First, before you read any further, go read Steve
Mentz's excellent response to the ongoing conversation
about Periodization and Its Discontents.
At the end of my last post, I ended with an overly pithy
statement about Hinch's "History without transition," and said that I
could think of worse things than such historical practices. Mentz responded as
follows: "Without in any way defending heroic
conceptions of early modernity that insist on leaping high by stomping
on medieval plurality, I don’t want history without transitions. I
like plurality, multiplicity, radical difference, but I also want narratives of
change, transformation, discontinuity." My own critical sympathies are
very much in tune with him here. While I can think of worse things than a
History without transition, one worse thing would certainly be only History
without transition.
Ever since reading China Meiville's The
City and the City, I've been thinking about the idea of
"cross-hatching" as a way to conceptualize temporality and history,
of boundaries that are both interpenetrating yet also visible and firm. I'm
interested in how we read continuity and discontinuity not as some fixed
binary, but as occurring alongside each other.
What I find most distasteful in
Greenblatt's thinking is the privileging of one time period over another, the
creation of an abject other out of a segment of the past. To be
fair, though, I've only encountered this sort of mentality outside of
print once. When I was a graduate student, I did an independent study on the
postcolonial Middle Ages, and I received some sideways glances from a few
faculty members. But, that's about the extent of it. While Jim Hinch's
take-down of Greenblatt was delightful to read, there is a sense, for me at
least, that although the older dogmas of heroic conceptions of periodization
will never fully die out in various conversations, books like The Swerve are
already seeming like the last gasp of a dying species. (I may be too optimistic
here.) I think we have the opportunity to have much more vibrant conversations
about temporality, history, and periodization. Mentz offers a way that this
might happen:
Always periodize — at least twice! With
apologies to Jameson,
we need periods and transitions, but also need to remember that we should not
believe in them too much, that they always do some violence to the full
(unknowable) plurality of historical experience. So what about a double (or
more) system of periodization, which might be as simple as recognizing that all
21c critical work responds to 21c claims (“presentism”) as well as the demands
of historical sources, or as sophisticated as remembering that historical
periods never end in any conclusive way, that cultural habits of responding to
historical stimuli layer themselves atop and alongside each other, intersecting
and accumulating and recombining. With legible but messy transitions.
We cannot ignore the claims and attitudes of our
own presentism, nor should we ignore the demands of historicism. We have to
negotiate continuity and discontinuity, always.