The Lytle-Tate Letters

The Lytle-Tate Letters

 

49,38 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
University Press of Mississippi
Año de edición:
1987
Materia
Literatura: historia y crítica
ISBN:
9781604735529
49,38 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Añadir a favoritos

The Lytle-Tate Letters: The Correspondence of Andrew Lytle and Allen Tateedited by Thomas Daniel Young and Elizabeth SarconeThis is a remarkable collection of letters covering nearly four decades of correspondence between two of the American South’s foremost literary figures. The series begins in 1927 when Tate invited Lytle, who was then a student at the Yale School of Drama, to visit him at his apartment at 27 Bank Street in New York. Although they were acquaintances through their involvement with the Fugitives Movement at Vanderbilt, they had never been close friends because Lytle’s association with the group occurred after Tate had left Nashville. But after Lytle’s first visit with Tate and his wife Caroline Gordon, both the friendship and the correspondence grew. The letters in this long sequence of exchanges take on a different content and character during each of the decades of the correspondence. The early letters, between 1927 and 1939, show the development of the Lytle-Tate relationship through their common bond-their love for the South. These letters discuss plans for writing their southern biographies, the two Agrarian symposia-I’ll Take My Stand (1930) and Who Owns America? (1936)-as well as Lytle’s first novel, The Long Night (1936) and Tate’s work on his novel, The Fathers. Although the letters of the forties deal with such basic questions as where each man should live and how he should support himself while he writes, their primary focus is first with Lytle’s and then with Tate’s editorship of The Sewanee Review. The letters of the fifties are by far the most valuable for literary commentary. In these Lytle reads and critiques many of Tate’s essays and poems, and Tate, in turn, reads and responds to Lytle’s plans for the novel he was to be so long in writing, The Velvet Horn. Although many letters in the final group-those of the sixties-are devoted to a discussion of Tate’s guest editing of the special T.S. Eliot issue of The Sewanee Review, these are also the letters which reveal the depth of the Lytle-Tate friendship. In these they share their personal problems and advise each other in the difficulties each is forced to face. Tate gives support to Lytle during the long illness and subsequent loss of his wife Edna and, later, during Lytle’s own bout with cancer. Similarly, Lytle sees Tate through his divorce from his second wife and into his next marriage. After a short time, Lytle brings consolation in the loss of one of the Tates’ infant twin sons. The correspondence between Tate and Lytle documents the evolution of a long personal and literary friendship between two men who helped shape a large part of modern southern literature.Thomas Daniel Young (deceased) was Gertrude Conaway Vanderbilt Professor of English Emeritus at Vanderbilt University. Elizabeth Sarcone is a professor of English at Delta State University.

Artículos relacionados

  • Notes on Ellipse
    Sharmeen Razvi
    Ellipse is a collection of poetry in different genres, including the villanelle, the epic, and the sonnet, postcolonial, post-modern and historical poetry. Sharmeen Razvi, a student of English at the University of Illinois in Chicago, U.S.A., provides a summary and analysis of each poem in the collection. 3 ...
  • Wordsworth's Political Writings
    This compilation by Richard Gravil of texts edited by W J B Owen and J W Smyser presents the four major political texts in Wordsworth’s prose oeuvre and illustrates both the detail of the poet’s political grasp, and the remarkable swerves he made between 1793 and 1835. The first text, A Letter to the Bishop of Llandaff (1793) is severely Jacobinical. Had Wordsworth published it...
    Disponible

    25,27 €

  • The Headless Horseman of Booger Holler and Other Dover Tales
    Mindy Campbell Hudson
    Collected through firsthand interviews, author Mindy Campbell Hudson brings local lore to life in The Headless Horseman of Booger Holler and Other Dover Tales with stories of Dover, Arkansas's own legends, history, and supernatural tales. Complete with photographs of historical Dover, this collection of tales captures the legacy and traditions of rural Arkansas and sets it ...
    Disponible

    12,86 €

  • One step at a time
    Betty Madill
    This book is aimed at helping bereaved parents, and anyone who would like to support them, in their time of grief, especially in the first few weeks and months following the death of their child, but do not know how. It is written by the author from personal experience of having to cope with the death of her young daughter.The author explains how her Christian faith became the ...
    Disponible

    5,13 €

  • Turbulence
    Various Artists
    An anthology of work from writers and poets taking part in the MA in Writing at the National University of Ireland, Galway, this book was originally published in 2003. It features an introduction by Irish Writer Mike McCormack, Winner of the Goldsmith Prize 2016 for 'Solar Bones', who was Writer-In-Residence in NUIG at that time. It features fiction: a bald trapeze artist seeks...
    Disponible

    11,45 €

  • Israel... Through the Book of Leviticus - Easy Reader Edition
    Ahava Lilburn
    The Ancient Texts and the Bible series was compiled by Ahava Lilburn and produced by Minister 2 Others. This ten volume set synchronizes the manuscripts of Enoch, Jasher, and Jubilees into the Bible, making one complete storyline.  The books are interwoven using the Torah as the backbone, and the extra-biblical texts as the fleshing out of that backbone.The eighth book in this ...
    Disponible

    30,57 €