James Joyce Open Letter statement
On November 8, 2018 (and again on December 12, 2018 with an altered form of address and an acknowledgement of the new bylaws passed by the International James Joyce Foundation as well as the James Joyce Quarterly’s response [with the permission of the signatories]), the letter below was sent to numerous representatives of James Joyce-affiliated organisations: namely, the James Joyce Italian Foundation, the Korean James Joyce Society, the Zurich James Joyce Foundation, the Dublin & Trieste Joyce Summer Schools, the James Joyce Society of Japan, and the Spanish James Joyce Society. Our hope was to elicit immediate and meaningful action regarding an escalation of harassment, misogyny, inappropriate behaviour, assault, and other abuses of power in Joyce studies. Leniency and indulgence of this behaviour has propagated and helped to produce new generations of scholars who replicate this unsafe environment. The growing list of signatories was in many ways a reflection of the extent of the whisper network described by the editors of The Modernist Review, and even now, many have not seen the letter referred to in the James Joyce Quarterly’s online post.
We are immensely grateful to the editors for agreeing to publish this letter. Our reasons for wanting to see the letter published are twofold: firstly, we wanted to reassure vulnerable scholars that we as a community will no longer be tolerant of the abuses outlined in this letter; secondly, this is not just a Joyce problem, and we sincerely hope that other academic communities will take heed of the success of the James Joyce Open Letter and work to make academia a safer place. We have seen success in many corners — i.e. the ratification of the new bylaws by the International James Joyce Foundation; the promise of the Dublin James Joyce Summer School to make their reporting procedures more transparent; encouragement from the Italian James Joyce Foundation and their promise to prioritize this at their next AGM; and the James Joyce Quarterly’s publication of their stance and procedures. We see all of this as the start of a success story and a new era, though we still have a long way to go. The list of signatories in this version of the letter is up-to-date as of January 15, 2019. We are still accepting signatures if you would like to email us at jamesjoyceopenletter@gmail.com.
The Open Letter
To the James Joyce community, including all of its globally associated Societies, Foundations, and Schools.
We, the undersigned, call upon the James Joyce community, including all of its globally associated Societies and Foundations, to take meaningful action to reduce the incidents of sexual harassment, inappropriate behaviour, abuse, and even assault at conferences, workshops, summer schools and any other events affiliated with the community. We, too, are survivors of sexual harassment, assault, and abuse, or know others who are.
The works of James Joyce are remarkable in their frankness about sexuality and their sensitivity to the value of women’s experience. Women’s scholarship within Joyce Studies is justly respected and celebrated. The spirit of Joyce’s works themselves, as well as the critical tradition emerging from it (which includes an important branch of feminist scholarship), is in sympathy with making the academic and social events that are central to the life of the community more accessible, more inclusive, and safer for women who are trying to make a name in the field.
We are familiar with readers who do not believe, or are not willing to believe, that there is a problem in Joyce Studies. We understand the perspective of readers who remain innocent of this issue or who have never had to deal with sexual harassment, even indirectly. We promise these readers that we are differentiating between natural interpersonal relationships (collegiality, friendship, flirtation, consensual relationships) and the abuse that we are targeting here, which have all happened at Joycean events (misogyny, voyeurism, abuse of power, harassment, assault, rape).
Abuses are born of imbalances of power and environments in which those hierarchies are used to silence and shame victims. When complaints are bravely made, we rarely see action being taken. It might be that procedures are robust and effective, but they are not transparent. Often we only hear the end of the story: the victim leaving the community or making a joke out of their horrific experiences so as not to appear ‘oversensitive’. Those of us who have survived abuse and developed coping strategies might be coded as ‘difficult’, ‘sharp’, ‘unfriendly’. We might be presented to others as ‘not getting’ some fundamental aspect of the community. All of these experiences affect the work of women in the Joyce community in ways we have been afraid to talk about until now.
Those of us with more experience in the community are tired of sending graduate and undergraduate students to conferences or summer schools with a list of unsafe individuals to avoid and/or behaviour of which to be wary or, conversely, tolerant. No one should have to introduce new scholars to the community in this way, and younger scholars should not be obliged to withstand behaviour that would be intolerable in non-academic circumstances and other learning and work environments. No one should be afraid for their physical and emotional safety in these spaces or worry that refusing/reporting unacceptable behaviour will lead to a diminishment of their academic prospects or standing. We can and should do better.
We are pleased that the Board of Trustees of the International James Joyce Foundation and the James Joyce Quarterly have already formulated policies and made them publicly available; likewise, many societies have agreed to make this a priority at their next general meeting. We would also like for other societies, foundations, and publications to address these issues, including, but not limited to, the James Joyce Italian Foundation, the James Joyce Society of Japan, the Korean James Joyce Society, the Spanish James Joyce Society, and the Zurich James Joyce Foundation. We would be happy to work with them to produce a policy that fully acknowledges the problems we are here describing.
Our demands are fair, reasonable, and proportionate:
- we ask for clear indications that this behaviour is unacceptable; for instance, through official statements from the boards of Joyce societies, foundations, and journals, and/or the inclusion of codes of professional, collegial, and respectful conduct in conference/workshop/summer school materials, membership forms, and websites.
- we ask for an implementation of a new code of conduct, including a clear explanation of how complaints are to be processed;
- we ask for multiple clear, confidential channels for the reporting of abuse without fear of retribution, and which recognise and respect the many difficulties in coming forward with an accusation of misconduct. These should include a named harassment or safeguarding officer — either an external Ombudsperson or a particular, impartial member of the Foundation or Society, elected or appointed to this task — to be made available for future conferences, summer schools, fellowships, and symposia;
- and we ask for punitive measures for academics who have amassed more than one complaint about harassment and/or assault (or who have been found guilty of any other sexual offense), which, at the very least, will prevent them from being chosen to give plenaries at conferences or to speak at summer schools, thereby placing them in positions of authority that will enable further misdemeanours (and send a message to young scholars that sexual violence is rewarded in the Joyce sphere).
We have a great respect for the Joyce industry — it is our chosen field — and all of the wonderful people that come with it. We request that you help us protect the collegiality of our profession and make our community a better environment for all of its members. We ask that you actively participate in this movement to put an end to harassment, exploitation, and assault in our community.
Yours sincerely,
Concerned Joyceans
cc: James Joyce Italian Foundation, Korean James Joyce Society, Zurich James Joyce Foundation, Dublin & Trieste Joyce Summer Schools, James Joyce Society of Japan, Spanish James Joyce Society (sent on 8.11.18 and again 12.12.18)
- Talia Abu
- Peter Adkins
- Boriana Alexandrova
- Robert Baines
- Richard Barlow
- Robert Berry
- Georgina Binnie
- Stephanie Boland
- Lucia Boldrini
- Elizabeth M. Bonapfel
- Ruben Borg
- Robert Brazeau
- John Wolf Brennan
- Jennifer Burns Bright
- Daniel Bristow
- Sara Ceroni
- Natasha R. Chenier
- Michele Chinitz
- Jean-Christophe Cloutier
- Jeremy Colangelo
- Sophie Corser
- Sara Crangle
- Matthew Creasy
- Daniel Curran
- Sarah Davison
- Jed Deppman
- Barry Devine
- Iva Dimovska
- Conor Dowling
- Hunter Dukes
- Katherine Ebury
- Dylan Emerick-Brown
- Bridget English
- Flavie Épié
- Paul Fagan
- Tiffany L. Fajardo
- Fiorenzo Fantaccini
- Layne Farmen
- Andrew Ferguson
- Tiana M Fischer
- Leah Flack
- Catherine Flynn
- Matt Fogarty
- Finn Fordham
- James Alexander Fraser
- Oona Frawley
- Ariela Freedman
- Dieter Fuchs
- Bruce Gilbert
- Michael Patrick Gillespie
- Jonathan Goldman
- Thomas Gurke
- Meltem Gürle
- Yaeli Greenblatt
- Michael Groden
- Cleo Hanaway-Oakley
- Julian Hanna
- Matthew Hayward
- Joseph Heininger
- Cheryl Herr
- Jeri Johnson
- Maria Kager
- Mikaela Kelly
- Ethan King
- Yvonne Lai
- Jeremy Lakoff
- Liam Lanigan
- Victoria Lévêque
- Laura Lovejoy
- Sangam MacDuff
- Vicki Mahaffey
- Celia Marshik
- Timothy Martin
- Ariana Mashilker
- Seamus May
- Barry McCrea
- Ivana Milivojevic
- Paige Miller
- Yoshimi Minamitani
- Katie Mishler
- John Morey
- Nicholas Morris
- Steven Morrison
- Camilla Mount
- Christin M. Mulligan
- Katherine Mullin
- Jonathan Najarian
- Stephanie Nelson
- Emer Nolan
- Katherine O’Callaghan
- Kate O’Donovan
- Salvatore Pappalardo
- Cóilín Parsons
- James Blackwell Phelan
- Adam Piette
- Vike Martina Plock
- Niko Pomakis
- Teresa Prudente
- Siobhán Purcell
- Marion Quirici
- Tamara Radak
- Ennio Ravasio
- Dominic Richard
- Maisie Ridgway
- Federico Sabatini
- Paul Saint-Amour
- Genevieve Sartor
- Helen Saunders
- Jaya Savige
- David Shackleton
- Sameera Siddique
- Sam Slote
- Flicka Small
- Sara Spanghero
- Agata Szczeszak-Brewer
- Rasheed Tazudeen
- Lindsay Welsch Sveen
- Elizabeth Switaj
- Chrissie Van Mierlo
- Wim Van Mierlo
- Annalisa Volpone
- Dominik Wallerius
- John Waters
- Kiron Ward
- Jolanta Wawrzycka
- T. Welsch
- Beth A. Wightman
- Michelle Witen
- Mark Wollaeger
Agree completely with letter and would be happy to add my name
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Hi Donal. Thanks a lot for your supportive message. Email the account at the bottom of the letter to have your named added.
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