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Size | .5 feet of linear shelf space (approximately 225 items) |
Abstract | Laura (Riding) Jackson, poet and critic, and member of "The Fugitives," a group of Southern poets that flourished in the 1930s. Jackson, who also worked closely with Robert Graves on several publishing ventures, was concerned, among other things, with issues of linguistic integrity. The collection consists chiefly of letters, 1982-1990, to William R. Harmon of the English Department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from Laura (Riding) Jackson. The letters are substantive, containing Jackson's comments on her life and work and including explications of specific poems and discussions about Robert Graves and other prominent authors with whom she worked. Many letters show Jackson in her struggle against critics and editors who, she believed, had misjudged the meaning and significance of her work. Also included are a few letters to Harmon from others and a small number of writings of Jackson and others, most of whom are not identified. |
Creator | Jackson, Laura (Riding), 1901- |
Curatorial Unit | Southern Historical Collection |
Language | English. |
The following terms from Library of Congress Subject Headings suggest topics, persons, geography, etc. interspersed through the entire collection; the terms do not usually represent discrete and easily identifiable portions of the collection--such as folders or items.
Clicking on a subject heading below will take you into the University Library's online catalog.
William Harmon Papers (#4568);
Laura Riding Jackson materials held by Cornell University (primary collection); Joint University Libraries, Nashville, Tenn. (Fugitives period); State University of New York at Buffalo; and Northwestern University.
Back to TopThe following is from the Laura Riding Jackson entry in Contemporary Authors, New Revision Series, Volume 28 (1981). Material within quotation marks represents Jackson's comments as submitted for inclusion in the entry. The entry also includes detailed remarks on Jackson's career from other sources (these are not reproduced here.
PERSONAL: Born 16 January 1901, in New York, N.Y.; name originally Laura Reichenthal; adopted the surname "Riding," 1926; daughter of Nathaniel S. and Sarah (Edersheim) Reichenthal; married Louis Gottchalk (a professor of history), 1920 (divorced, 1925); married Schuyler Brinckerhoff Jackson (a poet, critic, and former poetry editor of Time magazine), 20 June 1941 (died, 1968). Education: Attended Cornell University, 1918-1921; further study at University of Illinois, Urbana, and University of Louisville.
CAREER: Poet, critic, and author in various fields "with progressive concern with language as the natural human truth-system." Regular member of the Fugitives, a group of Southern poets, including John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, and Robert Penn Warren, in the 1920s; lived abroad, 1926-1939, mainly in England and Spain; worked at "furthering sensitivity of writer-associates, poets especially, to the importance of linguistic integrity as the basis of literary integrity." Founder, with Robert Graves, and managing partner of Seizin Press, 1927-1938; founder, with Graves, and editor of Epilogue, a series of volumes in which new principles of general criticism were explored, 1935-1938. Returned to the United States, 1939; beginning in 1943, involved in citrus farming in Florida with husband, Schuyler B. Jackson, and in working with him "towards the enlargement of the knowledge of words and capability of using them in truthfully exact consciousness of their meanings--towards the initiating of a new lexicography."
AWARDS/HONORS: Nashville prize, 1924; Mark Rothko Appreciation award, 1971; Guggenheim fellowship, 1973; National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, 1979.
WRITINGS: Note that Jackson's works have been published under the names Laura Riding, Laura Riding Gottschalk, and Laura (Riding) Jackson, and Madeleine Vara. In addition to the works listed here, there were also numerous translations of works in French; and essays and journal articles on poetry and other literary forms.
Poetry:
1926 | The Close Chaplet |
1927 | Voltaire: A Biographical Fantasy |
1928 | Love as Love, Death as Death |
1930 | Poems: A Joking Word |
1930 | Twenty Poems Less |
1930 | Though Gently |
1931 | Laura and Francisca |
1933 | The Life of the Dead |
1933 | The First Leaf |
1933 | Poet: A Lying Word |
1934 | Americans |
1935 | The Second Leaf |
1938 | Collected Poems (reprinted as The Poems of Laura Riding: A New Edition of the 1938 Collection, 1980) |
1970 | Selected Poems: In Five Set |
Novels:
1936 | 14A |
1936 | Convalescent Conversations |
1937 | A Trojan Ending with new edition in 1984) |
Editor:
1933 | Everybody's Letters |
1935-1937 | Epilogue: A Critical Summary |
1938 | The World and Ourselves |
The collection consists chiefly of letters, 1982-1989, to William R. Harmon of the English Department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill from Laura (Riding) Jackson. The letters, written from Jackson's home in Wabasso, Fla., are largely substantive, containing Jackson's comments on her life and work, including explications of specific poems and discussions about Robert Graves and other prominent authors with whom she worked. Many letters show Jackson in her struggle against critics and editors who, she believed, had misjudged the meaning and significance of her work.
Also included are a few letters to Harmon from others, particularly Jackson's friend Elizabeth Friedmann of the English Department at Jacksonville University, and a small number of writings of Jackson and others, most of whom are not identified. Some of Jackson's writings are photocopies of published articles, but others are photocopies of typed works.
Back to TopArrangement: chronological.
Letters, 1982-1989, chiefly from Laura (Riding) Jackson to William Harmon. There are also a few letters to Harmon from others, including Jackson's friend Elizabeth Friedmann of the English Department at Jacksonville University and a several journal editors with whom Jackson was feuding. Many letters show Jackson in her struggle against critics and editors who she believed had largely misjudged the meaning and significance of her work.
Among the letters are:
21 December 1983 | Jackson to Harmon: Jackson's response to a proposed MLA seminar on her work. Appended is a paper by Jackson, called Comments on Barbara Adams's 'Riding's Poetics: Theory and Practice.' |
3 May 1984 | Jackson to Harmon: Explanation of Jackson's poem Opening of Eyes. |
25 June 1984 | Jackson to Harmon: Copy of letter to W. W. Norton about exclusion of Jackson's work from the Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry. |
26 July 1985 | Jackson to Harmon: Response to Joyce P. Wexler's presentation of herself as a bibliographical authority in regard to my writings. |
September 1985 and after | Jackson to Harmon: Discussion of Harmon's efforts to help Jackson collect, edit, and publish her early poetry. |
3 October 1985 | Jackson to Harmon: Letter with one-page enclosure by Jackson, called On Two Virtue Mongers: Robert Graves, Robert Frost. |
14 February 1987 | Jackson to Harmon: Letter with poem by Jackson enclosed. The poem, called In Response to A Manifesto Circulated by the Union of Concerned Scientists, is marked in private circulation only. |
14 June 1987 | Elizabeth Friedmann to Harmon: Includes revised version of In Response to A Manifesto Circulated by the Union of Concerned Scientists. |
Folder 1 |
1982-1983 |
Folder 2 |
1984 |
Folder 3 |
1985 |
Folder 4 |
1986 |
Folder 5 |
1987 |
Folder 6 |
1988-1990 |
Essays and other items. Most of the writings are by Jackson, but some appear to have been written by others, largely unidentified, who were interested in her work. Of the pieces written by Jackson, a few are copies of printed articles, but others are photocopies of typed materials.
Folder 7-8
Folder 7Folder 8 |
Writings by Jackson, Laura (Riding), 1984 and undated"First-Person Background Report from the Modern Language Association's December 1984 Discussion of My Poetic Work" (1984, 8 pp.) "Life Report, In the Tenses of Survival" (undated, 7 pp.) "The One Language" (undated, 2 pp.) "The Principle of the Thing" (undated, 32 pp.) |
Folder 9 |
Correspondence and other items, 1992-1992Chiefly relating to Jackson's literary estate. |
Folder 10 |
"The Poems of Laura Riding: A New Edition of the 1938 Collection"Typescript, 267 pp. |