James Wood (b. 1965) holds an unusual position in contemporary Anglo-American letters. He arrived at the moment when the authority of literary criticism was collapsing and for a generation restored the role of the critic as a feared and consequential public judge. His career traces the institutional migration of literary authority from British newspaper reviewing into the elite American university and magazine system. His own writing became a central battleground in the argument over what the novel should be in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.
James Douglas Graham Wood was born on November 1, 1965 in Durham, England. His father, Dennis William Wood (b. 1928), grew up in Dagenham and went on to a double career as a professor of zoology at Durham University and an ordained Anglican minister. His mother, Sheila Graham Wood, née Lillia, was a schoolteacher from Scotland. The home stood inside the evangelical wing of the Church of England. Wood has described the atmosphere as austere and serious. The conjunction of empirical science and Protestant ministry inside the father’s life left a lasting imprint on the son’s work. Wood’s criticism fuses close observation with moral seriousness. After he lost religious belief in his twenties, the theological architecture remained. His essays return again and again to grace, incarnation, inwardness, guilt, suffering, and moral attention. He treats fiction as a moral-perceptual apparatus rather than as ideology or social discourse. The great novelist, in his account, attends to consciousness with a near-sacred seriousness, and prose style becomes an ethical discipline of seeing.
Wood’s schooling placed him inside the final stages of an older English literary order. He attended the Durham Chorister School and Eton College, both on music scholarships. He read English Literature at Jesus College, Cambridge, graduating with a First in 1988. He inherited the remains of a culture shaped by F. R. Leavis (1895-1978), George Steiner (1929-2020), Frank Kermode (1919-2010), Christopher Ricks (b. 1933), and the broader tradition of postwar English literary humanism. He matured at the precise moment when that order was fragmenting under several pressures at once: the spread of French theory inside universities, the commercialization of publishing, the acceleration of digital media, and the weakening of the general literary public.
After Cambridge, Wood went to London and lived in Herne Hill while trying to make himself into a working reviewer. He succeeded faster than almost anyone of his generation. At twenty-six he became chief literary critic at The Guardian, a post he held from 1992 to 1995. From the first he wrote as a prosecutor rather than a cautious reviewer. His early criticism carried an iconoclastic energy. He dismantled established literary reputations with a confidence many readers found exhilarating and others found arrogant.
His treatment of John Updike (1932-2009) showed the deeper logic of his criticism. Wood admired Updike’s sentence-level brilliance while accusing him of lacking structural and metaphysical seriousness. Updike in Wood’s rendering became a writer of extraordinary surfaces whose novels sometimes lacked existential weight. The distinction has organized Wood’s evaluative method ever since. Beautiful prose alone is insufficient. Style requires pressure beneath it. Sentences need moral and psychological necessity. Wood treated Steiner’s intellectual grandiosity with an English empirical skepticism. He preferred the small scale: gesture, embarrassment, sensory perception, tonal modulation, psychological hesitation. Even when discussing transcendence or faith, he approached them through concrete particulars rather than from theoretical altitude. This empirical bias placed him in a long English tradition extending from Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) through George Orwell (1903-1950) and V. S. Naipaul (1932-2018). Literature should remain accountable to ordinary human texture. Abstraction must yield to observation.
In 1992 he married the novelist Claire Messud (b. 1966), whom he had met at Cambridge. The couple has two children. Wood moved with Messud to the United States in the mid-1990s, and the move transformed his role. He joined The New Republic as a senior editor in 1995, a position he held until 2007. The New Republic in those years still operated as a center of serious literary and political argument, and Wood quickly became a leading literary critic in the English-speaking world. He began teaching at Boston University, co-teaching a course with Saul Bellow (1915-2005), and later taught at Kenyon College in Ohio. In September 2003 he started at Harvard as a visiting lecturer. The appointment matured into the Professorship of the Practice of Literary Criticism. In 2007 he left The New Republic for The New Yorker, where he has been a staff writer and book critic ever since. He won the National Magazine Award for reviews and criticism in 2009 and held a Berlin Prize Fellowship at the American Academy in Berlin.
His first essay collection, The Broken Estate: Essays on Literature and Belief, appeared in 1999 and established his reputation in book form. The volume gathers essays on Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880), Herman Melville (1819-1891), Anton Chekhov (1860-1904), Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910), Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821-1881), and other figures, organized around the disappearance of religious belief and the survival of religious sensibility inside secular fiction. The novel, on this account, inherits some of the labor once performed by scripture. His first novel, The Book Against God, appeared in 2003 and turned the same material into fiction. A young philosophy student named Thomas Bunting cannot finish his dissertation against God and cannot stop lying to his father, an Anglican vicar. The autobiographical pressure beneath the criticism became visible inside the fiction.
The Irresponsible Self: On Laughter and the Novel followed in 2004 and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. The book gathered Wood's celebrated essay on Zadie Smith (b. 1975) and White Teeth, where he introduced the term that has trailed him ever since: hysterical realism. He used the phrase to describe a strain of contemporary maximalist fiction characterized by proliferating systems, manic subplots, encyclopedic information, comic performance, and elaborate social architecture. He directed the argument at Don DeLillo (b. 1936), Thomas Pynchon (b. 1937), David Foster Wallace (1962-2008), Salman Rushdie (b. 1947), and Smith. His charge that these novels know a thousand things and yet fail to know a single human being captured the dispute in a sentence. He aimed at something deeper than length or ambition. He saw a structural panic inside the form. Novelists filled their books with information and event in compensation for weak characterization. Fiction exists, on his account, to preserve the irreducibility of consciousness. Once characters become functions of systems, the novel loses its deepest task.
The argument provoked a long counter-argument. Critics influenced by Marxism, postcolonial theory, and systems analysis argued that modernity has destabilized the sovereign individual. Globalization, digital networks, finance capitalism, bureaucracy, empire, surveillance, and technological mediation require new literary forms capable of representing distributed systems rather than isolated minds. The disagreement runs deeper than aesthetics. It concerns competing theories of the human person. Wood remains committed to the perceiving individual as the primary scale of literature. His detractors argue that contemporary reality exceeds that scale. The conflict placed him in indirect opposition to Fredric Jameson (1934-2024) and the tradition of cognitive mapping, and to the novelistic traditions that attempt to render informational or geopolitical totality.
How Fiction Works, published in 2008, became his most read book and gave the fullest statement of his critical method. The volume serves at once as a manifesto, a reading guide, and a craft manual. Wood argues that the essence of fiction lies in the rendering of consciousness, and he champions free indirect style, psychological density, and carefully managed detail as the central technologies of the novel. The book entered the American MFA system, and Wood’s vocabulary became embedded in the pedagogy of creative writing. Thousands of university-trained writers absorbed his assumptions about realism, consciousness, and prose texture. He moved from reviewer of literary culture to architect of it.
That architecture produced its own backlash. Critics argued that Wood’s preferences helped produce a polished but risk-averse American realism, a fiction of intimate domestic consciousness and calibrated prose that avoids larger political, technological, and historical structures. The complaint has merit and limits. Wood’s own canon is broader than his critics admit. He championed W. G. Sebald (1944-2001), whose work preserves intimate consciousness while confronting collective trauma, memory, displacement, and twentieth-century violence. He championed Marilynne Robinson (b. 1943), whose fiction combines theological seriousness with meticulous psychological realism. He has written with admiration about Elena Ferrante and a range of contemporary writers across languages and traditions.
The Fun Stuff and Other Essays appeared in 2012, The Nearest Thing to Life in 2015, Upstate in 2018, and Serious Noticing: Selected Essays 1997-2019 in 2019. The Nearest Thing to Life draws on the Mandel Lectures at Brandeis and turns the autobiographical pressure of the criticism into open memoir. Wood writes about his father, his Durham childhood, the loss of faith, emigration to America, the death of his sister, and the persistence of religious longing inside secular life. The book makes plain what the criticism had always implied. The questions that organize his reading are the questions of his life.
Upstate (2018), his second novel, follows an English father, his American academic daughter, and her sister through a winter visit in upstate New York. The book is quieter than The Book Against God and more controlled, a study of family love under conditions of distance, illness, and the slow accumulation of years. Critics noted that the novel embodied the same virtues the criticism had defended: tonal modulation, free indirect access to multiple consciousnesses, restrained perceptual texture, moral attention without moral pronouncement.
At Harvard, Wood occupies an unusual academic role. He works not as a conventional specialist producing monographs for peer-reviewed systems. He works as a public critic absorbed into the university, addressing educated general readers while teaching seminars on the novel. The position itself reflects a historical change. As newspapers declined and literary reviewing fragmented online, elite universities began to absorb functions once performed by independent literary culture. Harvard now serves as a legitimizing center for serious criticism in a way it had no need to during the era of the older newspaper review pages and the early decades of the New York Review of Books.
His prose style contributes to his authority. He writes with compressed intelligence, tactile sensitivity, and rhythmic care. His essays move from microscopic textual observation toward philosophical conclusion without abandoning the texture of the sentence. He distrusts jargon because jargon protects critics from the vulnerability of judgment. He insists that some novels see more clearly than others, that some sentences carry more weight than others, that some writers enlarge consciousness while others perform intelligence. His insistence on judgment may explain his enduring standing. Much contemporary criticism prefers contextualization, political positioning, and sociological decoding. Wood asks the reader to decide whether the prose on the page sees the world.
His career records both survival and elegy. He belongs to a late generation that still believed literary criticism could function as a central intellectual activity rather than a niche specialization or a market accessory. He began as an insurgent attacking the literary establishment and became an institution within it. He defended close reading while the surrounding culture moved toward speed, fragmentation, and ideological signaling. He preserved aesthetic discrimination in an era suspicious of evaluative hierarchy. He stands as a figure inside the long retreat of the humanistic public sphere and as an argument against that retreat.
The Broken Estate: James Wood Through Charles Taylor
Charles Taylor (b. 1931) gives modernity its sharpest pair of names. The porous self lives open to the world. Spirits, gods, ancestors, charged objects, sacred places, and demonic forces act on it from outside. Meaning arrives from beyond. The boundary between self and cosmos breathes. The buffered self lives sealed inside its own consciousness. The world arrives as data. Meaning gets generated inside the mind. Spirits and sacred objects no longer act. The boundary between self and cosmos hardens. Taylor’s argument in A Secular Age runs that modernity slowly replaces the first self with the second, and the replacement leaves a residue. The buffered self cannot forget the porous condition. It feels flattened, lonely, stripped of resonance. It reaches for art, romance, nature, drugs, politics, and certain kinds of fiction in an attempt to recover what the porous self once had.
James Wood chronicles the porous self trying to survive inside the buffered condition. The title of his first essay collection announces the territory. The Broken Estate is the estate of belief that once held grace, incarnation, providence, and judgment as living realities. Wood writes from inside the breakage. He cannot restore the estate. He cannot stop attending to its ruins.
The biography sets the terms. Wood grew up inside the evangelical wing of the Church of England, in a home where his father preached and taught zoology in the same week. Empirical science and Protestant ministry shared the breakfast table. The conjunction shaped him. He inherited a habit of close observation joined to moral seriousness, and he received a porous-self formation: sin, grace, conscience, salvation, scripture as living word. He lost the doctrine in his twenties. He never lost the formation. His criticism reads novels the way an evangelical reads scripture, with attention to revelation, hypocrisy, sentiment, falseness, and the texture of the soul.
The technical core of his criticism follows from this. Wood champions free indirect style. He treats it as the deepest technology the novel has produced. Free indirect style dissolves the line between narrator and character. The reader inhabits a consciousness from inside. The technique presupposes a self with interior depth and assumes the reader can be ushered through the wall. In Taylor’s terms, free indirect style is a porous-self device. It lets a buffered modern reader briefly recover the experience of consciousness opened to another consciousness. Wood does not theorize the technique in Taylor’s vocabulary. He works the territory by instinct.
The canon follows the same logic. Wood champions Marilynne Robinson, whose Calvinist fiction takes grace, conscience, and the soul as real categories of experience. He champions W. G. Sebald, whose narrators move through landscape and object as though the dead still act through them, as though the buffered surface of secular Europe might break and let history pour through. He champions Chekhov, whose characters suffer from porous longings inside a world that has begun to seal itself. He champions Tolstoy, whose great scenes (Levin watching his son’s birth, Pierre at Borodino, Ivan Ilyich on his deathbed) stage the porous self breaking through the buffered routines of social life. He champions Saul Bellow, whose narrators carry the porous self into Chicago and refuse to surrender it. He champions V. S. Naipaul, whose flat sentences hide an obstinate attention to the resonance of small objects and inherited shame.
His targets map the same fault line from the other side. Don DeLillo writes the buffered self inside terminal late capitalism. Consciousness in DeLillo flattens into media saturation, brand awareness, paranoia, and ambient dread. Thomas Pynchon writes characters who exist as functions of conspiracies they cannot map. David Foster Wallace writes the buffered self in its last phase, trapped inside recursive irony, unable to break the wall outward. Zadie Smith in her first novel writes a comic social architecture, with characters as nodes inside a network of multicultural systems. Wood’s complaint that these novels know a thousand things and fail to know a single human being translates into Taylor’s vocabulary. The novels have accepted the buffered self as the final form of consciousness. They have stopped trying to break the seal.
The phrase hysterical realism names the diagnosis. Wood sees in the maximalist novel a kind of panic. The novelist piles up information, event, subplot, and comic invention because the underlying form has lost faith in the interior life it once represented. Hysterical realism is the buffered self performing vitality at full volume to compensate for the loss of porous depth. Wood reads the noise as symptom.
This places him in long opposition to the systems-fiction tradition and its critical defenders. Fredric Jameson and the tradition of cognitive mapping argue that modern reality has outgrown the scale of individual consciousness. The novel must learn to represent corporations, supply chains, finance capital, surveillance networks, and ecological systems. The buffered self in this account no longer counts as a sufficient lens, because the forces that govern modern life act below and above its threshold. Wood and Jameson share a diagnosis of disenchantment. They draw opposite conclusions about what fiction should do with it. Jameson says the novel must map the system. Wood says the novel must preserve the soul.
Taylor’s account of cross-pressure clarifies why Wood occupies this position. The modern condition for Taylor is one of unresolved tension. The buffered self cannot fully believe. It also cannot fully unbelieve. It feels the loss of the sacred even while it accepts the disenchanted account of nature. Cross-pressure is the lived experience of a self that has crossed into the buffered condition without surrendering porous longings. Wood’s criticism dramatizes the cross-pressure. He treats the novel as the place where religious longing survives without doctrine. His own phrase, that the novel is a secular form of scripture, is unintelligible outside Taylor’s account. The phrase assumes a reader who can no longer trust scripture and still needs what scripture once supplied.
The autobiographical writing makes the diagnosis visible. The Nearest Thing to Life circles the same material the criticism circles from a distance. Wood writes about his father’s death, his mother’s house, the death of his sister, his emigration to America, his sense of secular homelessness. The phrase secular homelessness is a Taylor formulation in everything except attribution. The buffered self at home in the disenchanted world should feel no homelessness. Wood feels homelessness because the porous formation has not faded. The criticism and the memoir converge on the same point. Marilynne Robinson and the dead father in Durham occupy the same territory. Both stand for what the buffered condition cannot supply.
Read through Taylor, the much-criticized narrowness of Wood’s preferred canon looks like confession rather than parochialism. He champions fiction that holds the porous line. He attacks fiction that has surrendered it. The choice runs deeper than aesthetics. It tracks his own unresolved cross-pressure. He cannot return to faith. He cannot accept that the disappearance of faith leaves nothing behind. The novel becomes the residual sanctuary in which the porous self might still be addressed.
The Taylor frame also reveals the limit of Wood’s project. He cannot accept that the buffered self might be the truth of late modernity rather than a falling away from a richer earlier condition. He keeps reaching for resonance. He treats DeLillo and Pynchon as failures of attention rather than as accurate descriptions of a self that has become what they portray. A critic willing to accept the buffered self as a destination rather than a deficit might read these novelists as forms of realism Wood cannot allow himself to recognize. The same Taylor frame that explains Wood’s strengths explains why he cannot fully credit the work of his opponents.
His Christianity-shaped imagination supplies the heat. His empirical training supplies the cool. The combination makes him a specialist in the cross-pressure he names without theorizing. He reads the modern novel as the form invented for the buffered self by writers who could not stop missing the porous one. He defends the novelists who keep the longing alive. He attacks the novelists who have made peace with the loss. The criticism makes a single sustained argument across thirty years and ten books, and the argument is Taylor’s argument carried out in literary terms by a man who has lived the cross-pressure from inside.
The Set
James Wood operates inside a small overlapping set of editors, critics, novelists, and academics who run the remaining high precincts of Anglo-American literary culture. The institutional spine sits at The New Yorker under David Remnick (b. 1958), where Wood has been book critic since 2007 alongside Adam Gopnik (b. 1956), Louis Menand (b. 1952), Jill Lepore (b. 1966), Hilton Als (b. 1960), Anthony Lane (b. 1962), Joan Acocella (b. 1945), and the fiction editor Deborah Treisman (b. 1970). The magazine’s back-of-the-book pages set the tone for serious literary judgment in the United States and supply the canon for the educated general reader.
Wood’s wife, the novelist Claire Messud, sits at the same table. Their friends and frequent reviewers include Daniel Mendelsohn (b. 1960), Pankaj Mishra (b. 1969), and the critic Caleb Crain. Wood’s Harvard colleagues include Stephen Greenblatt (b. 1943), Marjorie Garber, Louis Menand on the academic side, and the late Helen Vendler (1933-2024). The Brandeis lecture series that produced The Nearest Thing to Life and the Mandel chair connect the world to a New England humanities establishment running through Princeton, Yale, Columbia, and the older Ivy English departments.
The Anglo wing connects through The Guardian, the London Review of Books under Mary-Kay Wilmers (b. 1938), and the older novelist generation of Martin Amis (1949-2023), Christopher Hitchens (1949-2011), Ian McEwan (b. 1948), and Julian Barnes (b. 1946). Hitchens and Amis admired Wood early. Hitchens once distributed a Wood review of John Updike to his own students.
The publishing side runs through Farrar, Straus and Giroux (Wood‘s publisher and the historic home of serious American letters), Knopf, the Random House imprints, and a few smaller houses. The legacy magazine network includes the New York Review of Books founded by Robert Silvers (1929-2017) and Barbara Epstein (1928-2006), the London Review of Books, The New Republic of the Leon Wieseltier (b. 1952) era when Wood was senior editor, Harper’s, The Atlantic, and at one remove The Paris Review under Lorin Stein and George Plimpton‘s successors.
The novelists Wood has consecrated form the core of the canon the set treats as living. Marilynne Robinson stands at the top. W. G. Sebald defined the high European mode. Elena Ferrante carries the European novel into the present. Edward P. Jones, Joseph O’Neill, Norman Rush, Lydia Davis (b. 1947), Aleksandar Hemon (b. 1964), Teju Cole (b. 1975), Rachel Cusk (b. 1967), and Ben Lerner (b. 1979) round out the group. Older American writers such as Cynthia Ozick (b. 1928) sit as honored elders.
What the set values can be named with a small set of words.
Sentence-level prose. The well-made sentence is the test of seriousness. Members can quote Flaubert on le mot juste and recognize the technical achievements of a paragraph the way musicians recognize voice leading.
Restraint. Excess registers as vulgarity. The set distrusts the comic, the encyclopedic, the maximalist, and the genre. It prefers the controlled domestic novel, the spare lyric memoir, and the patient European modernist.
Inwardness. The novel exists to render consciousness. A book that fails at inwardness has failed the novelistic task.
Moral seriousness without doctrine. The set inherits the tone of older religious humanism without its content. It distrusts proselytizing believers and triumphant atheists alike. The Marilynne Robinson position (taking belief seriously while remaining inside literary fiction) supplies the ideal.
Judgment. The set defends the right to say one book is better than another. It treats relativism as moral failure. It treats the absence of evaluation in much current academic writing as a betrayal of literature.
Continuity with tradition. The realist line from Tolstoy and Chekhov through Henry James, Joyce, Mann, and Bellow remains the spine. Postmodern experiment counts as a tributary. Genre counts as the outside.
What gives this world meaning, in place of the religion most members no longer hold, is the survival of serious reading. Members understand themselves as custodians. They are saving the novel from market promotion on one side and academic ideology on the other. They carry the tradition forward by reading well, judging accurately, and writing prose that deserves the attention they demand for the work under review. The vocation supplies a sense of mission strong enough to organize a life. Wood himself has written that the novel is a secular form of scripture, and the line names the function reading performs for the set. Fiction substitutes for the religious practices many members lost or never had. A successful Wood essay carries the rhythm and weight of a sermon delivered to a congregation that still believes in the form even after the theology has gone.
The status games sit on top of this vocation.
Being reviewed by Wood remains the strongest single signal of arrival inside contemporary literary fiction. A favorable Wood essay can establish a writer for a generation. An unfavorable Wood essay can damage a reputation for a decade. The Hitchens distribution of a Wood review to students captures the internal currency. Wood’s word travels among members as a benchmark.
Magazine placement supplies the next ranking. A novel reviewed in The New Yorker, the New York Review of Books, and the London Review of Books has cleared the bar. A novel reviewed only in The New York Times Book Review under Sam Tanenhaus (b. 1955) or his successors clears a different bar. A novel reviewed only in trade venues sits outside.
Prize ecology supplies a parallel circuit. The Pulitzer, the National Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Booker, and the International Booker count. The Nobel sits above the system. The MacArthur, the Berlin Prize, the Rome Prize, and the Guggenheim certify the artist between books.
Institutional affiliation supplies the third layer. A Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Columbia, NYU, or Chicago appointment confers durable status. The Iowa Writers’ Workshop and a handful of other MFA programs confer the same on younger writers. A staff position at The New Yorker confers more than most academic appointments.
Friendship economies run beneath all of this. The same names appear in each other’s acknowledgments, on each other’s panels, at the same Berlin and Bellagio fellowships, at the same Brooklyn and Harvard Square parties, and on each other’s book jackets. The set is small enough that everyone has met everyone within ten years of any career.
The normative claims the set treats as obvious:
The novel ought to take consciousness seriously. A novel that does not is at best entertainment and at worst noise.
A writer ought to earn every sentence. Padding, repetition, and looseness signal failure of attention.
A critic ought to read closely before judging. Contextualization without close reading counts as dereliction.
Realism in the high European tradition remains the standard against which other modes get measured. Departures from realism require justification.
The reader ought to come to the book equipped with a tradition. Without the tradition, judgment becomes mere reaction.
The essentialist claims the set treats as facts about the world:
There exists such a thing as good prose, distinguishable from bad prose by anyone who has learned to read.
Some novels are deeper than others. The depth belongs to the work. A reader’s taste might miss it or recognize it, but the taste does not create it.
Consciousness has a real structure, available to the novelist who attends carefully. The novel exists to render that structure.
The human person remains the primary scale of literature. Systems, networks, and structures exist. The person remains the unit of literary attention.
Aesthetic judgment can be transmitted by close reading, conversation, and apprenticeship. It cannot be reduced to theory or formalized into rules. Those who have it recognize each other. Those who do not get politely excluded.
The fights inside and around this world tend to break along predictable lines. The n+1 founders (Benjamin Kunkel (b. 1972), Keith Gessen (b. 1975), Mark Greif (b. 1975), Marco Roth, Chad Harbach) emerged in 2004 with a critique of Wood and The New Republic that treated the set’s restraint as a class style and its realism as a political evasion. The Fredric Jameson tradition argues the set’s preferred form cannot represent late capitalism. The Walter Benn Michaels position argues the set has retreated from politics into psychology. The Franco Moretti distant-reading position argues the set’s close-reading method cannot scale to literary history. The set tolerates these critiques and absorbs the more talented critics over time. Greif has become an academic. Gessen writes for The New Yorker.
The set rarely names its enemies. It does not need to. The words restraint, attention, seriousness, and judgment do the work. A writer or critic outside the set gets described as loud, performative, undisciplined, ideological, or simply not very good. The set never says of itself what its critics say of it: that the canon skews White, male, and Anglo, that the prose preferences track a New England Protestant inheritance, that the politics tilt centrist liberal with a religious-humanist undertone, that the rejection of theory often serves the defense of an older privilege. The members do not believe these descriptions, because the set’s self-understanding holds that aesthetic judgment runs deeper than identity politics, that the canon stands open to anyone who can write at the level, and that the standards belong to the truth about prose rather than to a class style.
The combination of restraint, judgment, vocation, and institutional placement produces what the set calls seriousness. The word does most of the work. To be serious is to belong. To fail at seriousness is to fall outside. Wood stands as the chief example of the seriousness he calls for. The set protects him because his standing protects the set. The set fears his loss because his loss might end the period when serious literary criticism still commanded national attention.
The Nearest Thing to Life: James Wood Through Ernest Becker
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argued that culture exists to manage the terror of death. Human beings cannot bear the knowledge that they are mortal animals. They construct hero systems that give the finite life a place inside something larger and more durable than the body. Religion is the oldest hero system. It promises explicit transcendence. Art, science, scholarship, fame, nation, ideology, and family are the secular hero systems modernity provides. Each works by attaching the self to a symbolic order that outlasts the body. Becker called the work of attaching oneself to such an order the immortality project. The project gives the days their meaning. Its collapse produces neurosis, depression, or the desperate construction of a new project to replace the one that failed.
James Wood inherited a double immortality project from his father. Dennis William Wood served as both a professor of zoology and an Anglican minister. The integration is rare and worth noting. The father held one position offering scientific immortality through the contribution to knowledge, and another offering religious immortality through the promise of eternal life. The son grew up watching both run in the same week. He took the empirical attention and never let it go. He could not sustain the religious half. Becker’s question for any son in that position is the same. What does the son build to replace what he cannot inherit?
The answer is the criticism.
Wood’s literary criticism performs every function the Anglican ministry once performed for the household it shaped. Moral seriousness. Attention to the soul. Judgment of falsity. Discrimination between the deep and the shallow, the authentic and the performed. Vocation as transcendence. The structure of the work has migrated from the church to the page. The father preached on Sunday. The son writes 5,000 words for The New Yorker. The functions are the same. The vehicle has changed.
Wood’s own phrase says the rest. He calls the novel a secular form of scripture. The sentence rewards close attention. The word secular admits that the religious form is no longer available. The word form admits that the structure remains intact. The word scripture admits that what the religious form supplied (revelation, judgment, communion with greater meaning) must still be supplied by something. The novel performs the work scripture once performed. Wood reads novels with the close attention an evangelical reads scripture. He grades them with the moral seriousness a clergyman grades souls. The vocabulary of his criticism (consciousness, soul, attention, judgment, depth, falseness, evasion, sentimentality) is the vocabulary of the cure of souls translated into literary terms.
The Book Against God dramatizes the substitution from inside. The novel follows Thomas Bunting, a young philosophy student who cannot finish his anti-theological dissertation and cannot stop lying to his father, an Anglican vicar. Bunting cannot complete the inherited religious project. He cannot finish the project of overturning it. He cannot construct his own. He lies because the gap between father and son contains nothing yet that can hold him. Becker might name this stalled state the collapse of one hero system before a new one has been built to take its place. The lies are character armor inadequate to the work. The novel ends without resolution because the resolution had not yet been built in Wood’s own life when he wrote the book. He had begun the criticism but had not yet declared what it was. How Fiction Works, published five years later, makes the declaration. The vocation is reading well. The work is teaching others to read well. The transmission of close attention to consciousness is the immortality project that replaces the lost religious one.
The Nearest Thing to Life gives the project its name. The title is a confession. Not life. The nearest thing. Wood knows what he has built is a substitute. The father’s promise of life beyond death was the original. The novel cannot deliver that promise. The novel can deliver the nearest secular approach. Reading well, attending to consciousness, judging accurately, preserving the tradition, transmitting the practice to students at Harvard and to readers at The New Yorker, writing prose that itself deserves attention: these activities are the nearest thing the modern condition permits. The book’s autobiographical content (the father’s death, the mother’s house, the sister’s death, the loss of faith, the emigration to America) makes the substitution explicit. Wood writes about secular homelessness because the home his father offered was a religious one, and Wood now lives in a house his father did not build.
The heat beneath the prose has its source here. Wood writes book criticism with the intensity of a man performing the work of judgment for a symbolic order that organizes his life. A bad book threatens the order. A celebrated bad book threatens it more. The novels he attacks (the maximalist works of Don DeLillo, Thomas Pynchon, David Foster Wallace, the early Zadie Smith, Salman Rushdie) propose different hero systems. They make heroes of system-mapping, of paranoid pattern-finding, of comic encyclopedism, of ironic distance. Wood cannot recognize their hero work because it does not perform the work his order requires. So he describes their books as panic, noise, hysterical realism. From inside his order the description is accurate. From inside theirs the description misses what they were trying to do.
The novelists Wood consecrates carry his hero system in altered form. Marilynne Robinson keeps the Calvinist register inside literary fiction. Her novels treat grace, conscience, repentance, and the immortal soul as live categories. Robinson preserves in literary fiction the religious content Wood lost. He champions her because she does in her work what he wishes the broader culture still permitted. W. G. Sebald preserves the dead through narrative. His memorial prose treats the duty to remember as a sacred obligation surviving the disappearance of any explicit theology. Sebald’s narrators perform memorial labor on behalf of those the twentieth century killed. Wood champions Sebald because the memorial function is unmistakable hero work in Becker’s sense. The dead are saved from oblivion by the prose. Anton Chekhov, Leo Tolstoy, and Saul Bellow carry the same hero work back into the realist tradition. Each preserves the inwardness of mortal persons against the forces that would dissolve them.
The defense of free indirect style fits inside the same logic. Free indirect style allows two consciousnesses to inhabit a single sentence. The boundary between mortal minds dissolves briefly. The reader enters another life from inside. The technique denies, for the length of the paragraph, the isolation that mortality enforces. Wood defends the technique with unusual intensity because it is the literary practice that does the most immortality work. It accomplishes the temporary fusion of selves that religion once promised in eternal form. Becker might recognize the operation. The art form has taken on the labor the failed cosmology can no longer perform.
The vocation supplies the heroism. Wood works half time at Harvard. He writes book criticism for The New Yorker. He produces the occasional novel and the occasional volume of lectures. The shelf has accumulated. The Broken Estate. The Irresponsible Self. The Book Against God. How Fiction Works. The Fun Stuff. The Nearest Thing to Life. Upstate. Serious Noticing. The monument grows year by year. The recognition (the National Magazine Award in 2009, the Berlin Prize Fellowship, the Mandel Lectures at Brandeis, the Professorship of the Practice at Harvard) supplies the social ratification any hero system requires to function. He has built what his father had. A position from which to preach. An audience that takes the preaching seriously. A textual practice that organizes the week. A sense that the work outlives the worker. He has built it on different ground from his father’s. The structure is the same.
The limit of any hero system is the worker’s own knowledge that the system is a system. Becker’s writing emphasizes that consciousness of one’s immortality project tends to weaken it. Faith works best when the believer cannot see that he is believing. Wood occupies an unusual position. He can name the substitution. The phrase secular form of scripture admits the displacement. The title The Nearest Thing to Life admits that what he has is not the thing itself. The criticism shows him to be a man performing the work of a faith he no longer holds, in full awareness of the displacement, and unwilling either to return to the original faith or to give up the work the faith made possible. The cross-pressure produces the prose. The prose carries the heat because the project carries the heat. The project carries the heat because the original is gone and the substitute cannot fully replace it.
This explains the autobiographical pressure that builds across the career. The early Wood writes as a prosecutor of false reputations. The middle Wood codifies the method in How Fiction Works. The later Wood turns toward memoir. He writes about the father, the sister, the mother, the lost faith, the emigration. The hero system that began as a public vocation reveals itself as a private response to the original loss. By the time of The Nearest Thing to Life and Serious Noticing, the criticism and the memoir have converged. The reader sees that the essays on Robinson and Sebald and Chekhov are essays about the writer’s own condition. The novels he praises are the novels that do for him what the church once did for the family in Durham.
The frame explains why Wood’s enemies sense something more than literary disagreement when he attacks them. The maximalist novelists are not just being criticized. They are being denied legitimacy inside the only sacred order Wood recognizes. The n+1 critics who emerged after him understood this. They treated his criticism as a faith they did not share rather than as a method they could not perform. The accusation that Wood’s preferences amount to a religion of literature in the absence of religion proper is accurate in Becker’s sense. The accusation does not destroy the project. It only describes it.
The ministry continues. The father is dead. The son writes. The reader who picks up Serious Noticing finds twenty-five years of sermons on the novel, delivered with the moral intensity of a man who has staked his life on the proposition that careful reading is the nearest thing to life. The wager remains open. The work continues. The hero system holds.
The Tacit Reader: James Wood Through Stephen Turner
Stephen Turner (b. 1951) has spent decades thinking about a problem Michael Polanyi (1891-1976) named more than half a century ago. Some forms of knowing cannot be written down. The diagnostician sees the tumor in the X-ray that the student does not see. The master craftsman knows when the joint is right. The chess grandmaster perceives the position. The wine taster discriminates the vintage. None of them can fully explain how. Polanyi called this kind of knowing tacit. He summarized it in a famous sentence: we can know more than we can tell. Turner’s work clarifies what is and what is not happening in such cases. The skill is real. The perceptual training is real. The transmission from master to apprentice is real. Turner’s strict reading denies the existence of a collective storehouse of tacit knowledge living outside individual nervous systems and shared the way explicit propositions get shared. Tacit knowing is always somebody’s knowing, built by experience, transmissible only through long exposure to a teacher who has it.
James Wood works inside this tradition. His criticism rests on the claim that literary judgment is a tacit skill. You can hear good prose. You can hear bad prose. The hearing is real. It cannot be reduced to a checklist. It can be developed by reading well-chosen passages with someone who already has the ear. The position has been the constant of Wood’s practice from his early Guardian reviews through How Fiction Works and Serious Noticing. The position has also been the source of nearly every charge laid against him by his critics. Both the strength and the vulnerability of his project belong to its tacit-knowledge structure.
Wood reviews novels by quoting passages and showing what works. He marks the sentence that earns its weight and the sentence that does not. He demonstrates free indirect style by reading a paragraph and tracking the shifts of consciousness. He demonstrates failed prose by reading a sentence that strains for effect and showing where the strain shows. The method assumes the reader can be brought to see what Wood sees. The method does not assume the reader can be given a rule that will produce the seeing without the reading. Wood writes as a master demonstrating a skill, and his prose performs the discrimination it asks the reader to develop.
How Fiction Works is the most explicit document of the practice. The book moves through detail, character, dialogue, free indirect style, point of view, and language. Each section advances by example. Wood selects a passage from Henry James or Saul Bellow or Anton Chekhov, reads it closely, names what the passage does, and moves on. The book contains almost no theory. It contains a great deal of demonstrated reading. The reader who works through the book is not learning a system. The reader is being trained to notice. Polanyi described this kind of pedagogy as the only available method for transmitting perceptual skill. Turner has added the further point that the transmission produces a population of readers whose discriminations resemble each other closely enough to constitute a tradition. Individual readers within the population vary. The tradition is not a shared mental object. The tradition is a population of individually trained skills that happen to converge on similar judgments because they were trained by similar exposures.
The position explains Wood’s long resistance to the academic theories that have organized literary studies during his career. Deconstruction, postcolonial theory, new historicism, ideology critique, and their successors share a common form. Each offers an explicit method. The critic learns the method, applies it to a text, and produces an analysis the method itself almost dictates. Wood objects to this on two grounds. The methods replace the slow training of perceptual skill with the rapid application of formal procedure. The methods also produce readings that miss what the novel does as a novel. The first objection is procedural. The second is substantive. The two objections share a root. The explicit method substitutes for the tacit skill the practice requires. The substitution may produce publishable articles. It does not produce readers who can hear what a sentence is doing.
Wood’s preferred vocabulary supports the diagnosis. He works with words such as attention, noticing, perception, ear, texture, weight, and pitch. These are connoisseur’s words. They name the qualities of skilled perception. They cannot be formalized into rules. A critic who has the ear can use the words and mean something. A critic who lacks the ear can use the same words and mean nothing. The vocabulary does not transfer the skill. The vocabulary names the skill for those who have it.
His title at Harvard makes the diagnosis institutional. He is Professor of the Practice of Literary Criticism. The title was created for a class of appointments that recognize working practitioners rather than producing scholars. Wood holds the chair as a critic, not as an academic theorist of criticism. His seminars transmit the practice. Students read passages with him. They write essays modeled on his essays. They are being apprenticed. The chair institutionalizes the master-apprentice relation that the academic English department had been moving away from for half a century. The cost of the move from practice to theory had been the slow loss of the apprenticeship structures that produced critics like Wood in the first place. The Professorship of the Practice is a small institutional repair being attempted.
The same logic explains Wood’s role at The New Yorker. The magazine still operates as a place where the long review essay can be written and read. The format is part of the apprenticeship structure. A serious 5,000-word essay on a single novel demonstrates the practice across the length the practice requires to register. A 300-word notice cannot do it. The reduction of book reviewing to short notices in most outlets eliminates the form that carries the perceptual training. Wood’s New Yorker essays are among the last regularly produced documents at the length required for the apprenticeship to occur in print.
The hysterical realism dispute reads cleanly through the tacit-knowledge frame. Wood’s complaint against the maximalist novel comes from the ear. The prose accumulates without earning its accumulations. The characters fill space without taking up the depth a perceiving reader expects to find. The information piles up where the interior life should be. Wood cannot prove this by argument. He can demonstrate it by reading passages and showing where the prose tries to substitute event for perception. His critics often note that he cannot prove the claim. The criticism misses what the practice is. No connoisseur can prove a judgment. The connoisseur can only show another trained perceiver where to look.
Wood sometimes speaks as if the standards of good prose belong to literature itself rather than to a particular tradition of training. The tacit-knowledge frame in Turner’s strict reading does not support that move. The standards belong to the trained individuals who hold them. The standards are similar across the trained because the training is similar. The standards belong to the converged outputs of a particular apprenticeship lineage. The lineage runs through certain books, certain editors, certain teachers, and certain magazines. The claim that good prose has objective features can be made. The claim that the features are accessible to anyone who reads carefully is harder to defend. Most readers will never have the apprenticeship. Most readers cannot do what Wood does. The connoisseurship is real and unevenly distributed.
This produces a political tension Wood has never fully resolved. He writes for the general reader. He writes as a master demonstrating a practice the general reader does not possess. The general reader can follow the demonstration with pleasure and learn from it. The general reader cannot reproduce the practice without years of apprenticeship the general reader does not have time to undertake. The democratic surface of the New Yorker essay covers an aristocratic structure of skill. Wood inhabits the tension with more grace than most of his critics credit him with. He does not condescend. He invites the reader into the demonstration as far as the demonstration can go. He does not pretend that one essay produces a reader at his level. The honesty of the position is part of the practice.
The future of Wood’s kind of criticism depends on whether the apprenticeship structures hold. Turner’s diagnosis might identify the pressure points. The book review pages are shrinking. The literary academy has shifted toward methods that do not require the slow training of the ear. The MFA produces writers at scale but does not produce critics at depth. The number of magazines still capable of running 5,000-word essays on individual novels has fallen to a handful. The transmission requires masters, apprentices, time, and venues. Each is under pressure. If the conditions continue to weaken, the kind of judgment Wood exemplifies will not vanish, because tacit skills do not vanish all at once. The judgment will become harder to find, harder to develop, and harder to transmit. The tradition will continue in thinner form.
Wood understands this. He has spent more than a decade writing as if his kind of criticism may be ending. Serious Noticing reads partly as elegy because the practice it demonstrates lies under threat. The book gathers twenty-five years of essays as an exhibition of what the practice looks like when fully alive. Readers in the next generation may consult the book the way readers once consulted the lectures of an older master they did not have time to study with. The tacit knowledge cannot be fully captured in the text. The text can supply the closest available substitute. The reader can work through the demonstrations and absorb what can be absorbed by reading rather than by sitting at the master’s elbow.
‘A Big Misunderstanding‘
David Pinsof’s arguwa that most intellectuals operate inside a flattering story. The story says humanity’s problems are caused by misunderstanding, and intellectuals exist to correct the misunderstandings. The story is wrong. Humans are savvy animals. We understand what we have an incentive to understand. Our stupidity is usually strategic. Our stated motives differ from our actual motives. We are hierarchy-climbing, rival-derogating, coalition-maintaining primates who have learned to dress our ascent strategies as sacred missions. The intellectual project of correcting public misunderstandings is one of those ascent strategies. The intellectual elevates his own standing by claiming the right to nudge, correct, and improve the masses he despises.
The frame applies to James Wood. His criticism has always presented itself as misunderstanding-correction at the literary level. Most novelists do not understand how to render consciousness. Most readers do not understand what novels are for. Most academics do not understand how to read. Wood’s job, as he has framed it for thirty years, is to correct these failures of understanding and to preserve the practice of serious reading against the forces that would dissolve it.
Pinsof’s question: what does Wood get out of telling this story?
The answer is a successful career structured around the operations Pinsof identifies. Hierarchy climbing. Rival derogating. Coalition maintenance. Status accumulation. Wood is among the most accomplished literary critics of his generation by every measurable index. The Harvard chair. The New Yorker staff position. The National Magazine Award. The Berlin Prize Fellowship. The book shelf running from The Broken Estate through Serious Noticing. The capacity to make or break novelistic reputations with a single review. None of this might have come to a critic who told a different story about himself. The story Wood tells produces the status Wood has.
The story sounds like this. Literature is sacred. Consciousness deserves attention. The novel preserves what religion once preserved. Serious reading is the nearest thing to life. The maximalist novelists have lost the thread. The academic theorists never had the thread. I, James Wood, will hold the thread for the rest of you, at significant personal effort, because the work needs doing.
Pinsof’s translation. The maximalist novelists are competitors for the prestige goods my coalition controls. I will derogate them at length and call the derogation hysterical realism. The academic theorists offer methods that, if accepted, would devalue my particular kind of cultivated ear. I will resist them and call the resistance a defense of literature. The general reader will be invited into my coalition through the demonstration of my superior reading, which raises my standing while flattering the reader who follows along. The coalition will accumulate the prizes, the chairs, the book contracts, the speaking fees, and the reputational goods that flow to a successful intellectual coalition. The flow will continue as long as the story continues. My job is to keep the story plausible.
Pinsof would point out that nothing in this translation requires conscious cynicism on Wood’s part. Humans are savvy without being calculating. Wood believes the story. The story has features that benefit him. Both facts are stable across time. Most humans who tell self-flattering stories about themselves are sincere about the stories and rational in choosing them.
The early career sharpens the point. Wood arrived at The Guardian at twenty-six as an attacker of established reputations. He took apart John Updike, George Steiner, and other large figures with the confidence of a critic willing to bet his standing on the strength of his judgments. The bets paid. He moved to The New Republic, then The New Yorker, then Harvard. The progression looks, from one angle, like a vocation honoring its calling. From the Pinsof angle the progression looks like an ascent strategy executed competently. The attacks on established figures cleared territory near the top of the hierarchy. The young critic who can credibly dethrone a reigning name gains the dethroning name’s space.
The hysterical realism intervention deserves its own paragraph. Wood named the genre while reviewing Zadie Smith’s White Teeth in 2000. The phrase stuck. Critics inside Wood’s coalition adopted it. The maximalist novelists found themselves carrying a label none of them had chosen. The label organized fifteen years of literary argument. The intervention reads, in the Pinsof frame, as a successful brand-launch by a young critic positioning himself against a rising school whose ascent threatened the coalition he was building inside. The argument that DeLillo, Pynchon, Wallace, Smith, and Rushdie know a thousand things and not a single human being is the mission statement. The argument that Wood needed an attack frame that might let his coalition win the fight for the high middle of the American literary novel is the operation. Both are true at once. The mission-statement version protects the operation from being seen as an operation.
Wood’s preferred canon reads through the same logic. Marilynne Robinson and W. G. Sebald are coalition members in good standing. Praising them praises Wood. The canon Wood promotes is the canon his coalition can supply prizes, reviews, and academic appointments to. The coalition’s writers ascend together. The opposing coalition’s writers (the maximalists, the genre experimentalists, the political novelists, the systems writers) get described in Wood’s vocabulary as panicked, flat, vulgar, or unserious. The judgments may be right. The judgments also happen to advance Wood’s coalition against its rivals. Pinsof’s point is not that the judgments are wrong. The point is that the judgments are convenient. Convenient judgments deserve scrutiny.
The religious-humanist register of Wood’s criticism reads as the most successful element of the brand. Most critics talk about books. Wood talks about souls. The shift in register produces a shift in authority. The reader who follows Wood is not reading a magazine review. The reader is participating in a sacred practice. The framing transfers prestige from the older religious institutions to the new literary one and gives the practitioners of the new institution the moral standing the old institutions used to carry. The line that the novel is the secular form of scripture performs this transfer. The line elevates the critic to the position of priest. Pinsof’s reading does not call the line dishonest. The line is honest in the sense that Wood means it. The line is also strategically optimal. Honesty and strategy align in successful intellectuals.
Wood’s autobiographical writing reads through Pinsof as the next stage of brand maintenance. The Nearest Thing to Life discloses the loss of faith, the dead father, the emigration, the secular homelessness. The disclosure deepens the public character. A critic who has suffered is a critic whose judgments carry more weight. The reader feels closer to Wood after the memoir and grants the criticism more authority. The disclosure is sincere. The disclosure is also useful. Pinsof’s argument requires both. The intellectual who cannot write a moving memoir about his father loses access to the cultural standing available to the intellectual who can. Wood’s life happens to supply material that converts into authority. The conversion is real and well executed.
The harder Pinsof move is to ask what Wood does when literary judgment and coalition interest part ways. The answer, on the available evidence, is that Wood usually finds the literary judgment the coalition prefers. He praises the writers the coalition can prize. He attacks the writers whose suppression benefits the coalition. He defends the institutions that produce his standing. He criticizes the institutions that compete with the ones that produce his standing. The pattern is too regular to be coincidence. The pattern is also too regular to be conscious. Pinsof’s account asks only that selection pressures over a long career produce a critic whose tastes happen to align with the coalition his career depends on.
The complaint about academic theory deserves the same treatment. Deconstruction, postcolonial theory, and ideology critique threatened the master-apprentice transmission of cultivated reading that Wood’s standing depends on. If anyone with a method can produce criticism, the cultivated ear loses its market value. Wood’s resistance to theory reads as a defense of the form of cultural capital his career has accumulated. The defense is dressed as a defense of literature itself. The Pinsof translation. The defense is also a defense of the income, prestige, and authority that flow to a critic whose particular skills retain their scarcity.
Pinsof’s last move applies to Wood’s elegiac mood. The late Wood writes as if his kind of criticism may be ending. The shrinking review pages. The industrialized MFA. The academic shift away from close reading. The handful of remaining venues for the long literary essay. The mood is partly accurate. The mood is also useful. A critic who writes as the last representative of a vanishing tradition acquires the standing of a custodian. The custodian draws more authority than the merely successful working critic. Pinsof would say the elegiac framing serves Wood as the misunderstanding-correction framing serves the broader intellectual class. The story makes the storyteller important. The importance is the point.
What does this leave of Wood? Quite a lot. Pinsof’s argument does not deny that Wood reads well. The hawk’s eye is a good eye. The cheetah’s sprint is a fast sprint. Wood’s ear for prose is a real ear. The savvy of the animal does not erase the competence of the animal. What the Pinsof reading erases is the framing under which the competence exists to serve literature against forces that might harm it. The competence exists because it was built and rewarded by the institutions Wood ascended. The competence serves Wood. The competence also serves a particular literary coalition. The competence happens to overlap with the interests of literary value in ways that are real and partial. The overlap is partial because all such overlaps are partial. No intellectual project tracks the truth all the way down because intellectual projects exist to produce status for the intellectuals who run them, and the production of status requires distortions of the truth at the points where status and truth come apart.
Wood is among the most accomplished examples of his type. He is a savvy primate who built a hierarchy-climbing project of unusual sophistication, sustained it across thirty years, accumulated the institutional anchors required to weather the decline of his field, and dressed the whole operation in a religious-humanist vocabulary borrowed from his father’s lost church. He probably knows this at some level. He probably will not say it. The story he tells continues to produce the standing he has. The standing is real. The story that produces it is the kind of story Pinsof’s essay was written to identify.
The misunderstanding is that there has been a misunderstanding. Wood understands his work. His coalition understands its interests. His rivals understand theirs. The argument between them is a fight savvy animals have over scarce prestige goods. The communication works. The interests conflict. The fight produced Wood. Wood produced the criticism. The criticism produced the standing. The standing now produces more criticism. Nothing about the operation requires misunderstanding by anyone.