
Robert Penn Warren, Shadowy Autobiography, and Other Makers of American Literature
- 193 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Robert Penn Warren, Shadowy Autobiography, and Other Makers of American Literature
About this book
Toward the end of his career, Robert Penn Warren wrote, “It may be said that our lives are our own supreme fiction.” Although lauded for his writing in multiple genres, Warren never wrote an autobiography. Instead, he created his own “shadowy autobiography” in his poetry and prose, as well as his fiction and nonfiction. As one of the most thoughtful scholars on Robert Penn Warren and the literature of the South, Joseph Millichap builds on the accepted idea that Warren’s poetry and fiction became more autobiographical in his later years by demonstrating that that same progression is replicated in Warren’s literary criticism. This meticulously researched study reexamines in particular Warren’s later nonfiction in which autobiographical concerns come into play—that is, in those fraught with psychological crisis such as Democracy and Poetry.
Millichap reveals the interrelated literary genres of autobiography, criticism, and poetry as psychological modes encompassing the interplay of Warren’s life and work in his later nonfiction. He also shows how Warren’s critical engagement with major American authors often centered on the ways their creative work intersected with their lives, thus generating both autobiographical criticism and the working out of Warren’s own autobiography under these influences. Millichap’s latest book focuses on Warren’s critical responses to William Faulkner, John Crowe Ransom, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, John Greenleaf Whittier, and Theodore Dreiser. In addition, the author carefully considers the black and female writers Warren assessed more briefly in American Literature: The Makers and the Making.
Robert Penn Warren, Shadowy Autobiography, and Other Makers of American Literature presents the breadth of Millichap’s scholarship, the depth of his insight, and the maturity of his judgment, by giving us to understand that in his writing, Robert Penn Warren came to know his own vocation as a poet and critic—and as an American.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Prologue: Robert Penn Warren and Shadowy Autobiography
- 1. “He Was Almost Too Powerful”: Warren and William Faulkner
- 2. “He Was Much Like a Father to Me”: Warren and John Crowe Ransom
- 3. “My Experience with the Poetry”: Warren and Herman Melville
- 4. “Poetry as Experience”: Warren and John Greenleaf Whittier
- 5. “Shadow-Selves”: Warren and Theodore Dreiser
- 6. “Shadowy Territory”: Warren and Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Epilogue: Robert Penn Warren and Other Makers of American Literature
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index