GAZETTE:  What does your writing life look like outside of Harvard?

McCARTHY: Part of my intellectual profile is magazine writing. I work as a writer and editor for The Point, a literary magazine devoted to essays. That writing informs my approach to teaching. I see it as my role, particularly in an English department, to work closely with students on writing — how to become a stronger writer, how to edit, how to think, and how to revise a draft. I’m interested in using that work to model and also experiment with ways of thinking in public. Recently, for example, I wrote for the magazine N+1 about trap music by adapting an approach to form I found in Susan Sontag. I hope that’s something I bring to the table at Harvard, a sense of excitement and experiment with contemporary writing that also connects back to classic and canonical texts. I think we’re all aware of the breakdowns in political discourse, divides, political correctness, how to talk about race in politics and culture. Harvard needs to be a place where we are actively thinking through those questions, and I to contribute to helping students think about ways we might oxygenate these conversations and debates.

GAZETTE: After college you taught in Brooklyn for New York City Teaching Fellows. What was the impact of that experience, and where did it lead you?

McCARTHY: That was the hardest job I’ve ever had and also probably the most rewarding. It forced me to grow up in a lot of ways. It taught me a lot about the possibilities of teaching that come from having strong, close interpersonal relationships with students, but also the limitations of teaching in terms of institutional and structural forces that condition those situations. It solidified for me the notion that this was something I really enjoyed and I was potentially good at, but I also came to recognize that, at that moment and at that age, I wasn’t ready or able to be the teacher the students needed. I learned a lot from the extraordinary teachers working there.

After I left, I had some wandering years. I did odd jobs. I traveled. I lived in San Francisco, doing catering. I came back to New York and worked at Book Culture, a bookstore near Columbia. I enjoyed it and I was a good bookseller, and eventually became a manager. In my second year there, I thought of other options. I was an English major in college, but I had been out of school four or five years so I went to the New York Public Library and did a lot of reading to find out what kinds of conversations were going on in the field.

When I arrived at Princeton, I didn’t come in with the certainty that I would become a professor. I knew that I still had a lot more to learn, but I also knew why I cared about the disciplines I was interested in, and I had a clear sense of the kind of scholarship I thought still needed to be done and that I felt I could contribute to. But it wasn’t a straight path. I try to convey that to the students here. You don’t have to be relentlessly achieving and perfect. There’s this ambient anxiety that if you take the time to look around and explore that you will waver and fall off the conveyer belt that you believe is necessary to being “successful.” There are many, many ways to get to where you’re meant to be in life, and people from all walks have something important to offer. Having the opportunity to expand your horizons with learning is a precious gift, and I want students to value that for its own sake, and help them make the most of the opportunities we’ve been blessed with.

 This interview has been lightly edited for clarity and length.