Andrew Milner

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Andrew Milner
Born
Andrew John Milner

(1950-09-09) 9 September 1950 (age 70)
Leeds, Yorkshire, England
NationalityAustralian British
Occupation
  • Academic
  • Author
Spouse(s)
(m. 1977)
Children3
Parent(s)
  • John Milner
  • Dorothy Ibbotson
Relatives
  • Richard Milner (brother)
  • Joyce Morton (sister)
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisJohn Milton and the English Revolution (1977)
Doctoral advisorAlan Swingewood
InfluencesLucien Goldmann

Pierre Bourdieu

Raymond Williams
Academic work
Disciplinesociology of literature
School or traditioncultural materialism
Institutions
Doctoral students28
Notable studentsAdam Bandt
Main interestsscience fiction, utopia and dystopia
Notable ideaspost-culturalism

Andrew John Milner (born 9 September 1950) is a British-Australian cultural theorist and literary critic, Professor Emeritus of English and Comparative Literature at Monash University and Honorary Professor of English and Comparative Literary Studies at the University of Warwick. In 2013 he was Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack Visiting Professor of Australian Studies at the Institut für Englische Philologie, Freie Universität Berlin.

Milner was born in Leeds, UK, the son of John Milner and Dorothy Ibbotson. He was educated at Batley Grammar School and later at the London School of Economics, where he studied sociology. He graduated with a BSc (Econ) degree, with honours in Sociology, in 1972 and a PhD in the Sociology of Literature in 1977. He married Verity Burgmann, the Australian political scientist and labour historian, in 1977. They have three sons.[1] He is a member of the Melbourne Cricket Club and an inaugural member of the Melbourne Victory Football Club.

Milner was politically active, by turn, in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, the Labour Party Young Socialists, the Vietnam Solidarity Campaign, the International Socialists, the Socialist Workers Party (Britain) and, in Australia, People for Nuclear Disarmament.[2] In the early 21st century he appears to have joined the Australian Greens.[3]

Milner's academic interests include literary and cultural theory, the sociology of literature, utopia, dystopia and science fiction. His work has been published in English in Australia, India, the US and the UK and has been translated into French, German, Portuguese, Chinese, Persian and Korean. He first attracted attention for work, strongly influenced by Lucien Goldmann, on the sociology of 17th-century literature. Subsequently, he has become better known for his advocacy of Raymond Williams's cultural materialism and for studies of utopian and dystopian science fiction. He also has a strong interest in the cultural sociology of Pierre Bourdieu.[4]

Career[]

Andrew Milner began his academic career teaching Sociology at the London School of Economics in 1972. He subsequently taught in Sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London; in Cultural Studies at the University of Leeds; and in the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies at Monash University, where he was appointed to a chair in 2000. He was Director of the Centre 2001-2003 and Deputy Director 2004–2010. When the University merged its programs in Comparative Literature and English in January 2012 he became Professor of English and Comparative Literature. He retired in 2013 and was appointed Professor Emeritus before proceeding to a position in English at the Freie Universität Berlin. He also held visiting appointments in the Centre for Philosophy and Literature at the University of Warwick, the Theory, Culture and Society Centre at Nottingham Trent University, the School of English at the University of Liverpool and the Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies at the University of Warwick.

Sociology of literature[]

Milner's first book, John Milton and the English Revolution, was an application of Goldmann's 'genetic structuralist' sociology of literature to the political, philosophical and poetical writings of John Milton, the great poet of the English Revolution. It argued that the seventeenth-century revolutionary crisis had witnessed the creation and subsequent destruction of a rationalist world vision, which found political expression in the political practice of 'Independency'. A detailed analysis of Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes interpreted the poems as articulating distinct and separate responses to the problem of defeat, whether actual or potential, and to the triumph of unreason over reason. Literature, Culture and Society was published in two editions, the first in 1996 and the second, very substantially revised, in 2005. Both develop a substantive account of the capitalist literary mode of production, focussing on technologies of mechanical reproduction and social relations of commodification. The differences between editions are evidence of Milner's growing interest in comparative literature and science fiction studies. Two of the additional case-studies in the second edition reflect both interests, a third the latter alone.

Cultural materialism[]

Milner's concern with Williams's theoretical legacy inspired Cultural Materialism, published in 1993, and Re-Imagining Cultural Studies, published in 2002. Both traced the continuing influence on literary and cultural studies of the kinds of cultural materialism developed by Williams and his successors. They also stressed the differences between Williams and Richard Hoggart, arguing that the label 'culturalism' could not properly be applied to both. Milner argued that Williams had stood in an essentially analogous relation to the British 'culturalist' tradition as Bourdieu and Michel Foucault to French structuralism and Jürgen Habermas to German critical theory. Cultural materialism was therefore best understood, not as culturalist, but rather as positively 'post-culturalist'. In 2010 Milner published, under the title Tenses of Imagination, an edited collection of Williams's writings on utopia, dystopia and science fiction.

Science fiction[]

Locating Science Fiction is arguably Milner's most important, potentially paradigm-shifting, book. Academic literary criticism had tended to locate science fiction primarily in relation to the older genre of utopia; fan criticism primarily in relation to fantasy and science fiction in other media, especially film and television; popular fiction studies primarily in relation to such contemporary genres as the romance novel and the thriller. Milner's book relocates science fiction in relation not only to these other genres and media, but also to the historical and geographic contexts of its emergence and development. Locating Science Fiction sought to move science fiction theory and criticism away from the prescriptively abstract dialectics of cognition and estrangement associated with Fredric Jameson and Darko Suvin, and towards an empirically grounded understanding of what is actually a messy amalgam of texts, practices and artefacts. Inspired by Williams, Bourdieu and Franco Moretti's application of world systems theory to literary studies, it drew on the disciplinary competences of comparative literature, cultural studies, critical theory and sociology to produce a powerfully distinctive mode of analysis, engagement and argument. The concluding chapter is preoccupied with environmentalist thematics occasioned by Milner's growing interest in Green politics.

Late Collaboration with J.R. Burgmann[]

In 2015 Milner published an article on climate fiction co-authored with three research assistants, Rjurik Davidson, Susan Cousin, and Milner's son James, who writes as J.R. Burgmann. Thereafter Milner and Burgmann collaborated on a series of journal articles on climate fiction, science fiction, and world systems theory. In 2018 Burgmann published an edited collection of Milner's essays. Their collaboration culminated in 2020 with the co-authored Science Fiction and Climate Change.

Honors[]

Selected bibliography[]

  • Milner, A. and J.R. Burgmann (2020) Science Fiction and Climate Change: A Sociological Approach, Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, ISBN 978-1-789-62172-3.
  • Kendal, Z., A. Smith, G. Champion and A. Milner (eds) (2020) Ethical Futures and Global Science Fiction, Palgrave-Macmillan, London and New York, ISBN 978-3-030-27892-2.
  • Milner, A. (2019) Again, Dangerous Visions: Essays in Cultural Materialism, ed. J.R. Burgmann, Haymarket Books, Chicago ISBN 9781642590395.
  • Milner, A. (2018) Again, Dangerous Visions: Essays in Cultural Materialism, ed. J.R. Burgmann, E.J. Brill, Leiden, ISBN 978-90-04-31416-0.
  • Milner, A. (2013) John Milton and the English Revolution: A Study in the Sociology of Literature, Palgrave, New York, ISBN 1349048550.
  • Milner, A. (2012) Locating Science Fiction, Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, ISBN 978-1846318429.
  • Milner, A., S. Sellars and V. Burgmann (eds) (2011) Changing the Climate: Utopia, Dystopia and Catastrophe, Arena Publications, Melbourne, ISBN 9780980415827.
  • Williams, R.; Milner, A. (2010), Tenses of Imagination : Raymond Williams on Science Fiction, Utopia and Dystopia, Ralahine utopian studies, Peter Lang, Oxford and Bern, OCLC 430678958. ISBN 978-3039118267.
  • Milner, A.; Ryan, M.; Sellars, S. (2008), Demanding the Impossible: Utopia and Dystopia, Arena Publications, Melbourne, ISBN 978-0-646-50630-2, OCLC 298536482.
  • Milner, A., M. Ryan and R. Savage (eds) (2006) Imagining the Future: Utopia and Dystopia, Arena Publications, Melbourne, ISBN 0-9598181-8-9.
  • Milner, A. (2005) Literature, Culture and Society, second edition, Routledge, London and New York, ISBN 0-415-30784-8. ISBN 0-415-30785-6.
  • Milner, A. (ed.) (2005) Postwar British Critical Thought, Volume One: Old Right and New Left, Sage Publications, London, Thousand Oaks and New Delhi, ISBN 0761943676. ISBN 978-0761943679.
  • Milner, A. (ed.) (2005) Postwar British Critical Thought, Volume Two: New Theory, Sage Publications, London, Thousand Oaks and New Delhi, ISBN 978-0761943679.
  • Milner, A. (ed.) (2005) Postwar British Critical Thought, Volume Three: New Politics, Sage Publications, London, Thousand Oaks and New Delhi, ISBN 978-0761943679.
  • Milner, A. (ed.) (2005) Postwar British Critical Thought, Volume Four: New Times, Sage Publications, London, Thousand Oaks and New Delhi, ISBN 978-0761943679.
  • Milner, A. and J. Browitt (2002) Contemporary Cultural Theory: An Introduction, third edition, Routledge, London and New York, ISBN 0-415-30099-1. ISBN 0-415-30100-9.
  • Milner, A. (2002) Re-Imagining Cultural Studies: The Promise of Cultural Materialism, Sage Publications, London, Thousand Oaks and New Delhi, ISBN 0-7619-6113-5. ISBN 0-7619-6114-3.
  • Milner, A. (1999) Class, Sage Publications, London, Thousand Oaks and New Delhi, ISBN 978-0761952459.
  • Milner, A. (1996) Literature, Culture and Society, University College London Press, London, ISBN 1-85728-095-4.
  • Milner, A. (1994) Contemporary Cultural Theory: An Introduction, second edition, University College London Press, London, ISBN 1-85728-127-6.
  • Milner, A. (1993) Cultural Materialism, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, ISBN 978-0522844931.
  • Milner, A. (1991) Contemporary Cultural Theory: An Introduction, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, ISBN 9780044422921.
  • Milner, A., P. Thomson and C. Worth (eds) (1990) Postmodern Conditions, Berg, Oxford, ISBN 978-0854965915.
  • Milner, A. and C. Worth (eds) (1990) Discourse and Difference: Post-Structuralism, Feminism and the Moment of History, Centre for General and Comparative Literature, Monash University, Melbourne, ISBN 0732601231.
  • Milner, A. (1984) The Road to St. Kilda Pier: George Orwell and the Politics of the Australian Left, Stained Wattle Press, Sydney, ISBN 095904860X.
  • Milner, A. (1981) John Milton and the English Revolution: A Study in the Sociology of Literature, Macmillan, London, ISBN 0333271343.

References[]

  1. ^ Who's Who in Australia 2009, ed. Leanne Sullivan, Crown Content, Melbourne, 2009, p. 1480.
  2. ^ Milner, Andrew, The Road to St. Kilda Pier: George Orwell and the Politics of the Australian Left, Stained Wattle Press, Sydney, 1984, p. ii.
  3. ^ Milner, Andrew, 'Shock! Horror! Chattering Classes Vote Green!' Overland No. 166, 2002, pp. 95-97.
  4. ^ "Andrew Milner". Monash University. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  5. ^ "Swancon36 » Natcon Fifty Ditmar Awards". Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  6. ^ "Science Fiction Research Association - SFRA 2016 Annual Conference". sfra.wildapricot.org. Retrieved 9 June 2016.
  7. ^ "2020 BSFA Shortlist". 18 February 2021. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
  8. ^ "2021 Locus Awards Top Ten Finalists". 1 May 2021. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  9. ^ "Who are the 78ers?". First mardi gras. Retrieved 5 January 2020.

External links[]

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