- Willa Cather
Infobox Writer
name = Willa Sibert Cather
imagesize = 200px
caption = Cather in 1936.
pseudonym =
birthdate =December 7 ,1873
birthplace = nearWinchester, Virginia ,United States
deathdate =April 24 ,1947
deathplace =New York City ,New York ,United States
occupation =Novelist
nationality = American
period = 1912-1947
genre =
subject =
movement =
influences =
influenced =
website =Willa Sibert Cather (
December 7 ,1873 [Woodress, James Leslie. "Willa Cather: A Literary Life", University of Nebraska Press, Omaha, 1987, p. 516. Cather's birth date is confirmed by a birth certificate and a 22 January 1874 letter of her father's referring to her. While working at "McClure's Magazine", Cather claimed to be born in 1875. After 1920 she claimed 1876 as her birth year. That is the date carved into her gravestone atJaffrey, New Hampshire .] –April 24 ,1947 ) was an American author who grew up inNebraska . She is best known for her depictions of frontier life on theGreat Plains in novels such as "O Pioneers! ", "My Ántonia ", and "Death Comes for the Archbishop ".Early life
Willa Cather was born in 1873 on a small farm in the Back Creek valley near
Winchester, Virginia . Her father was Charles Fectigue Cather (d. 1928), whose family had lived on land in the valley for six generations. Her mother was born Mary Virginia Boak (d. 1931). Mary had six more children after Willa: Roscoe, Douglass, Jessica, James, John, and Elsie. [Lewis, Edith. "Willa Cather Living: A Personal Record", pp. 5-7. Alfred Knopf, New York, 1953.] In 1883, Cather moved with her family to Catherton inWebster County, Nebraska . The following year the family relocated to Red Cloud, the county seat. Cather spent the rest of her childhood in the town which she later made famous by her writing career. Willa Cather insisted on attending college, so her family borrowed money for her to enroll at theUniversity of Nebraska-Lincoln .While in college, Cather became a regular contributor to the "
Nebraska State Journal ". Cather then moved to Pittsburgh, where she taught high school English and worked for "Home Monthly ". After receiving a job offer from "McClure's Magazine", she moved to New York City for her career. "McClure's Magazine" serialized her first novel, "Alexander's Bridge ", a work heavily influenced by her admiration for the style ofHenry James .Cather was born into a
Baptist family, but in 1922 she was formally received into the Episcopal Church. After moving to New York, she had begun to attend Sunday services in the Episcopal Church as early as 1906. [Acocella, Joan. "Willa Cather and the Politics of Criticism", p. 84. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Nebraska, 2000.]Writing career
Cather moved to
New York City in 1906 to join the editorial staff of "McClure's" and in 1908 was promoted to managing editor. As a journalist, she co-authored a critical biography ofMary Baker Eddy , the founder ofChristian Science . It was serialized in "McClure's" in 1907-8 and published the next year as a book. Christian Scientists were outraged and tried to buy every copy.Fact|date=February 2008 The work was reprinted by the University of Nebraska Press in 1993.In New York Cather met a variety of authors.
Sarah Orne Jewett advised her to rely less on the influence of Henry James and more on her own experiences in Nebraska. For her novels Cather returned to the prairie for inspiration and also drew on her experiences in France. These works became both popular and critical successes.In 1923 she was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize for "One of Ours ", published in 1922. This work had been inspired by reading her cousinG.P. Cather 's wartime letters home to his mother. He was the first officer from Nebraska killed inWorld War I . Those letters are now held in the George Cather Ray Collection at the [http://www.unl.edu/libr/libs/spec/ University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries] .Cather was celebrated by critics like
H.L. Mencken for writing in plainspoken language about ordinary people. When novelistSinclair Lewis won theNobel Prize in Literature , he paid homage to her by saying that Cather should have won the honor.Later critics tended to favor more experimental authors. In times of political activism some attacked Cather, a political conservative, for writing about conditions of ordinary people, rather than working to change them.
Honors
Cather received both national and state honors. In 1973, the
United States Postal Service honored Willa Cather by using her image on a postage stamp. In 1981 theUS Mint created the Willa Cather medallion, a half-ounce gold coin. Cather was elected to theNebraska Hall of Fame . In 1986, Cather was inducted into theNational Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame . Her alma mater, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, named residence halls after both Cather and her college friend Louise Pound. Pound had a lifelong career as professor of English at the university and was the first woman president of the Modern Language Association. [ [http://housing.unl.edu/halls/cather.shtml Cather and Pound Halls, University of Nebraska-Lincoln] ]Personal life
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