[Vwoolf] Vwoolf Digest, Vol 97, Issue 7--Bloomsbury and Race

Gretchen Gerzina ozma at sover.net
Sun Jun 7 07:13:52 EDT 2020


Dear Stuart,

I think that was me, speaking at both conferences on Bloomsbury and Race!

Best,
Gretchen


On 6/6/20, 7:09 PM, "vwoolf-bounces at lists.osu.edu on behalf of vwoolf-request at lists.osu.edu" <vwoolf-bounces at lists.osu.edu on behalf of vwoolf-request at lists.osu.edu> wrote:

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    Today's Topics:

       1. Kabe Wilson interview (Dr T Tate)
       2. Re: Vwoolf Digest, Vol 97, Issue 5 "VW and Race"
          (Stuart N. Clarke)
       3. Teaching Woolf Now and Online (Jane Marie Garrity)


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Message: 1
    Date: Sat, 06 Jun 2020 21:37:13 +0100
    From: Dr T Tate <tt206 at cam.ac.uk>
    To: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu
    Subject: [Vwoolf] Kabe Wilson interview
    Message-ID: <f9b5573ca72e8c6f81fb6ff946267540 at cam.ac.uk>
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed

    Dear Elizabeth,

    Re. Kabe Wilson's work on Woolf.

    Kabe Wilson has spoken several times on our Woolf summer courses, and 
    brought along his remarkable rewriting of A Room of One's Own, which is 
    an interesting artefact in itself, all on one huge sheet of paper.

    There are a couple of links here which might be useful for your class: 
    https://www.literaturecambridge.co.uk/news/kabe-2019

    Best wishes,
    Trudi
    ---
    Dr Trudi Tate
    Literature Cambridge
    www.literaturecambridge.co.uk


    ------------------------------

    Message: 2
    Date: Sat, 6 Jun 2020 21:55:50 +0100
    From: "Stuart N. Clarke" <stuart.n.clarke at btinternet.com>
    To: <vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>
    Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] Vwoolf Digest, Vol 97, Issue 5 "VW and Race"
    Message-ID: <68158CF59C6740CF85A0B10824BF45C7 at StuartHP>
    Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="utf-8";
    	reply-type=original

    The plenary at the London Conference in 2004 was "Bushmen and Blackface: 
    Bloomsbury and Race."  But there was also a plenary the year before at Smith 
    College: "Bloomsbury and Race", which covered some of the same ground.

    Stuart
    (Day 81)

    -----Original Message----- 
    From: Gretchen Gerzina via Vwoolf
    Sent: Saturday, June 6, 2020 9:31 PM
    To: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu
    Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] Vwoolf Digest, Vol 97, Issue 5 "VW and Race"

    Hello everyone,

    I highly recommend my seminal article "Bushmen and Blackface: Bloomsbury and
    Race." I believe I was one of the very first to take on this subject, and
    gave keynote addresses on it at one of the VW Conferences, and at Duke's
    conference on Bloomsbury.

    Gretchen Gerzina 



    ------------------------------

    Message: 3
    Date: Sat, 6 Jun 2020 23:09:51 +0000
    From: Jane Marie Garrity <jane.garrity at colorado.edu>
    To: Erica Delsandro <ericadelsandro at gmail.com>, "Elizabeth F. Evans"
    	<evansef at gmail.com>, Woolf Listserv
    	<vwoolf at lists.service.ohio-state.edu>
    Subject: [Vwoolf] Teaching Woolf Now and Online
    Message-ID: <60D5C093-E914-43D7-A41E-C5657BF445C8 at colorado.edu>
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"

    Hi Liz & everyone,
    These are all wonderful suggestions and I just wanted to add a few more below that either explicitly or implicitly address race in relation to Woolf:

    Sonita Sarker, ?Bloomsbury and Empire?
    Gretchen Gerzina, ?Bloomsbury and Empire?

    Not as recent but still worth reading!

    Anna Snaith, ?Conversations in Bloomsbury: Colonial Writers and the Hogarth Press?
    Margaret Lucille Trenta, ?The Noble Savage and the Savage Noble: Mulk Raj Anand?s Deconstruction of Identity in Conversations in Bloomsbury?

    I hope everyone is well and safe?
    Jane




    Jane Garrity
    Associate Professor of English
    University of Colorado at Boulder
    226 UCB
    Boulder, CO 80309-0226
    Jane.Garrity at Colorado.Edu<mailto:Jane.Garrity at Colorado.Edu>



    On Jun 6, 2020, at 2:16 PM, Erica Delsandro via Vwoolf <vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>> wrote:

    Hello Liz and the Woolf Crew!

    I lean heavily on Urmila Seshagiri's Race and the Modernist Imagination in my Modernism on the Margins class.  Urmila's book offers a twofold contribution: context and model.  She provides us with the cultural and historical context for reading race in modernist writing AND, through her close readings, models for us a way to close read texts that she doesn't explicitly examine.

    An interesting pairing might be Saidiya Hartman's Wayward Lives, Beautiful Experiments (excerpts) with any text or excerpt from Woolf in which a marginal character with a marginalized identity (race, class, etc.) figures.  Woolf has these more or less anonymous women in her work and although she is committed to the voices of anonymous women -- arguably white -- many female characters with cameo roles appear and remain in the shadows.  (Crosby in The Years jumps to mind.)  Actually, as I write this, I am imagining many generative affiliations and critiques (of Woolf, of white modernism) that could emerge by putting Woolf in conversation with Hartman's project.

    A pairing that I have written on is Three Guineas and Ta-Nehisi Coate's Between the World and Me, as both are epistolary.  Personally, I have wanted to teach those two books together for quite some time!  I think there is some interesting synergy to be explored that provides a way to examine Woolf's failures in racial consciousness while analyzing her structural critique of social and political structures. And such a pairing introduces students to Coates (yes, please!), opens up modernist writing to contemporary issues, and illustrates the importance of an intersectional approach.  (Which neither author employs.)

    Thanks for restarting the conversation, Liz!

    In health and hope -- EGD



    On Sat, Jun 6, 2020 at 1:03 PM Elizabeth F. Evans via Vwoolf <vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>> wrote:
    Hello everyone!

    I really enjoyed this thread on the challenges and opportunities of teaching Woolf online in our age of pandemic. I wanted to resurrect the discussion and also to add a new question: how to best teach Woolf in this time when systemic racism, "genteel racism," and authoritarianism are also very much on our minds in the US. (Hence the revised subject line.) I'll be teaching a Woolf class this fall and am hoping to incorporate a meaningful engagement with such issues, as well as reflection on pandemics/quarantine/illness. It's a lot to juggle in one course, but, then again, we're all already juggling these balls! I don't yet know what the mode of delivery will be but am anticipating it to be at least partially online.

    For discussing Woolf in relationship to systemic racism, casual racism, and authoritarianism, Three Guineas will obviously be an important touchstone. The Voyage Out would also be useful, though I'm not sure if I'm willing to make room for it. I'm planning to teach A Room of One's Own alongside Kabe Wilson's remarkable rewriting of the book as Of One Woman or So by Olivia N'Gowfri, which is told from the perspective of a female African student at contemporary Cambridge. (More about that on Blogging Woolf<https://bloggingwoolf.wordpress.com/2016/01/11/author-rearranges-woolfs-words-into-a-novella/>. Susan Stanford Friedman has written and presented on Wilson's project.) Jane Marcus's groundbreaking discussion of Room in "A Very Fine Negress" will be apropos. Does anyone have recommendations for more recent scholarship that explicitly engages with Woolf and race in ways that would be useful for the current moment in the US?

    Returning to the topic of teaching online, I'm hoping to take advantage of born digital materials, like Melba Cuddy-Keane's on-line essay, ?Mapping Mrs. Dalloway: London as a Networked City?: http://hdl.handle.net/1807/97406

    Hope you're all hanging in there.

    With best wishes,
    Liz


    Elizabeth F. Evans
    Associate Professor of English
    Wayne State University
    https://bit.ly/ElizabethEvansProfile

    Author of Threshold Modernism: New Public Women and the Literary Spaces of Imperial London (Cambridge University Press, 2019) (bit.ly/ThresholdModernism<http://bit.ly/ThresholdModernism>)

    Book Review Editor of The Space Between: Literature and Culture, 1914-1945 (https://spacebetweensociety.org/home/journal/<https://secure-web.cisco.com/15MDZ1jqNgM0ckH6TjXzdZowLrwRRcgFXPat4C5Wm3_RQuahsk4dNdjJ-VQlz0hjnYelf4jmzmUGukYIqbxEK9oyYomC22MD_gnu0MVymH_ETHQw9hAYeh2enoxQDzYfwPblYM5JhYXr4i8b6MpZf2skfdyYamie-XSHxJetjQTKgf-uKHEmhlAz-t0vpYN_ypNJmvictobWp7RbKsih0fC9wooxO056Cj_ZzyjoFa-oPI4epVbDUDbhz6LcN4nf3vSJObTbiEEMxLCzHkMH4rYrPvcO9DzRJ7xytIflQTCZRSwUBiaYC7MeMQuesvzccYo1JSsOED2A18WHz4lKbtTeb8MmIjSs2iuli-i1xEkWDvIHzh2xFw9VnQLgxKAVlX5FDh_pNGHuzsMX393eUu3rs8E7qNy-fceqUREJIAw75qUzyPjMeCtA8JdlCxXYOqYiBYIoK4QIkWV_ahNgLtw/https%3A%2F%2Fspacebetweensociety.org%2Fhome%2Fjournal%2F>)





    On May 27, 2020, at 4:23 PM, Mark Hussey via Vwoolf <vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>> wrote:

    Thanks Madelyn, Cheryl, Eleanor (& hello out there! Hope everyone is doing ok!)
    Like Eleanor, I?d successfully avoided ever teaching online until being thrust into the zoom in March. 6 of the 12 students from my spring modernism class have signed up for a fall Woolf seminar, so I decided not to put Mrs D on the syllabus again (though, as many people have already pointed out, that novel, in the context of Elizabeth Outka?s reading in Viral Modernism, has popped up in all kinds of places online recently).
    I only teach undergrads, but it struck me that if many of the Woolf community are going to be teaching online, a thread like this sharing ideas and resources would be very welcome, especially to novices like me. Our interlibrary loan is functioning smoothly for articles, and I?ve also sometimes been able to provide scans of various Woolf things for colleagues who can?t get into their libraries at the moment. Perhaps we could establish a kind of database of materials?  Just a thought?

    Stay safe out there.
    mark

    From: Vwoolf <vwoolf-bounces at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf-bounces at lists.osu.edu>> On Behalf Of Eleanor McNees via Vwoolf
    Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2020 3:10 PM
    To: Detloff, Madelyn <detlofmm at miamioh.edu<mailto:detlofmm at miamioh.edu>>; Kllevenback <kllevenback at att.net<mailto:kllevenback at att.net>>
    Cc: vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>
    Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] NYTimes: The Future of College Is Online, and It?s Cheaper?and teaching Woolf?

    Dear All,

    As it happens I?m teaching online for the first time ever in my 40+ years of teaching, and this happens to be my graduate seminar, Woolf and the Victorians (not Woolf and Bloomsbury, but close). I have 15 mostly PhD students, and we meet for two hours Thursday afternoons on Zoom with an optional mid-week office Zoom hour. I began with ?On Being Ill,? and one of my students persuaded me to change the title of the course to add ?A Zoom of One?s Own.? We have active discussion posts about the readings, only the last two weeks of which are specifically Woolf?s novels, Mrs. Dalloway and The Years. For these I?ve delved into the current work on the 1918 pandemic, especially Outka?s essays (don?t have her book). Wonderful Jane de Gay made a video lecture on Woolf and religious background which my students discussed last week (another feature of online teaching?allowing us to collaborate and share from great distances), and I hope to do one for her in the fall. Finally, we?ll end the
      quarter with a Zoom panel discussion of their various projects. All of the Victorian novels we?ve read?Jane Eyre, David Copperfield, Middlemarch and Far From the Madding Crowd?have been prefaced by Woolf?s and Leslie Stephen?s essays on these novelists so that students are reading these through a Stephen/Woolfian lens. Finally, of course, I?ve  had to adjust some of the readings, but thanks to DU?s having access to the TLS database and many others, including Hathi Trust, we?ve been able to gather many sources. I?m only sorry that Leaska?s The Pargiters doesn?t seem available.

    Best wishes to all of you,
    Eleanor
    Dr. Eleanor McNees
    Interim Director of Graduate Studies
    Department of English and Literary Arts
    University of Denver
    Denver, CO 80208

    <image001.png>



    From: Vwoolf <vwoolf-bounces at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf-bounces at lists.osu.edu>> on behalf of "vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>" <vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>>
    Reply-To: "Detloff, Madelyn" <detlofmm at miamioh.edu<mailto:detlofmm at miamioh.edu>>
    Date: Wednesday, May 27, 2020 at 6:53 AM
    To: "kllevenback at att.net<mailto:kllevenback at att.net>" <kllevenback at att.net<mailto:kllevenback at att.net>>
    Cc: "vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>" <vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>>
    Subject: Re: [Vwoolf] NYTimes: The Future of College Is Online, and It?s Cheaper?and teaching Woolf?

    HI all,
    I hope you are all safe and healthy.  I will miss seeing you at the conference.  As we Chicago Cubs fans are fond of saying, "Wait until next year!" :)

    I teach online but usually WGS courses, so I don't have specific modules set up for Woolf. That said, I think that an online course might be a good opportunity to do some interesting work on her letters, since they present  a form  of communication that presumes the need to connect across separateness.  It might also be interesting to read "On Being Ill" together with a class this fall. I could imagine an assignment where students create their own updated takes on On Being Quarantined, or something similar.

    Take care, all, and... I can't wait until next year!

    Madelyn

    On Tue, May 26, 2020 at 6:47 PM Kllevenback via Vwoolf <vwoolf at lists.osu.edu<mailto:vwoolf at lists.osu.edu>> wrote:
    Has anyone exciting/interesting approaches to on-line teaching of VW and Bloomsbury?
    Stay safe, be well?
    Karen Levenback

     The Future of College Is Online, and It?s Cheaper
    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/25/opinion/online-college-coronavirus.html?referringSource=articleShare<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/www.nytimes.com/2020/05/25/opinion/online-college-coronavirus.html?referringSource=articleShare__;!!NCZxaNi9jForCP_SxBKJCA!HUHiC961L6ZZKKwUjWscrIONk6pxx3XuPVcZmOW5F1d-jZqoVO44iVcLGrww_Q$>


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    --



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    Madelyn Detloff
    Chair and Professor of English
    Professor of Global and Intercultural Studies
    Miami University
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    Oxford, OH 45056  O: 513-529-5221 | MiamiOH.edu/English<http://miamioh.edu/English>
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    *I am agnostic about pronouns as long as they are respectful, but she, her, hers will do in a pinch*
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    --
    EGD
    she/her/hers

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