In a rather disheartening opening to his chapter in Ronan McDonald’s edited collection, The Values of Literary Studies, Derek Attridge writes:
The establishment of a career structure for huge numbers of university employees dependent upon publication of ‘research’ in the humanities, and the modelling of that research upon the sciences, has resulted in a massive increase in the number of articles, reviews, and notes appearing annually in journals, edited collections, annotated editions, online comments and academic talks. The introduction in certain countries of national assessments of the research produced in specific subjects, on which crucial funding decisions depend, has further increased the quantity of what we have learned to call ‘outputs’… Given the vast resources, institutional and individual, now being devoted to this global activity, the question of value becomes unavoidable. (250)
Attridge’s contribution to the collection has a specific focus on the nature and value of the literary…