Daniel Hoffman Letters to Judith Moffett Ms

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Daniel Hoffman Letters to Judith Moffett Ms Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett Ms. Coll. 1026 Finding aid prepared by Molly B. Hutt. Last updated on April 14, 2017. University of Pennsylvania, Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts 2014 September 4 Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett Table of Contents Summary Information...................................................................................................................................3 Biography/History.........................................................................................................................................4 Scope and Contents.......................................................................................................................................4 Administrative Information...........................................................................................................................5 Related Materials ......................................................................................................................................... 6 Controlled Access Headings......................................................................................................................... 6 Collection Inventory..................................................................................................................................... 7 Correspondence.......................................................................................................................................7 Manuscripts.............................................................................................................................................8 - Page 2 - Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett Summary Information Repository University of Pennsylvania: Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts Creator Hoffman, Daniel, 1923-2013 Creator Moffett, Judith, 1942- Title Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett Call number Ms. Coll. 1026 Date [inclusive] 1970-2012 Extent 0.6 linear feet (2 boxes) Language English Abstract Daniel Hoffman (1923-2013) was an American poet and essayist whose lengthy career at the University of Pennsylvania (beginning in 1966) included acting as a dissertation director for Judith Moffett (born 1942), an American poet, English professor, Swedish translator, and author of twelve books. The collection covers the period from 1970, when Moffett was still a student at the University of Pennsylvania, to 2012, the year before Hoffman died. It includes letters and other correspondence addressed from Hoffman to Moffett, drafts and manuscripts of Hoffman's literary work, and a manuscript and posthumously published copy of a book of poems by Hoffman's wife, Elizabeth McFarland. Cite as: - Page 3 - Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett, 1970-2012, Ms. Coll. 1026, Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, University of Pennsylvania Biography/History Daniel Hoffman (1923-2013) was an American poet and essayist. He received his B.A. (1947), M.A. (1949), and Ph.D. (1956) from Columbia University. He taught at Columbia as well as Swarthmore College prior to beginning his career at the University of Pennsylvania in 1966. From 1973 to 1974, he was named Poet Laureate of the United States. His poems vary greatly in structure, ranging from sonnets to an epic poem about the founding of Pennsylvania; but he is best known for his work, “Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe” (1972), which his New York Times obituary describes as "an unusual study melding biography, criticism and bits of his own autobiography in a highly personal analysis of the American writer whose literary reputation is wildly diffuse." Hoffman lived primarily in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania with his wife, poet and esteemed Ladies' Home Journal editor, Elizabeth McFarland. Hoffman and McFarland spent their summers in Cape Rosier, Maine, which Hoffman used as a setting for many of his poems. Judith Moffett (born 1942) is a poet, English professor, Swedish translator, and author of twelve books, including poetry volumes, formal translations of Swedish poetry, science-fiction novels, and a creative non-fiction volume. She also published a critical study of the poems of James Merrill, with whom she shared a long friendship. Moffett was born in Louisville, Kentucky and grew up in Cincinnati prior to moving to Philadelphia to earn her doctorate in American Civilization at the University of Pennsylvania. She completed her dissertation on the work of Stephen Benét under the direction of Daniel Hoffman and went on to work at several colleges and universities in the United States and Europe, including a fifteen-year career at the University of Pennsylvania. She now divides her time between Swarthmore, Pennsylvania and her farm in Lawrenceburg, Kentucky. Scope and Contents This collection covers the period from 1970, when Moffett was still a student at the University of Pennsylvania, to 2012, the year before Hoffman died. It includes letters and other correspondence addressed from Hoffman to Moffett, drafts and manuscripts of Hoffman's literary work, and manuscripts and a posthumously published copy of a book of poems by Hoffman's wife, Elizabeth McFarland. Series I. Correspondence is composed mainly of letters addressed to Judith Moffett from Daniel Hoffman between 1970 and 2012, some of which include drafts of unfinished poems or clippings from newspapers, online articles, and academic journals. There are also printed copies of three emails sent from Moffett to Hoffman in 2008 and 2009, the latter of which relates to Hoffman's manuscript, Lives of the Poets, which - Page 4 - Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett is located in Series II. The earliest letters, written in the 1970s, focus largely on Moffett's literary work and search for a job in academia. Hoffman also mentions James Merrill as a topic of Moffett's research and writing, and Merrill continues to pop up throughout the rest of their correspondence, until his death in 1995. Starting around 1978, the year in which Moffett began her first teaching job at the University of Pennsylvania, Hoffman begins to discuss his own writing more in his letters, although he also devotes a considerable amount of space to figuring out the logistics of Moffett's move to Pennsylvania. Correspondence throughout the 1980s and 1990s is more sparse, with some years including only short and sporadic communications, such as Christmas cards. One notable exception is a February 18, 1995 letter regarding the death of James Merrill and including a copy of Merrill's funeral program. Between 2002 and 2012, Hoffman started to include a number of clippings in his letters, including Hoffman's translations of French poems by Stéphane Mallarmé and Gérard Nerval, an article by Hoffman entitled "Returns from the Grave: The Spirit of Poe in Contemporary Fictions," obituaries and a memorial service program for Elizabeth McFarland (Hoffman's wife), and printed online articles on a variety of topics. During this time, Hoffman sent Moffett drafts of his own poems with more frequency than in their previous communications. Series II includes two sets of manuscripts. The first of these is Over the Summer Water, a book of poems by Elizabeth McFarland published posthumously by Hoffman. A published copy of Over the Summer Water is also contained in the collection. The second, rather longer, set of manuscripts consists of drafts of Hoffman's unpublished 2009 book Lives of the Poets with handwritten notes and corrections by Moffett. Lives of the Poets seems to be largely autobiographical. Administrative Information University of Pennsylvania, Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts 2014 September 4 Finding aid prepared by Molly B. Hutt. Access Restrictions This collection is open for research use. Use Restrictions Copyright restrictions may exist. For most library holdings, the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania do not hold copyright. It is the responsibility of the requester to seek permission from the holder of the copyright to reproduce material from the Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts. Custodial History note Sold by David J. Holmes Autographs, 2013. - Page 5 - Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett Related Materials Related Archival Materials note At Hanover College: The Judith Moffett Papers At Western Michigan University: Judith Moffett Literary Correspondence Collection Controlled Access Headings FORM/GENRE(S) • Clippings (information artifacts) • Correspondence • Drafts (documents) • Publications (document genre) PERSONAL NAME(S) • McFarland, Elizabeth, 1922-2005 • Merrill, James, 1926-1995 SUBJECT(S) • Poetry • Poetry--Study and teaching • Poets • Poets, American--20th century - Page 6 - Daniel Hoffman letters to Judith Moffett Collection Inventory CORRESPONDENCE. Box Folder 1970-1973. 1 1 1974. 1 2 1975. 1 3 1976. 1 4 Scope and Contents note Includes one letter to Judith Moffett from Anthony Hecht. 1977. 1 5 1978. 1 6 1979. 1 7 1980. 1 8 1982-1984, 1989, 1992-1994. 1 9 1995-1996, 1999. 1 10 2002-2003. 1 11 2006-2008. 1 12 - Page 7 - 2009-2012. 1 13 undated. 1 14 MANUSCRIPTS. Box Folder Over the Summer Water: Poems by Elizabeth McFarland, preface by Daniel 1 15 Hoffman, draft and published copies, 2008. Lives of the Poets, by Daniel Hoffman, draft with comments by Judith 2 1-3 Moffett, 2009. - Page 8 -.
Recommended publications
  • April 2005 Updrafts
    Chaparral from the California Federation of Chaparral Poets, Inc. serving Californiaupdr poets for over 60 yearsaftsVolume 66, No. 3 • April, 2005 President Ted Kooser is Pulitzer Prize Winner James Shuman, PSJ 2005 has been a busy year for Poet Laureate Ted Kooser. On April 7, the Pulitzer commit- First Vice President tee announced that his Delights & Shadows had won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry. And, Jeremy Shuman, PSJ later in the week, he accepted appointment to serve a second term as Poet Laureate. Second Vice President While many previous Poets Laureate have also Katharine Wilson, RF Winners of the Pulitzer Prize receive a $10,000 award. Third Vice President been winners of the Pulitzer, not since 1947 has the Pegasus Buchanan, Tw prize been won by the sitting laureate. In that year, A professor of English at the University of Ne- braska-Lincoln, Kooser’s award-winning book, De- Fourth Vice President Robert Lowell won— and at the time the position Eric Donald, Or was known as the Consultant in Poetry to the Li- lights & Shadows, was published by Copper Canyon Press in 2004. Treasurer brary of Congress. It was not until 1986 that the po- Ursula Gibson, Tw sition became known as the Poet Laureate Consult- “I’m thrilled by this,” Kooser said shortly after Recording Secretary ant in Poetry to the Library of Congress. the announcement. “ It’s something every poet dreams Lee Collins, Tw The 89th annual prizes in Journalism, Letters, of. There are so many gifted poets in this country, Corresponding Secretary Drama and Music were announced by Columbia Uni- and so many marvelous collections published each Dorothy Marshall, Tw versity.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Papers of the Summer Seminar of the Arts
    Summer Seminar of the Arts Papers Guide to the Papers of The Summer Seminar of the Arts Auburn University at Montgomery Library Archives and Special Collections © AUM Library TABLE OF CONTENTS Content Page # Collection Summary 2 Administrative Information 2 Restrictions 2 Biographical Information 3-4 Scope and Content Note 5 Arrangement 5-6 Inventory 6-24 1 Summer Seminar of the Arts Papers Collection Summary Creator: Jack Mooney Title: Summer Seminar of the Arts Papers Dates: ca. 1969-1983 Quantity: 9 boxes; 6.0 cu. ft. Identification: 2005/02 Contact Information: AUM Library Archives & Special Collections P.O. Box 244023 Montgomery, AL 36124-4023 Ph: (334) 244-3213 Email: [email protected] Administrative Information Preferred Citation: Summer Seminar of the Arts Papers, Auburn University Montgomery Library, Archives & Special Collections. Acquisition Information: Jack Mooney donated the collection to the AUM Library in May 2005. Processing By: Samantha McNeilly, Archives/Special Collections Assistant (2005). Copyright Information: Copyright not assigned to the AUM Library. Restrictions Restrictions on access: There are no restrictions on access to these papers. Restrictions on usage: Researchers are responsible for addressing copyright issues on materials not in the public domain. 2 Summer Seminar of the Arts Papers Biographical/Historical Information The Summer Seminar of the Arts was an annual arts and literary festival held in Montgomery from 1969 until 1983. The Seminar was part of the Montgomery Arts Guild, an organization which was active in promoting and sponsoring cultural events. Held during July, the Seminar hosted readings by notable poets, offered creative writing workshops, held creative writing contests, and featured musical performances.
    [Show full text]
  • Librarian of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate
    University of New Hampshire University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository Media Relations UNH Publications and Documents 8-2-2007 Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate Erika Mantz UNH Media Relations Follow this and additional works at: https://scholars.unh.edu/news Recommended Citation Mantz, Erika, "Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate" (2007). UNH Today. 850. https://scholars.unh.edu/news/850 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the UNH Publications and Documents at University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Media Relations by an authorized administrator of University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate 9/11/17, 1250 PM Librarian Of Congress Appoints UNH Professor Emeritus Charles Simic Poet Laureate Contact: Erika Mantz 603-862-1567 UNH Media Relations August 2, 2007 Librarian of Congress James H. Billington has announced the appointment of Charles Simic to be the Library’s 15th Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry. Simic will take up his duties in the fall, opening the Library’s annual literary series on Oct. 17 with a reading of his work. He also will be a featured speaker at the Library of Congress National Book Festival in the Poetry pavilion on Saturday, Sept. 29, on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Simic succeeds Donald Hall as Poet Laureate and joins a long line of distinguished poets who have served in the position, including most recently Ted Kooser, Louise Glück, Billy Collins, Stanley Kunitz, Robert Pinsky, Robert Hass and Rita Dove.
    [Show full text]
  • Richard Hugo Awarded $10,000 Academy of American Poets Fellowship
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana University of Montana News Releases, 1928, 1956-present University Relations 12-1-1981 Richard Hugo awarded $10,000 Academy of American Poets fellowship University of Montana--Missoula. Office of University Relations Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/newsreleases Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation University of Montana--Missoula. Office of University Relations, "Richard Hugo awarded $10,000 Academy of American Poets fellowship" (1981). University of Montana News Releases, 1928, 1956-present. 7225. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/newsreleases/7225 This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Relations at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Montana News Releases, 1928, 1956-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. /^University yi# of Montana Office of University Relations • Missoula, Montana 59812 (406) 243-2522 braun/rv MEDIA RELEASE 12/1/81 state, w/pic RICHARD HUGO AWARDED $10,000 ACADEMY OF AMERICAN POETS FELLOWSHIP MISSOULA-- Richard Hugo, professor of English and director of the creative writing program at the University of Montana, has been awarded a $10,000 fellowship for "distinguished poetic achievement" by the Academy of American Poets. The announce­ ment was made by Mrs. Hugh Bullock, academy president, at the 47th annual mem­ bers' meeting in New York Nov. 18. The fellowship of the Academy of American Poets was the first award of its kind in the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Poetry for the People
    06-0001 ETF_33_43 12/14/05 4:07 PM Page 33 U.S. Poet Laureates P OETRY 1937–1941 JOSEPH AUSLANDER FOR THE (1897–1965) 1943–1944 ALLEN TATE (1899–1979) P EOPLE 1944–1945 ROBERT PENN WARREN (1905–1989) 1945–1946 LOUISE BOGAN (1897–1970) 1946–1947 KARL SHAPIRO BY (1913–2000) K ITTY J OHNSON 1947–1948 ROBERT LOWELL (1917–1977) HE WRITING AND READING OF POETRY 1948–1949 “ LEONIE ADAMS is the sharing of wonderful discoveries,” according to Ted Kooser, U.S. (1899–1988) TPoet Laureate and winner of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. 1949–1950 Poetry can open our eyes to new ways of looking at experiences, emo- ELIZABETH BISHOP tions, people, everyday objects, and more. It takes us on voyages with poetic (1911–1979) devices such as imagery, metaphor, rhythm, and rhyme. The poet shares ideas 1950–1952 CONRAD AIKEN with readers and listeners; readers and listeners share ideas with each other. And (1889–1973) anyone can be part of this exchange. Although poetry is, perhaps wrongly, often 1952 seen as an exclusive domain of a cultured minority, many writers and readers of WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS (1883–1963) poetry oppose this stereotype. There will likely always be debates about how 1956–1958 transparent, how easy to understand, poetry should be, and much poetry, by its RANDALL JARRELL very nature, will always be esoteric. But that’s no reason to keep it out of reach. (1914–1965) Today’s most honored poets embrace the idea that poetry should be accessible 1958–1959 ROBERT FROST to everyone.
    [Show full text]
  • LIBRARY of CONGRESS MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2015 Poetry Nation
    LIBRARY OF CONGRESS MAGAZINE MARCH/APRIL 2015 poetry nation INSIDE Rosa Parks and the Struggle for Justice A Powerful Poem of Racial Violence PLUS Walt Whitman’s Words American Women Poets How to Read a Poem WWW.LOC.GOV In This Issue MARCH/APRIL 2015 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS MAGAZINE FEATURES Library of Congress Magazine Vol. 4 No. 2: March/April 2015 Mission of the Library of Congress The Power of a Poem 8 Billie Holiday’s powerful ballad about racial violence, “Strange Fruit,” The mission of the Library is to support the was written by a poet whose works are preserved at the Library. Congress in fulfilling its constitutional duties and to further the progress of knowledge and creativity for the benefit of the American people. National Poets 10 For nearly 80 years the Library has called on prominent poets to help Library of Congress Magazine is issued promote poetry. bimonthly by the Office of Communications of the Library of Congress and distributed free of charge to publicly supported libraries and Beyond the Bus 16 The Rosa Parks Collection at the Library sheds new light on the research institutions, donors, academic libraries, learned societies and allied organizations in remarkable life of the renowned civil rights activist. 6 the United States. Research institutions and Walt Whitman educational organizations in other countries may arrange to receive Library of Congress Magazine on an exchange basis by applying in writing to the Library’s Director for Acquisitions and Bibliographic Access, 101 Independence Ave. S.E., Washington DC 20540-4100. LCM is also available on the web at www.loc.gov/lcm.
    [Show full text]
  • W. H. Auden William Blake Charles Baudelaire Margaret Atwood
    Margaret Atwood W. H. Auden William Blake comprehensive poetry exam questions - masterlist MFA Charles Baudelaire Elizabeth Bishop Gwendolyn Brooks Robert Bly Robert Browning Lucille Clifton Robert Creely E. E. Cummings Bei Dao Emily Dickinson John Donne Rita Dove Paul Dunbar T.S. Eliot Robert Frost Alan Ginsberg H. D. Robert Hass Gerard Manley Hopkins subjects & themes, periods & traditions • “imagination,” metaphor, symbol, myth • religious poetry and belief • political and social content / themes • “largeness” (of subjects, themes, styles) • place • the commonplace • eroticism & death • women poets • african-american poets • gay & lesbian poets Langston Hughes Richard Hugo John Keats Denise Levertov Phillip Levine formal elements & conventions • evolution of formal elements & conventions • formal innovation / formalism vs. free verse • dramatic poetry • other formal / nonformal conventions Federico Lorca Robert Lowell Mira Loy Galway Kinnell W.S. Merwin influence, affiliation, “movements,” comparison & contrast • influence, affiliation, “movements,” comparison & contrast • confessional poetry • language • translation • humor • questioning the list itself Marianne Moore Ogden Nash Pablo Neruda Frank O’Hara Sharon Olds relation of list to student’s own writing • relation of the list to student’s own writing • teaching • rivalries / judging • performance • critical reception • partying Wilfred Owen Sylvia Plath Stanley Plumly Ezra Pound Adrienne Rich Rainer Maria Rilke Theodore Roethke Chrstina Rossetti Anne Sexton Leopold Senghor Sipho Sepamia Charles Simic Gary Snyder Wallace Stevens Mark Strand James Tate Cesar Vallejo Walt Whitman Richard Wilbur William Carlos Williams William Wordsworth James Wright subjects & themes, periods & traditions “imagination,” metaphor, symbol, myth 1. Discuss the use of myth, symbolism, and their simulacra in the work of two of the following: Zbigniew Herbert, Theodore Roethke, Francis Ponge, Adrienne Rich 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Fall 1965 $1 the CARLETON MISCELLANY
    O Oo 5 z z (A (A tt 2 5 > I u u SEE 'Your Eighty Years' Fall 1965 $1 THE CARLETON MISCELLANY Vol. VI, Number 4 Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota 55057 Published by Carleton College Editor: Erling Larsen Associate Editor: Wayne Carver Managing Editor: Carolyn Soule Editor, Department of American: Wayne Booth Consulting Editor: Reed Whittemore Vol. VI, No. 4 Fall 1965 In Fourteen Lines I Hail Your Eighty Years 5 June 1965 Two poems by John Lucas 2 Others, story by Robley Wilson, Jr 4 Poems by Lawrence P. Spingarn, Ernest Kroll, John Pauker and Ralph S. Pomeroy 30 The Virgin in the Woods, essay by Harold Bordwell 36 Poems by Laurence Lieberman, Barry Spacks, Daniel Hoffman and Mona Van Duyn 50 The Kiss, story by Robert Lowry 58 Poems by Larry Rubin, Constance Urdang, Andrew Oerke and Kenneth Pitchford 61 Reviews by Forbes Hays, David Porter, Robert Diebold and Wayne Carver 69 A Garland of Letters 107 Cover drawing by Henri Gaudier-Brzeska The Carleton Miscellany is published quarterly. Rates are as follows: $1.00 a copy; $3.50 a year; $6.00 for two years. It is distributed to newsstands and bookstores by B. De Boer, 188 High Street, Nutley, New Jersey. All volumes available on microfilm through University Microfilms, 313 N. First St., Ann Arbor, Michigan. Manuscripts should be submitted to The Carleton Miscellany, Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, as should subscriptions. Manuscripts are submitted at the authors risk, and will not be returned unless they are accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelopes. The Carleton Miscellany is not an official publication of Carleton College, nor are the views expressed in its columns necessarily those of the college.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gazette Online
    GAZETTE Volume 19, No. 27 • July 25, 2008 • A weekly publication for Library staff Librarian Appoints Kay Ryan as 16th Poet Laureate ibrarian of Congress James H. Billington on June 17 announced Lthe appointment of Kay Ryan, a Californian whose spare, prize-winning poems offer surprises and insights, as the Library’s Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry for 2008-2009. Ryan will take up her duties in the fall, opening the Library’s annual literary series on Oct. 16 with a reading of her work. She also will be a featured guest at the Library’s 2008 National Book Festival in the Poetry pavilion on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 27. Ryan, the 16th poet laureate, succeeds Charles Simic and joins a long line of distinguished poets who have served in the position, including Simic, Donald Hall, Ted Kooser, Louise Glück, Billy Collins, Stanley Kunitz, Robert Pinsky, Robert Hass and Rita Dove. Billington said the Laureateship is Jennifer Loring uniformly awarded for the highest qual- Kay Ryan brings the voice of her quiet life to the poet laureateship. LAUREATE, Continued on page 4 New Garden Enhances Adams Building ibrary staff, visitors and neighbors uled for the fall,” Morgan said. have reason to stroll past a new “We decided a facelift was needed to Lperennial garden on the east side enhance the beauty of one of our national of the Adams Building on Third Street, treasures by creating a new design meant S.E. to soften the existing hardscape and pro- Carl Morgan, Architect of the Capi- vide seasonal color and winter interest,” tol (AOC), led a crew of four Library Morgan said.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide to the Faye George Collection, 1940-2016
    Bridgewater State University Maxwell Library Archives & Special Collections Faye George Collection, 1940 - 2020 (MSS-024) Finding Aid Compiled by Orson Kingsley and Lenora Robinson Last Updated: April 14, 2020 Maxwell Library Bridgewater State University 10 Shaw Road / Bridgewater MA 02325 / 508-531-1389 Finding Aid: Faye George Collection (MSS-024) 2 Volume: 7.5 linear feet (13 document boxes) Acquisition: All items in this manuscript group were donated to Bridgewater State University. The bulk of the material was received in the autumn of 2015. A second installment of the collection was received in October of 2016. Access: Access to this record group is unrestricted. Copyright: The researcher assumes full responsibility for conforming with the laws of copyright. Whenever possible, the Maxwell Library will provide information about copyright owners and other restrictions, but the legal determination ultimately rests with the researcher. Requests for permission to publish material from this collection should be discussed with the University Archivist. Table of Contents Biographical Sketch Scope and Content Note Series Descriptions Box and Folder List Series 1: Publications, 1951, 1968, 1978-2019 . Sub-series 1: Books/Chapbooks by Faye George, 1995-2019 . Sub-series 2: Periodicals Containing Poems by Faye George, 1951, 1968, 1978- 2018 . Sub-series 3: Anthologies Containing Poems by Faye George, 1990-2016 Series 2: Correspondence with Mentors and Poets, 1977-2019 . Sub-series 1: Daniel Hoffman, 1987-2013 . Sub-series 2: Richard Dey, 1995-2019
    [Show full text]
  • Contributors, Advertisement, Issue 9
    Ontario Review Volume 9 Fall-Winter 1978-79 Article 27 April 2017 Contributors, Advertisement, Issue 9 Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.usfca.edu/ontarioreview Recommended Citation (2017) "Contributors, Advertisement, Issue 9," Ontario Review: Vol. 9 , Article 27. Available at: http://repository.usfca.edu/ontarioreview/vol9/iss1/27 For more information, please contact [email protected]. CONTRIBUTORS RuTH DANON teaches at Quinebaug Valley Community College and is working for her Ph.D. at the University of Connecticut. This is her first publication in a national magazine. PAULA DEITZ, a former OR contributor, is co-editor of the Hudson Review in New York City. She writes both art and literary criticism. BELA EoYEDI, another former contributor, was born in Hungary and is now a Canadian citizen. A resident of Montreal, he has published and exhibited in North America, Europe, and Japan. The photographs which appear in this issue are: "Sub-Patio Pattern," p. 18; "Winter Zen," p. 20; "The Big Bubble" (Man and His World, Montreal) , p. 71 ; "Baroque Bike Pattern" (Provincetown, Cape Cod), p. 94; "Asphalt Graffiti" (Rue Durocher, Montreal), p. 98. WILLIAM EvERSON was recently given the Shelley Award for Poetry. His latest book is Man-Fate (New Directions) . ("Blackbird Sundown" ap­ peared as a broadside published by Lord John Press, 1978.) RuTH FAINLIGHT has published widely in England and the United States, in such magazines as Southern Review, The New Yorker, Poetry (Chi­ cago), and the Massachusetts Review. She is the author of four books of poetry and a collection of stories, Daylife and Nightlife. She lives near Notting Hill Gate, London, with her husband Alan Sillitoe.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae-1
    Ann Elizabeth Hostetler [email protected] Associate Professor Department of English 109 Carter Road Goshen College Goshen, IN 46526 Goshen, IN 46526 Phone: 574-535-7469 (w) 574-537-9270 (h) Fax: 574-535-7293 (w) 574-537-0567 (h) E-mail: [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, 1996 Dissertation: “ Telling the Story of the Past: History, Identity, and Community in the Fiction of Walter Scott, William Faulkner, Toni Morrison, and Leslie Silko.” Advisors: Peter Conn, Farah Griffin, David DeLaura M.A. The Pennsylvania State University, 1982 Thesis: “The Novel as Maturation Myth: A Study of Jane Eyre and David Copperfield” Advisor: Robert Lougy A.B. Kenyon College, 1976 Magna cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa, Honors PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE TEACHING Goshen College, Goshen, Indiana Associate Professor, Department of English, 2000-present Assistant Professor, 1998-2000 Courses taught include American Literature Survey, African American Literature, Contemporary African American Literature and Film; Major Author Seminar on William Faulkner and Toni Morrison; Major Author seminar on D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf, American Indian Literature; British Literature 1800-present; Contemporary Poetry, Creative Writing (Introduction to Creative Writing; Advanced Writing: Poetry; Advanced Writing: Creative Nonfiction); Expository Writing; Humanities 420: Literature and Art; Humanities 321: Literature and Music; Introduction to Literary Interpretation; Literature and Writing (topics include "Writing About America," "Communities in Fiction," "Introduction to American Poetry," “Literary Journeys,” “Imagining Community,” Honors section); Expository Writing; Women in Literature: Women and Nature, Women's Studies: Women and the Media. Supervised student teachers in English Secondary Education, 1999-2000. Advisor to Broadside, student poetry publication.
    [Show full text]