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The Craft of Fiction

Type: Physical

Description

This seminar seeks to reinvigorate the function of novel theory in our contemporary moment.  Rather than seeking a “new” totalizing theory for this moment, we propose understanding it as a wide-ranging genre that can blend with others—the essay, the periodical, life writing, the novel itself—and that can be generated by novelists reflecting upon their own craft as much as by the meditations of critics and philosophers. We hope to generate a discussion about the past and present of novel theory, tracing alternative lineages for the theory of the novel that help us to understand the vitality and resilience of this field of thought in the twenty-first century. 

Literary studies tends to distinguish “novel theory” from other types of thinking about the novel, especially that of novelists themselves. When novelists reflect on the novel form, such work falls in the realms of “craft” or “art” rather than the critical attention of theory associated with the venerable names of Lukács and Bakhtin. Novel theory signals seriousness and concern with the political, philosophical, historical, and social value of the novel, whereas the "craft of fiction," to use Percy Lubbock's phrase, seems most concerned with the phenomenology of novel-writing and novel-reading and the novel’s function as art. The writings of novelists like Henry Fielding, George Eliot, Virginia Woolf, Marcel Proust, Vladimir Nabokov, Zadie Smith, and Akwaeke Emezi have been understood as contributing to novel theory but have not been understood as novel theory. Yet, recently scholars have begun to see novel theory as a more capacious category that includes craft, life-writing, film theory, and novels themselves as novel theory.

We invite papers that take up novel theory from usual or surprising angles: 

  • self-theorizing novels
  • genre as theory
  • autotheory of the novel
  • craft writing as theory
  • theories of reading
  • seriality and serialization
  • book history
  • therapeutic reading
  • book reviews and essays as theories

Schedule

Friday, February 27, 2026
4:00 PM EST - 5:45 PM EST
Room: 516B

Papers

Density and Velocity: the Promise and Peril of a Democratized Novel Theory
Chris Holmes — Ithaca College
Speaker Bio

Chris Holmes is Professor of Literatures in English at Ithaca College. He is the creator and host of the literary podcast Burned by Books. He is the author of Kazuo Ishiguro as World Literature (Bloomsbury). His work has appeared in NovelModern Fiction Studies, CritiqueContemporary LiteratureLiterature CompassDiaspora, and Oxford’s Research Encyclopedia. He is part of the working group editing the podcast transcripts of the show Novel Dialogue for publication with Columbia UP.

Aspects of the Novel as Theory
Andrew Koenig — Harvard
Speaker Bio

Andrew Koenig holds a PhD in English from Harvard University, where he currently teaches literature and writing. His academic articles and essays have been published or are forthcoming in English Literary History, Modern Language Quarterly, Modernism/modernity, the Journal of Modern Literature, and elsewhere. For his essay on D.H. Lawrence and Geoff Dyer he was awarded the inaugural Marshall Brown Prize from Modern Language Quarterly.

Novel Theory by Means of a Detour
Thom Dancer — University of Toronto
Speaker Bio

Thom Dancer (he/him) works at the University of Toronto where he dabbles broadly in contemporary fiction, critical methodology, pragmatism & literature, and science fiction & fantasy as well as novel theory, aesthetic philosophy/theory, and the Russian novel (in translation).  He is the author of Critical Modesty in Contemporary Fiction as well as some other things.

Saturday, February 28, 2026
4:00 PM EST - 5:45 PM EST
Room: 516B

Papers

From Disillusion to Dada: The Avant-garde Antinovel and/as Theory of the Novel
James Sullivan — CUNY Graduate Center
Speaker Bio

James Sullivan is a PhD student in the department of Comparative Literature at the CUNY Graduate Center specializing in narrative theory, theory of the novel, and aesthetics. 

The Good Enough Novel
Daniel Wright — University of Toronto
Speaker Bio

Daniel Wright is associate professor of English at the University of Toronto, and the author of The Grounds of the Novel (Stanford UP, 2024) and Bad Logic: Reasoning about Desire in the Victorian Novel (Johns Hopkins UP, 2018) and, most recently, the editor of the Norton Library edition of Charles Dickens's Great Expectations. His essays have appeared in venues such as PMLA, Victorian Studies, ELH, and Public Books.