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Information: The first column shows data points from Trilling, Diana in red. The third column shows data points from Trilling, Diana in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Trilling, Diana
Shared
Trilling, Diana
Trilling, Diana
Name Components
Name :
Trilling, Diana
Dates
- Name Entry
- Trilling, Diana
Citation
- Name Entry
- Trilling, Diana
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Trilling, Diana
Name Components
Name :
Trilling, Diana
Dates
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Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Trilling, Diana, 1905-
Name Components
Name :
Trilling, Diana, 1905-
Dates
- Name Entry
- Trilling, Diana, 1905-
Citation
- Name Entry
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Trilling, Diana, 1905-1996
Name Components
Name :
Trilling, Diana, 1905-1996
Dates
- Name Entry
- Trilling, Diana, 1905-1996
Citation
- Name Entry
- Trilling, Diana, 1905-1996
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Rubin, Diana 1905-1996
Name Components
Name :
Rubin, Diana 1905-1996
Dates
- Name Entry
- Rubin, Diana 1905-1996
Citation
- Name Entry
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
トリリング, ダイアナ
Name Components
Name :
トリリング, ダイアナ
Dates
- Name Entry
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Citation
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Female
Citation
- Gender
- Female
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
Writer Diana Trilling spent much of her life carving a niche out for herself that would separate her from her husband, critic and author, Lionel Trilling. Although she was fiercely devoted to their marriage, she maintained her own identity and had a successful career as a literary critic, an author, and a cultural commentator. She was not afraid to shy away from controversy especially if, in her view, her political opinions were being distorted or misunderstood by others. (The name Trilling, when used alone, refers to Diana Trilling. Lionel Trilling will always be referred to by his full name.).
Diana Rubin was born in New York City on July 21, 1905. Her parents, Joseph Rubin and Sadie Helene Rubin (neé Forbert), were immigrants from Poland. Joseph Rubin was a successful businessman while his wife did occasional work in interior design. Diana Rubin lived first in Westchester and then Brooklyn where she attended Erasmus Hall High School. She entered Radcliffe College in 1921 as an Art History major with a minor in Music. Rubin had wanted to be a singer, but had suffered from an affliction of the thyroid, effectively ending any chances she may have head to pursue a professional career.
After graduating cum laude in 1925, she moved back to New York to look for a job in some artistic environment, preferably a museum. What she found was a young graduate student at Columbia named Lionel Trilling. After dating for a couple of years, they married on October 25, 1929. Lionel Trilling continued to pursue his doctorate in English Literature while Diana Trilling spent her time volunteering in Harlem. She was active with other politically-minded individuals who were trying to save the Scottsboro Boys, the nine black boys charged with raping two white women in Scottsboro, Alabama. Diana Trilling tried to work with her Harlem neighbors and raise money to pay lawyer fees, a situation made more difficult due to racial and economic factors that distanced residents from each other.
In 1941, Lionel Trilling was asked by editors at The Nation to suggest a fiction critic for them. Diana Trilling offered her services and the weekly column "Fiction in Review" was created. The column ran until 1949. At this point, Trilling had begun contributing pieces on literary, social, and political themes for some of the following publications: The New York Times Book Review, Partisan Review, Commentary, Harpers, The Atlantic, The Saturday Review, Redbook, McCall's, Esquire, Mademoiselle, Vogue, The Nation, and The New Leader. Later on while being interviewed, she always made the point that she never discriminated against a particular journal or magazine. In other words, it was a privilege to know that one's articles were wanted in intellectual journals as well as mainstream magazines. In addition to these pieces, Trilling edited the Portable D.H. Lawrence for Viking Press in 1947. She was an active writer throughout her life and yet, found time to raise a family. James Lionel Trilling was born in 1949.
In the 1940s and 1950s, both Diana and Lionel Trilling began to distance themselves politically from other New York intellectuals. Once staunch supporters of Communism, they were unhappy with whom their fellow communists supported during World War II and the actions conducted in Europe under the umbrella of Communism. The Trillings joined the American Committee for Cultural Freedom. The American branch of this organization was in essence an Anti-Communist set of intellectuals and public personas that strove to condemn censorship of art and defend civil liberties. The group was comprised of individuals who represented various fields such as literature, dance, art, as well as political and labor activists. Notable members included Sidney Hook, James T. Farrell, Peter Viereck, W.H. Auden, George Balanchine, Saul Bellow, Elia Kazan, Robert Motherwell, Jackson Pollock, A. Philip Randolph, John Steinbeck and Robert Penn Warren. Diana Trilling served as Chairman of the Board from 1953 to 1957 and as a board member from 1957 until she resigned three years later. Trilling felt that she had moved away politically from some of the leadership and wanted to distance herself from their cause.
During this time, Lionel Trilling taught English at Columbia University. He was an extremely popular public figure who was always receiving invitations to give lectures, be a visiting scholar, or to read and offer criticism to literary pieces. Although he may have been more well-known of the two, Diana Trilling continued to publish articles and books. In 1958 she edited a selection of letters of D.H. Lawrence. This was followed by a collection of essays in 1964 published under the title Claremont Essays. The Trillings lived on Claremont Avenue and Diana Trilling felt that her address, and her neighborhood, had such an impact on the way she viewed the world.
Lionel Trilling was diagnosed with a rapid moving cancer in spring of 1975. His health quickly declined and he passed away in November of that same year. Despite this personal tragedy, Diana Trilling continued to write. Two years after his death, she published a retrospective of her time at Radcliffe College and the impression that coeducation made on the students of the mid-1970s called We Must March My Darlings. That same year Trilling began editing a twelve-volume uniform edition of her husband's works. This project lasted until 1979. In between, she pulled together some of her more popular book reviews and published Reviewing the Forties. Other publications include a nonfiction analysis of a 1981 Westchester murder trial entitled Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor, and a 1993 memoir of her marriage, The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling.
Throughout her career, Diana Trilling was active in intellectual and social organizations. Among them were the Radcliffe Club, the Cosmopolitan Club, which she joined in 1968, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, which she was elected to in 1976. She was also an honorary member of the Radcliffe Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. Trilling also successfully received a joint grant from the Rockefeller Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and two Guggenheim Fellowships, one in 1950 and one in 1991.
Diana Trilling remained a public figure even when she was not at the peak of her career. Her fiery public outbursts, like the Lillian Hellmann controversy, and her outspoken nature, made her a controversial figure. Even when her eyesight was failing and she was diminishing her creative output, Trilling continued to praise the political and cultural time of the 1930s and criticize the social movements of the 1960s. Like her husband, she was often considered elitist and woefully ignorant of the ways in which the United States in general, and New York in particular, had moved on since the 1930s.
Despite the criticisms, Diana Trilling remained determined to defend her views and those of her husband. She continued to give interviews and mentor younger writers until her death from cancer in 1996. She is survived by her son James Trilling, an art historian.
Writer Diana Trilling spent much of her life carving a niche out for herself that would separate her from her husband, critic and author, Lionel Trilling. Although she was fiercely devoted to their marriage, she maintained her own identity and had a successful career as a literary critic, an author, and a cultural commentator. She was not afraid to shy away from controversy especially if, in her view, her political opinions were being distorted or misunderstood by others. (The name Trilling, when used alone, refers to Diana Trilling. Lionel Trilling will always be referred to by his full name.)
Diana Rubin was born in New York City on July 21, 1905. Her parents, Joseph Rubin and Sadie Helene Rubin (neé Forbert), were immigrants from Poland. Joseph Rubin was a successful businessman while his wife did occasional work in interior design. Diana Rubin lived first in Westchester and then Brooklyn where she attended Erasmus Hall High School. She entered Radcliffe College in 1921 as an Art History major with a minor in Music. Rubin had wanted to be a singer, but had suffered from an affliction of the thyroid, effectively ending any chances she may have head to pursue a professional career.
After graduating cum laude in 1925, she moved back to New York to look for a job in some artistic environment, preferably a museum. What she found was a young graduate student at Columbia named Lionel Trilling. After dating for a couple of years, they married on October 25, 1929. Lionel Trilling continued to pursue his doctorate in English Literature while Diana Trilling spent her time volunteering in Harlem. She was active with other politically-minded individuals who were trying to save the Scottsboro Boys, the nine black boys charged with raping two white women in Scottsboro, Alabama. Diana Trilling tried to work with her Harlem neighbors and raise money to pay lawyer fees, a situation made more difficult due to racial and economic factors that distanced residents from each other.
In 1941, Lionel Trilling was asked by editors at The Nation to suggest a fiction critic for them. Diana Trilling offered her services and the weekly column "Fiction in Review" was created. The column ran until 1949. At this point, Trilling had begun contributing pieces on literary, social, and political themes for some of the following publications: The New York Times Book Review, Partisan Review, Commentary, Harpers, The Atlantic, The Saturday Review, Redbook, McCall's, Esquire, Mademoiselle, Vogue, The Nation, and The New Leader. Later on while being interviewed, she always made the point that she never discriminated against a particular journal or magazine. In other words, it was a privilege to know that one's articles were wanted in intellectual journals as well as mainstream magazines. In addition to these pieces, Trilling edited the Portable D.H. Lawrence for Viking Press in 1947. She was an active writer throughout her life and yet, found time to raise a family. James Lionel Trilling was born in 1949.
In the 1940s and 1950s, both Diana and Lionel Trilling began to distance themselves politically from other New York intellectuals. Once staunch supporters of Communism, they were unhappy with whom their fellow communists supported during World War II and the actions conducted in Europe under the umbrella of Communism. The Trillings joined the American Committee for Cultural Freedom. The American branch of this organization was in essence an Anti-Communist set of intellectuals and public personas that strove to condemn censorship of art and defend civil liberties. The group was comprised of individuals who represented various fields such as literature, dance, art, as well as political and labor activists. Notable members included Sidney Hook, James T. Farrell, Peter Viereck, W.H. Auden, George Balanchine, Saul Bellow, Elia Kazan, Robert Motherwell, Jackson Pollock, A. Philip Randolph, John Steinbeck and Robert Penn Warren. Diana Trilling served as Chairman of the Board from 1953 to 1957 and as a board member from 1957 until she resigned three years later. Trilling felt that she had moved away politically from some of the leadership and wanted to distance herself from their cause.
During this time, Lionel Trilling taught English at Columbia University. He was an extremely popular public figure who was always receiving invitations to give lectures, be a visiting scholar, or to read and offer criticism to literary pieces. Although he may have been more well-known of the two, Diana Trilling continued to publish articles and books. In 1958 she edited a selection of letters of D.H. Lawrence. This was followed by a collection of essays in 1964 published under the title Claremont Essays. The Trillings lived on Claremont Avenue and Diana Trilling felt that her address, and her neighborhood, had such an impact on the way she viewed the world.
Lionel Trilling was diagnosed with a rapid moving cancer in spring of 1975. His health quickly declined and he passed away in November of that same year. Despite this personal tragedy, Diana Trilling continued to write. Two years after his death, she published a retrospective of her time at Radcliffe College and the impression that coeducation made on the students of the mid-1970s called We Must March My Darlings. That same year Trilling began editing a twelve-volume uniform edition of her husband's works. This project lasted until 1979. In between, she pulled together some of her more popular book reviews and published Reviewing the Forties. Other publications include a nonfiction analysis of a 1981 Westchester murder trial entitled Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor, and a 1993 memoir of her marriage, The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling.
Throughout her career, Diana Trilling was active in intellectual and social organizations. Among them were the Radcliffe Club, the Cosmopolitan Club, which she joined in 1968, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, which she was elected to in 1976. She was also an honorary member of the Radcliffe Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. Trilling also successfully received a joint grant from the Rockefeller Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and two Guggenheim Fellowships, one in 1950 and one in 1991.
Diana Trilling remained a public figure even when she was not at the peak of her career. Her fiery public outbursts, like the Lillian Hellmann controversy, and her outspoken nature, made her a controversial figure. Even when her eyesight was failing and she was diminishing her creative output, Trilling continued to praise the political and cultural time of the 1930s and criticize the social movements of the 1960s. Like her husband, she was often considered elitist and woefully ignorant of the ways in which the United States in general, and New York in particular, had moved on since the 1930s.
Despite the criticisms, Diana Trilling remained determined to defend her views and those of her husband. She continued to give interviews and mentor younger writers until her death from cancer in 1996. She is survived by her son James Trilling, an art historian
Photo Credit: Michael O'Neill
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Pascal Covici Correspondence TXRC96-A14., 1924-1966, (bulk 1938-1964)
Title:
Pascal Covici Correspondence 1924-1966 (bulk 1938-1964)
This collection ofcorrespondence of editor and publisher Pascal Covici consists of typed andholograph correspondence and post cards, including enclosures such asphotographs, a pamphlet, and drawings. Topics touched on include the publishingindustry, the Covici-Friede publishing firm, and writers, such as RichardAldington, Saul Bellow, M. F. K. Fisher, Radclyffe Hall, Victor Hugo, ArthurMiller, Iris Murdoch, Frederic Prokosch, Elmer Rice, John Steinbeck, LionelTrilling, Mark Van Doren, and Rebecca West.
ArchivalResource:
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Pascal Covici Correspondence TXRC96-A14., 1924-1966, (bulk 1938-1964)
Hopwood Awards Collection, 1930-
Title:
Hopwood Awards Collection, 1930-
Consists of correspondence relating to the annual University of Michigan student contests in creative literature for the Avery Hopwood and Jule Hopwood Prizes funded by income from the Avery Hopwood bequest.
ArchivalResource: 8, 111 items.
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Tate, Allen, 1899-1979. Hopwood Awards Collection, 1930-
Eisner, Dorothy. Dorothy Eisner papers, 1925-2008.
Title:
Dorothy Eisner papers, 1925-2008.
The Dorothy Eisner Papers consist of correspondence, photographs, and ephemera that document periods of her personal life and artwork. Eisner's correspondence files contain letters from fellow painters: nearly thirty from her friend Dorothy Andrews (1918-2008), who wrote mostly from her home in Khania, Crete; three from William Kienbusch (1914-1980); and one each from Sarah Freedman McPherson (1894-1978) and Emil Holzhauer (1887-1986); there are also letters from her stepdaughter, the painter Joan McDonald Miller. However, the bulk of the correspondence is between Eisner and her parents, and includes letters in which she describes her interactions with Leon Trotsky during the Dewey Commission's hearing in Mexico City. Additional items related to that experience are the nearly fifty informal snapshot photographs taken in and around the hearing, Eisner's admission card, and one letter from Trotsky. Other friends in the correspondence files include the writers Tess Slesinger (1905-1945) and Diana Trilling (1906-1996). A folder of miscellaneous personal papers holds some childhood letters and drawings, a bank book from the early 1930s, and a few Social Security papers from the late 1970s-early 1980s. A scrapbook of clippings, photographs, and ephemera, supplemented by folders of announcements, brochures, and installation photographs, document exhibitions of Eisner's paintings and collages mounted during her lifetime. The collection also includes two published books of Walker Evans's photographs.
ArchivalResource: 1.75 linear feet (4 boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/702158803 View
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- Eisner, Dorothy. Dorothy Eisner papers, 1925-2008.
Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975. Lionel Trilling papers, 1899-1987.
Title:
Lionel Trilling papers, 1899-1987.
The Lionel Trilling Papers document the professional work and personal life of Lionel Trilling (1905-1975), the prolific literary critic and Columbia University Professor of English Literature. This collection was acquired upon his death in 1975. The bulk of the records consist of his many writings in the form of articles, essays, lectures, short stories, and book reviews. Correspondence with other prominent writers and intellectuals of the 20th century, family members, editors and publishers comprises the second largest series in the collection. Also contained are records concerning Trilling's work as a professor at Columbia University, as well as his involvement in various outside professional organizations. There is a small amount of personal documents and articles about Trilling's life and writings, including his detailed journals, comprised of his personal thoughts and intellectual queries. Some of the items in this collection were originally located in the archives of his wife, Diana Trilling. Since their personal and professional lives intersected constantly, records concerning him, such as photographs and correspondence with his publishers, may be found in her collection as well.
ArchivalResource: 27 linear feet [ 51 document boxes, 3 index card boxes]
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/426030842 View
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- Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975. Lionel Trilling papers, 1899-1987.
Podhoretz, Norman. Papers, 1951-1982.
Title:
Papers, 1951-1982.
Correspondence, memoranda, diary, journal, writings, speeches, transcripts of interviews, newspaper clippings, printed materials, and other papers, relating primarily to Podhoretz's career as an author, intellectual, and editor of Commentary. Includes correspondence, research materials, and drafts for Podhoretz's literary, social, and political criticism published in articles, short stories, and books, which reflect his political transition from advocate of left-wing liberal ideology to leading spokesman for neoconservative philosophy. Topics include censorship, the Middle East, military readiness, politics, social and cultural issues such as poverty and racism, travels to Asia, Australia, and India in the 1970s and 1980s, the Vietnamese Conflict, and individuals including Saul Bellow, Albert Camus, Benjamin Disraeli, F.R. Leavis, and Edmund Wilson. Correspondents include Eldridge Cleaver, Midge Decter, Allen Ginsberg, Lilian Hellman, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Susan Sontag, Terry Southern, Diana Trilling, Lionel Trilling, and Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
ArchivalResource: 15.4 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/31605110 View
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- Podhoretz, Norman. Papers, 1951-1982.
Macdonald, Dwight. Dwight Macdonald papers, 1865-1984 (bulk 1920-1978)
Title:
Dwight Macdonald papers
The papers consist of correspondence, manuscripts, notes, printed material, photographs, and memorabilia documenting the personal life and professional career of Dwight Macdonald. Macdonald's literary career, political activities, teaching and speaking engagements, and personal life are detailed. Major subjects represented in the papers include: communism and the Trotskyite movement, journalism and publishing, American social and political life (1920s-1970s), pacifism, and the Congress for Cultural Freedom. Correspondence files include letters with many prominent intellectual and political figures.
ArchivalResource: 94.25 linear ft.
https://archives.yale.edu/repositories/12/resources/4550 View
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- Macdonald, Dwight. Dwight Macdonald papers, 1865-1984 (inclusive), 1920-1978 (bulk).
Lionel Trilling Papers, 1899-1987
Title:
Lionel Trilling Papers, 1899-1987
The Lionel Trilling Papers document the life of author, professor, and literary critic, Lionel Trilling. This collection contains his writings, extensive correspondence with other New York intellectuals, personal documents, and other records concerning his professional activities.
ArchivalResource: 27 linear feet (51 document boxes, 3 index card boxes)
http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_4079615 View
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- Lionel Trilling Papers, 1899-1987
Sykes, Gerald, 1903-. Papers, ca. 1921-1984.
Title:
Papers, ca. 1921-1984.
Correspondence, manuscripts, notes, notebooks, documents, photographs, course-related materials, and printed materials. The manuscripts include typescripts of Sykes' published and unpublished novels, monographs, plays, short stories, and articles. Among these are THE PERENNIAL AVANTGARDE, THE COOL MILLENNIUM, and THE HIDDEN REMNANT. Sykes' notes and notebooks span the period from the early 1930s to 1980, and include preliminary ideas and sketches for his books, as well as autobiographical material. A small number of documents concern Sykes' wartime work in the U.S. Government Office of War Information. Course-related material including writings and correspondence of students taught by Sykes between 1962 and 1975 at the New School and as an adjunct professor at Columbia University. Printed materials consist of numerous reviews of Sykes' books, in addition to offprints and articles by Sykes. Included as well are printed materials about or connected with Sykes, offprints of articles inscribed to him, and many volumes from his library. The substantial correspondence series includes personal letters and correspondence with agents and publishers relating to his books. Correspondents include Harold Clurman, Aaron Copland, Lawrence Durrell, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Francis Steegmuller, as well as a number of Sykes' students. There is extensive correspondence between Sykes and the artist John Hartell from 1927 to 1983.
ArchivalResource: 41 linear ft. (ca.9,150 items in 56 boxes, 155 volumes, & 1 oversize folder).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/122515178 View
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- Sykes, Gerald, 1903-. Papers, ca. 1921-1984.
McGinley, Phyllis, 1905-1978. Lillian Hellman Papers, 1904-1984 (bulk 1934-1984).
Title:
Lillian Hellman Papers, 1904-1984 (bulk 1934-1984).
The Lillian Hellman papers comprise manuscripts, correspondence, legal documents, business records, appointment books, and clippings. Series I includes notes for and multiple drafts of all Hellman's plays and memoirs. Drafts of film scripts, original and adaptations, by Hellman and others, are included in the series, along with articles, interviews, speeches, teaching files, and editorial work. Series II contains Hellman's professional and general correspondence, principally from 1934 to her death. Personal correspondence is largely absent. Correspondents include Leonard Bernstein, Kermit Bloomgarden, Don Congdon, Dashiell Hammett, Max B. Hellman, John Hersey, Stanley M. Isaacs, Diane Johnson, Robert Lantz, Katherine Lederer, Harry Levin, Little, Brown and Company, Archibald MacLeish, Bernard Malamud, John F. Melby, New York Times, R. D. Orlova, Dorothy Parker, Richard Poirier, Herman Shumlin, Margaret Tallichet, Hanna Weinstein, and Richard Wilbur. Series III Other Papers is the largest series and contains Hellman's appointment books from 1956 on, along with an extensive collection of scrapbooks and clippings. Notebooks describing foreign travel between 1944 and 1980 and a group of address books are also present in the series. Series IV, Legal and Financial Papers, includes documents and correspondence concerning Hellman's acquisition and administration of Dashiell Hammett's literary estate, along with materials relating to Hellman's investments, personal taxes, and household expenses. Series V, Works by and Papers of Others, includes short pieces about Lillian Hellman, a small group of materials relating to Dorothy Parker, and a collection of documents on Hellman assembled by various federal government agencies between 1940 and 1975.
ArchivalResource: 157 boxes (68 linear feet).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/78685575 View
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- McGinley, Phyllis, 1905-1978. Lillian Hellman Papers, 1904-1984 (bulk 1934-1984).
Gerald Sykes Papers, ca. 1921-1984
Title:
Gerald Sykes Papers, ca. 1921-1984
ArchivalResource: 41 linear ft. (ca.9,150 items in 56 boxes, 155 volumes, & 1 oversize folder).
http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_4079758 View
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- Gerald Sykes Papers, ca. 1921-1984
Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975. Letters, 1970-1976, to Lewis Mumford.
Title:
Letters, 1970-1976, to Lewis Mumford.
ArchivalResource: 2 items (4 l.).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/155876900 View
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- Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975. Letters, 1970-1976, to Lewis Mumford.
Leo Lerman Papers, 1893-2012, [Bulk Dates: 1937-1994]
Title:
Leo Lerman Papers, 1893-2012 [Bulk Dates: 1937-1994]
Personal and Professional papers of writer and magazine editor Leo Lerman. The papers include correspondence, professional papers, topical files, research files, and photographs.
ArchivalResource: 105.54 ‡f linear ft. (108 boxes: 91 record storage cartons, 8 document boxes, 1 oversized document box, 7 flat boxes; 1 cassette box).
http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_6881813 View
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- Resource Relation
- Leo Lerman Papers, 1893-2012, [Bulk Dates: 1937-1994]
Dwight Macdonald papers, 1865-1984 (bulk 1920-1978)
Title:
Dwight Macdonald papers
The papers consist of correspondence, manuscripts, notes, printed material, photographs, audiotapes, and memorabilia documenting the personal life and professional career of Dwight Macdonald. Macdonald's literary career, political activities, teaching and speaking engagements, and personal life are detailed. Major subjects represented in the papers include: communism and the Trotskyite movement, journalism and publishing, American social and political life (1920s-1970s), pacifism, and the Congress for Cultural Freedom. Correspondence files include letters with many prominent intellectual and political figures.
ArchivalResource: 94.25 linear feet
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/mssa.ms.0730 View
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- Dwight Macdonald papers, 1865-1984, 1920-1978
Robert Lowell Papers TXRC94-A10., ca. 1845-1988, (bulk 1970-1977)
Title:
Robert Lowell Papers ca.1845-1988 (bulk1970-1977)
Although this body materials spansmore than a century, the bulk of the materials document Lowell's writings as a poet,playwright, and translator during the last seven years of his life. Heavily editeddrafts of poems published in and illustrate Lowell'spropensity for revision. The collection also includes photographs, medical files,and legal papers that provide biographical information about Lowell's early andlater life. In addition, the collection contains letters and manuscripts fromseveral of Lowell's contemporaries. The Dolphin, Lizzie and Harriet, History, Day by Day
ArchivalResource: 23 boxes (oversize materials in box 23), 9 galley folders, 14 soundrecordings (11.5 linear feet)
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/uthrc/00081/00081-P.html View
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- Lowell, Robert, 1917-1977. Papers, 1845-1988 (bulk 1970-1977).
Guide to the American Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, 1939-1957
Title:
Guide to the American Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, 1939-1957
the American Committee for Cultural Freedom was formed in the 1950s as an affiliate of the International Congress for Cultural Freedom and membership included prominent liberal and leftist artists and intellectuals across a broad political spectrum. The group's activity involved the organization and execution of numerous anti-communist campaigns and programs. As Cold War tensions diffused, the group disolved. This collection includes the Committee's minutes, publications, proceedings of conferences, financial records, and files dealing with its relationship with Arthur Miller, Jean Paul Sartre, and Bertrand Russell.
ArchivalResource: 7 Linear Feet in 15 boxes
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_023/tam_023.html View
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- American Committee for Cultural Freedom. Records, 1939-1957, 1950-1957 (bulk).
Podhoretz, Norman. Norman Podhoretz papers, 1951-1982.
Title:
Norman Podhoretz papers, 1951-1982.
Correspondence, memoranda, diary, journal, writings, speeches, transcipts of interviews, newspaper clippings, printed matter, and other papers relating primarily to Podhoretz's career as an author, editor of Commentary, New York, N.Y., and intellectual. Reflects his political transition from advocate of left-wing liberal ideology to leading spokesman for neoconservative philosophy. Includes correspondence, research materials, and drafts for Podhoretz's literary, social, and political criticism published in articles, short stories, and books. Subjects include censorship, the Middle East, military readiness, politics, social and cultural issues such as poverty and racism, travels to Asia, Australia, and India in the 1970s and 1980s, and the Vietnamese conflict. Also includes material concerning Saul Bellow; Albert Camus; Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield; F.R. Leavis; and Edmund Wilson. Correspondents include Eldridge Cleaver, Midge Decter, Allen Ginsberg, Lillian Hellman, Daniel P. Moynihan, Susan Sontag, Terry Southern, Diana Trilling, Lionel Trilling, and Kurt Vonnegut.
ArchivalResource: 11,500 items.43 containers.15.4 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/71014545 View
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- Podhoretz, Norman. Norman Podhoretz papers, 1951-1982.
Lerman, Leo, 1914-1994. Leo Lerman papers, 1893-1995 [Bulk Dates: 1937-1994].
Title:
Leo Lerman papers, 1893-1995 [Bulk Dates: 1937-1994].
Collection contains papers related to Leo Lerman's professional life as a writer, magazine editor-- including a long-time editor with Condé Nast. Nast working with publications such as Vogue, House and Garden, and Vanity Fair. The collection contains correspondence, subject files, editorial and professional files, and research notes as well as personal materials photographs. Much of the material was preliminarily organized and annotated by Stephen Pascal, Lerman's long-time assistant and the editor of The Grand Surprise: The Journals of Leo Lerman. Mr. Pascal has provided dates and contextual information for much material in the collection, and any such notes found in the papers should be assumed to have been generated by him, with the assistance of Gray Foy and Richard Hunter.
ArchivalResource: 102.54 linear ft. (103 boxes: 90 record storage cartons, 5 document boxes, 1 oversized document box, 7 flat boxes).
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/720264066 View
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- Lerman, Leo, 1914-1994. Leo Lerman papers, 1893-1995 [Bulk Dates: 1937-1994].
Davis, Hope Hale. Papers, 1831-1835, 1916-2002 (inclusive).
Title:
Papers, 1831-1835, 1916-2002 (inclusive).
Collection includes correspondence with other writers, friends, family members, and students; writings, including drafts of short stories, novels, memoir, and literary criticism, as well as notes, research material, and correspondence related to the publishing of her work; teaching material; and photographs.
ArchivalResource: 8 linear ft. (18 file boxes, 2 photograph folders, 1 folio+ folder)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/232009157 View
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- Davis, Hope Hale. Papers, 1831-1835, 1916-2002 (inclusive).
Dorothy Eisner papers, 1923-2008
Title:
Dorothy Eisner papers 1923-2008
The Dorothy Eisner Papers consist of correspondence, photographs, and ephemera that document periods of her personal life and artwork. Eisner's correspondence files contain letters from fellow painters: nearly thirty from her friend Dorothy Andrews (1918-2008), who wrote mostly from her home in Khania, Crete; three from William Kienbusch (1914-1980); and one each from Sarah Freedman McPherson (1894-1978) and Emil Holzhauer (1887-1986); there are also letters from her stepdaughter, the painter Joan McDonald Miller. However, the bulk of the correspondence is between Eisner and her parents William and Florine Eisner, and includes letters in which she describes her interactions with Leon Trotsky during the Dewey Commission's hearing in Mexico City. Additional items related to that experience are the nearly fifty informal snapshot photographs taken in and around the hearing, Eisner's admission card, and one letter from Trotsky. Other friends in the correspondence files include the writers Tess Slesinger (1905-1945) and Diana Trilling (1906-1996). Other papers include copies of the constitution of the Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors, and an autobiographical memoir written by her grandfather Moritz Eisner, who had emigrated from Vienna to the United States. A folder of miscellaneous personal papers holds some childhood letters and drawings, a bank book from the early 1930s, and a few financial papers from the late 1970s-early 1980s. A binder of photographs and a scrapbook of clippings, photographs, and ephemera, supplemented by folders of announcements, brochures, and installation photographs, document Eisner's paintings and collages, and exhibitions of her work. The collection also includes two published books of photographs by Walker Evans.
ArchivalResource: 1.25 linear feet (2 boxes)
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/beinecke.eisner View
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- Dorothy Eisner papers, 1923-2008
Hofstadter, Richard, 1916-1970. Richard Hofstadter papers, 1944-1970.
Title:
Richard Hofstadter papers, 1944-1970.
Correspondence, manuscripts, and notes.
ArchivalResource: 29 linear ft. ( 47 document boxes & 5 record storage cartons of books)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/496102665 View
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- Hofstadter, Richard, 1916-1970. Richard Hofstadter papers, 1944-1970.
Guide to the American Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, 1939-1957
Title:
Guide to the American Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, 1939-1957
the American Committee for Cultural Freedom was formed in the 1950s as an affiliate of the International Congress for Cultural Freedom and membership included prominent liberal and leftist artists and intellectuals across a broad political spectrum. The group's activity involved the organization and execution of numerous anti-communist campaigns and programs. As Cold War tensions diffused, the group disolved. This collection includes the Committee's minutes, publications, proceedings of conferences, financial records, and files dealing with its relationship with Arthur Miller, Jean Paul Sartre, and Bertrand Russell.
ArchivalResource: 7 Linear Feet in 15 boxes
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_023/tam_023.html View
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- American Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, 1939-1957
The Nation, records, 1879-1974 (inclusive), 1920-1955 (bulk).
Title:
The Nation records, 1879-1974 (inclusive), 1920-1955 (bulk).
Records of the weekly magazine, The Nation, primarily during the editorship of Freda Kirchwey.
ArchivalResource: 34 boxes (42.5 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00189/catalog View
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- The Nation, records, 1879-1974 (inclusive), 1920-1955 (bulk).
Novack, George Edward. George Edward Novack and Evelyn Reed papers, 1933-1992.
Title:
George Edward Novack and Evelyn Reed papers, 1933-1992.
Papers of Novack, a leader of the Socialist Workers Party best known for his writing on Marxian philosophy and his Marxist interpretations of history, together with papers of his wife Evelyn Reed, an anthropologist and fellow Trotskyist. The papers include interviews and biographical material, correspondence, and speeches and writings. There are papers on Novack's leadership of the American Committee for the Defense of Leon Trotsky and the Civil Rights Defense Committee. Reed's papers largely concern her work as a Marxist anthropologist and her views on the oppression of women in society. The correspondence contains letters from Isaac Deutscher, Joseph Hansen, Ernest Mandel, C. Wright Mills, Harrison Salisbury, and Max Shachtman. Numerous exchanges with historian Alan Wald about New York intellectuals of the 1930's (especially James T. Farrell and Sherry Mangan) enclose copies of letters from Herbert Aptheker, James Burnham, Noam Chomsky, Pierre Frank, Albert Glotzer, Granville Hicks, Elinor Rice Hayes, Sidney Hook, Irving Howe, Quincy Howe, Sidney Kunitz, Mary McCarthy, Felix Morrow, B. F. Skinner, Herbert Solow, Arne Swabeck, and Lionel and Diana Trilling. Speeches and writings include notes, additional correspondence, and drafts on many topics in American history and Marxist philosophy, as well as some scattered documents and instructional courses prepared for the Socialist Workers Party. The processed portion of this collection is summarized above, dates 1933-1992, and is described in the register. There are additional accessions which date 1977 and are described below.
ArchivalResource: 11 reels of microfilm (35 mm); plusadditions of 0.1 c.f.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/466121526 View
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- Novack, George Edward. George Edward Novack and Evelyn Reed papers, 1933-1992.
Simpson, Lewis P. Lewis P. Simpson papers, 1923-2004 (bulk 1980-2000).
Title:
Lewis P. Simpson papers, 1923-2004 (bulk 1980-2000).
Correspondence consists primarily of Simpson's professional correspondence with peers, employees, publishers, reviewers, and organizations, but is interlaced with some personal notes. Topical Files consist of Simpson's works: book drafts, book reviews, essays, miscellaneous notes and writings, speeches, and lectures. It also contains clippings, awards, invitations to professional events, various reports, fliers, circulars, announcements, meeting notes and minutes, memos, photographs, miscellaneous notes for writing essays, bibliographies, numerous printed matter, film projects, television scripts, contracts, royalty statements, receipts, correspondence with the LSU Press, correspondence within the LSU Dept. of English, applications to the National Endowment for the Humanities, and itineraries.
ArchivalResource: 24 linear ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/129876663 View
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- Simpson, Lewis P. Lewis P. Simpson papers, 1923-2004 (bulk 1980-2000).
Stein, Sol. Sol Stein Papers, 1943-2004 (Bulk Dates: 1950-2004).
Title:
Sol Stein Papers, 1943-2004 (Bulk Dates: 1950-2004).
This collection holds the papers of author, editor and publisher, Sol Stein. The bulk of the papers chart Stein's development as a writer and include multiple drafts of his published novels, plays and non-fiction work, with notes and suggestions from Stein and other readers. The collection also contains drafts of currently unpublished materials, including screenplay and theatrical versions of his novels and other projects. Other materials pertain to Stein's work as an editor and include correspondence charting the publication of James Baldwin's Notes of a Native Son, drafts of two Elia Kazan novels on which he worked and multiple student projects he supervised as a writing instructor. This collection also contains Stein's professional and personal correspondence with notable literary figures including Edward Albee, Saul Bellow, Jacques Barzun, Eric Bentley, Elia Kazan, Arthur Miller, Lionel Trilling and Bertram Wolfe. Stein's political activities in the 1950s as a writer for Voice of America and as Executive Director of The American Committee for Cultural Freedom are also represented, to a lesser extent, in these papers.
ArchivalResource: 24.56 linear ft. (58.5 document boxes)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/299029489 View
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- Stein, Sol. Sol Stein Papers, 1943-2004 (Bulk Dates: 1950-2004).
Robert Lowell papers, 1861-1976 (inclusive) 1935-1970 (bulk).
Title:
Robert Lowell papers, 1861-1976 (inclusive) 1935-1970 (bulk).
Compositions, letters, and other papers of the American writer Robert Lowell.
ArchivalResource: 33 boxes (8.5 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00658/catalog View
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- Robert Lowell papers, 1861-1976 (inclusive) 1935-1970 (bulk).
May Sarton Papers, 1846-1995, 1920-1995
Title:
May Sarton Papers 1846-1995 1920-1995
The May Sarton Papers at the Berg Collection cover the years 1846-1995 (bulk dates 1920-1995) and arehoused in 188 boxes (47 linear feet), plus oversized material. They include manuscripts, correspondence, personalnotebooks, artwork, handmade collections, anthologies and commonplace books as well as family papers andphotographs. They also include professional papers, theater-related materials, translations, and work inspired byMay Sarton.
ArchivalResource:
http://archives.nypl.org/brg/19101 View
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- May Sarton Papers, 1846-1995, 1920-1995
New Yorker records
Title:
New Yorker records
Weekly magazine founded in New York City in 1925 by Harold W. Ross, Jane Grant, Alexander Woollcott and Raoul Fleischman. The records consist of correspondence, interoffice memoranda, edited and corrected manuscripts and typescripts, drawings, statistical reports, lists of story and art ideas, photographs, and sound recordings and printed materials created during the foundation and day-to-day operations of the magazine from 1924-1984. This material documents the production of every issue of the magazine and provides insight on the careers of its staff and contributors.
ArchivalResource: 1058.76 linear feet; 2566 boxes; 7 microfilm reels; 18 sound recordings
http://archives.nypl.org/mss/2236 View
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- New Yorker records, ca.1924-1984
Diana Trilling Papers, 1921-1996
Title:
Diana Trilling Papers, 1921-1996
The Diana Trilling Papers document the life of literary and cultural critic, Diana Trilling. This collection contains her writings, extensive correspondence with other New York intellectuals, and subject files for her research as well as for the Lionel Trilling Estate.
ArchivalResource: 29.75 linear feet (57 document boxes, 2 oversized boxes)
http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_6259383 View
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- Diana Trilling Papers, 1921-1996
Trilling, Diana,. Diana Trilling papers, 1921-1996.
Title:
Diana Trilling papers, 1921-1996.
This collection holds the papers of author, literary critic, and cultural commentator, Diana Trilling. Along with her husband, Lionel, Diana Trilling was a force on the New York intellectual scene from the 1930s until the 1970s. The records that comprise this collection document her professional life as well as her marriage with Lionel Trilling and the ways in which she balanced the two. The bulk of the records are Diana Trilling's writings in the form of manuscripts, articles both published and unpublished, drafts and research notes. Correspondence with Lionel Trilling and other family members, publishing houses, and colleagues are also well represented. Other records include personal documents, photographs, subject files used for research and maintaining the Lionel Trilling Estate, and audio visual material. Much of the records contained here provide insight or overlap with those within the Lionel Trilling Papers (MS#1256). These papers were donated soon after his death in 1976; however Diana Trilling continued to conduct his literary affairs on his behalf until her death in 1996.
ArchivalResource: 29.75 linear feet [ 57 document boxes, 2 oversized boxes]
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/299029769 View
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- Trilling, Diana,. Diana Trilling papers, 1921-1996.
John Hollander Papers, circa 1950-2007
Title:
John Hollander Papers circa 1950-2007
The collection consists of material created andaccumulated by John Hollander in the course of his various literary andteaching activities. Material includes correspondence with poets, authors,critics, academics, and composers; drafts and manuscripts of poems and essays;typescripts of writings by others and related correspondence; files relating toclasses taught; music material; and other papers. The collection documentsHollander's prolific career as a poet and literary critic, as well as hisrelationships with other key literary figures of the late twentieth and earlytwenty-first century.
ArchivalResource: 24 Boxes
http://hdl.handle.net/10079/fa/beinecke.hollander View
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- John Hollander Papers, circa 1950-2007
Robert Manning papers, 1938-1993.
Title:
Robert Manning papers, 1938-1993.
Correspondence, speeches, other compositions, and notes by Robert Manning, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs,1962-1964, and editor of the , 1964-1980. Atlantic
ArchivalResource: 68 boxes and 1 portfolio box (22 linear ft.)
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL.Hough:hou00145 View
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- Robert Manning papers, 1938-1993.
Butcher, Philip, 1918-. Philip Butcher papers, ca.1890-1991.
Title:
Philip Butcher papers, ca.1890-1991.
Correspondence, manuscripts, typescripts, notes, photographs, microfilms, videotape, posters, a phonograph record, and printed materials.
ArchivalResource: 11.5 linear ft. ( 22 boxes & 3 oversize folders)
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/472459797 View
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- Butcher, Philip, 1918-. Philip Butcher papers, ca.1890-1991.
Lebowitz, Martin, 1921-1993. Martin Lebowitz papers, 1929-1996.
Title:
Martin Lebowitz papers, 1929-1996.
Correspondence, photographs, death announcement, and eulogy relating primarily to Lebowitz's work as a philosopher and critic. Includes material from his undergraduate years at Columbia University, New York, N.Y. Correspondents include Jacques Barzun, Leon Edel, Doris Grumbach, David Madden, Iris Murdoch, John Crowe Ransom, Diana Trilling, and Lionel Trilling.
ArchivalResource: 100 items.1 container.0.2 linear feet.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/70984462 View
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- Resource Relation
- Lebowitz, Martin, 1921-1993. Martin Lebowitz papers, 1929-1996.
Jacobson, Herbert L., 1915-. Herbert L. Jacobson letters, 1939-1975.
Title:
Herbert L. Jacobson letters, 1939-1975.
Letters written to Jacobson from Jacques Barzun, William Phillips, Mario Praz, David Stacton, Diana Trilling, and Lionel Trilling, concerning a variety of personal, literary, and academic matters. Also, a Stacton typescript, and one miscellaneous letter.
ArchivalResource: 2 boxes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/496102622 View
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- Resource Relation
- Jacobson, Herbert L., 1915-. Herbert L. Jacobson letters, 1939-1975.
Maurice Isserman Research Files for, The Other American: The Life of Michael Harrington, ., Bulk, 1970-1995, 1940-1995
Title:
Maurice Isserman Research Files for . The Other American: The Life of Michael Harrington Bulk, 1970-1995 1940-1995
Maurice Isserman is an historian and author of (2000), and several other books relating to the history of the American left. The collection contains interview transcripts, topical files, newspaper clippings by and about Harrington, and FOIA files obtained by Isserman. Prominent interviewees include: William F. Buckley, Lewis Coser, Norman Dorsen, Hal Draper, Harry Fleischman, John K. Galbraith, Herbert Gans, Michael Harrington (there are also two interviews of Harrington conducted by others), his wife Stephanie Harrington, Irving Howe, Irving Kristol, David McReynolds, Jack Newfield, Victor Reuther, Eugene Rostow, Andre Schiffrin, Stanley Sheinbaum, and Diana Trilling. The Other American: The Life of Michael Harrington
ArchivalResource: 4.0 linear feet; (5 boxes)
http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/tam_239/tam_239.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Maurice Isserman Research Files for, The Other American: The Life of Michael Harrington, ., Bulk, 1970-1995, 1940-1995
Victoria Ocampo papers, 1908-1979.
Title:
Victoria Ocampo papers, 1908-1979.
Papers of Victoria Ocampo (d.1979), the Argentine writer, translator, publisher,feminist, and founder of the review Sur.
ArchivalResource: 34 boxes (11.3 linear ft.)
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/hou00038/catalog View
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- Resource Relation
- Victoria Ocampo papers, 1908-1979.
Sol Stein Papers, 1943-2004, [Bulk Dates: 1950-2004].
Title:
Sol Stein Papers, 1943-2004 [Bulk Dates: 1950-2004].
The Sol Stein Papers chart the literary life of author, editor and publisher, Sol Stein, who in addition to his own career as novelist and playwright, founded the publishing house Stein and Day. His papers contain correspondence with important literary figures; multiple drafts of his plays, novels and non-fiction writing; and correspondence which closely documents the editing process. The papers also include some material relating to Stein’s political activities as Executive Director of The American Committee for Cultural Freedom and as Ideological Analyst and writer for The Voice of America.
ArchivalResource: 24.56 linear ft. (58.5 document boxes)
http://findingaids.cul.columbia.edu/ead/nnc-rb/ldpd_5540444 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Sol Stein Papers, 1943-2004, [Bulk Dates: 1950-2004].
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Covici, Pascal, 1888-1964
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Committee for Cultural Freedom.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- American Committee for Cultural Freedom.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Barzun, Jacques, 1905-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Barzun, Jacques, 1905-
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- Constellation Relation
- Butcher, Philip, 1918-
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- Constellation Relation
- Davis, Hope Hale.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Eisner, Dorothy.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hofstadter, Richard, 1916-1970.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hollander, John.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Isserman, Maurice
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Jacobson, Herbert L., 1915-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lebowitz, Martin, 1921-1993.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lerman, Leo, 1914-1994.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Lowell, Robert, 1917-1977.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Macdonald, Dwight.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- MacDonald, Dwight.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Manning, Robert, 1919-
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- Constellation Relation
- McGinley, Phyllis, 1905-1978.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Nation (New York, N.Y. : 1865).
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- New Yorker Magazine, Inc
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Novack, George Edward.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Ocampo, Victoria, 1891-
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Podhoretz, Norman.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sarton, May, 1912-1995
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- Constellation Relation
- Simpson, Lewis P.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stein, Sol.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Stein, Sol.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Sykes, Gerald, 1903-
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- Constellation Relation
- Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975.
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Citation
- Language
- eng
Women authors, American
Citation
- Subject
- Women authors, American
Anti-communist movements
Citation
- Subject
- Anti-communist movements
Anti-communist movements
Citation
- Subject
- Anti-communist movements
Criticism
Citation
- Subject
- Criticism
Criticism
Citation
- Subject
- Criticism
Literary quarrels
Citation
- Subject
- Literary quarrels
Women critics
Citation
- Subject
- Women critics
Women critics
Citation
- Subject
- Women critics
Americans
Citation
- Nationality
- Americans
Citation
- Place
- New York (State)--New York
New York (State)--New York
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- United States
United States
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>
Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 132