On the next book in the evolving career of one of the most interesting
AmericanStudiers.
I think all of us humans look to other people for models and inspiration,
and I know that such examples are vital in a profession and career as complex
and open-ended as academia. Many of the fellow scholars about whom I’ve written
in Scholarly
Review and Tribute
posts fit that bill for me, have offered in their careers and work models
for the path I hope to follow in my own. But few have seemed to offer quite as
overt a blueprint for my own series of AmericanStudies books as Gavin Jones, who similarly
began his career with a cultural and historical analysis of Gilded Age literature
(Strange
Talk, 1999), moved into a broader engagement with American literary and
cultural history (American
Hungers, 2007), and has found his way to an even more sweeping public
scholarly topic in his most recent book: Failure
and the American Writer: A Literary History (2014).
Jones’ first two books weren’t just models in terms of their respective
focal points and motivating questions, however; they were also exemplary
scholarly engagements with their topics. Strange
Talk takes the often-controversial subject of dialect literature seriously
without losing a sense of ethics, analyzing all the different permutations of the
form in the late 19th century on their own terms yet maintaining a
clear set of arguments about the more and less troubling and even oppressive
versions of the trend. American Hungers
traces more than a century of literary and cultural representations of poverty
both broadly and specifically, making convincing connections across its works
and periods while paying close, nuanced attention to particular examples and
elements throughout. In their respective ways both books provided pitch-perfect
illustrations of successful AmericanStudies scholarship, and I have no doubt
that Failure will offer its own
impressive models for my ongoing thinking and writing.
I haven’t had a chance to read it yet, but it also seems likely to me that Failure will add another layer to my
ongoing thoughts about the topic of my own next book: the idea, which I’m
trying to capture in the phrase Hard-Won
Hope, that it’s only through our engagements with our darkest realities and
histories that we can find our way to a brighter future. In his focus on the
topic of failure, as partly a contrast with but also and even more importantly
a complement to our national emphasis on success, Jones has found a rich vein
of such darker but still productive shared experiences and emotions. But at the
same time, it looks as if Jones has continued to link such broad ideas to his
readings of particular authors and works, and thus to model one more time how
much our overarching narratives and arguments depend on close, sustained
engagement with specific examples and analyses. I look forward to another round
of inspiration for my own such work!
Last new book tomorrow,
Ben
PS. New (or classic) AmericanStudies books you’d highlight? Share for the
weekend post!
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