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Édouard Roditi

Édouard Roditi (6 June 1910 in Paris, France – 10 May 1992 in Cadiz, Spain[1]) was an American poet, short-story writer, critic and translator.[2]

Literary career edit

A prolific writer, Édouard Roditi published numerous volumes of poetry, short stories, and art criticism starting with Poems for F (Paris: Éditions du Sagitaire [fr], 1935). He was also well regarded as a translator, rendering into English original works from French, German, Spanish, Danish, Portuguese and Turkish. He was, for instance, one of the first to translate the work of French poet Saint-John Perse into English, in a volume published in 1944.

In 1961, he translated Yaşar Kemal's epic novel İnce Memed (1955) under the English title Memed, My Hawk. This book was instrumental in introducing the famed Turkish writer to the English-speaking world. Memed, My Hawk is still in print. Roditi was a cousin of Kemal's wife, Thilda Serrero. Roditi also translated Robert Schmutzler's Art Nouveau (1964) into English, in an edition that is still in print. He also translated such authors as C.P. Cavafy, Paul Celan, Albert Memmi, Fernando Pessoa.

In addition to his poetry and translations, Roditi is perhaps best remembered for the numerous interviews he conducted with modernist artists, including Marc Chagall, Joan Miró, Oskar Kokoschka, Philippe Derome and Hannah Höch. Several of these have been assembled in the collection Dialogues on Art.

Reflecting his wide reading of works on sexuality as well as his personal experience, Roditi also published a book-length essay in French on homosexuality titled De l'homosexualité (Paris: Société des Éditions Modernes/SEDIMO, 1962). The work assesses historical, sociological, religious, medical, legal and literary approaches to the subject; it closes with a seven-page bibliography of sources in French, English and German.[3]

Upbringing, schooling & early jobs edit

Édouard Roditi's father was a Sephardi Jew from Istanbul who became an American citizen.[4] His mother was of Ashkenazi and Flemish Catholic descent, and a British citizen.[5] He was born in Paris, where his parents had already been living for a number of years.

Roditi grew up in France and attended public school there before going on to study in England at Elstree School, Charterhouse and briefly at Balliol College, Oxford.[6][7] In 1929, he moved back to Paris, where he frequented the proponents of Surrealism and became a partner in the Surrealist publishing house Éditions du Saggitaire.[5] During this period, he visited the celebrated salon of Gertrude Stein, whom he found "incredibly pretentious" and "rather offensive."[5]

Roditi traveled to the United States in 1929 and 1932, meeting members of the Harlem Renaissance as well as novelist and photographer Carl van Vechten.[5] He returned in 1937 to take a bachelor's degree in Romance languages at the University of Chicago, then went on to do graduate work at the University of California, Berkeley. During World War II, he served in the French short-wave broadcast unit of the United States Office of War Information and as a translator for the State Department and the Defense Department.[5]

Following the war, he served as a multilingual interpreter for the United Nations Charter Conference in San Francisco. He subsequently returned to Europe to work as a freelance interpreter for international organizations and conferences, including the International War Crimes Tribunal at Nuremberg.[5] In 1950, during the "Lavender Scare", he was fired from that job. Roditi was part of the Benton Way Group with Charles Aufderheide.[8]

Personal life edit

Édouard Roditi had recognized that he was attracted to other men from an early age, and he actively explored the homosexual milieu of dance halls, bars, bathhouses and public cruising areas in Paris starting in his teen years and continuing in other places where he lived thereafter.[5][9]

Among Roditi's close friends in France in the early 1930s was the American homosexual poet Hart Crane.[5] In the United States in the late 1930s, Roditi befriended a fellow gay Jewish writer Paul Goodman.

Roditi's first book, Poems for F., printed in 250 copies in 1935, was inspired by a two-year affair with a married man, probably an Austrian painter, 20 years older than the poet. Roditi kept the identity of F. secret to the end of his life.[10]

In his romantic life, Roditi followed an early-20th-century pattern of seeking out partners among men who did not identify as gay. In a 1984 interview, he recalled, "Personally, I have never been particularly attracted to outright homosexuals, and most of my more enjoyable and lasting relationships have been with bisexual or otherwise normal men in whose love life I was an exception."[5]

He considered himself "thrice chosen" by being Jewish, homosexual, and epileptic, as expressed in his anthology titled Thrice Chosen (1981).[11]

Published works edit

  • Poems for F. Paris, Éditions du Sagittaire, 1935.
  • Prison Within Prison. Three Elegies on Hebrew Themes. Prairie City, Press of James A. Decker, 1941. (German Translation : Drei Hebraïsche Elegien. Deutsche ubersetzung von Alexander Koval. Berlin, Karl H. Henssel Verlag, 1950).
  • Pieces of Three. With Paul Goodman & Meyer Liben. New Jersey, 5 x 8 Press, 1942.
  • Oscar Wilde. New York, New Directions, 1947. New Revised edition. New York, New Directions, 1986. (German trans. Alexander Koval. Munich, Verlag Herbert Kluger, 1947.)
  • Poems. 1928-1948. New York, New Directions, 1949.
  • Selbstanalyse eines Sammlers. Cologne, Verlag Galerie der Spiegel, 1960.
  • In Erdnähe (Close to earth). Poems by Roditi, etchings by Heinz Trökes. In German, English and French. Cologne, Verlag Galerie der Spiegel, 1960.
  • Dialogues on Art. London, Martin Secker & Warburg, 1960.
  • Dialogues on Art. Santa Barbara, Ross-Erikson, 1980. Includes Marc Chagall, Marino Marini, Giorgio Morandi, Joan Miró, Oskar Kokoschka, Barbara Hepworth, Pavel Tchelitchew, Gabrièle Münter, Eduardo Paolozzi, Josef Hermann, Henry Moore, Fahr-el-Nissa Zeid.
  • More Dialogues on Art. Santa Barbara, Ross-Ekrikson, 1984. Includes Victor Brauner, Carlo Carra, Max Ernst, Leonore Fini, Demetrios Galanis, Nicolas Ghika, Hannah Höch, Mordercai Moreh, Ianni Tsarouchis, Jef Van Hoof, Ossip Zadkine, Alexander Zlotnik.
  • De L'Homosexualité. Préf. G. Valensin. Paris, Sedimo, 1962. (Spanish translation : La Inversion Sexual. Trans. Alberto Santalo. Barcelona, Ediciones Picazo, 1975).
  • Le journal d'un ahuri. Ou le maquereau malgé lui. Châtelet (Belgium), Imprimeur Franz Jacob, 1962.
  • Propos sur l'Art. Chagall, Miro, Max Ernst. Paris, Sedimo, 1967.
  • Propos sur l'Art. Propos recueillis par Édouard Roditi. Miro. Ernst. Chagall. Paris, Hermann Editeurs, 2006.
  • An Earthly Paradise + Present Indicative. With From the Notebook of Marco Gillette + Park Street Under by Richard Dean Rosen. Rhode Island, Hellcoal Press, 1968.
  • New Hieroglyphic Tales. Prose Poems. Drawings Modesto Roldan; San Francisco, Kayak Press, 1968.
  • Joachim Karsch. Berlin, Mann, 1968.
  • La sultana de los desmazalados. Trans. Amadeo Solé-Leris. Madrid, Papelos de son Armadans, 1969.
  • Habacuc. Traduit de l'anglais par Alain Bosquet. Gravure Albert Bitran. Paris, Imprimerie S.M.I., 1972.
  • Magelan of the Pacific. London, Faber & Faber, 1972. (American edition : New York, McGraw-Hill, 1972).
  • Emperor of Midnight. Illustration José Hernandez. Los Angeles, Black Sparrow Press, 1974.
  • The Disorderly Poet and Other Essays. Santa Barbara, Capra Press, 1975.
  • The Delights of Turkey. Twenty Tales. New York, New Directions, 1977. (Turkish translation : Türkiye Tatlari. Trans. Sevin Okyay. Istanbul, Yapi Kredi, 1999).
  • Meetings with Conrad. Los Angeles, Press of the Pegacycle Lady. 1977.
  • In a Lost World. Los Angeles, Black Sparrow Press, 1978.
  • The Temptations of a Saint. Illustrations Jose Hernandez. California, Ettan Press, 1980.
  • Thrice Chosen. Foreword. Paul Goodman. Black Sparrow Press, 1981
  • Etre un Autre. Poèmes. Illus. Manuel Cargaleiro. Lisbon, Isaac Holly, 1982
  • Fabelter. Illus. Manuel Cargaleiro. Paris & Lisbon, Isaac Holly, 1982.
  • New Old and New Testaments. New York, Red Ozier Press, 1983.
  • Orphic Love. New York, Hydra Group, 1986.
  • Propos sur l'Art. Paris, José Corti, 1987.
  • Jef Van Hoof. Brussels, Les Editeurs d'Art Associes, 1989.
  • Dialogues. Conversations with European Artists at Mid-Century. London, Lund Humphries, 1990. Includes Victor Brauner, Carlo Carra, Marc Chagall, Max Ernst, Barbara Hepworth, Josef Hermann, Hannah Höch, Oskar Kokoschka, Marino Marini, Gabrièle Münter, Ettore Sottsass, Pavel Tschelitchev and Ossip Zadkine.
  • The Journal of an Apprentice Cabbalist. Newcastle upon Tyne, Cloud, 1991.
  • Choose Your Own World. Illus. Yüksel Arslan. Santa Maria, Asylum Arts, 1992.

Journal articles edit

  • Roditi, Édouard (June 1946). "Henri Brémond: Poetics as Mystagogy". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. 4 (4): 229–235. doi:10.2307/426531. JSTOR 426531.

References edit

  • Michael Neal's Édouard Roditi Archive. Cayeux-sur-Mer. France.
  • Edouard Roditi, "Éloges and other poems, Saint-John Perse", Contemporary Poetry, Baltimore, vol. IV, no. 3, Autumn 1944
  1. ^ "Finding Aid for the Edouard Roditi Papers, 1910–1992". Online Archive of California / University of California. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  2. ^ Rosie Ayliffe, Marc Dubin, John Gawthrop. Rough Guide to Turkey (2003), p. 1061, "Edouard Roditi was born of Turkish Sephardic Jewish parents, but left Istanbul relatively early in life. Though for many years dividing his time between Paris and California, he still retained an obvious affection for his roots;..."
  3. ^ Roditi, Edouard (1962). De l'homosexualité. Paris: Société des Editions Modernes.
  4. ^ George Monteiro. The Presence of Pessoa: English, American, and Southern African ... (1998), p. 28, "Credit Edouard Roditi with having introduced Fernando Pessoa to readers in the United States. ... In a conversation with Edmund White, published in 1985, he recalled: My father was an American citizen, though born as a Sephardic Jew in Roditi was born in Paris"
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Koskovich, Ray Gerard (1984-04-17). "Edouard Roditi: Tales From Two Cities". The Advocate. pp. 59–61.
  6. ^ Roditi, Édouard (1944), "Trick Perspectives", Virginia Quarterly Review, University of Virginia, Autumn 1944: 541–554, Thus I came first to Elstree school, from which I graduated in time to Charterhouse and thence to Balliol College, Oxford.
  7. ^ "Finding Aid for the Edouard Roditi Papers, 1910–1992". Online Archive of California / University of California. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  8. ^ Roditi, Edouard (1947). Oscar Wilde. New Directions Publishing. p. 4. ISBN 9780811209953. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  9. ^ Barbedette, Gilles (2008). Paris Gay 1925 (in French). Paris: Non Lieu. ISBN 978-2352700494.
  10. ^ Sienna, Noam (2019). A Rainbow Thread (1st ed.). Philadelphia PA: Print-O-Craft. pp. 281–282. ISBN 978-0-9905155-6-2.
  11. ^ Sienna, Noam (2019). A Rainbow Thread (1st ed.). Philadelphia PA: Print-O-Craft. p. 282. ISBN 978-0-9905155-6-2.
  • Edouard Roditi, Inventions and Imitations: Tradition and the Advanced Guard in the Work of Edouard Roditi. Interviewer, Richard Candida Smith. Oral History Program, University of California, Los Angeles. 1986.

External links edit

Édouard, roditi, june, 1910, paris, france, 1992, cadiz, spain, american, poet, short, story, writer, critic, translator, contents, literary, career, upbringing, schooling, early, jobs, personal, life, published, works, journal, articles, references, external,. Edouard Roditi 6 June 1910 in Paris France 10 May 1992 in Cadiz Spain 1 was an American poet short story writer critic and translator 2 Contents 1 Literary career 2 Upbringing schooling amp early jobs 3 Personal life 4 Published works 4 1 Journal articles 5 References 6 External linksLiterary career editA prolific writer Edouard Roditi published numerous volumes of poetry short stories and art criticism starting with Poems for F Paris Editions du Sagitaire fr 1935 He was also well regarded as a translator rendering into English original works from French German Spanish Danish Portuguese and Turkish He was for instance one of the first to translate the work of French poet Saint John Perse into English in a volume published in 1944 In 1961 he translated Yasar Kemal s epic novel Ince Memed 1955 under the English title Memed My Hawk This book was instrumental in introducing the famed Turkish writer to the English speaking world Memed My Hawk is still in print Roditi was a cousin of Kemal s wife Thilda Serrero Roditi also translated Robert Schmutzler s Art Nouveau 1964 into English in an edition that is still in print He also translated such authors as C P Cavafy Paul Celan Albert Memmi Fernando Pessoa In addition to his poetry and translations Roditi is perhaps best remembered for the numerous interviews he conducted with modernist artists including Marc Chagall Joan Miro Oskar Kokoschka Philippe Derome and Hannah Hoch Several of these have been assembled in the collection Dialogues on Art Reflecting his wide reading of works on sexuality as well as his personal experience Roditi also published a book length essay in French on homosexuality titled De l homosexualite Paris Societe des Editions Modernes SEDIMO 1962 The work assesses historical sociological religious medical legal and literary approaches to the subject it closes with a seven page bibliography of sources in French English and German 3 Upbringing schooling amp early jobs editEdouard Roditi s father was a Sephardi Jew from Istanbul who became an American citizen 4 His mother was of Ashkenazi and Flemish Catholic descent and a British citizen 5 He was born in Paris where his parents had already been living for a number of years Roditi grew up in France and attended public school there before going on to study in England at Elstree School Charterhouse and briefly at Balliol College Oxford 6 7 In 1929 he moved back to Paris where he frequented the proponents of Surrealism and became a partner in the Surrealist publishing house Editions du Saggitaire 5 During this period he visited the celebrated salon of Gertrude Stein whom he found incredibly pretentious and rather offensive 5 Roditi traveled to the United States in 1929 and 1932 meeting members of the Harlem Renaissance as well as novelist and photographer Carl van Vechten 5 He returned in 1937 to take a bachelor s degree in Romance languages at the University of Chicago then went on to do graduate work at the University of California Berkeley During World War II he served in the French short wave broadcast unit of the United States Office of War Information and as a translator for the State Department and the Defense Department 5 Following the war he served as a multilingual interpreter for the United Nations Charter Conference in San Francisco He subsequently returned to Europe to work as a freelance interpreter for international organizations and conferences including the International War Crimes Tribunal at Nuremberg 5 In 1950 during the Lavender Scare he was fired from that job Roditi was part of the Benton Way Group with Charles Aufderheide 8 Personal life editEdouard Roditi had recognized that he was attracted to other men from an early age and he actively explored the homosexual milieu of dance halls bars bathhouses and public cruising areas in Paris starting in his teen years and continuing in other places where he lived thereafter 5 9 Among Roditi s close friends in France in the early 1930s was the American homosexual poet Hart Crane 5 In the United States in the late 1930s Roditi befriended a fellow gay Jewish writer Paul Goodman Roditi s first book Poems for F printed in 250 copies in 1935 was inspired by a two year affair with a married man probably an Austrian painter 20 years older than the poet Roditi kept the identity of F secret to the end of his life 10 In his romantic life Roditi followed an early 20th century pattern of seeking out partners among men who did not identify as gay In a 1984 interview he recalled Personally I have never been particularly attracted to outright homosexuals and most of my more enjoyable and lasting relationships have been with bisexual or otherwise normal men in whose love life I was an exception 5 He considered himself thrice chosen by being Jewish homosexual and epileptic as expressed in his anthology titled Thrice Chosen 1981 11 Published works editPoems for F Paris Editions du Sagittaire 1935 Prison Within Prison Three Elegies on Hebrew Themes Prairie City Press of James A Decker 1941 German Translation Drei Hebraische Elegien Deutsche ubersetzung von Alexander Koval Berlin Karl H Henssel Verlag 1950 Pieces of Three With Paul Goodman amp Meyer Liben New Jersey 5 x 8 Press 1942 Oscar Wilde New York New Directions 1947 New Revised edition New York New Directions 1986 German trans Alexander Koval Munich Verlag Herbert Kluger 1947 Poems 1928 1948 New York New Directions 1949 Selbstanalyse eines Sammlers Cologne Verlag Galerie der Spiegel 1960 In Erdnahe Close to earth Poems by Roditi etchings by Heinz Trokes In German English and French Cologne Verlag Galerie der Spiegel 1960 Dialogues on Art London Martin Secker amp Warburg 1960 Dialogues on Art Santa Barbara Ross Erikson 1980 Includes Marc Chagall Marino Marini Giorgio Morandi Joan Miro Oskar Kokoschka Barbara Hepworth Pavel Tchelitchew Gabriele Munter Eduardo Paolozzi Josef Hermann Henry Moore Fahr el Nissa Zeid More Dialogues on Art Santa Barbara Ross Ekrikson 1984 Includes Victor Brauner Carlo Carra Max Ernst Leonore Fini Demetrios Galanis Nicolas Ghika Hannah Hoch Mordercai Moreh Ianni Tsarouchis Jef Van Hoof Ossip Zadkine Alexander Zlotnik De L Homosexualite Pref G Valensin Paris Sedimo 1962 Spanish translation La Inversion Sexual Trans Alberto Santalo Barcelona Ediciones Picazo 1975 Le journal d un ahuri Ou le maquereau malge lui Chatelet Belgium Imprimeur Franz Jacob 1962 Propos sur l Art Chagall Miro Max Ernst Paris Sedimo 1967 Propos sur l Art Propos recueillis par Edouard Roditi Miro Ernst Chagall Paris Hermann Editeurs 2006 An Earthly Paradise Present Indicative With From the Notebook of Marco Gillette Park Street Under by Richard Dean Rosen Rhode Island Hellcoal Press 1968 New Hieroglyphic Tales Prose Poems Drawings Modesto Roldan San Francisco Kayak Press 1968 Joachim Karsch Berlin Mann 1968 La sultana de los desmazalados Trans Amadeo Sole Leris Madrid Papelos de son Armadans 1969 Habacuc Traduit de l anglais par Alain Bosquet Gravure Albert Bitran Paris Imprimerie S M I 1972 Magelan of the Pacific London Faber amp Faber 1972 American edition New York McGraw Hill 1972 Emperor of Midnight Illustration Jose Hernandez Los Angeles Black Sparrow Press 1974 The Disorderly Poet and Other Essays Santa Barbara Capra Press 1975 The Delights of Turkey Twenty Tales New York New Directions 1977 Turkish translation Turkiye Tatlari Trans Sevin Okyay Istanbul Yapi Kredi 1999 Meetings with Conrad Los Angeles Press of the Pegacycle Lady 1977 In a Lost World Los Angeles Black Sparrow Press 1978 The Temptations of a Saint Illustrations Jose Hernandez California Ettan Press 1980 Thrice Chosen Foreword Paul Goodman Black Sparrow Press 1981 Etre un Autre Poemes Illus Manuel Cargaleiro Lisbon Isaac Holly 1982 Fabelter Illus Manuel Cargaleiro Paris amp Lisbon Isaac Holly 1982 New Old and New Testaments New York Red Ozier Press 1983 Orphic Love New York Hydra Group 1986 Propos sur l Art Paris Jose Corti 1987 Jef Van Hoof Brussels Les Editeurs d Art Associes 1989 Dialogues Conversations with European Artists at Mid Century London Lund Humphries 1990 Includes Victor Brauner Carlo Carra Marc Chagall Max Ernst Barbara Hepworth Josef Hermann Hannah Hoch Oskar Kokoschka Marino Marini Gabriele Munter Ettore Sottsass Pavel Tschelitchev and Ossip Zadkine The Journal of an Apprentice Cabbalist Newcastle upon Tyne Cloud 1991 Choose Your Own World Illus Yuksel Arslan Santa Maria Asylum Arts 1992 Journal articles edit Roditi Edouard June 1946 Henri Bremond Poetics as Mystagogy The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 4 4 229 235 doi 10 2307 426531 JSTOR 426531 References editMichael Neal s Edouard Roditi Archive Cayeux sur Mer France Edouard Roditi Eloges and other poems Saint John Perse Contemporary Poetry Baltimore vol IV no 3 Autumn 1944 Finding Aid for the Edouard Roditi Papers 1910 1992 Online Archive of California University of California Retrieved 18 May 2013 Rosie Ayliffe Marc Dubin John Gawthrop Rough Guide to Turkey 2003 p 1061 Edouard Roditi was born of Turkish Sephardic Jewish parents but left Istanbul relatively early in life Though for many years dividing his time between Paris and California he still retained an obvious affection for his roots Roditi Edouard 1962 De l homosexualite Paris Societe des Editions Modernes George Monteiro The Presence of Pessoa English American and Southern African 1998 p 28 Credit Edouard Roditi with having introduced Fernando Pessoa to readers in the United States In a conversation with Edmund White published in 1985 he recalled My father was an American citizen though born as a Sephardic Jew in Roditi was born in Paris a b c d e f g h i Koskovich Ray Gerard 1984 04 17 Edouard Roditi Tales From Two Cities The Advocate pp 59 61 Roditi Edouard 1944 Trick Perspectives Virginia Quarterly Review University of Virginia Autumn 1944 541 554 Thus I came first to Elstree school from which I graduated in time to Charterhouse and thence to Balliol College Oxford Finding Aid for the Edouard Roditi Papers 1910 1992 Online Archive of California University of California Retrieved 18 May 2013 Roditi Edouard 1947 Oscar Wilde New Directions Publishing p 4 ISBN 9780811209953 Retrieved 25 January 2018 Barbedette Gilles 2008 Paris Gay 1925 in French Paris Non Lieu ISBN 978 2352700494 Sienna Noam 2019 A Rainbow Thread 1st ed Philadelphia PA Print O Craft pp 281 282 ISBN 978 0 9905155 6 2 Sienna Noam 2019 A Rainbow Thread 1st ed Philadelphia PA Print O Craft p 282 ISBN 978 0 9905155 6 2 Edouard Roditi Inventions and Imitations Tradition and the Advanced Guard in the Work of Edouard Roditi Interviewer Richard Candida Smith Oral History Program University of California Los Angeles 1986 External links edithttp glbtqarchive com literature roditi e L pdf Saint John Perse Edouard Roditi Papers 1910 1992 at the Charles E Young Research Library University of California Los Angeles Guide to the Papers of Edouard Roditi 1910 1992 at the Leo Baeck Institute New York Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edouard Roditi amp oldid 1188668595, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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