New Books Network

“I love a dialectical reader, and best is a dialectical reader who cries”


Listen Later

Eighteenth century prison break artist and folk hero Jack Sheppard is among history’s most frequently adapted rogues: his exploits have inspired Daniel Defoe, John Gay, Bertolt Brecht, and most recently, Jordy Rosenberg, whose first novel, Confessions of the Fox (2018), rewrites Sheppard as a trans man and Sheppard’s partner Bess as a South Asian lascar and part of the resistance movement in the Fens. Rosenberg embeds the manuscript tracing their love story within a satirical frame narrative of a professor whose discovery of it gets him caught up in an absurd and increasingly alarming tussle with neoliberal academic bureaucracy and corporate malfeasance. Jordy is joined here by Annie McClanahan, a scholar of contemporary literature and culture who describes herself as an unruly interloper in the 18th century. 

Like Jordy’s novel, their conversation limns the 18th and 21st centuries, taking up 18th century historical concerns and the messy early history of the novel alongside other textual and vernacular forms, but also inviting us to rethink resistance and utopian possibility today through the lens of this earlier moment. Jordy and Annie leapfrog across centuries, reading the 17th century ballad “The Powtes Complaint” in relation to extractivism and environmental justice, theorizing the “riotous, anarchic, queer language of the dispossessed” that characterizes Confessions of the Fox as a kind of historically informed cognitive estrangement for the present, and considering the work theory does (and does not) do in literary works and in academic institutions.

Mentioned in this Episode

  • Peter Linebaugh, The London Hanged
  • John Bender, Imagining the Penitentiary
  • Dean Spade
  • Samuel Delany’s Return to Nevèrÿon series (Tales of NevèrÿonNeveryónaFlight from NevèrÿonReturn to Nevèrÿon)
  • Samuel Richardson’s Pamela
  • Sal Nicolazzo
  • Greta LaFleur
  • “The Powtes Complaint,” first printed in William Dugdale’s The history of imbanking and drayning of divers fenns and marshes, both in forein parts and in this kingdom, and of the improvements thereby extracted from records, manuscripts, and other authentick testimonies (1662)
  • Fred Moten
  • Saidiya Hartman
  • Jordy Rosenberg, “Gender Trouble on Mother’s Day” and “The Daddy Dialectic”
  • Amy De’Ath, “Hidden Abodes and Inner Bonds,” in After Marx, edited by Colleen Lye and Christopher Nealon
  • Aziz Yafi, “Digging Tunnels with Pens”
  • Jasbir Puar
  • Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    New Books NetworkBy New Books

    • 4.3
    • 4.3
    • 4.3
    • 4.3
    • 4.3

    4.3

    147 ratings


    More shows like New Books Network

    View all
    The New Yorker: Fiction by The New Yorker

    The New Yorker: Fiction

    3,330 Listeners

    The Book Review by The New York Times

    The Book Review

    3,917 Listeners

    The LRB Podcast by The London Review of Books

    The LRB Podcast

    314 Listeners

    The Partially Examined Life Philosophy Podcast by Mark Linsenmayer, Wes Alwan, Seth Paskin, Dylan Casey

    The Partially Examined Life Philosophy Podcast

    2,118 Listeners

    New Books in Critical Theory by Marshall Poe

    New Books in Critical Theory

    147 Listeners

    Jacobin Radio by Jacobin

    Jacobin Radio

    1,460 Listeners

    London Review Bookshop Podcast by London Review Bookshop

    London Review Bookshop Podcast

    134 Listeners

    Philosophy Bites by Edmonds and Warburton

    Philosophy Bites

    1,532 Listeners

    The TLS Podcast by The TLS

    The TLS Podcast

    181 Listeners

    The Dig by Daniel Denvir

    The Dig

    1,590 Listeners

    Radio Atlantic by The Atlantic

    Radio Atlantic

    2,380 Listeners

    The Paris Review by The Paris Review

    The Paris Review

    805 Listeners

    What's Left of Philosophy by Lillian Cicerchia, Owen Glyn-Williams, Gil Morejón, and William Paris

    What's Left of Philosophy

    290 Listeners

    The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

    The Ezra Klein Show

    16,525 Listeners

    Past Present Future by David Runciman

    Past Present Future

    347 Listeners