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Freed-Thall, Hannah

WORK TITLE: Spoiled Distinctions
WORK NOTES:
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https://vivo.brown.edu/display/hfreedth * https://news.brown.edu/new-faculty/humanities/hannah-freed-thall

RESEARCHER NOTES:

LC control no.: n 2015011536
LCCN Permalink: https://lccn.loc.gov/n2015011536
HEADING: Freed-Thall, Hannah
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670 __ |a Spoiled distinctions, 2015: |b ECIP t.p. (Hannah Freed-Thall)

PERSONAL

Female.

EDUCATION:

Graduated from Smith College; University of California at Berkeley, Ph.D., 2010.

ADDRESS

CAREER

Academic. Brown University, Providence, RI, assistant professor of comparative literature. Joukowsky Postdoctoral Fellow in the Pembroke Seminar; Princeton Society of Fellows, Cotsen Postdoctoral Fellow.

WRITINGS

  • Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism, Oxford University Press (New York, NY), 2015

Contributor to academic journals, including New Literary History, Modern Language Notes, and Contemporary French and Francophone Studies.

SIDELIGHTS

Hannah Freed-Thall is an academic. After graduating from Smith College, she completed a Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley in 2010. Freed-Thall became an assistant professor of comparative literature at Brown University and has served as a Cotsen Postdoctoral Fellow in the Princeton Society of Fellows and Joukowsky Postdoctoral Fellow in the Pembroke Seminar “Aesthetics and the Question of Beauty.” Her academic research interests include modern French literature and theory. Freed-Thall has published on these topics in a range of academic journals, including New Literary History, Modern Language Notes, and Contemporary French and Francophone Studies.

Freed-Thall published her first book, Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism, in 2015. Her book won both the Jeanne and Aldo Scaglione Prize for French and Francophone Studies and the Modernist Studies Association Prize for a First Book. The account looks into French modernism and its focus on the flawed and unexceptional, such as everyday occurrences, modest means of entertainment, and common objects, such as glasses of water, soap, spots, and statuettes that sit atop coffee tables. She uses half of the book to center her study on French novelist Marcel Proust, while the other half of the novel is centered on writers Nathalie Sarraute, Yasmina Reza, and Francis Ponge. The author examines the modern elements of Proust’s novel In Search of Lost Time, arguing that it serves as a guide to noticing beauty in the ordinary. Freed-Thall also points out the meaning of the word profanation in Ponge’s poetry, the aesthetics of bad taste in Sarraute’s fiction, and the phenomenology of blankness in Reza’s play Art.

Writing in Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, C.B. Kerr exclaimed that this is an “essential” book to read. Kerr remarked that “this is an important study of the theory of aesthetics, the sociology of culture, and the art of the quelconque.” Reviewing the book in Critical Inquiry, Zakir Paul insisted that “this excellent study” offers a “persuasive reading.” Paul concluded that “paradoxically, the more fully Spoiled Distinctions succeeds in making its case for the unsophisticated, the indistinct, and the ordinary, the more it distinguishes itself as a critical performance. Freed-Thall’s project revises the facile categorizations that make more mundane criticism possible. Knowingness remains one of the implicit enemies of this remarkable study, which provides a sustained counterargument for explorative modes of writing and thinking about aesthetic categories and what they imply about those who uphold or elide them.” Paul appended that “Spoiled Distinctions shows how writers from Proust to Reza temporarily suspend the ‘aesthetic subject’s quest to prove himself better than other people,’ allowing the ‘inestimable worth’ of the ordinary to shine forth. It is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the fate of aesthetic judgment in twentieth-century French literature.”

 

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Choice: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, April 1, 2016, C.B. Kerr, review of Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism, p. 1172.

ONLINE

  • Brown University Web site, https://www.brown.edu/ (March 18, 2017), author profile.

  • Critical Inquiry, http://criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/ (March 18, 2017), Zakir Paul, review of Spoiled Distinctions.

  • Princeton University Web site, http://www.princeton.edu/ (March 18, 2017), author profile.

  • Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism Oxford University Press (New York, NY), 2015
https://lccn.loc.gov/2015001732 Freed-Thall, Hannah, author. Spoiled distinctions : aesthetics and the ordinary in French modernism / Hannah Freed-Thall. New York : Oxford University Press, [2015] viii, 209 pages ; 25 cm PQ307.M63 F74 2015 ISBN: 9780190201029 (cloth)
  • Brown - https://vivo.brown.edu/display/hfreedth

    Hannah Freed-Thall Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature
    Hannah Freed-Thall holds a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of California, Berkeley, and specializes in comparative modernisms and modern French literature and theory. She is the author of Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism (OUP, 2015), which was awarded the Jeanne and Aldo Scaglione Prize for French and Francophone Studies and the Modernist Studies Association Prize for a First Book. Freed-Thall has been a Cotsen Postdoctoral Fellow in the Princeton Society of Fellows and a Joukowsky Postdoctoral Fellow in the Pembroke Seminar, "Aesthetics and the Question of Beauty."

  • Brown University -

    Hannah Freed-Thall
    Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature
    Mark Nickel

    Hannah Freed-Thall
    Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature
    Photo: Mike Cohea/Brown University
    Hannah Freed-Thall approaches literature — particularly modernist French literature — with a comparatist’s perspective and a musician’s sensitivity to the texture and sounds of words.
    Zut, zut, zut, zut. What is that?

    “The first dissertation chapter I ever wrote — it later became an article and is now a chapter in my book — started with that expression, which has been translated as ‘gosh,’ or ‘damn.’ It comes from Proust’s Du côté de chez Swann, ‘Swann’s Way,’ the first volume of In Search of Lost Time,” said Hannah Freed-Thall, assistant professor of comparative literature. “It’s the narrator’s first aesthetic judgment. He’s taking a walk and comes upon a stunning but perfectly ordinary assemblage: a chicken on a tool shed roof and a splotch of light on a pond. In response to this, all he can do is brandish an umbrella and say, ‘Zut, zut, zut, zut.’ That’s fascinating because Proust has such a reputation for eloquence and his novel is seen as a monument to cultural sophistication — yet here’s a moment of such unsophisticated aesthetic experience.”

    But it wasn’t a simple, single moment of non-comprehension. Freed-Thall found a constellation of such moments throughout the novel — instances of befuddlement, of bewildered beholding, of halting, inarticulate response. Taken together, she suggests, these occasions of everyday aesthetic disorientation show us a different side of Proust and of modernism itself. Setting aside familiar concepts like novelty, prestige, and heroism, Freed-Thall argues that Proust and other modernist authors multiply strategies for reading and valuing the ordinary.

    Freed-Thall’s training as a musician informs her interest in everyday aesthetics and her sensitivity to the texture and sound of words. She began her college career as a music student, working toward a degree in violin performance at the New England Conservatory in Boston. It taught her a lot about discipline and focus, and she still plays a bit when she can, but her time at the conservatory made one thing plain: She missed the academics, the analysis, the theory, the discussions, the writing, the enjoyment of literature.

    She moved to Smith College, where she earned her Bachelor of Arts in comparative literature and French literature with highest honors for a thesis on feminist theory. That led to graduate studies at the University of California–Berkeley (Ph.D., comparative literature, 2010).

    There was one more stop on the way to Brown — a three-year term as a Cotsen Postdoctoral Fellow in the Princeton Society of Fellows. She not only taught courses on emotion in modernity, philosophical aesthetics, and French thought — she taught them in French.

    In her first year at Brown, she is leading a seminar titled “Fashion and Power” and serving as a postdoctoral fellow in a Pembroke Center seminar, “Aesthetics and the Question of Beauty.”

    Ecological criticism is a more recent and growing interest. “Literary texts teach us to see the world differently and make us aware of the power of certain objects,” she said. “They can make us aware of alternative ways to view the world — nature not just as a resource to be exploited. I’m also interested in how art may make us cognizant of forms of damage or toxicity that aren’t immediately perceptible.”

    But the interest in and love of French literature and the comparative approach continue strong. “The first piece of advice that every comp lit graduate student receives is that when you get a Ph.D. in comparative literature, you have to be ready to be hired in a national literature department,” Freed-Thall said. “I love French literature and could have been very happy in a French department. But it’s really thrilling and exciting and freeing to be able to work as a comparatist on French literature, on European modernism more broadly, and on U.S. modernism as well.”

  • Princeton University - http://www.princeton.edu/sf/current-fellows/hannah-freed-thall/

    Hannah Freed-Thall
    Hannah Freed-Thall holds a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of California-Berkeley and specializes in modern French literature and theory. She has published articles in New Literary History, Modern Language Notes, and Contemporary French and Francophone Studies, and in 2013, was awarded the Malcolm Bowie Prize for her article on Proust and fake diamonds ("'Prestige of a Momentary Diamond': Economies of Distinction in Proust"). Freed-Thall is currently completing a book about the afterlife of aesthetic beauty in twentieth-century France. The project, drawn from her dissertation research, identifies four experimental aesthetic concepts that spoil distinctions of taste: Marcel Proust's "quelconque" ("whatever"), Roland Barthes's "nuance," Francis Ponge's "profanation," and Nathalie Sarraute's "douceâtre" ("sickly sweet"). Other work in progress includes a study of the rhetoric of revulsion in nineteenth- and twentieth-century France, and articles on queer ecology, modernist speculation, and grunge aesthetics in contemporary poetry. At Princeton, she has lectured on topics ranging from Rabelais to nineteenth-century art for Humanistic Studies 217-218, a team-taught course which explores interdisciplinary approaches to Western Culture since the Renaissance. In the French department, she has taught seminars on emotion in modernity and on taste and disgust, and in Fall 2013 will offer a course on contemporary French thought. Freed-Thall is also the Resident Faculty Fellow of Whitman College.

Freed-Thall, Hannah. Spoiled distinctions; aesthetics and the
ordinary in French modernism
C.B. Kerr
CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries.
53.8 (Apr. 2016): p1172.
COPYRIGHT 2016 American Library Association CHOICE
http://www.ala.org/acrl/choice/about
Full Text: 
Freed-Thall, Hannah. Spoiled distinctions; aesthetics and the ordinary in French modernism. Oxford, 2015. 209p bibl Index afp ISBN
9780190201029 cloth, $49.95; ISBN 9780190201036 ebook, contact publisher for price
53-3423
PQ307
2015-1732 CIP
This is an exceptional book about the unexceptional, the botched, the flawed, and the imperfect. Original and illuminating, the volume considers
French modernism and its fascination with the thoroughly unremarkable: everyday incidents and encounters, modest means of enjoyment, and
commonplace objects like coffee-table statuettes, glasses of tap water, spots, and soap. Devoting half of her study to Proust and the other half to
three writers she presents as his literary heirs--Francis Ponge, Nathalie Sarraute, and Yasmina Reza--Freed-Thall (comparative literature, Brown)
focuses on a significant but critically overlooked, surprisingly modern side of In Search of Lost Time: the power of the prosaic. She argues for
reading Proust's masterpiece as a guide to seeing beauty and intrinsic worth in ordinary, unsophisticated aspects of daily life. Beautifully written,
Freed-Thall's analysis of modernist variations of everyday aesthetics invites the reader to revisit Ponge's poetry while keeping in mind the word
"profanation," and to reexamine Sarrautes fiction while considering her deliberate cultivation of an aesthetics of bad taste. And the author
analyzes how Rezas play Art encourages the reader to experience the phenomenology of blankness. This is an important study of the theory of
aesthetics, the sociology of culture, and the art of the quelconque (the "whatever"). Summing Up: **** Essential. Upper-division undergraduates
through faculty.--C. B. Kerr, Vassar College
3/4/2017 General OneFile - Saved Articles
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Source Citation   (MLA 8th
Edition)
Kerr, C.B. "Freed-Thall, Hannah. Spoiled distinctions; aesthetics and the ordinary in French modernism." CHOICE: Current Reviews for
Academic Libraries, Apr. 2016, p. 1172. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?
p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA449661554&it=r&asid=c23aa59a2463bd9383862021cc72bdd8. Accessed 4 Mar.
2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A449661554

Kerr, C.B. "Freed-Thall, Hannah. Spoiled distinctions; aesthetics and the ordinary in French modernism." CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, Apr. 2016, p. 1172. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do? p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA449661554&it=r. Accessed 4 Mar. 2017.
  • Critical Inquiry
    http://criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/zakir_paul_reviews_spoiled_distinctions/

    Word count: 1623

    Zakir Paul reviews Spoiled Distinctions
    Hannah Freed-Thall. Spoiled Distinctions: Aesthetics and the Ordinary in French Modernism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. 209 pp.

    Review by Zakir Paul

    In a fragment on taste, Marcel Proust distinguishes between two sorts of readers. The first kind enjoys charming books like flowers, beautiful days, or lovers. “Others, tormented by an excessive sincerity, spoil their pleasure by wanting to test its depth and justification.”[1] From his juvenilia onward, Proust explores the critical and expressive possibilities of spoiled aesthetic judgments, while interrupting the ways taste becomes a source of intellectual and social distinction. Rather than being exclusively devoted to the pursuit of art and beauty, Proust emerges from Hannah Freed-Thall’s persuasive reading as a writer interested in exposing the “underside of cultural distinction,” pointing out how distinctions are “made and unmade.” He is joined in this excellent study by Francis Ponge, Nathalie Sarraute, and, more briefly, Yasmina Reza. Freed-Thall brings these authors together to explore a “variety of unclassifiable objects and affects,” drawing attention to how French modernism is attuned to the “ordinariness of things [which] confound critical appraisal.”

    The first part of the book, “Aesthetic Disorientation in Proust,” addresses the notion of “prestige” (defined as the “semi-magical production of everyday cultural value”), the “quelconque” or “whatever” (“an overlap of singularity and banality”) and finally “nuance” (a “shimmering, minimal variation”). The second section, “Mid-century experiments,” focuses on Ponge’s awkward “exposed labor of poetic making” and Sarraute’s “douceâtre” or “sickly sweet,” a “minor quotidian form of disgust.” As these categories announce, Spoiled Distinctions operates in a minor key, shunning the beautiful and the sublime for more quotidian notions that make traditional aesthetic terms tremble. The everyday, like the aesthetic sign, is radically ambivalent as it entails both a referential aspect and a flight from conceptual coherence. Freed-Thall innovatively builds upon a constellation of critical writings on affect and aesthetic categories from Eve Kosofky Sedgwick to Sianne Ngai. The introduction elegantly maps her argument, while situating the question of “aesthetic indistinction” in relation to recent studies of modernism and the everyday from Michael Sheringham to Liesl Olson and Siobhan Phillips.

    The first chapter, “Prestige,” begins by reading Proust’s pastiches in The Lemoine Affair against the grain. Proust’s parodies of Honoré de Balzac, Gustave Flaubert, Henri de Saint-Simon, and others are commonly read by critics as somewhere between a playful farce and a studied attempt by the budding novelist to rid his style of the influence of his predecessors. By focusing instead on their publication in the Figaro and the hoax that they depict—in 1908, Henri Lemoine momentarily conned experts by claiming he could create real diamonds artificially—the chapter underscores Proust’s interest in the volatility of economic and aesthetic value. According to Freed-Thall, pastiches and their dissemination in the newspaper “reveals the cultivation of distinction and the fabrication of art as banal, non-auratic, everyday exercises, and as enchanted practices of absorption and self-loss” (p. 25). In her reading, pastiche replaces metaphor as the key to Proust’s style. The next chapter, “Babble,” focuses on scenes from the Recherche in which the narrator is unable to appropriate sensations in a way that could enable them to redeem the ordinary or grant cohesion to the subject. Against epiphanic and redemptive readings of Proust, Freed-Thall concentrates on mundane scenes—the sight of a chicken on a wet rooftop above a gardener’s shed; the Martinville steeples; the little yellow patch of wall in A View of the Delft—that lead Proust’s characters to stop, stutter, and even die, rather than to masterfully consolidate their aesthetic judgment in a manner capable of producing analytic or social distinction. Much of this reading is directed against the “sublimatory” aesthetics of Time Regained, the final volume of the novel, that attempts to schematize the Proustian project, as well as teleological readings that would take the narrator’s theory of involuntary memory or successive selves as a guide through this fictive world. Unable to shore up the remains of “whatever” sensation into beauty, the passages of Proust’s novel discussed here suggest that we attend instead to nuance, and the scale of radiance that makes the everyday appear both ordinary and invaluable, arresting the “drive toward epistemological (aesthetic or erotic) revelation that often dominates the narrative” (p. 4). Freed-Thall thus shifts the focus from love, memory, and lost time to clouds, hawthorns, and flowers read as “haptic” spaces capable of touching us without being assimilated. Drawing on Roland Barthes and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, the third and final chapter devoted to Proust makes its case for “nuance” as form in its “least systematic” and “formless manifestation,” one which nudges the reader toward “gentler and weaker modalities of aesthetic interest” (p. 90).

    Ponge and Sarraute come to exemplify these weaker modes of aesthetic interest, although it remains open to question whether they are gentler. The chapter on Ponge does not read Le parti pris des choses, choosing instead to focus on his rag-tag notebook poems, especially the 1941 Mounine, or Note Struck in Afterthought on a Provence Sky and the 1949 Le verre d’eau (A Glass of Water) illustrated by Eugène de Kermadec. Although the chapter opens with Agamben’s notion of “profanation,” the concept yields to close readings that show how Ponge awkwardly belabors the linguistic failures of his poetry in order to “trouble the economic and aesthetic logic that grants the greatest worth to the rarest and least usable things” (p. 112). Stylistically, Freed-Thall notes, these poems teem with failed analogies, near repetition, and reformulations. Ponge’s description of a glass of water, or a tint of sky that provokes an “aesthetic sob” on a bus-ride become part of a larger attempt to divest poetry from extraordinary beauty.

    While Ponge inherits Proust’s exploration of babble, Sarraute takes up his sociological investigation into the ways in which judgments of taste constitute a will to distinction. “Sarraute’s Bad Taste” uses Austin’s speech act theory to argue that judgments of taste are failed performatives, utterances unable to muster the universal assent demanded by aesthetic judgment since Immanuel Kant. Read through Pierre Bourdieu’s Distinction, such supposedly disinterested judgments are instead construed as thinly veiled attempts to situate oneself both in relation to a prestigious aesthetic object (a vaulted kitchen door in The Planetarium or a pre-Columbian statuette in Do You Hear Them?) and other subjects who invariably fail to appreciate the value one seeks to accrue from owning or displaying such things. Sarraute’s characters, like Reza’s, fret and fidget over why their idea of beauty is not shared by others. Their fraught language is overtaken by clichés and fuzzy adjectives. Yet these contests never quite descend into the world of abjection cultivated and theorized by the avant-garde from Georges Bataille to Julia Kristeva. Instead, Sarraute’s readers are left with a cloying aftertaste that Freed-Thall identifies as the “sickly-sweet,” an instance of “the mixed or muddled feelings” that the novelist dubbed “tropisms.”

    The afterword plays out the themes of the book using Reza’s “Art” (1994) as a sounding board. In passing, we learn that its translator chose to set the English version of the play in Paris since he could only imagine three adults arguing about a blank painting in France. Freed-Thall comments that much of what Anglophone audiences found funny about the play is its “Frenchness,” specifying that there is more at stake in “Art” than “laughing at the French and their attachment to the ghosts of ancien régime distinction” (p. 145). Readers may wonder what is particularly French about the variant of modernism studied in Spoiled Distinctions. Despite the sustained reliance on Bourdieu, relatively little is said here about the “literary field” of French modernism beyond the claim that it is “particularly concerned with relations among art, social distinction, and everyday life” (p. 12). French language criticism, it is worth noting, largely eschews the category of modernism, preferring to speak either in terms of schools—Symbolists, Surrealists, and others—or to use military metaphors as periodization (avant-garde/arrière-garde, avant-guerre/entre-deux guerres). Is “French modernism,” then, like French theory, an invention of translators and critics writing in English? Finally, how would Freed-Thall’s argument contend with thinkers who challenge Bourdieu’s social critique of judgment? I am thinking, in particular, of Jacques Rancière who considers Distinction as a form of demystification so intent on classifying aesthetic subjects that it denies the power of art to redistribute the sensible in ways that confound the sociological survey and its grid. These queries are hardly meant to fault this subtle, inventive book. Rather, they suggest some of the larger conversations that it may incite at a time when the field of modernist studies remains caught between Anglo-American figures and various models of world literature.

    Paradoxically, the more fully Spoiled Distinctions succeeds in making its case for the unsophisticated, the indistinct, and the ordinary, the more it distinguishes itself as a critical performance. Freed-Thall’s project revises the facile categorizations that make more mundane criticism possible. Knowingness remains one of the implicit enemies of this remarkable study, which provides a sustained counterargument for explorative modes of writing and thinking about aesthetic categories and what they imply about those who uphold or elide them. Spoiled Distinctions shows how writers from Proust to Reza temporarily suspend the “aesthetic subject’s quest to prove himself better than other people” allowing the “inestimable worth” of the ordinary to shine forth. It is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the fate of aesthetic judgment in twentieth-century French literature.

    [1] Marcel Proust, “La Beauté veritable,” in Contre Sainte-Beuve, ed. Pierre Clarac (Paris, 1971), p. 342.