Department of English and Creative Writing Lancaster University Home
You are here: Home > Research >

Professor John Schad

John Schad

Professor of Modern Literature

Degree: BA (York), PGCE (Bristol), PhD (Wales)


Current Teaching

At undergraduate level, I give lectures on English 100, Victorian Literature, Modernism, and Literary Theory. I also offerthird-year options called 'Other Victorians' and'Between the Acts, 1919-1938.' At MA level, I offer two courses, one called 'Victorian Extremes: The Coming of Modernity' and one called 'Fusions' which explores various twenteith-century texts that fuse literary genres or traditions - in particular, the critical and the creative.

Research Interests

My main areas of research are: critical-creative writing; modernism; Victorian writing; literary theory; and the relationship between religion and literature. These interests are reflected in my major publications - my six authored books: namely, The Late Walter Benjamin (Continuum), Someone Called Derrida: An Oxford Mystery (Sussex), Arthur Hugh Clough (Northcote House), Queer Fish: Christian Unreason from Darwin to Joyce (Sussex), Victorians in Theory (Manchester UP), and The Reader in the Dickensian Mirrors (Macmillan); and my five edited books: namely, Dickens Refigured (Manchester UP); Thomas Hardy, A Laodicean (Penguin); Writing the Bodies of Christ (Ashgate); Crrritic! (Sussex); and life.after.theory (Continuum). This last book includes new interviews with Jacques Derrida, Frank Kermode, Toril Moi, and Christopher Norris. I have also been General Editor for a series of experimental monographs called critical inventions. The series includes titles by Thomas Docherty, Roger Ebbatson, J.Hillis Miller, Kevin Mills, David Punter, and Jean-Michel Rabaté.

I have just completed a documentary, or text-based, 'novel' called The Late Walter Benjamin (Continuum, April 2012). It concerns a man on a post-war council estate near London who thinks or says he is the late Walter Benjamin and who only ever uses the words of Benjamin. The opening scenes were read and discussed on BBC Radio 3's The Verb in January 2009, and the book will be launched at the Watford Palace Theatre in June 2012.

My previousbook, Someone Called Derrida (Susex, 2007), was a novelistic combination of traditional archival scholarship with memoir, investigative history, detective fiction, and Oxford; it is, in a sense, a book that explores the space between critical and creative writing. I recently received funding to have Someone dramatised forradio, by 'Crystal Clear,' and for a series of staged readings, the first of which will be at the Oxford Playhouse in April 2012.

In June 2009 I organised a conference called 'The Critic as Artist / The Artist as Critic' which sought to explore what it might now mean to fuse literary criticism and creative writing - or, if you will, the work of the critic and that of the artist. This led to my co-edited book Crrritic! Sighs, Cries, Lies, Insults, Outbursts, Hoaxes, Disasters, Letters of Resignation, and Various Other Noises Off in These the First and Last Days of Literary Criticism (June 2011). This is the concluding volume in my critical inventions series and includes new writing by Jonathan Dollimore, Steven Connor, Mark Ford, Geoffrey Hartman, Esther Leslie, et al. My contribution to this volume is called 'GodotOnSea' and is the first chapter of a novel I am beginning to write of that name which focuses on the 1956 production of Waiting for Godot at The Grand Theatre Blackpool. The opening of this chapter was read and discussed on BBC Radio 3's The Verb in April 2011..

I recently completed a dramatic monologue called 'Queerest Book' that revolves around Robert Bridges' 1918 edition of The Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins; this is now availabe as a web-cast http://litthe.oxfordjournals.org/and will be published in Literature and Theology in 2012. I am now writing another critical-creative piece called 'Ariadne in Paris, 1904' which will appear in my next book Turns for the Worse: Readings into Writings, 1993-2013 (Sussex, 2013)

I have been invited to read and lecture at a number of universities, both here and in the USA, regularly act as external examiner at PhD level, have been an external for MAs at the University of Southampton and Royal Holloway London, and for several years served as a member of Editorial Board of the Tennyson Research Bulletin. I am currently an external examiner for the BA English programme at the University of Kent, Canterbury.

In June 2003 I was invited to the USA to participate in the Erasmus Institute's Summer Faculty Seminar, 'Religious Hermeneutics and Secular Interpretation,' led by Geoffrey Hartman. Since then I have given a number of plenary lectures at major international conferences, including the 'Spiritual Identities' conference at Lancaster (2004), the 'counter-movements' conference at Portsmouth (2006), and 'The Hospitable Text' conference in London (2011).

I recently bid successfully to Leverhulme for funding to bring Simon Critchley of the New School, New York, to Lancaster as a Leverhulme Visiting Professor in Michaelmas Term2012

Having supervised several PhD students to successful completion, I welcome research proposals in any of my areas of interest.

I recentlycompleted almost five years as Research Director, and am nowHead of Department.

>

Reviews /Responses:

Crritic!

'What can one say? After this book, academic "discourse" in all its genres will never be the same again.' (J. Hillis Miller)

GodotOnSea

'sly and funny and deep and delicious' (Simon Callow)

The Late Walter Benjamin >

-'Set partly in Watford and partly in the haunted wing of the English language' (Ian Macmillan, on BBC Radio 3's 'The Verb')

-'as fascinating as the most experimental avant-garde mobilizations of literature during the interwar period. Stein, Breton, Pirandello and Pessoa come to mind.' (Geoffrey Hartman)

-'...mixes apparently autobiographical fiction and social history with astute critical reworking of many of Walter Benjamin's most important ideas' (J. Hillis Miller)

-'says something previously unsaid about not only about Walter Benjamin but post-war Austerity Britain. Indeed, this strange and unusual book pushes the Sinclairian version of the flâneur into new places and new modes and does so on the basis of rigorous historical and philosophical analysis.' (Esther Leslie)

>

critical inventions (the series)

-'a creative intellectual enterprise as rare as it is necessary' (Jonathan Dollimore, web-site endorsement)

-'an astounding series which really does offer new ways of thinking and reading' (Ian Macmillan, on BBC Radio 3's 'The Verb')

Someone Called Derrida >

-now studied as a primary textat the University of Toronto (see http://www.english.utoronto.ca/undergrad/11-12tt/2011-12/eng383h1sl0101.htm).

-'caught my imagination straight away' (Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury')

-'an extraordinary performance' (Sir Frank Kermode - webiste endorsement)'

-'an amazing book' (J. Hillis Miller, web-site endorsement)

-'a remarkable novel ...both challenging and ultimately rewarding' (Ian Macmillan, on BBC Radio 3's 'The Verb')

-'intriguing, emotionally powerful and disturbingly entertaining...an intellectual thriller' (The Daily Star, Lewisburg, USA)

-'dense and dizzying' (Church Times)

-'a perfect illustration of how scholarship and storytelling can dovetail beautifully' (Willy Maley, The Glass).

Arthur Hugh Clough

-'Schad …pushes out the…boundaries of Victorian studies' (Journal of Victorian Culture)

Queer Fish >

-'the modern theoretical re-evaluation of literature has given way to a renewed interest in religious questions. The religiously inflected critical inquiry of writers such as Geoffrey Hartman, Luce Irigaray, J. Hillis Miller, Terry Eagleton, and John Schad has developed this tradition.' (The Blackwell Companion to the Bible in English Literature).

-'Rarely is a book …so much a day at the beach: bright, splashy, full of laughter, leaving you happy, if exhausted, at the end….its overall point is not to be missed' (Victorian Studies)

-'John Schad's account of Christian unason makes both belief and unbelief more relevant for us today. His is a critical yet always empathetic rereading of some of the major thinkers who have influenced who we now are. Schad is a critic who inspires respect and trust.' (Jonathan Dollimore, jacket-cover endorsement)

-'this book is both quirky and highly informative, theoretically sophisticated and written in a unique voice… essential reading for anyone wanting to make sense of the traces of Christianity in our supposedly secular age' (Bryan Cheyette, jacket-cover endorsement)

-'if I had to select the book published this year that has affected me most it would be … Schad's wonderful mind-bending book' (The Daily Star, Lewisburg, USA)

-'one of the most exciting and imaginative contributions to the field of literature and religion for some time' (Christianity and Literature)

-'a single page can move the reader from laugh-out-loud jokes to stunned disbelief' (The Glass)

-'its scholarship is exceptional and its contribution to multiple disciplines…is fresh and unique' (Religion and Theology)

-'Schad takes his readers on a deep-sea expedition of Victorian waters' (Literature and Theology)

-'…many moments of real insight' (The Tennyson Research Bulletin).

-'…much more on the significance of fish in Christianity and philosophy can be gleaned from Queer Fish by John Schad, also sometimes known as 'John Shad,' a scholar who - despite appearing as a character in Nabakov's Pale Fire under the name 'John Shade' - is real, and not made up by me at all. In the slightest. Really.' (A.R.R.R. Roberts, The Va Dinci Cod (Gollancz, 2005))

life.after.theory >

-'rich in ideas' (Terry Eagleton - letter, Jan 2004)

-'interesting things' (The Guardian)

-'a useful contribution to poststructuralism and a critique of what remains of it' (TLS)

-'bracing and encouraging stuff' (The Spectator)

-'fresh, unprogrammatic and lively; a reminder of thinking at its best' (The Philosophers' Magazine)

Writing the Bodies of Christ >

'an exciting collection of essays …quirky, stimulating and enjoyable' (Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory)

-'Schad asks "Have those of us who belong to the discipline [of English Literature] ever left the church?" I cite this inquiry…as a call to action for further scholarship intersecting ...religious studies and current theory' (Victorian Literature and Culture)

-'the wonderfully allusive qualities of Schad's own essay…provide a microcosm of the commendable attempt that the volume makes to renew our thinking about the church' (Review of English Studies)

Victorians in Theory >

-'...an extraordinary text' (Jacques Derrida - letter, May 1999)

-'Schad's provocative and zestful study cross-hatches nineteenth-century English literature and recent French history, and makes them mutually illuminating' (Malcolm Bowie, All Souls College, Oxford - jacket cover)

-'John Schad is emerging as one of the most exciting readers of Victorian literature….the intertextual dialogue he sets up produces brilliant and, at times, breathtaking results' (Tennyson Research Bulletin).

-'audacieuse et originale…exécutée par un virtuose' (Etudes Anglaises)

-'at the threshold of literary experimentation and informed analysis, looking both backward and forward as it does, simultaneously mindful of both the periods it embraces' (Textual Practice)

-'a highly inventive interrogation, almost a meditation…fertile with suggestions and excitedly speculative in its heady way with ideas' (JVC)

-'a series of intellectual riffs…impressive and convincing' (19th-C Contexts)

-'by turns whimsical and insightful, challenging and rewarding' (Lit and Theology)

-'one cannot help but admire his eager intelligence and compendious grasp of the field' (Comparative Literature)

-'the …reference to the French original citations…makes this…study' (French Review)

Dickens Refigured

-'Schad's essay ...illuminates religion and architecture and many other aspects of Dickens, and sets up a discursive linking of these themes that others in the volume...echo with profit' (Journal of Victorian Culture)

-'Schad's collection attempts something striking and heartening: innovative, sinewy critical work...tough, philosophical, and historical assaults on areas of resistance ... and ... an editorial direction that has given space to ...much energy' (MLR)

-'challenging and engaging…sophisticated and original insights'(Dickens Quarterly)

The Reader in the Dickensian Mirrors >

-'This is a "big" book...' (Studies in English Literature)

-'This book is deeply-knowledgeable, abundant in insight, elegantly-argued and, in its dare-devil exorbitance, faithfully

Potential Doctoral Proposals

Victorian literature; Modernism; life-writing; place-writing; literary theory; critical-creative writing; religion and literature; experimental criticism.

Eprints Publications Repository and Bibliographic Database

John Schad has 4 selected publication records listed on this webpage. Use links to access abstracts and full text where available. View all records to sort by date, type and title. For all ePrints records go to http://eprints.lancs.ac.uk

Schad, S. J. (2007) Someone Called Derrida. An Oxford Mystery. Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-84519-031-6

Schad, S. J. (2006) Arthur Hugh Clough. Northcote House. ISBN 0-7463-1166-4

Schad, S. J. (2004) Queer Fish: Christian Unreason from Darwin to Joyce. Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 1-84519-020-3

Schad, S. J. and Payne, M. (2003) life. after. theory. Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-7317-2


Associated Keyword: English

 

View all research activities, ePrints, news and events associated with John Schad.

 

«Back

 Contact Details

Tel: +44 (0)1524 592234

Room: County, B99

View Staff Profiles

Find staff personal pages in English and Creative Writing and other Faculty departments:

English and Creative Writing Staff

All Faculty Staff

Search Faculty by Keyword

| Home | Undergraduate | Postgrad English | Postgrad Creative Writing |
| Research | Staff | News & Events | Contact Us | Resources for Current Students |
County College, Lancaster University, LA1 4YD, UK | Tel:+44 (0)1524 592129 Fax: +44 (0) 1524 594247  Email