- Mark Van Doren
-
Born June 13, 1894
Hope, Vermilion County, IllinoisDied December 10, 1972 (aged 78)
Torrington, ConnecticutOccupation poet, critic, teacher Alma mater University of Illinois
Columbia UniversityNotable work(s) Shakespeare (1939)
A Liberal Education (1943)Notable award(s) Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, 1940 for Collected Poems 1922–1938
Academy of American Poets' Fellowship (1967)Spouse(s) Dorothy Graffe Van Doren Children Charles Van Doren
John Van DorenRelative(s) Carl Van Doren (brother)
Mark Van Doren (June 13, 1894 – December 10, 1972) was an American poet, writer and a critic, apart from being a scholar and a professor of English at Columbia University for nearly 40 years, where he inspired a generation of influential writers and thinkers including Thomas Merton, Robert Lax, John Berryman, and Beat Generation writers such as Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac. He remained literary editor of The Nation, in New York City (1924–28), and its film critic, 1935 to 1938.[1]
Amongst his notable works, many published in The Kenyon Review,[2] include a collaboration with brother Carl Van Doren, American and British Literature since 1890 (1939), the play The Last Days of Lincoln; critical studies, The Poetry of John Dryden (1920), Shakespeare (1939), The Noble Voice (1945) and Nathaniel Hawthorne (1949), collections of poems like three book-length narrative poems: Jonathan Gentry (1931), stories, and the verse play The Last Days of Lincoln (1959).
Contents
Early life and education
He was born in the town of Hope in Vermilion County, Illinois. The fourth of five sons of the county's doctor, Charles Lucius Van Doren, of remote Dutch ancestry, and wife Eudora Ann Butz, he was raised on his family's farm in eastern Illinois, before his father decided moved to the neighboring town of Urbana, to be closer to good schools.[3]
He was the younger brother of the academic and biographer Carl Van Doren, and starting with whom, all his five brothers attended the local elementary school and high school, and eventually joining the University of Illinois also in the town.[3]
Mark Van Doren earned a B.A. from the University of Illinois in 1914 and a Ph.D. from what became the Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Columbia University in 1920.
Career
Van Doren joined Columbia University faculty in 1920, his entry was easy as he was preceded by his brother and noted author, Carl Van Doren, though he went on to become one of its greatest teachers, and a "legendary classroom presence". He attained full professorship in 1942, and taught English until 1959, and later he remained Professor Emeritus, 1959–72 [4] His students at Columbia included the poets and writers John Berryman, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, Louis Simpson, Richard Howard, Lionel Trilling (later a colleague), Robert Lax, Anthony Robinson, as well as the Japanologist and interpreter of Japanese literature Donald Keene, author and activist Whittaker Chambers,[5] writer and Trappist monk Thomas Merton, Walter B Pitkin Jr and poet-critic John Hollander.[4][6]
"I have always had the greatest respect for students. There is nothing I hate more than condescension—the attitude that they are inferior to you. I always assume they have good minds."
He twice served on the staff of The Nation during the 1920s and 1930s. He was a member of the Society for the Prevention of World War III.
Van Doren helped Ginsberg avoid jail time in June 1949 by testifying on his behalf when Ginsberg was arrested as an accessory to crimes carried out by Herbert Huncke and others, and was an important influence on Merton, both in Merton's conversion to Catholicism and Merton's poetry. He was a strong advocate of liberal education, and wrote the book, The Liberal Education (1943), which helped promote the influential "great books" movement. Starting 1941, he also did Invitation to Learning a CBS radio show, where as one of the experts he discussed great literature.
He was made a Fellow in American Letters of the Library of Congress and also remained president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.[7][8]
Personal life
Mark Van Doren married novelist and the writer of memoir, The Professor and I (1959), Dorothy Graffe Van Doren in 1922, whom he had earlier met at The Nation. His successful book, Anthology of World Poetry, enabled the couple to buy a house on Bleecker Street in the New York City in February 1929, before markets collapsed.[6]
Their son, Charles Van Doren (born February 12, 1926), briefly achieved renown as the winner of the rigged game show Twenty-One. In the film Quiz Show (1994), Mark Van Doren was played by Paul Scofield,[9][10] who earned an Academy Award nomination in Best Supporting Actor category for his performance.[11] Their second son is John Van Doren who also lives in Cornwall, Connecticut at the farmstead, where their father did most of his writing between academic years, and where he moved after retirement.[6]
Mark Van Doren died on December 10, 1972, in Torrington, Connecticut, aged 78; two days after undergoing surgery for circulatory problems at the Charlotte Hungerford Hospital, and was interred at Cornwall Hollow Cemetery in Connecticut.[12] Lion: A Memoir of Mark Van Doren (1991), by Dan Wakefield won the 1992 Cohen Awards.
Legacy
His correspondence with Allen Tate is at Vanderbilt University.[13] Since 1962, students of Columbia College have honored a great teacher at the school each year with the "Mark Van Doren Award".[4] A Canadian alternative rock band named themselves "Our Lady Peace", which was in honor of Mark van Doren's poem, "Our Lady Peace".
Bibliography
Poetry:
- Spring Thunder (1924)
- An Anthology of World Poetry (1928)
- Jonathan Gentry (1931), (Editor)
- The Oxford Book of American Prose, (OUP), (1932)
- Winter Diary (1935)
- Collected Poems 1922–1938 (1939), Winner of the 1940 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
- The Mayfield Deer (1941)
- Selected poems (Holt), (1954)
- The Last Days of Lincoln, a play in six scenes (1959), a Verse Play
- Our Lady Peace
- The Story-Teller (N/A)
- Collected and New Poems 1924–1963 (1963)
Novels:
- The Transients (1935)
- Windless Cabins (1940)
- Tilda (1943)
Short story collection
- Nobody Say a Word (1954)
Nonfiction:
- The Poetry of John Dryden (1920)
- Introduction to Bartram's Travels (1928)
- An Autobiography of America, (A. & C. Boni), )1929)
- American poets, 1630-1930 (Little, Brown), (1932)
- American and British Literature Since 1890 (1939), with Carl Van Doren
- Shakespeare (1939)
- The Liberal Education (1943)
- The night of the summer solstice: & other stories of the Russian war, (Henry Holt and Company), (1943)
- The Noble Voice (1946)
- Nathaniel Hawthorne (1949)
- Introduction to Poetry (1951)
- The Autobiography Of Mark Van Doren (1958)
- The Happy Critic (1961)
- Mark Van Doren on great poems of Western literature, (Collier Books), (1962)
- George Hendrick, ed (1987). The Selected Letters of Mark Van Doren. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0807113174.
Discography:
Reviews
This well-edited, attractive selection (about one-fourth of the surviving letters) brings Mark Van Doren alive, especially to those who knew him and can hear the voice behind the written words. It should help criticism begin to engage the works and personality of a very considerable American "man of letters": superb poet and critic, wide-ranging editor, accomplished storyteller and playwright, and devoted educator.[14]
Quotes
- "The literature of the world has exerted its power by being translated." [15]
- "Nothing in man is more serious than his sense of humor; it is the sign that he wants all the truth." [16]
- "The art of teaching is the art of assisting discovery." [16]
Further reading
- Mark Van Doren, by J. T. Ledbetter. Peter Lang, 1996. ISBN 0820433349.
- Sonnets by Mark Van Doren
References
- ^ Mark Van Doren Encyclopedia Britannica
- ^ "History" the Kenyon Review Web site, accessed January 26, 2007
- ^ a b Mark Van Doren: Collected and New Poems University of Pennsylvania.
- ^ a b c d "Mark Van doren", Columbia 250 - Colombian Ahead of Their Times Columbia University.
- ^ [|Chambers, Whittaker] (1952). Witness. Random House. pp. 164–166, 545. ISBN 0-89526-571-0.
- ^ a b c Mark Van Doren and Shakespeare columbia.edu.
- ^ Mark Van Doren Profile The New York Review of Books
- ^ "Mark Van Doren", Faculty Profiles Columbia University.
- ^ Maslin, Janet (September 14, 1994). "QUIZ SHOW; Good and Evil in a More Innocent Age". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1994/09/14/movies/film-review-quiz-show-good-and-evil-in-a-more-innocent-age.html?pagewanted=all.
- ^ David Ansen (Sep 19, 1994). "FALL PREVIEW: MOVIES: When America Lost Its Innocence--Maybe - Robert Redford Takes A Prismatic Look At A Nation Through The Tv Quiz-Show Scandals Of The '50S". Newsweek. http://www.newsweek.com/id/108975.
- ^ Mark Van Doren
- ^ "Mark Van Doren, 78, Poet, Teacher, Dies". New York Times. December 12, 1972. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F70F17FB3D55137B93C0A81789D95F468785F9.
- ^ Mark Van Doren Vanderbilt University Library.
- ^ "Mark Van Doren's Literary Letters". Virginia Quarterly Review: 756–764. Autumn 1989. http://www.vqronline.org/articles/1989/autumn/kahn-mark-van-dorens/.
- ^ The Art, Craft, Modes, and Efficacy of Literary Translation Discussed Through the Ages The University of Texas at Dallas - School of Arts & Humanities.
- ^ a b Mark Van Doren quotes thinkexist.com.
The Essays of Mark Van Doren(1924–1972) Selected, with introduction by William Claire
External links
- Mark Van Doren and Shakespeare; Columbia College Today, September 2005 (retrieved May 24, 2009)
- Mark Van Doren & American classicism.
- Grave of Mark Van Doren at findagrave.com
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry (1922–1950) Edwin Arlington Robinson (1922) • Edna St. Vincent Millay (1923) • Robert Frost (1924) • Edwin Arlington Robinson (1925) • Amy Lowell (1926) • Leonora Speyer (1927) • Edwin Arlington Robinson (1928) • Stephen Vincent Benét (1929) • Conrad Aiken (1930) • Robert Frost (1931) • George Dillon (1932) • Archibald MacLeish (1933) • Robert Hillyer (1934) • Audrey Wurdemann (1935) • Robert P. T. Coffin (1936) • Robert Frost (1937) • Marya Zaturenska (1938) • John Gould Fletcher (1939) • Mark Van Doren (1940) • Leonard Bacon (1941) • William Rose Benét (1942) • Robert Frost (1943) • Stephen Vincent Benét (1944) • Karl Shapiro (1945) • Robert Lowell (1947) • W. H. Auden (1948) • Peter Viereck (1949) • Gwendolyn Brooks (1950)
- Complete list
- (1922–1950)
- (1951–1975)
- (1976–2000)
- (2001–2025)
Categories:- 1894 births
- 1972 deaths
- People from Vermilion County, Illinois
- American people of Dutch descent
- American poets
- Columbia University alumni
- University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign alumni
- American autobiographers
- Van Doren family
- American writers
- Columbia University faculty
- Pulitzer Prize for Poetry winners
- American literary critics
- American film critics
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