J. Hillis Miller


Joseph Hillis Miller Jr. was an American literary critic and scholar who advanced theories of literary deconstruction. He was part of the Yale School along with scholars including Paul de Man, Jacques Derrida, and Geoffrey Hartman, who advocated deconstruction as an analytical means by which the relationship between literary text and the associated meaning could be analyzed. Through his career, Miller was associated with the Johns Hopkins University, Yale University, and University of California, Irvine, and wrote over 50 books studying a wide range of American and British literature using principles of deconstruction.

Early life

Miller was born in Newport News, Virginia, on March 5, 1928, to Nell Martin and J. Hillis Miller Sr. His mother was a homemaker and his father a Baptist minister who was professor of psychology at the College of William & Mary, and would go on to serve as the president of the University of Florida.
Miller graduated from Oberlin College switching his major of study from Physics to English. He moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to start his masters at Harvard University. During this time, he contracted polio and was noted to have completed his dissertation writing with his left hand, having lost the ability to use his right hand. He completed his masters from the university in 1949 and his PhD in 1952.

Career

Miller started his career as a member of the faculty at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in 1953. During this time, Miller was heavily influenced by fellow Johns Hopkins professor and Belgian literary critic Georges Poulet and the Geneva School of literary criticism, which Miller characterized as "the consciousness of the consciousness of another, the transposition of the mental universe of an author into the interior space of the critic's mind." This was also the time that he was introduced to Paul de Man, who was a member of the faculty at Johns Hopkins as well as Jacques Derrida, a visiting professor, with whom he would remain associated.
In 1972, he joined the faculty at Yale University where he taught for fourteen years. At Yale, he worked alongside prominent literary critics Paul de Man and Geoffrey Hartman, where they were collectively known as the Yale School of deconstruction, in contention with prominent Yale influence theorist Harold Bloom.
By this time, Miller had emerged as an important humanities and literature scholar specializing in Victorian and Modernist literature, with a keen interest in the ethics of reading and reading as a cultural act. At one time, he was supervising at least 14 doctoral dissertations studying Victorian literature.
In 1986, Miller left Yale to work at the University of California Irvine, where he was later followed by his Yale colleague Derrida. During the same year, he served as President of the Modern Language Association, and was honored by the MLA with a lifetime achievement award in 2005. In 2004, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society. Both at Yale and UC Irvine, Miller mentored an entire generation of American literary critics including noted queer theorist Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick. He was Distinguished Research Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California Irvine until 2001.
After his retirement, he wrote over 15 books and many articles in journals and was also active on the international lecturing circuit. He also served on dissertation committees in his retirement supervising dissertations and doctoral theses works at UC Irvine, University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Queensland.

Role as a deconstructionist

Miller was associated with a group of scholars including Paul de Man, Jacques Derrida, and Geoffrey Hartman, collectively referred to as the Yale School, who advanced deconstruction, an analytical approach of associating and drawing linkages between literary text and the associated meaning. The theory espoused that words and texts had linkages to other expressed words and texts. These built on ideas and themes that Derrida and de Man had brought along from Europe, while Miller joined them. He applied these techniques to a range of American and British works, including prose as well as poetry. Throughout his career, he would go on to write over 35 books and many articles in journals advancing these themes.
Miller defined the movement as searching for "the thread in the text in question which will unravel it all", and said that there are multiple layers to any text, both its clear surface and its deep countervailing subtext:
On the one hand, the "obvious and univocal reading" always contains the "deconstructive reading" as a parasite encrypted within itself as part of itself. On the other hand, the "deconstructive" reading can by no means free itself from the metaphysical reading it means to contest.
Miller's "The Critic as Host" could be viewed as a reply to M. H. Abrams, who presented a paper, "The Deconstructive Angel," at a session of the Modern Language Association in December 1976, criticizing deconstruction and the methods of Miller. Miller presented his paper just after Abrams's presentation at the same session. He made the case that words and text lacking objective outside or providing meaning didn't mean they were the "prison-house of language," but, instead, they were a "place of joy" where the critics had the freedom to associate and provide various possibilities eventually guiding the meaning. The movement continued to gain popularity through the next decade, presenting a paper called "Triumph of Theory" at the 1986 session of the Modern Language Association. He was also noted to have made the topic of deconstruction more accessible to a wider audience by publishing in magazines including Newsweek, and The [New York Times Magazine].
He was also a defender of the movement in the late 1980s when deconstruction was losing some of its popularity. He advanced ideas that he termed 'ethics of learning' where he countered critics by arguing that it was the reader's obligation to try and find meaning in the text even when it appeared impossible.

Personal life

Miller married Dorothy James in 1949, and remained married until her death in January 2021. The couple had two daughters and a son. Miller died from COVID-19 on February 7, 2021, the month after Dorothy's death, at his home in Sedgwick, Maine; he was 92.

Books

The Disappearance of God: Five Nineteenth-Century WritersPoets of Reality: Six Twentieth-Century WritersThe Form of Victorian Fiction: Thackeray, Dickens, Trollope, George Eliot, Meredith, and HardyThomas Hardy, Distance and DesireCharles Dickens and George CruikshankFiction and Repetition: Seven English NovelsThe Linguistic Moment: from Wordsworth to StevensThe Lesson of Paul de ManThe Ethics of Reading: Kant, de Man, Eliot, Trollope, James, and BenjaminVersions of PygmalionVictorian SubjectsTropes, Parables, Performatives: Essays on Twentieth Century LiteratureTheory Now and ThenHawthorne & History: Defacing ItAriadne's Thread: Story LinesIllustrationTopographiesReading NarrativeBlack HolesOthersSpeech Acts in LiteratureOn LiteratureThe J. Hillis Miller ReaderLiterature as Conduct: Speech Acts in Henry JamesThe Medium is the Maker: Browning, Freud, Derrida, and the New Telepathic EcotechnologiesFor DerridaThe Conflagration of Community: Fiction Before and After AuschwitzReading for Our Time: Adam Bede and Middlemarch RevisitedCommunities in FictionAn Innocent Abroad: Lectures in China
  • ''Thinking Literature Across Continents''

Archival collections

  • Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
  • Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
  • Nidesh Lawtoo and J. Hillis Miller, The Critic and the Mime: J. Hillis Miller in Dialogue with Nidesh Lawtoo, The Minnesota Review, 95.
  • with Miller about his recent book The Conflagration of Community: Fiction Before and After Auschwitz on "New Books in Critical Theory"

Documentary