Eric Hoffer Papers

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Eric Hoffer Papers http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0n39n6dd No online items Register of the Eric Hoffer Papers Processed by David Jacobs Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California 94305-6010 Phone: (650) 723-3563 Fax: (650) 725-3445 Email: [email protected] © 2003 Hoover Institution Archives. All rights reserved. Register of the Eric Hoffer Papers 94057 1 Register of the Eric Hoffer Papers Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California Contact Information Hoover Institution Archives Stanford University Stanford, California 94305-6010 Phone: (650) 723-3563 Fax: (650) 725-3445 Email: [email protected] Processed by: David Jacobs Date Completed: 2002 Encoded by: ByteManagers using OAC finding aid conversion service specifications © 2003 Hoover Institution Archives. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: Eric Hoffer papers, Date (inclusive): 1934-1985 Collection number: 94057 Creator: Hoffer, Eric Collection Size: 142 manuscript boxes, 3 cubic foot boxes, 10 oversize boxes, 7 card file boxes, 1 painting(73 linear feet) Repository: Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace Stanford, California 94305-6010 Abstract: Speeches and writings, correspondence, reports, minutes, memoranda, printed matter, and audiovisual material, relating to philosophy, social psychology, the nature of mass movements, social violence, the social role of intellectuals, and social conditions in the United States. Language: English. Access Box 142 closed until 2020 October 1. The remainder of the collection is open for research. The Hoover Institution Archives only allows access to copies of audiovisual items. To listen to sound recordings or to view videos or films during your visit, please contact the Archives at least two working days before your arrival. We will then advise you of the accessibility of the material you wish to see or hear. Please note that not all audiovisual material is immediately accessible. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Archives. Video tapes (Boxes 144-146) may not be reproduced. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Eric Hoffer papers, [Box number], Hoover Institution Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired. Accruals Increments may have been received since this finding aid was prepared. Please check Stanford University's online catalog Socrates at http://library.stanford.edu/webcat to find the full extent of the collection. 1898 Born, New York (?) 1920s-1930sWorks as migrant farm laborer and gold miner in California, Oregon, and Washington 1942 Begins work as a longshoreman in San Francisco, California Register of the Eric Hoffer Papers 94057 2 1951 Author, The True Believer 1955 Author, The Passionate State of Mind 1963 Author, The Ordeal of Change 1967 Author, The Temper of Our Time Invited to the White House by President Lyndon B. Johnson 1967-1969 Writes nationally syndicated newspaper column, “Reflections” 1968-1969 Member, National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence 1969 Author, Working and Thinking on the Waterfront 1973 Author, Reflections on the Human Condition, 1973 1979 Author, Before the Sabbath 1983 Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom by Ronald Reagan Died, San Francisco, California Autobiography, Truth Imagined, published posthumously Scope and Content Note Acquired in 1994, the Eric Hoffer papers in the Hoover Institution Archives represent the largest single fund of primary sources documenting the unusual life and influential writings of a celebrated and controversial individual who came to be known as America's "longshoreman philosopher." The collection contains nearly everything ever written by Hoffer, including copious notes made throughout his lifetime, as well as a large volume of correspondence from readers of his works. There are also newspaper columns and audiovisual materials which, taken together with his writings, reveal a fuller picture of Hoffer as not only the solitary thinker, but a public figure engaged with the world around him. The documents in the Hoffer collection concern all periods of his life, and they include early, unpublished stories based on his experiences as a migrant worker and sometime gold miner in California during the Depression. Although living at the very margins of society, Hoffer made great efforts to educate himself on a wide variety of subjects. The NOTEBOOKS series provides an annotated record of Hoffer's readings, along with his own observations on many topics. In these notebooks, the genesis of his personal philosophy can be traced, as can the polishing of the aphoristic style that characterized much of his published work. Hoffer continued his practice of keeping notebooks until late in his life, and these contain much unpublished material, a large portion of which was transcribed before his death and is part of the collection. Hoffer's first published work, The True Believer (1951), brought him enduring acclaim for its analysis of mass movements in history and Hoffer's emphasis on the part played by fanaticism in the trajectory of such movements. The term "true believer" entered the popular vocabulary as an archetype of the political or religious zealot, and Hoffer's book is still invoked in contemporary discussions of religious fundamentalism and political terrorism. The collection contains early drafts of this seminal work, as well as its final manuscript form. Hoffer, who indeed worked for many years as a longshoreman on the San Francisco docks, went on to write other books ( The Ordeal of Change and The Temper of Our Time, among others) in which he set forth his ideas on history and social change, the relationship of humanity to nature, and what, in Hoffer's view, was the often suspect role played by intellectuals as exponents of absolutist doctrine and as seekers of power for themselves. Following several programs devoted to him on national television in the 1960s, Hoffer became a public personality, and through numerous speeches and a syndicated newspaper column, he participated vocally in the often strident debates over foreign and domestic policy in the United States during the Vietnam War era. The SPEECHES AND WRITINGS series of the Hoffer collection contains the manuscript drafts of most of his books, as well as copies of the numerous articles he wrote for various publications. Among the manuscripts, there are the original diaries used as the basis for Working and Thinking on the Waterfront, and some later diary entries. An unpublished work, "Quotations and Comments," which Hoffer was working on at the time of his death, can also be found in this series. Hoffer's notecards, where he compiled a vast number of citations from various authors and which formed the raw material for much of his writing, comprise the CARD FILE series of the collection. The collection contains the entire run of Hoffer's syndicated newspaper column, "Reflections," where for several years he wrote on many topical subjects, such as student protest and black militancy, in an often vigorously polemical style. There are also videotape recordings of television interviews made with Hoffer in the 1960s, as well as video and sound recordings of some his public appearances. The extensive CORRESPONDENCE series of the collection reflects the large audience for Hoffer's work, and also details his relationships with publishers and editors, including the early encouragement of his writing by Margaret Anderson and Elizabeth Lawrence. There is a separate series for the correspondence of Eric Hoffer's longtime companion, Lili Fabilli Osborne. Register of the Eric Hoffer Papers 94057 3 There are also substantial materials concerning Hoffer's sometimes stormy tenure as a member of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence, as well as ones relating to his time on the San Francisco Art Commission. The collection also includes a significant amount of biographical and critical writings on Hoffer. Additional primary documents relating to Eric Hoffer can be found in the collections of the San Francisco Public Library and the Immigration History Research Center of the University of Minnesota (Margaret Anderson collection and the papers of the organization and publication with which Anderson was affiliated, the Common Council for American Unity and Common Ground). Indexing Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the repository's online public access catalog. Subjects Social psychology. Political psychology. Violence--United States. Intellectuals--United States. United States--Social conditions-1945- United States. Conservatism. Philosophy. Box 1-7 Biographical File, 1952-1985. Scope and Content Note Addresses, articles and clippings, bibliography, biographies, certificates, diplomas, itineraries, membership books, memorial register and resolutions, obituaries, programs, scrapbook, studies, arranged alphabetically by physical form, and subject file, arranged alphabetically by subject Box 7-42 Correspondence, 1941-1983. Scope and Content Note Letters and cards, with some enclosures, arranged alphabetically by name of correspondent Box 42-77 Speeches and Writings, 1934-1983. Scope and Content Note Articles, diaries, drafts of books, proofs, printed copies of books, speeches, television interviews, and anthologies, arranged chronologically by title, and translations, listed at the end Box 78-94 Notebooks, 1936-1981. Scope and Content Note Originals and typed transcriptions, arranged chronologically
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