Resubmission of Middlebrow: A Transatlantic Interdisciplinary Research Network

Lead Research Organisation: University of Strathclyde
Department Name: English

Abstract

In historical terms, 'middlebrow' refers to the extensive area of cultural production which situated itself between high modernism and popular culture, and to a set of tastes and social formations associated primarily with the middle class in the early to mid-twentieth century. In recent decades, 'middlebrow' has continued to designate, on the one hand, works of art and literature which combine sophistication with accessibility, and on the other, their educated and aspirational - rather than elite - audience. The ideological charge of this contested term (which can be pejorative or celebratory) depends largely on the standpoint of the observer, and a variety of cultural and class-based tensions can be read in the competing definitions of 'middlebrow'.

The study of middlebrow culture matters because it illuminates social and cultural trends in the earlier twentieth century, and helps us understand the relationship between elite, popular and 'intermediate' cultures. It matters especially now because the emergence of middlebrow cultural products in the decades following the First World War was, primarily, a result of technical innovations in printing, distribution, recording, and broadcasting. Study of this phenomenon will advance understanding of trends in our own time, as the internet has not only resulted in a vast renaissance of textual production, but has also created new channels for the transmission of images, broadcast programmes, and films. In addition the internet has generated new audiences and interpretive communities which echo the middlebrow cultural formations of the early twentieth century. Examples include electronic book clubs, new bohemian web magazines such as thesmartset.com or feathertale.com, and diaries and blogs which recall the Mass Observation project.

Hierarchies of culture, class and taste represent an increasingly important research theme in literary, historical and cultural studies, but at present, our understanding of these subjects is hampered by a lack of mechanisms for cross-disciplinary collaboration. This is a serious problem, since middlebrow culture can only be fully understood by bringing together perspectives from social and cultural history with critical analysis of literature, film, and the media. The tensions surrounding middlebrow are related to discourses of class and taste which range across the whole area of lifestyle choices and cultural consumption, from interior décor, gardens, design and fashion to preferences in music, film and books.

The research field is currently unstructured, with no regular conferences or publications, no professional association, no forum for online discussion and no organised web presence. By establishing the required structure, the network will facilitate collaboration and encourage future projects. In addition, we aim to stimulate comparative transatlantic enquiry in order overcome the tendency to treat British and American middlebrow cultures as separate phenomena. As well as comparing specific manifestations of middlebrow culture, we will also seek to understand the way cultural taxonomies are actually constructed. Our presentations and publications will explore the inflection of social and cultural capital by a range of other categories, notably class, gender, and nation. We will also investigate the material and economic dimensions of middlebrow culture, and explore the nature of middlebrow audiences and their reception of different genres of film, music and literature. The history of middlebrow reading and book collecting will be explored through study of collections such as the Sybil Campbell library, established in the 1920s. Network members will be drawn from a variety of academic disciplines in the US and UK, and additional advisors to the project include archivists, journalists and publishers.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description In terms of shifts in thinking about middlebrow, we have identified the following key changes which have been effected or consolidated through the Network's events and publications:

• a move away from the notion of a middlebrow genre or style and towards an understanding of middlebrow as a mode of production and reception. The notion that some texts/images/music/artefacts possess formal qualities which make them inherently middlebrow is very problematic, and we are increasingly talking in terms of the audiences and institutions of middlebrow culture, rather than about 'middlebrow novels' or 'middlebrow art'.

• talking about style itself in a new way. Rather than considering 'middlebrow' as a stylistic category analogous to 'modernist', we increasingly think in terms of the way particular narrative or representational styles determine the categorisation and evaluation of works of art. For instance, why are realism, humour, irony and decorative design associated with the middlebrow, and where does that leave 'modernists' who also use these modes?

• an increasingly comparative approach. One of the key aims of the Network was to further transatlantic comparisons and counteract the previous earlier tendency to treat British and North American middlebrow cultures as entirely separate. But we have moved far beyond this initial remit, in that presentations and publications arising from the project work across national boundaries, consider countries other than Britain and America, and explore colonial middlebrow. Several of our conference panels exemplified comparative study: for instance, one at MSA, The Middlebrow Lexicon, included papers on American, English and Australian-born authors (Anita Loos, Noel Coward and Elizabeth von Arnim). There is a paper on African writing in one of the special journal issues, while the Middlebrow Matters collection is explicitly structured as a transatlantic comparison. The Strathclyde conference offered panels on Welsh literary cultures, colonial fiction and Canadian middlebrow. (Indeed, Canadian academics, and Canadian topics, have become increasingly important within the Network. Since my own background is in Canadian studies, I have been able to draw the different strands of my work together by interactions with Network members such as Rifkind, M. Smith and Slemon.)

• We have strongly encouraged interdisciplinary thinking and cross-disciplinary collaboration. At the start, the group designing the Network was weighted in favour of literary scholars, but we soon brought specialists in art, music, film and social history into our Core Group and Advisory Board. We were able to access new constituencies of researchers through these groups, and have extended discussion of middlebrow into areas where it has not traditionally been a key term (e.g. design, modern languages, publishing history).
Exploitation Route See final report submitted 2010.
Sectors Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

URL http://www.middlebrow-network.com/
 
Description The Network has produced a wide range of outputs, resources, and public engagement initiatives, including an open-access book collection in Sheffield and a blog, "Reading 1900-1950", sustained by community reading groups and followed by 481 people as at Mar 2018. This was the basis of a REF impact case study. The mailing list for the Network has 370 members including many non-academic members.We have supported collaborative initiatives with a range of organisations; most recently the Glasgow Women's Library.
Sector Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural

 
Title Middlebrow Network site 
Description Website includes scholarly resources, bibliographies, and a database of members (with contact details, affiliation, research interests, research keywords, and a publication list.) 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Open access Special Collection established at Sheffield Hallam University http://www.middlebrow-network.com/SpecialCollection.aspx Blog associated with this, run by community reading group members (427 followers) http://reading19001950.wordpress.com/ 
URL http://www.middlebrow-network.com
 
Description Invited participant in Modernism and Fashion Roundtable at Modernist Studies Association, Montreal 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other academic audiences (collaborators, peers etc.)
Results and Impact discussion. Further speaking invitations from other roundtable participants.

None
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2009
 
Description Invited participant in Modernist Studies Association President's Roundtable at MLA, Los Angeles 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other academic audiences (collaborators, peers etc.)
Results and Impact Visitor : Invited talk : Invited participant in Modernist Studies Association President's Roundtable at MLA, Los Angeles

None
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2011
 
Description One of 3 keynote speakers at launch of 'Readerships and Literary cultures' Special Collection, Adsetts Centre, Sheffield Hallam University 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Visitor : Invited talk : One of 3 keynote speakers at launch of 'Readerships and Literary cultures' Special Collection, Adsetts Centre, Sheffield Hallam University.

Audience: public, librarians, reading group members.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2010
 
Description invited talk at public event, Adsetts Centre library 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Visitor : Invited talk : Talk: The Constant Nymph: The Novel

None
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2012