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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
December
English department celebrates
new journal, new scholars, new honors
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
12/13/05
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photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
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This year's special issue of American Literary History
is dedicated to one exceptional scholar – Nina
Baym, who taught at Illinios for 41 years and retired
from teaching in 2004. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
—
American literary history is being made at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign – literally, figuratively and frequently.
In the first place, the editorial office of the journal American Literary
History and its founding editor Gordon Hutner have moved to the Illinois
campus.
Published by Oxford University Press and most recently based at the
University of Kentucky, ALH at age 17 is considered the pre-eminent
forum for traditional and new scholarship on American cultural studies.
Specializing in 19th- and 20th-century American literature, particularly
fiction, American criticism and ethnic literature, Hutner is the author
of several books including “Secrets and Sympathy: Forms of Disclosure
in Hawthorne’s Novels” (1988) and is working on a manuscript
about the mid-20th-century American novel.
Hutner envisioned a new paradigm for ALH: It would be a flagship journal
for the new scholarship, “one that competed for primacy with a
journal of 60 years’ standing,” he said, but that also gave
traditional scholarship “its rightful place in our pages.”
He would focus on American culture as seen through the prism of literary
history, and he would hunt for new work “from scholars not quite
so well known, but whose standards of achievement were no less luminous”;
entry-level professors and promising graduate students as well as premier
critics and literary historians also were targeted.
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University
of Illinois photo |
| Gordon
Hutner is the founding editor of American Literary
History. Published by the Oxford University Press,
it was most recently based at the University of Kentucky.
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Hutner encouraged
scholars from all over the academic map – history, law, philosophy,
political science, religion, and sociology – to submit to ALH.
Today, the U. of I. is supporting the journal – and in “very
munificent ways,” Hutner said. The College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences in particular, he said, “has worked hard to give the
journal the platform we wanted.”
Martin Camargo, the head of Illinois’ English
department, sees a ripple effect from having Hutner and ALH on campus:
“As the premier scholarly journal in the field, ALH has further
raised the national profile of our already strong program in American
literature.”
In addition to maintaining its rigorous publishing schedule –
three general issues and one special issue a year – ALH has, since
coming to Illinois a year ago, pulled off a historic “first.”
Its latest issue is dedicated to one exceptional scholar.
“This is unprecedented for us,” Hutner said of the issue
devoted to Nina Baym, who taught at Illinois for 41 years and retired
from teaching in 2004.
Six essays celebrate Baym’s “career-long engagement with
American writing, centered on her illustrious scholarship on and criticism
of the American Renaissance, women writers and the writing of American
literary history,” Hutner wrote in his introduction to the Winter
2005 issue.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
University
of Illinois photo |
| Dale
Bauer was hired to take over the courses on American
women's writing that Nina Baym had taught at Illinois.
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Baym, who “made
her first reputation” on the study of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Hutner
said, is indisputably the leading literary scholar and critic of American
female writers and the primary catalyst for major changes in the American
literature canon during the past 25 years. The author of seven books,
eight edited works and nearly 150 essays, Baym has been, since 1999,
the general editor of “The Norton Anthology of American Literature,”
recognized as one of the profession’s most prestigious assignments.
She also has served as editor of two sections of the anthology since
1986.
Baym has garnered every major U. of I. award: She is a Swanlund Endowed
Chair and is a Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the
Center for Advanced Study Professor of English. She won the Hubbell
Award for lifetime achievement from the Modern Language Association
in 2000.
In the first essay of the new issue of ALH, Dale Bauer said of Baym’s
work:
“She’s a Jamesian figure. She knows what it means to be
of her time and simultaneously ahead of it.”
According to Bauer, Baym was “the key figure to change the way
we read U.S. women’s writing, beginning with her book ‘Woman’s
Fiction.’ ”
Bauer, who is married to Hutner, had been teaching at the University
of Kentucky when she was hired by Illinois last year to take over Baym’s
courses on American women’s writing.
The English department was “delighted to welcome Bauer for her
outstanding and continued expertise in turn-of-the-century modernist
American fiction, and most especially, women’s studies,”
said Julia Saville, the associate head of the department.
“In the later respect, she not only contributes substantially
to an already growing departmental strength, but considerably ameliorates
the great loss the department feels from the retirement of Nina Baym,
an internationally recognized pioneer in this field.”
Bauer is the author of a book about Edith Wharton’s politics,
has edited five books and collections, and 35 articles and book chapters.
She is working on a manuscript titled “Sex Expressions and American
Women,” in which she traces the trope of sex expression in literature
from the 1860s to the 1930s and ’40s.
Camargo concedes that Baym and Bauer’s personal styles and research
emphases are quite different, “but they both have strong commitments
to feminist scholarship, active service to the university and the larger
profession, and outstanding classroom teaching and mentorship of graduate
students,” he said.
The trend in literature today, Bauer said, is to become more specialized
in analyzing U.S. women’s writing, “following Baym’s
lead, but also focusing on style, metaphors of civilization and cultures,
specific issues and cultural debates.”
Bauer said she began her own scholarship with “Feminist Dialogics,”
a book about feminist theory and 19th-century American literature. Her
book on sex expressions “takes up where Baym and Ann Douglas left
off in their meditations on the different ways that women’s rhetoric
and style generated an explosion of women’s writing.”
As Baym sees it, she and Bauer “overlap,” but they aren’t
“in the same mold.”
For one thing, the periods they study are different, Baym said.
“Bauer’s chronological focus is late 19th century through
the modernist period – that is, up to World War II – whereas
mine was – is – from the early national period, the 1780s,
up to World War I,” Baym said.
Another difference: Where Bauer concentrates on female writers, Baym
has devoted a great deal of research to male writers from the pre-Civil
War era – Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Thoreau, for example. On
the other hand, Bauer has devoted much energy to feminist literary theory,
while Baym has only written two theoretical articles, “one of
which is subtitled, ‘Why I Don’t Do Feminist Literary Theory,’
” Baym said.
Bauer also stresses pedagogy. Indeed, she “makes the teaching
of literature a second specialty and has won incredible numbers of teaching
awards,” Baym said.
When asked which accomplishment she is most proud of, Baym said the
fact that more than 30 of her former graduate students attended her
retirement celebration, and that she taught “the gargantuan”
American literature survey course 15 years in a row – “a
notoriously difficult assignment at a time when students preferred small
classes,” Baym said.
At the final lecture, the entire class gave Baym a standing ovation.
“I have thought about that response many times since, and although
I don’t really miss teaching, the event made the whole experience
worthwhile.”
Baym is still in high gear, supervising the eight editors of the Norton
anthology – a publication that “remains the most widely
used in the field,” Baym said.
Baym also is continuing on the editorial boards of several journals,
including ALH. She reads manuscripts for academic presses, does promotion
and tenure reviews for several schools, gives invited talks and does
book reviews.
As for research, she is beginning a new area of specialization on women
who published from and about the Old West.
Who will make the cut?
“How many names do you want,” Baym joked, before saying,
“Let’s start with Elizabeth Custer, the spouse of you-know-who;
Amelia Clapp, whose ‘Dame Shirley’ letters were the first
account from the California gold mines – preceding Bret Harte’s
by several years; Mary Hallock Foote, who figures as a source in Wallace
Stegner’s novel ‘Angle of Repose’; Mary Austin; Helen
Hunt Jackson; and Willa Cather.”
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