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Is Literary Study Un-American?


Article # : 13100 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 11 / 1987  4,282 Words
Author : John Braeman
John Braeman is professor of history at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln.

       AMERICAN LITERATURE AND THE ACADEMY:
       The Roots, Growth, and Maturity of a Profession
       Kermit Vanderbilt
       Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986
       609 pp., $34.95
       
       PROFESSING LITERATURE:
       An Institutional History
       Gerald Graff
       Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987
       315 pp., $24.95
       
        A deep sense of malaise runs through the contemporary university scene. There is no question that a major source is the inevitable deflation of expectations in the face of relative financial stringency after the boom years of the 1960s. But faculty demoralization is as much intellectual as economic. There exists among the nation's professors a strong feeling of loss of direction - a self-questioning not simply of the worth of what they are doing but even its validity. Perhaps nowhere is this mood more strikingly apparent than in literary studies. In different ways, these two new accounts of literary studies' academic institutionalization are responses to this crisis of confidence. Kermit Vanderbilt's American Literature and the Academy: The Roots, Growth, and Maturity of a Profession deals with a single subfield - the attainment of an accepted place in the curriculum for the study of American literature. Gerald Graff's Professing Literature: An Institutional Study is broader in scope if thinner on details. "Professing Literature," Graff announces, "is a history of academic literary studies in the United States, roughly from the Yale Report of 1828, which assured the primacy of the classical over the vernacular languages in American colleges for another half-century, to the waning of the New Criticism in the 1960s and subsequent controversies over literary theory."
       
        To outward appearance, the authors are dealing with a tremendous success story. English departments are gargantuan enterprises in which American literature has become a fully accepted part. But a feeling that things have gone wrong suffuses these works. "What seems a renewed assault on the integrity and usefulness of humanistic learning," Vanderbilt laments in his introduction, "has generally reduced the morale of professors old and young, in all literature fields." Although later social and cultural forces have played a role by fostering a "materialistic" cast of mind among the nation's
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