Early in my career, I have been fortunate to have regular opportunities to teach courses in Rhetoric & Popular Culture and Rhetorical Criticism for undergraduate and student graduate audiences. Although the seminars are quite different in terms of content, both require some focus on teaching rhetorical/critical methods. In this series, I’ll be reflecting on the struggles I’ve encountered teaching (and doing) critical methods and the lessons I’ve learned from my students as they follow the critical path.
At the end of my Rhetoric and Popular Culture seminar, I get to watch my students present their semester long criticisms to their peers and then struggle to pose and answer questions about the arguments that they’ve come to. Mostly, these presentations are quick summaries of obvious theses (e.g., “As it turns out, almost all of the Disney princess films are sexist” or, “Apparently, Childish Gambino’s song ‘This is America’ is about racism”) followed by a couple of superficial questions and a lot of awkward eye-contact avoidance. There are a few gems, but mostly the results are predictable after seeing the proposals in the third week of the semester. Regardless of their quality, though, they tend to be useful as poi
nts of reflection about how I’ve taught the research methods and theoretical foundations that are supposedly on display.
A few semesters ago, I noticed a recurring argument that students used to contextualize the findings of their research. It goes like this:
“Obviously, back in the day this text wouldn’t have been possible because culture is so much more open to LGBTQIA+ identities, women, folx of color, etc.”
The logic if “back in the day” is troubling because it takes the progressiveness of contemporary culture for granted. It rests on some assumed universality of the moment that cannot be possible. It also takes the “wins” of critical/cultural scholarship for granted by assuming that the struggles against racism, sexism, and homophobia—struggles against power—are somehow not ongoing struggles with histories that affect the here and now.
Simply, the “back in the day” argument gets too much wrong. Things aren’t all that much better than they were back in the day and, in those cases where they are, that’s a weak standard for social progress—and one that undermines the whole critical project. Better isn’t enough and it never will be. More troublingly, just because today is better than yesterday doesn’t mean that today is good, or that today is right, or that today is just. The critical project matters because it remains unfinished. There is no ultimate win, only the slow drive of progress toward a tomorrow that is more equitable than today.
In some distant future, say at the end of a career, a productive critic should reflect on the progress made by the critical project. Upon reflection, a critic should be able to say that she has made the world better. Better is a worthy goal for such reflection. But reflection is not criticism. For criticism of the here and now, better is bullshit. Criticism rests on the brokenness of today, not the idea that we’re better than “back in the day.”
Returning to critical methods, it’s worth remembering that all criticism is written “back in the day” for the its reader. The best criticism takes that responsibility seriously. Our methods, as critics, rhetorical or otherwise, require embracing the complexity, nuance, and brokenness of our culture. Our methods require us to see culture for what it is.
From a practical standpoint, the “back in the day” argument lets contemporary culture off the hook and, at the same time, reveals the scholar’s laziness (intentional or not). The critic’s task, from a rhetorical standpoint, is an epideictic one—a task connected to its moment in time. Criticism is about praise and blame. It’s about judgement. We write about the here and now. That means that we must spend time understanding the here and now for our reader, and we must do so unflinchingly. Reflecting on how things were “back in the day” reduces all of that important contextual work that makes criticism meaningful and productive in its moment to a wink and a nod.
Arguments about a text’s context that hang on vague comparisons to our past sins ignore the present and, thus, obscure the power of the critic’s judgement. As if to say, “I’ve done all of this research but, but you, dear reader, probably already know and agree with the conclusion that it lead me to because you live in less-racist/sexist/homophobic times than I did when the project began.”
On the one hand, I hope, sincerely, that this is true for my readers. I hope that my writing finds culture in a moment that is more just than the one in which I write. And I recognize that my cultural moment is, in some ways, more just than those even of my recent past.
On the other hand, I also hope that my criticism of my moment (whether my text is of recent or distant historical) will be productive, that it will be useful, for my reader in her moment—and her moment will necessarily be in the future. The only way that’s possible is to present my moment in sober clarity for my reader so that she can make connections with her own. The imperfections in my moment are waypoints that help to chart the progress of social change, they can help my reader both see more clearly the imperfections of their own moment and to track those imperfections across time to their time.
Make no excuses, justifications, or explanations for the imperfections of your moment. See them. Call them what they are so that your reader can see them, too, even though they may have changed by the time your reader encounters your writing. It’s not (just) that context matters. It’s that context that helps the reader see why criticism mattered “back in your day” and why it still matters in their day, too.
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