Norman, James, 1912-

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1912
Death 1983

Biographical notes:

The author James Norman was born James Norman Schmidt in 1912 in Chicago to Hugo and Laura (Blais) Schmidt. Norman married his second wife, Margaret Fox, in 1961. Norman died September 26, 1983 at University Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.

Norman received a B.A. from Loyola University of Chicago in 1932 and a certificate from the Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris, in 1934. From 1953-1954, he attended Centro Universitario Mexico. In 1957, he received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of the Americas, Mexico City, and in 1967, a masters degree from the Institute Allende, Mexico.

Norman remarked that he had long been interested in literature and the peoples of distant lands, but his career as a writer began as a fluke. While studying sculpture in Paris, he ran out of money and obtained a job with the Chicago Tribune and United Press as a reporter from 1933-1936. He was assigned to cover the Spanish Civil War and soon quit his job to serve in the struggle against the Fascists as member of the International Brigade. After being injured, he worked at a pro-Republic short wave radio station where he met Ernest Hemingway. Near the end of the war, Norman escaped from Madrid and returned to Chicago and then moved to California. He worked as an editor of Compton's Pictured Encyclopedia from 1939-1940. After the U.S. became involved in WWII, he served in the Army for three years as a military correspondent on the Pacific front, covering the fighting on the island of Leyte, the fall of Manila, and the later occupation of Japan. He became first lieutenant and was awarded the Bronze Star.

After his service in the Army, Norman returned to Los Angeles for a year and then moved to Mexico City in 1948, where he worked as a freelance writer. He met many rapidly rising Latin American writers and poets, including Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Octavio Paz. While in Mexico, he also met Margaret Fox.

Norman became a lecturer on Mexican history and customs at the Academia Americana. He served as director of creative writing at the Instituto Allende from 1958-1961 and later from 1980-1983.

As the market for fiction and magazine writing declined in the early 1960s, Norman decided to return to the U.S. and applied for positions at several universities. In the spring of 1965, he was a writer in residence at Hanover College in Hanover, Indiana. Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, hired Norman on recommendation of art professor Dr. John Baldwin, who had known Norman in Mexico. At Ohio University, he was a lecturer in English, 1965-1966, and a professor of creative writing, 1967-1979.

Norman was a prolific writer. His published works, dating from the 1930s to the 1970s include many novels, short stories, journal articles, and television stories. At the time of his death, he was working on the final draft of a biography of Cassius Marcellus Clay, a nineteenth century American abolitionist, Civil War general, and Lincoln's appointment as minister to Russia.

The subject matter of Norman's literary work varied widely. Much of it was geared toward young people. Also, the topic of Mexico was a frequent theme in his writings. Norman twice won La Pluma de Plata (The Silver Pen) award from the Mexican government for articles that appeared in National Geographic, ("The Tarahumaras," 1977 and "The Huichols - Mexico's People of Myth and Magic," 1978).

Aliases for Norman found in this collection are: J. Norman Schmidt, J. Norman S., J. Norman Szweig, and possibly John Wisdom - an alias not definitely identified to be Norman by this professor.

From the guide to the James Norman papers, 1934-1983, (Ohio University)

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  • American literature
  • Authors, American
  • Authors

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