Abstract
The “affective turn” is by now long established, part of a wider surge of interest in emotion playing out in a range of disciplines. In literary studies, the conversation about how affect theory might help us to interpret literature is still emerging. The goal of the present discussion is to provide a critical overview of work by scholars who draw on the insights of recent theory to read literary texts written in English. At the same time that the discussion offers an appraisal of the current state of scholarship, it also seeks to identify emerging new directions in research.
Keywords
Introduction
The “affective turn” is by now long established, having touched at last count a score of disciplines in the humanities and social sciences, part of a wider surge of interest in emotion playing out in different traditions—in critical theory, in philosophy, in affective science. In its variety this work poses both opportunity and challenge for scholars interested in interdisciplinarity, as attention to affect manifests particularly in each field, in ways that are not always immediately apparent to disciplinary outsiders. In literary studies, the conversation about how affect theory might help us interpret literature is still emerging. The goal of the present discussion is to provide a useful critical overview of work by scholars who draw on the insights of recent theory to read literary texts written in English. Given the multifarious lines of thinking that have been categorized under the broad heading Affect Theory over the past couple of decades, there could be many ways to proceed with such an assignment. My brief here will be to consider the relevance to literary criticism of theoretical perspectives concerned with affect as force or impetus manifested in bodies, and so encompasses approaches to literature influenced by the work of psychologist Silvan Tomkins as well as philosopher Gilles Deleuze. The discussion is informed by other approaches often placed under the affect theory umbrella, such as work by scholars who seek to uncover how appeals to affective engagement in literary depictions of everyday life compel citizens to feel and act in ways that conform to dominant ideology. My main focus here will not be on such approaches, though, for while they offer powerful tools for critique they are interested in investigating the cultural politics of emotion, really, rather than in affect as a phenomenon tending to the more biological than cultural in genesis and effect. 1
The genealogy of the lines of theory in question is by now well known, with the watershed year of 1995 seeing the publication both of Eve Sedgwick and Adam Frank's “Shame in the Cybernetic Fold: Reading Silvan Tomkins” and of Brian Massumi's “The Autonomy of Affect.” These interventions were driven expressly by a desire to find a way out of the orthodoxies of their critical moment. Inspired by the work of Tomkins, Sedgwick, and Frank saw accounting for affect as a way to move beyond the limitations of poststructuralist critique, with its drive to unmask the ideological workings of a field of binary opposites, manifested in cultural artifacts to be decoded according to the logic of a linguistic model of representation. In literary studies, such critique was exemplified by Deconstruction (under the aegis of Jacques Derrida) and then in turn by New Historicism (Michel Foucault). Similarly frustrated with the governing paradigm for critique, Massumi sought to move away from abstract conceptions of “The Body” and to think instead about actual bodies embedded in and affected by networks of relation. 2 A guiding principle of both interventions was that attending to the biologically rooted operations of affect/s rather than giving primacy to abstracted Reason or Theory might blur the boundaries between self and other—and so offer a more complete picture of what it means to be human, one that by being attuned to the richness of affective interrelation might respect all actors even while it might seem to efface difference.
These approaches are different in kind, both in their fundamental assumptions and in how the theory might be applied by others, with Tomkins's model concerned with how the individual builds social scripts shaped by the stimulus–response circuits of hardwired affect-pairs, and with Massumi concerned with affect not as a property of individual psychology, but as manifestations of a force of intensity that—because a phenomenon that impinges on the embodied subject—is in nature not personal but rather prepersonal. Taken together, these two visions of affective life have had a profound impact on research in the humanities and social sciences, encouraging scholars to give voice to what had been unnoticed or ignored by the traditions in which they grew up. Literature has, of course, been preoccupied for millennia with the affective dimension of human experience, and critics in the European tradition as far back as Aristotle have theorized the affective engagements of characters, of authors, of readers—and different forms such as poems, plays, and, recently, novels (see Daly, 2015) have developed to depict these engagements; just what is new is my focus here. In the following discussion I provide a sense of how literary scholars working in a range of historical archives have drawn on two of the main lines of affect theory so far, and along the way offer a case study of my own to show how engaging with recent theorizations of affect might help the critic elucidate the literary text in productive ways. Always front of mind, I suggest, should be guiding questions of relevance and utility, as we ask: just what explanatory power is affect theory affording me here as a critic? and, what can the insights of the theory help me
Primary Affects and Literary Analysis: Reading the Script
The strain of theory more in line with psychological as well as vernacular understandings of how we are affected by strong feelings is the one developed by Silvan Tomkins over many decades, primarily in his magnum opus
Sedgwick and Frank's championing of Tomkins's model brought him to the attention of literary critics, and when their essay became a cornerstone of Sedgwick's influential collection
The other line of influence of Tomkins's work has been application of his script theory for literary interpretation. The most substantial and systematic study is Duncan Lucas'
Clearly Tomkins's work on affect has sparked productive interest—and yet given all the talk about affect over the past couple of decades, it's notable that overall his model has not made great inroads into the practice of professional literary criticism, even during a period of openness to varied approaches, when for the first time in a long time there has been no doctrinaire way to “do” critical analysis driven by a thinker such as a Freud, Derrida, or Foucault. Perhaps the relative lack of interest in taking inspiration from Tomkins's vision of the affect system stems from what the editors of the
Still, Tomkins's affect-pairs can provide a useful taxonomy for literary critics reading texts from different historical periods, particularly when scenes in narratives can read as familiar scripts, preordained by the rules of genre and plot, and when a character's motives and actions can be seen to be playing out the psychological phenomena Tomkins describes. Systems such as his that seek to capture the features of discrete affects or emotions (or, to use older cognate terms, passions, affections, sentiments) have been common and influential in Western thought since the Ancients. For my part, Tomkins's affect-pairs can be viewed much as the affective terms in circulation in a given historical period in a given cultural milieu: they help the critic grasp the significance of what's going on in a particular text, whether it's a fictional work such as a novel, play, or poem, or a work of nonfiction such as a personal diary, political speech, or philosophical treatise. It's just that one needs to be careful about the claims to be made, the lessons to be drawn. Broadly speaking, approaching earlier literature informed by the insights of the history of emotions may help us pay attention to the conceptual paradigms and terms for emotion available at the time, and so to grasp what's at stake in the moments of heightened affect that punctuate literary texts in the European tradition from the plays of Sophocles to the novels of Jane Austen and beyond. 3 Not to do so, to instead assume that our current paradigms have universal applicability through time, is to risk falling into the presentism that can mark readings blind to the fact that past cultures, in at least to some meaningful degree, did not understand affective life in the way we do now (whoever that “we” might be).
Useful for the literary critic is work by scholars like Ute Frevert (2014) and Louise Joy (2020) to situate emotion terms in the contexts of their historical use. Particularly instructive is Thomas Dixon's (2012) contention that
In a way, though, I would say that for a critic drawing on either Tomkins's or Massumi's model, a need to “always historicize” (the rallying cry of New Historicism) is not the prime directive, as the whole point is that either model rests on a sense that there is a universal structure to human psychology, embedded as we are in relations of interdependence with phenomena that affect us profoundly. The fact that many texts from different eras recognizably portray the workings of affective intensities as they move through characters would seem to demonstrate a transhistorical truth value to the Massumi–Deleuzean model. Yet critics who’ve grown up in an age of healthy suspicion of the political costs of universalizing wonder whether embracing such models merely reinscribes a retrograde assumption that Western ways of thinking and feeling are the best—even the only—ways available. This is a fundamental concern, analogous to Sedgwick and Frank's apprehension three decades ago as they drew on the insights of a systems theory approach to psychology to break out of the constructivist–essentialist impasse that had straightjacketed critical discourse. This problematic won’t be resolved here, but I hope the next sections of the discussion will help show the value to the literary critic of a model that, even if it raises legitimate questions of epistemic and political consequence, wields an explanatory force that cannot be ignored.
Affect as Intensity: Accounting for Traces on the Page
The most widely influential line of recent theory takes its inspiration from Brian Massumi's reading of Gilles Deleuze's work on philosophers Baruch Spinoza and Henri Bergson. This vision of affect forms a major strain of what has come to be called nonrepresentational theory, which “tries to capture the ‘onflow’ … of everyday life”; this line of theory “follows the anti-substantialist ambition of philosophies of becoming and philosophies of vitalist intuition equally—and their constant war on frozen states” (Thrift, 2007, p. 5). A serious challenge for those encountering engagements with Massumi–Deleuzean theory is that seems counterintuitive, in that it upends centuries of thinking in the Western tradition by rejecting the notion of a stable self. The theory disrupts perhaps most forcefully commonsense understandings of affective agency, by asserting a distinction between affect and emotion: the first, a phenomenon that is “prepersonal” and eludes cognition, while the second, something that is brought into the personal as a result of “the
Literary critics have profitably explored the workings of affective intensities in different historical archives over the past decade or so. One of the most illuminating is Wan-Chuan Kao's reading of Chaucer's
In the Archive, With Feeling
As with any viable method or framework for research, the tools offered by affect theory need to be relevant to the contexts and evidence sets of a given discipline. The archive I work in—the literary culture of 18th-century Britain—is particularly amenable to investigations of affect as intensity, as this was a time marked by widespread preoccupation with heightened feeling. Writers working in various genres portrayed in exhaustive detail the psychophysiological impacts on both actual and virtual/fictional thinking-feeling bodies of forceful encounters with the world. In the impassioned world of early romance narrative, for instance, seduction begins with a process of influence that takes hold below the threshold of conscious awareness. The transmission of affect—to use Theresa Brennan's (2004) influential formulation—happens without warning or intent, as characters are drawn involuntarily to one another. This movement may happen all of a sudden and with great vehemence in moments of high drama. Or, in situations of lower intensity, characters may find affection steal upon them without their knowledge. At work at such times is a model of “unfelt” affect that James Noggle (2020) has shown pervades all forms of prose writing during the 18th century, including philosophy, historiography, and political economy, as well as literature. The operations of the unfelt are revealed in words such as “imperceptibly” that indicate the ways in which human processes can be affected significantly yet subtly, as the influence of a burgeoning potential to be moved escapes the subject's attention. Noggle's analysis draws on recent theorizations of affect that posit affective intensities as impersonal, even prepersonal, as autonomous forces that can circulate among feeling bodies in ways that escape the emotional knowledge of affected individuals. This relation governs the idiom of the unfelt, which “portrays people as objects of insensible processes rather than subjects of ‘insensible emotions’” (p. 7). In early novels, Noggle notes, unfelt affects “often decisively delineate character, advance plot, and confer a distinctive texture on narrative” (p. 69).
My own reading of 18th-century fiction demonstrates this phenomenon, especially with regard to works written in a romance mode that is preoccupied primarily with interpersonal relationships. Jane Austen's novels, for instance, each feature a female protagonist learning to navigate a complex social world, whose challenges include the need to comprehend the workings of her own heart as well as the feelings and motives of others.
I hope this brief case study goes some way to showing how the insights of recent affect theory might help us better see what's “on the page” in early fiction.
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The question of what's at stake in these moments of excess is something I’m still trying to get ahold of (as many narrators in early novels know and tell their readers, it's hard to express the inexpressible). But what is clear to me is that Massumi—following Spinoza—is on to something profound when he finds great import in the fact that “the body, when impinged upon … [is] in a state of passional suspension in which it exists more outside of itself, more in the abstracted action of the impinging thing and the abstracted context of that action, than within itself” (2002, p. 31). Paradoxical though it sounds, it's in the state of
Questions of Method: Challenges of the Ineffable
All well and good as a singular example, one might say, but the challenge remains that it's hard to account for phenomena that resist determinate definition. As Laurie Ringer notes, “Affect can … educe the unmediated experience of emotion as an event”; more broadly, “With affect theory, subjectivity becomes an ongoing event that arises from the movements of the body rather than the machinations of language” (2014, paras. 11–12). To attend to this insight is exciting … but how to proceed when the machinations of language are all that's offered by a literary text?
Affective phenomena are particularly difficult to study, because, in the case of affect as intensity, fleeting, precognitive, even prepersonal; and in the case of primary affects, because driven by biologically based motivators of behavior that can function in the first instance outside of willful self-control. While such phenomena exert material effects, they evince immaterial properties. And so the editors of
And yet there is perhaps not so radical a category difference as might first appear, because—and here a profound insight of Deleuzean thinking comes in—phenomena always encompass the virtual as well as the real, are about potentiality in the process of becoming, even when actualized in a singular instance of body or art, flesh or fiction. Jean-Michel Rabaté (2016) provides deep insight into this metaphysics of aesthetic creation in his reading of Deleuze and Félix Guattari's late essay “Percept, Affect and Concept” (1994), about which Rabaté notes that “no single text was more influential” in “launch[ing] the critical vocabulary of affects” (pp. 88–89). Deleuze's vision is that “the task of art is to invent affects” (p. 89). Critically, such affects are not representations of the felt emotions of an author, or a character, or a reader. Instead they are something of an entirely different order, for, “caught by art, sensible matter creates its own eternity, even if it is to last an instant. Affects are autonomous, unattached to a perceiving subject, eternally out there in their stubborn materiality” (p. 90). All of this runs counter, of course, to the desire of psychoanalytic critics to psychologize character, or of cognitivists to tease out stable mental states marked by self-possessed motives. Observing that for Deleuze “What matters is not psychology” (p. 91), Rabaté offers a cogent summary of Deleuze's aesthetic theory, as follows: “Avoiding any subjectivist projection when defining art as the invention of new emotions, Deleuze combines his philosophy of expression with his objectivist anti-humanism. On this view, art produces monuments that are self-sufficient because it creates an autonomous universe that should not be read as the transmutation or sublimation of human passions and affections” (p. 89). Ilai Rowner helps to further clarify the ontology that underpins Deleuze's understanding of art and/as affects, noting that “when Deleuze suggests thinking about art and literature in
How might we bring these big ideas to bear on a particular text? Denise Riley has written eloquently of the power of writing to affect the reader, not by forging some kind of authentic connection between flesh-and-blood writer and reader, but through the generative properties of the medium itself. Language, Riley contends, does not represent feeling but “does feeling” (2000, p. 36): the text produces effects on the reader through deployment of formal elements and techniques (see Houen, 2020). Riley's innovation is to focus not on how
Thinking/Writing/Reading Feeling
For literary critics writing on emotion and literature, there has emerged a divide (Hogan, 2016; Miller, 2017). On one hand, we have the kind of cognitivist approach that's been a strain in literary criticism for some decades now, influenced by how philosophers, and recently neuroscientists, view emotions as intentional mental states. A number of recent contributions to thinking about emotion and literature largely take this approach, even if they might include some ecumenical gestures toward other approaches such as affect theory and the history of emotions (Hogan, Irish & Hogan, 2022; Wehrs & Blake, 2017). On the other hand, we have affect as read by those influenced by Tomkins and more strikingly by Massumi—which is something very different,
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as work by critics engaging with literary texts across many periods shows, and as a scattering of articles a decade ago is now building to a critical mass. My own edited collection,
Might there be a way to reconcile cognitivist and affect-theoretical approaches to reading literary depictions of affectively rich moments? The ostensible gulf between the two can be quickly characterized. On one side, we have the assertion by a leading proponent for taking a cognitive approach to literature that “An emotion is fundamentally a system of the mind, with a neural and somatic substrate, that motivates motor or cognitive behavior” (Hogan & Irish, 2022, p. 2). For both Tomkins and Massumi, however, the somatic comes first, not just as a matter of timing but of importance. Tomkins does not deny the role of cognition, but gives primary importance to how the affect system amplifies the motivating impetus of the drive system and then informs cognition through an ongoing process of feedback. For Massumi and for followers such as Brennan (2004) and Thrift (2007), affect is a force that operates outside an individual's control—it does things
Perhaps a way forward is emerging. In his recent introduction to the edited collection
A major impetus of Houen's project is corrective, in that he uses as a springboard to develop his own method a critique of what he sees as the problem with “most cognitivists’ approach”: that “in conceiving the emotionality of fiction as inter needs to consider the various possible locations of emotion in literature. These begin with the real people involved—authors and readers. But they extend to implied authors and implied readers as well as wholly fictional persons, such as narrators and characters. Emotion bears also on scenes and sequences—both the sequence of events as they actually occur in the story and the sequence of events as they are presented in the plot (which may, for example, reveal the outcome of events before revealing their causes). Sometimes, a given narrative level has its own characteristic emotions or affective concerns—such as suspense in the case of plot (suspense is in part a function of when story information is provided). At other times, a given level will merely affect the ways the emotions of other levels are modulated (as when some stylistic features, not funny in themselves, contribute to comic effect). (2016, p. 1)
By Way of a Conclusion … Notes on Expanding Influence, Emerging Concerns
So where are we now? Interest in affect theory continues to grow, and to have a considerable impact on thinking about cultural products and social life. As happens with any model for cultural analysis once we’ve lived with it for a while, we have moved beyond the initial excitement, the drama of discovery (which, certainly with the Massumi–Deleuzean line, tended to two extremes: “hey! affect On one end are studies that embrace affect as an umbrella term for moving beyond emotions in a normative key. In these studies, what affect The point here is not to bemoan the lack of recognition of Black feeling, but rather to make clear the way that anti-blackness permeates even that which is seen to be a universal, prediscursive “human” capacity. Affect theory, in its recourse to the biological and the ontological, has been positioned as the answer to the trappings of “identity” and “difference,” yet it offers no language with which to approach the sensorial dimensions of ontological negation. Blackness represents the unthought horizon of affect theory, and in order to understand the persistence of the anti-Black paradigm, we must begin to theorize affect from the position of blackness—to think the unthinkable.
Palmer's corrective is justified and long overdue—and the implications will take time to play out (other interrogations of affect and/as racialization include Cobo-Piñero, 2023; Fetta, 2018; Palmer, 2020, 2023).
As a closing note, I ask whether there might be a way to recuperate a vision of affect as a useful analytic category that does not do violence to cultural difference and minoritized communities. Sneja Gunew's work on cultural translation suggests perhaps a way to do so, in a luminous meditation on an “idea of affect … that does not foreclose too quickly on the reassurance of familiar taxonomies of emotions” (2020, p. 185). Gunew's representative text is a novel by Korean writer Han Kang that depicts a central character gripped by
We will need to continue to work all of this out, but my sense is that, if we view affect as a phenomenon not somehow resistant to critique but rather open to appraisal, affect theory will continue to hold out a promise of explanatory value for scholars from many disciplines for many years to come.
Footnotes
Notes
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
