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F. O. Matthiessen

Francis Otto Matthiessen (February 19, 1902 – April 1, 1950) was an educator, scholar and literary critic influential in the fields of American literature and American studies.[1] His best known work, American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman, celebrated the achievements of several 19th-century American authors and had a profound impact on a generation of scholars. It also established American Renaissance as the common term to refer to American literature of the mid-nineteenth century. Matthiessen was known for his support of liberal causes and progressive politics. His contributions to the Harvard University community have been memorialized in several ways, including an endowed visiting professorship.

F. O. Matthiessen
Matthiessen (right) with Russell Cheney, Normandy, Summer 1925
Born
Francis Otto Matthiessen

(1902-02-19)February 19, 1902
DiedApril 1, 1950(1950-04-01) (aged 48)
Resting placeSpringfield Cemetery, Springfield, Massachusetts
Alma materYale, Oxford and Harvard
Occupation(s)Historian, literary critic, educator
Known forAmerican Renaissance
PartnerRussell Cheney
AwardsDeForest and Alpheus Henry Snow Prizes, Rhodes Scholarship

Early life and education edit

Francis Otto Matthiessen was born in Pasadena, California on February 19, 1902. He was the fourth of four children born to Frederick William Matthiessen (1868–1948) and Lucy Orne Pratt (1866). His grandfather, Frederick William Matthiessen, was an industrial leader in zinc production and a successful manufacturer of clocks and machine tools; and also served as mayor of LaSalle, Illinois for ten years. Francis' three older siblings were Frederick William (born 1894), George Dwight (born 1897) and Lucy Orne (born 1898).[2]

In Pasadena Francis was a student at Polytechnic School. Following the separation of his parents, he relocated with his mother to his paternal grandparents' home in LaSalle. He completed his secondary education at Hackley School, in Tarrytown, New York.

In 1923, he graduated from Yale University, where he was managing editor of the Yale Daily News, editor of the Yale Literary Magazine and a member of Skull and Bones.[3] As the recipient of the university's DeForest Prize, he titled his oration, "Servants of the Devil", in which he proclaimed Yale's administration to be an "autocracy, ruled by a Corporation out of touch with college life and allied with big business".[4] In his final year as a Yale undergraduate, he received the Alpheus Henry Snow Prize,[5] awarded to the senior "who through the combination of intellectual achievement, character and personality, shall be adjudged by the faculty to have done the most for Yale by inspiring in classmates an admiration and love for the best traditions of high scholarship".

 
Helen Bayne Knapp, Matthiessen, and Russell Cheney: photo taken in Cheney's garden, 1925

He studied at Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, earning a B.Litt. in 1925. At Harvard University, he quickly completed his M.A. in 1926 and Ph.D. degree in 1927. He then returned to Yale to teach for two years, before beginning a distinguished teaching career at Harvard.

 
F. O. Matthiessen tablet at Eliot House, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, US

Scholarly work edit

Matthiessen was an American studies scholar and literary critic at Harvard University,[6] and chaired its undergraduate program in history and literature.[7] He wrote and edited landmark works of scholarship on T. S. Eliot, Ralph Waldo Emerson, the James family (Alice James, Henry James, Henry James Sr., and William James), Sarah Orne Jewett, Sinclair Lewis, Herman Melville, Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman. His best-known book, American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman (1941), discusses the flowering of literary culture in the middle of the American 19th century, with Emerson, Thoreau, Melville, Whitman and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Its focus was the period roughly from 1850 to 1855 in which all these writers but Emerson published what would, by Matthiessen's time, come to be thought of as their masterpieces: Melville's Moby-Dick, multiple editions of Whitman's Leaves of Grass, Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables, and Thoreau's Walden. The mid-19th century in American literature is commonly called the American Renaissance because of the influence of this work on later literary history and criticism. In 2003 The New York Times said that the book "virtually created the field of American literature."[1] Originally Matthiessen planned to include Edgar Allan Poe in the book, but found that Poe did not fit in the scheme of the book.[8] He wrote the chapter on Poe for the Literary History of the United States (LHUS, 1948), but "some of the editors missed the usual Matthiessen touch of brilliance and subtlety."[9] Kermit Vanderbilt suggests that because Matthiessen was "not able to pull together the related strands" between Poe and the writers of American Renaissance, the chapter is "markedly old-fashioned."[10] Matthiessen edited The Oxford Book of American Verse, published in 1950, an anthology of American poetry of major importance which contributed significantly to the propagation of American modernist poetry in the 1950s and 1960s.

Matthiessen was one of earliest scholars associated with the Salzburg Global Seminar. In July 1947, he gave the inaugural lecture, stating:

Our age has had no escape from an awareness of history. Much of that history has been hard and full of suffering. But now we have the luxury of an historical awareness of another sort, of an occasion not of anxiety but of promise. We may speak without exaggeration of this occasion as historic, since we have come here to enact anew the chief function of culture and humanism, to bring man again into communication with man.[11]

Along with John Crowe Ransom and Lionel Trilling, in 1948, Matthiessen was one of the founders of the Kenyon School of English.[12]

Politics edit

Matthiessen's politics were left-wing and socialist. Already financially secure, he donated an inheritance he received in the late 1940s to his friend, Marxist economist Paul Sweezy. Sweezy used the money, totalling almost $15,000, to found a new journal, which became the Monthly Review. On the Harvard campus, Matthiessen was a visible and active supporter of progressive causes. In May 1940 he was elected president of the Harvard Teachers Union, an affiliate of the American Federation of Labor. The Harvard Crimson reported his inaugural address in which Matthiessen quoted the campus union's constitution: "In affiliating with the organized labor movement, we express our desire to contribute to and receive support from this powerful progressive force; to reduce the segregation of teachers from the rest of the workers ...and increase thereby the sense of common purpose among them; and in particular to cooperate in this field in the advancement of education and resistance to all reaction."[13]

Matthiessen seconded the nomination of the Progressive Party presidential candidate, Henry Wallace, at the party's convention in Philadelphia in 1948.[14] Reflective of the emerging McCarthyism surveillance of left-wing university academics, he was mentioned as an activist in Boston area so-called "Communist front groups" by Herbert Philbrick.[15]

Personal life edit

Matthiessen was known to his friends as "Matty".[16] As a gay man in the 1930s and 1940s, he chose to remain in the closet throughout his professional career, if not in his personal life – although traces of homoerotic concern are apparent in his writings.[17] In 2009, a statement from Harvard University said that Matthiessen "stands out as an unusual example of a gay man who lived his sexuality as an 'open secret' in the mid-20th century."[6][7]

He had a two-decade-long romantic relationship with the painter Russell Cheney, twenty years his senior.[1] Like Matthiessen's family, Cheney's was prominent in business, being among America's leading silk producers. In a 1925 letter to Cheney, Matthiessen wrote about trusting friends with the knowledge of their relationship, rather than the world at large;[18] in planning to spend his life with Cheney, Matthiessen went as far as asking his cohort in the Yale secret society Skull and Bones to approve of their partnership.[19] With Cheney having encouraged Matthiessen's interest in Whitman, it has been argued that American Renaissance was "the ultimate expression of Matthiessen's love for Cheney and a secret celebration of the gay artist."[1][20][21] Throughout his teaching career at Harvard, Matthiessen maintained a residence in either Cambridge or Boston. However, the couple often retreated to their shared cottage in Kittery, Maine. Russell Cheney died in July 1945.

A compilation of letters between Matthiessen and Cheney was published in 1978 under the title Rat & the Devil: journal letters of F. O. Matthiessen and Russell Cheney.[22] The title alludes to the pseudonyms by which the two refer to one another: Matthiessen is "Devil" and Cheney is "Rat".[23] In 1992 the collection was adapted as a stage play, titled Devil & Rat in Love, written and directed by Michael Bonacci.[24] The play was also a tribute to Bonacci's partner, who had died the previous year.[25]

Death edit

Matthiessen committed suicide in 1950 by jumping from a 12th floor window of the Hotel Manger in Boston.[6][1] He had been hospitalized once for a nervous breakdown in 1938–39. He also continued to be deeply affected by Russell Cheney's death, which was caused by a heart attack.[23] He spent the evening before his death at the home of his friend and colleague, Kenneth Murdock, Harvard's Higginson Professor of English Literature.

In a note left in the hotel room, Matthiessen wrote, "I am depressed over world conditions. I am a Christian and a Socialist. I am against any order which interferes with that objective."[26] Commentators have speculated on the impact of the escalating Red Scare on his state of mind. He was being targeted by anti-communist forces that would soon be exploited by Senator Joseph McCarthy, and inquiries by the House Un-American Activities Committee into his politics may have been a contributing factor in his suicide. In an article subsection titled "Dupes and Fellow Travelers Dress Up Communist Fronts" in the April 4, 1949 edition of Life magazine, he had been pictured among fifty prominent academics, scientists, clergy and writers, who also included Albert Einstein, Arthur Miller, Lillian Hellman, Langston Hughes, Norman Mailer and fellow Harvard professors, Kirtley Mather, Corliss Lamont and Ralph Barton Perry.[27] Writing in 1958, Eric Jacobsen referred to Matthiessen's death as "hastened by forces whose activities earned for themselves the sobriquet un-American which they sought so assiduously to fasten on others".[28] However, in 1978, Harry Levin was more skeptical, saying only that "spokesmen for the Communist Party, to which he had never belonged, loudly signalized his suicide as a political gesture".[19]

Matthiessen was buried at Springfield Cemetery in Springfield, Massachusetts.[citation needed]

Legacy edit

Matthiessen's contribution to the critical celebration of 19th-century American literature is considered formative and enduring. Along with several other scholars, he is regarded as a contributor to the creation of American studies as a recognized academic discipline. His personal story, academic contributions, political activism and early death had a lasting impact on a circle of scholars and writers. Their sense of loss and struggle to understand his suicide can be found in two novels with central figures inspired by Matthiessen, May Sarton's Faithful are the Wounds (1955)[29] and Mark Merlis's American Studies (1994).[30]

His stature and legacy as a member of the Harvard community has been memorialized in several ways by the university. He was the first Senior Tutor at Eliot House, one of Harvard College's undergraduate residential houses. More than seventy years after his death, Matthiessen's suite at Eliot House remains preserved as the F. O. Matthiessen Room, housing personal manuscripts and 1700 volumes of his library available for scholarly research by permission.[31][32] Eliot House also hosts an annual Matthiessen Dinner with a guest speaker.

In 2009, Harvard established an endowed chair in LGBT studies called the F. O. Matthiessen Visiting Professorship of Gender and Sexuality.[6][7][33] Believing the post to be "the first professorship of its kind in the country",[6] Harvard President Drew Faust called it "an important milestone".[7][33] It is funded by a $1.5 million gift from the members and supporters of the Harvard Gender and Sexuality Caucus.[6][7][33][34][35]

Holders of the chair have included:

Several generations after Matthiessen's death, this visiting professorship reaffirms the university's appreciation for his continuing legacy as a storied scholar and teacher.

Bibliography edit

  • Sarah Orne Jewett, ISBN 0844613053, Peter Smith, (1929)
  • Translation: An Elizabethan Art, ISBN 0781270340, (January 1931)
  • The Achievement of T. S. Eliot: An Essay on the Nature of Poetry, Oxford University Press (1935)
  • American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman, ISBN 0-19-500759-X, Oxford University Press (1941) (also available in many other editions)
  • Herman Melville: Selected Poems, edited, New Directions (1944)
  • Henry James: The Major Phase, ISBN 0195012259, Oxford University Press (June 1944)
  • Russell Cheney, 1881–1945: A Record of His Work, Oxford University Press (1947)
  • The Notebooks of Henry James, edited by F. O. Matthiessen and Kenneth B. Murdock, (first edition 1947) ISBN 0-226-51104-9, University of Chicago Press (1981)
  • From the Heart of Europe, Oxford University Press (1948)
  • The Education of a Socialist, Monthly Review, Vol 2 No 6, October 1950 (posthumous)
  • Of Crime and Punishment, Monthly Review, Vol 2 No 6, October 1950 (posthumous)
  • The Oxford Book of American Verse, ISBN 0195000498, Oxford University Press (December 1950)
  • Responsibilities of the Critic, ISBN 0195000072, Oxford University Press (posthumous - 1952)
  • The James Family: A Group Biography, ISBN 0715638386, Alfred A. Knopf (1947, posthumous - 1961)
  • To the Memory of Phelps Putnam, essay in The Collected Poems of H. Phelps Putnam, ISBN 0374126275, Farrar, Straus, and Giroux (posthumous - 1971)

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Smith, Dinitia (May 29, 2003). "American Culture's Debt To Gay Sons of Harvard". The New York Times. Retrieved June 3, 2006.
  2. ^ Whittelsey, Charles Barney (1900). The Ancestry and the Descendants of John Pratt of Hartford, Conn. Hartford, Conn.: Case, Lockwood & Brainard. p. 179.
  3. ^ Yale University obituary 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine mssa.library.yale.edu, Retrieved December 21, 2013
  4. ^ Max Lerner: Pilgrim in the Promised Land, Retrieved December 21, 2013
  5. ^ . Harvard Gay and Lesbian Caucus. Archived from the original on June 12, 2009. Retrieved January 26, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Steinberg, Jacques (June 3, 2009). "Harvard to Endow Chair in Gay Studies". The New York Times. Retrieved June 4, 2009.
  7. ^ a b c d e Jan, Tracy (June 3, 2009). "Harvard to endow professorship in gay studies". The Boston Globe. Boston.com. Retrieved June 3, 2009.
  8. ^ Kermit Vanderbilt, American Literature and the Academy: The Roots, Growth, and Maturity of a Profession., p. 501. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986. ISBN 0-8122-1291-6
  9. ^ Vanderbilt 1986, p. 502
  10. ^ Vanderbilt 1986, 523
  11. ^ Salzburg Global Seminar History 2013-12-25 at the Wayback Machine www.salzburgglobal.org, Retrieved September 5, 2013
  12. ^ Kenyon School of English 2013-12-03 at the Wayback Machine www.kenyonhistory.net, Retrieved September 5, 2013
  13. ^ Matthiessen Heads Union The Harvard Crimson, Retrieved March 22, 2013
  14. ^ Memories of the Moderns, pg. 218, Retrieved December 21, 2013
  15. ^ Philbrick, Herbert A. (1952). I Led 3 Lives: citizen, "Communist," counterspy. New York: McGraw-Hill. matthiessen.
  16. ^ Phelps, Christopher (May 1999). "Introduction: a Socialist Magazine in the American Century". Monthly Review. 51 (1): 2. doi:10.14452/MR-051-01-1999-05_1.
  17. ^ "American Renaissance (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941), p. 431".
  18. ^ Stein, Marc (2004). Encyclopedia of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender History in America. Vol. 2. New York, NY: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 238. ISBN 0684312611. In the same letter to Cheney (7 February 1925), Matthiessen makes clear a distinction between the world and those 'close friends' with whom he thinks it safe to share the fact of their relationship.
  19. ^ a b Levin, Harry. "The Private Life of F. O. Matthiessen." New York Review of Books 25:12 (July 20, 1978), pp. 42–46 (abstract online; full text for subscribers only).
  20. ^ Bergman, David (January 1, 1991). Gaiety Transfigured: Gay Self-Representation in American Literature. The University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-13050-9.
  21. ^ Shand-Tucci, Douglass (May 19, 2003). The Crimson Letter: Harvard, Homosexuality and the Shaping of American Culture. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-19896-5.
  22. ^ Hyde, Louis, ed. (1978). Rat & the Devil: journal letters of F. O. Matthiessen and Russell Cheney. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books. ISBN 978-0-208-01655-3.
  23. ^ a b Norton, Rictor (1998). "Rat and the Devil". Gay History & Literature. Retrieved Mar 13, 2023.
  24. ^ Vaughan, Peter (March 18, 1992). "'Rat and Devil in Love' appeals to the mind, not the emotions". Star Tribune: Newspaper of the Twin Cities. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  25. ^ Bonacci, Michael (April 26, 2010). "Rat & the Devil". Goodreads (This is a citation of a primary source (book review written by the author of the book) found on a book review blog.). Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  26. ^ "F. O. Matthiessen Plunges to Death from Hotel Window". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
  27. ^ "Red Visitors Cause Rumpus". Life Magazine. April 4, 1949. p. 43. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
  28. ^ Jacobsen, Eric (1958). Translation: a Traditional Craft. Copenhagen: Gyldendalske Boghandel. pp. 9–10.
  29. ^ Harrington, Michael (Summer 1955). "Fictional Biography". New International. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  30. ^ Baltimore Sun 2013-12-03 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 25, 2013
  31. ^ "Eliot Book Room Exhibits Treasures". Harvard Crimson. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  32. ^ . eliot.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on January 1, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
  33. ^ a b c Associated Press (June 3, 2009). "Harvard to Endow Chair in Gay, Lesbian Studies". FOXNews.com. Retrieved June 4, 2009.
  34. ^ . HGLC.org. Archived from the original on June 12, 2009. Retrieved June 4, 2009.
  35. ^ "About our name change from HGLC to HGSC". Retrieved June 6, 2018.
  36. ^ Ferreol, Michelle Denise L. (October 4, 2012). "Harvard Establishes the First LGBTQ Faculty Position in the United States". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved October 4, 2012.
  37. ^ Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences Registrar's Office 2013-12-02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 25, 2013
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on February 11, 2017. Retrieved September 26, 2017.
  39. ^ "F. O. Matthiessen Visiting Professorship of Gender and Sexuality". Retrieved June 6, 2018.
  40. ^ "Welcome Reception for Mel Y. Chen, 2020 F.O. Matthiessen Visiting Professor of Gender and Sexuality". Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  41. ^ "C. Riley Snorton is the 2023 F.O. Matthiessen Visiting Professor of Gender and Sexuality". Retrieved November 5, 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Monthly Review, Vol 2 No 6, October 1950, entire edition dedicated to FOM with two essays by FOM and essays and statements by friends and scholars including Leo Marx, Paul Sweezy, Alfred Kazin, Corliss Lamont, Kenneth Murdock, May Sarton and Richard Wilbur
  • Arac, Jonathan. "F. O. Matthiessen: Authorizing an American Renaissance." The American Renaissance Reconsidered. Eds. Walter Benn Michaels and Donald Pease. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1985.
  • Hyde, Louis, ed. Rat and the Devil: Journal Letters of F. O. Matthiessen and Russell Cheney. Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books, 1978. ISBN 1-55583-110-9; ISBN 0-208-01655-4.
  • Leverenz, L. David. Manhood and the American Renaissance. Ithaca, NY: Cornell UP, 1989.
  • Levin, Harry. "The Private Life of F. O. Matthiessen." New York Review of Books 25:12 (July 20, 1978), pp. 42–46 (abstract online; full text for subscribers only).
  • Marcus, Greil. The Old Weird America New York: Henry Holt (Picador), pp. 90, 124
  • Phelps, Christopher (May 1999). "Introduction: a Socialist Magazine in the American Century". Monthly Review. 51 (1): 1. doi:10.14452/MR-051-01-1999-05_1.
  • Reynolds, David. Beneath the American Renaissance: The Subversive Imagination in the Age of Emerson and Melville. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP, 1988.
  • Spark, Clare, "F. O. Matthiessen: martyr to McCarthyism?". 29 December 2010. YDS: The Clare Spark Blog, December 29, 2010
  • Stern, Frederick C., F. O. Matthiessen - Christian Socialist as Critic. Chapel Hill, North Carolina : University of North Carolina Press, 1981.
  • Sundquist, Eric J. To Wake the Nations: Race and the Making of American Literature. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP, 1993.
  • Toibin, Colm. "Love in a Dark Time". New York, Scribner, 2004.
  • Ward, John William 1955.Andrew Jackson, Symbol for an Age. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Marx, Leo. 1964. The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Ward, John William 1969 Red, White, and Blue: Men, Books, and Ideas in American Culture . New York: Oxford University Press

External links edit

  • F. O. Matthiessen at Find a Grave
  • Retrieved November 25, 2013
  • Retrieved April 4, 2012
  • A public conversation with Henry Abelove on YouTube, reflections on Matthiessen from 11:48 through 19:10 minutes, YouTube, Harvard's Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Retrieved March 22, 2013
  • F. O. Matthiessen Papers. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

matthiessen, francis, otto, matthiessen, february, 1902, april, 1950, educator, scholar, literary, critic, influential, fields, american, literature, american, studies, best, known, work, american, renaissance, expression, emerson, whitman, celebrated, achieve. Francis Otto Matthiessen February 19 1902 April 1 1950 was an educator scholar and literary critic influential in the fields of American literature and American studies 1 His best known work American Renaissance Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman celebrated the achievements of several 19th century American authors and had a profound impact on a generation of scholars It also established American Renaissance as the common term to refer to American literature of the mid nineteenth century Matthiessen was known for his support of liberal causes and progressive politics His contributions to the Harvard University community have been memorialized in several ways including an endowed visiting professorship F O MatthiessenMatthiessen right with Russell Cheney Normandy Summer 1925BornFrancis Otto Matthiessen 1902 02 19 February 19 1902Pasadena California USDiedApril 1 1950 1950 04 01 aged 48 Boston Massachusetts USResting placeSpringfield Cemetery Springfield MassachusettsAlma materYale Oxford and HarvardOccupation s Historian literary critic educatorKnown forAmerican RenaissancePartnerRussell CheneyAwardsDeForest and Alpheus Henry Snow Prizes Rhodes Scholarship Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Scholarly work 3 Politics 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Legacy 7 Bibliography 8 Footnotes 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and education editFrancis Otto Matthiessen was born in Pasadena California on February 19 1902 He was the fourth of four children born to Frederick William Matthiessen 1868 1948 and Lucy Orne Pratt 1866 His grandfather Frederick William Matthiessen was an industrial leader in zinc production and a successful manufacturer of clocks and machine tools and also served as mayor of LaSalle Illinois for ten years Francis three older siblings were Frederick William born 1894 George Dwight born 1897 and Lucy Orne born 1898 2 In Pasadena Francis was a student at Polytechnic School Following the separation of his parents he relocated with his mother to his paternal grandparents home in LaSalle He completed his secondary education at Hackley School in Tarrytown New York In 1923 he graduated from Yale University where he was managing editor of the Yale Daily News editor of the Yale Literary Magazine and a member of Skull and Bones 3 As the recipient of the university s DeForest Prize he titled his oration Servants of the Devil in which he proclaimed Yale s administration to be an autocracy ruled by a Corporation out of touch with college life and allied with big business 4 In his final year as a Yale undergraduate he received the Alpheus Henry Snow Prize 5 awarded to the senior who through the combination of intellectual achievement character and personality shall be adjudged by the faculty to have done the most for Yale by inspiring in classmates an admiration and love for the best traditions of high scholarship nbsp Helen Bayne Knapp Matthiessen and Russell Cheney photo taken in Cheney s garden 1925 He studied at Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar earning a B Litt in 1925 At Harvard University he quickly completed his M A in 1926 and Ph D degree in 1927 He then returned to Yale to teach for two years before beginning a distinguished teaching career at Harvard nbsp F O Matthiessen tablet at Eliot House Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USScholarly work editMatthiessen was an American studies scholar and literary critic at Harvard University 6 and chaired its undergraduate program in history and literature 7 He wrote and edited landmark works of scholarship on T S Eliot Ralph Waldo Emerson the James family Alice James Henry James Henry James Sr and William James Sarah Orne Jewett Sinclair Lewis Herman Melville Henry David Thoreau and Walt Whitman His best known book American Renaissance Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman 1941 discusses the flowering of literary culture in the middle of the American 19th century with Emerson Thoreau Melville Whitman and Nathaniel Hawthorne Its focus was the period roughly from 1850 to 1855 in which all these writers but Emerson published what would by Matthiessen s time come to be thought of as their masterpieces Melville s Moby Dick multiple editions of Whitman s Leaves of Grass Hawthorne s The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables and Thoreau s Walden The mid 19th century in American literature is commonly called the American Renaissance because of the influence of this work on later literary history and criticism In 2003 The New York Times said that the book virtually created the field of American literature 1 Originally Matthiessen planned to include Edgar Allan Poe in the book but found that Poe did not fit in the scheme of the book 8 He wrote the chapter on Poe for the Literary History of the United States LHUS 1948 but some of the editors missed the usual Matthiessen touch of brilliance and subtlety 9 Kermit Vanderbilt suggests that because Matthiessen was not able to pull together the related strands between Poe and the writers of American Renaissance the chapter is markedly old fashioned 10 Matthiessen edited The Oxford Book of American Verse published in 1950 an anthology of American poetry of major importance which contributed significantly to the propagation of American modernist poetry in the 1950s and 1960s Matthiessen was one of earliest scholars associated with the Salzburg Global Seminar In July 1947 he gave the inaugural lecture stating Our age has had no escape from an awareness of history Much of that history has been hard and full of suffering But now we have the luxury of an historical awareness of another sort of an occasion not of anxiety but of promise We may speak without exaggeration of this occasion as historic since we have come here to enact anew the chief function of culture and humanism to bring man again into communication with man 11 Along with John Crowe Ransom and Lionel Trilling in 1948 Matthiessen was one of the founders of the Kenyon School of English 12 Politics editMatthiessen s politics were left wing and socialist Already financially secure he donated an inheritance he received in the late 1940s to his friend Marxist economist Paul Sweezy Sweezy used the money totalling almost 15 000 to found a new journal which became the Monthly Review On the Harvard campus Matthiessen was a visible and active supporter of progressive causes In May 1940 he was elected president of the Harvard Teachers Union an affiliate of the American Federation of Labor The Harvard Crimson reported his inaugural address in which Matthiessen quoted the campus union s constitution In affiliating with the organized labor movement we express our desire to contribute to and receive support from this powerful progressive force to reduce the segregation of teachers from the rest of the workers and increase thereby the sense of common purpose among them and in particular to cooperate in this field in the advancement of education and resistance to all reaction 13 Matthiessen seconded the nomination of the Progressive Party presidential candidate Henry Wallace at the party s convention in Philadelphia in 1948 14 Reflective of the emerging McCarthyism surveillance of left wing university academics he was mentioned as an activist in Boston area so called Communist front groups by Herbert Philbrick 15 Personal life editMatthiessen was known to his friends as Matty 16 As a gay man in the 1930s and 1940s he chose to remain in the closet throughout his professional career if not in his personal life although traces of homoerotic concern are apparent in his writings 17 In 2009 a statement from Harvard University said that Matthiessen stands out as an unusual example of a gay man who lived his sexuality as an open secret in the mid 20th century 6 7 He had a two decade long romantic relationship with the painter Russell Cheney twenty years his senior 1 Like Matthiessen s family Cheney s was prominent in business being among America s leading silk producers In a 1925 letter to Cheney Matthiessen wrote about trusting friends with the knowledge of their relationship rather than the world at large 18 in planning to spend his life with Cheney Matthiessen went as far as asking his cohort in the Yale secret society Skull and Bones to approve of their partnership 19 With Cheney having encouraged Matthiessen s interest in Whitman it has been argued that American Renaissance was the ultimate expression of Matthiessen s love for Cheney and a secret celebration of the gay artist 1 20 21 Throughout his teaching career at Harvard Matthiessen maintained a residence in either Cambridge or Boston However the couple often retreated to their shared cottage in Kittery Maine Russell Cheney died in July 1945 A compilation of letters between Matthiessen and Cheney was published in 1978 under the title Rat amp the Devil journal letters of F O Matthiessen and Russell Cheney 22 The title alludes to the pseudonyms by which the two refer to one another Matthiessen is Devil and Cheney is Rat 23 In 1992 the collection was adapted as a stage play titled Devil amp Rat in Love written and directed by Michael Bonacci 24 The play was also a tribute to Bonacci s partner who had died the previous year 25 Death editMatthiessen committed suicide in 1950 by jumping from a 12th floor window of the Hotel Manger in Boston 6 1 He had been hospitalized once for a nervous breakdown in 1938 39 He also continued to be deeply affected by Russell Cheney s death which was caused by a heart attack 23 He spent the evening before his death at the home of his friend and colleague Kenneth Murdock Harvard s Higginson Professor of English Literature In a note left in the hotel room Matthiessen wrote I am depressed over world conditions I am a Christian and a Socialist I am against any order which interferes with that objective 26 Commentators have speculated on the impact of the escalating Red Scare on his state of mind He was being targeted by anti communist forces that would soon be exploited by Senator Joseph McCarthy and inquiries by the House Un American Activities Committee into his politics may have been a contributing factor in his suicide In an article subsection titled Dupes and Fellow Travelers Dress Up Communist Fronts in the April 4 1949 edition of Life magazine he had been pictured among fifty prominent academics scientists clergy and writers who also included Albert Einstein Arthur Miller Lillian Hellman Langston Hughes Norman Mailer and fellow Harvard professors Kirtley Mather Corliss Lamont and Ralph Barton Perry 27 Writing in 1958 Eric Jacobsen referred to Matthiessen s death as hastened by forces whose activities earned for themselves the sobriquet un American which they sought so assiduously to fasten on others 28 However in 1978 Harry Levin was more skeptical saying only that spokesmen for the Communist Party to which he had never belonged loudly signalized his suicide as a political gesture 19 Matthiessen was buried at Springfield Cemetery in Springfield Massachusetts citation needed Legacy editMatthiessen s contribution to the critical celebration of 19th century American literature is considered formative and enduring Along with several other scholars he is regarded as a contributor to the creation of American studies as a recognized academic discipline His personal story academic contributions political activism and early death had a lasting impact on a circle of scholars and writers Their sense of loss and struggle to understand his suicide can be found in two novels with central figures inspired by Matthiessen May Sarton s Faithful are the Wounds 1955 29 and Mark Merlis s American Studies 1994 30 His stature and legacy as a member of the Harvard community has been memorialized in several ways by the university He was the first Senior Tutor at Eliot House one of Harvard College s undergraduate residential houses More than seventy years after his death Matthiessen s suite at Eliot House remains preserved as the F O Matthiessen Room housing personal manuscripts and 1700 volumes of his library available for scholarly research by permission 31 32 Eliot House also hosts an annual Matthiessen Dinner with a guest speaker In 2009 Harvard established an endowed chair in LGBT studies called the F O Matthiessen Visiting Professorship of Gender and Sexuality 6 7 33 Believing the post to be the first professorship of its kind in the country 6 Harvard President Drew Faust called it an important milestone 7 33 It is funded by a 1 5 million gift from the members and supporters of the Harvard Gender and Sexuality Caucus 6 7 33 34 35 Holders of the chair have included 2013 Henry D Abelove 36 2014 Gayle Rubin 37 2016 Robert Reid Pharr 38 2018 Omise eke Natasha Tinsley 39 2020 Mel Y Chen 40 2023 C Riley Snorton 41 Several generations after Matthiessen s death this visiting professorship reaffirms the university s appreciation for his continuing legacy as a storied scholar and teacher Bibliography editSarah Orne Jewett ISBN 0844613053 Peter Smith 1929 Translation An Elizabethan Art ISBN 0781270340 January 1931 The Achievement of T S Eliot An Essay on the Nature of Poetry Oxford University Press 1935 American Renaissance Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman ISBN 0 19 500759 X Oxford University Press 1941 also available in many other editions Herman Melville Selected Poems edited New Directions 1944 Henry James The Major Phase ISBN 0195012259 Oxford University Press June 1944 Russell Cheney 1881 1945 A Record of His Work Oxford University Press 1947 The Notebooks of Henry James edited by F O Matthiessen and Kenneth B Murdock first edition 1947 ISBN 0 226 51104 9 University of Chicago Press 1981 From the Heart of Europe Oxford University Press 1948 The Education of a Socialist Monthly Review Vol 2 No 6 October 1950 posthumous Of Crime and Punishment Monthly Review Vol 2 No 6 October 1950 posthumous The Oxford Book of American Verse ISBN 0195000498 Oxford University Press December 1950 Responsibilities of the Critic ISBN 0195000072 Oxford University Press posthumous 1952 The James Family A Group Biography ISBN 0715638386 Alfred A Knopf 1947 posthumous 1961 To the Memory of Phelps Putnam essay in The Collected Poems of H Phelps Putnam ISBN 0374126275 Farrar Straus and Giroux posthumous 1971 Footnotes edit a b c d e Smith Dinitia May 29 2003 American Culture s Debt To Gay Sons of Harvard The New York Times Retrieved June 3 2006 Whittelsey Charles Barney 1900 The Ancestry and the Descendants of John Pratt of Hartford Conn Hartford Conn Case Lockwood amp Brainard p 179 Yale University obituary Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine mssa library yale edu Retrieved December 21 2013 Max Lerner Pilgrim in the Promised Land Retrieved December 21 2013 Biography of F O Matthiessen Harvard Gay and Lesbian Caucus Archived from the original on June 12 2009 Retrieved January 26 2012 a b c d e f Steinberg Jacques June 3 2009 Harvard to Endow Chair in Gay Studies The New York Times Retrieved June 4 2009 a b c d e Jan Tracy June 3 2009 Harvard to endow professorship in gay studies The Boston Globe Boston com Retrieved June 3 2009 Kermit Vanderbilt American Literature and the Academy The Roots Growth and Maturity of a Profession p 501 University of Pennsylvania Press 1986 ISBN 0 8122 1291 6 Vanderbilt 1986 p 502 Vanderbilt 1986 523 Salzburg Global Seminar History Archived 2013 12 25 at the Wayback Machine www salzburgglobal org Retrieved September 5 2013 Kenyon School of English Archived 2013 12 03 at the Wayback Machine www kenyonhistory net Retrieved September 5 2013 Matthiessen Heads Union The Harvard Crimson Retrieved March 22 2013 Memories of the Moderns pg 218 Retrieved December 21 2013 Philbrick Herbert A 1952 I Led 3 Lives citizen Communist counterspy New York McGraw Hill matthiessen Phelps Christopher May 1999 Introduction a Socialist Magazine in the American Century Monthly Review 51 1 2 doi 10 14452 MR 051 01 1999 05 1 American Renaissance New York Oxford University Press 1941 p 431 Stein Marc 2004 Encyclopedia of Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender History in America Vol 2 New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons p 238 ISBN 0684312611 In the same letter to Cheney 7 February 1925 Matthiessen makes clear a distinction between the world and those close friends with whom he thinks it safe to share the fact of their relationship a b Levin Harry The Private Life of F O Matthiessen New York Review of Books 25 12 July 20 1978 pp 42 46 abstract online full text for subscribers only Bergman David January 1 1991 Gaiety Transfigured Gay Self Representation in American Literature The University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 13050 9 Shand Tucci Douglass May 19 2003 The Crimson Letter Harvard Homosexuality and the Shaping of American Culture St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 19896 5 Hyde Louis ed 1978 Rat amp the Devil journal letters of F O Matthiessen and Russell Cheney Hamden Conn Archon Books ISBN 978 0 208 01655 3 a b Norton Rictor 1998 Rat and the Devil Gay History amp Literature Retrieved Mar 13 2023 Vaughan Peter March 18 1992 Rat and Devil in Love appeals to the mind not the emotions Star Tribune Newspaper of the Twin Cities Retrieved March 13 2023 Bonacci Michael April 26 2010 Rat amp the Devil Goodreads This is a citation of a primary source book review written by the author of the book found on a book review blog Retrieved March 13 2023 F O Matthiessen Plunges to Death from Hotel Window The Harvard Crimson Retrieved November 11 2012 Red Visitors Cause Rumpus Life Magazine April 4 1949 p 43 Retrieved November 11 2012 Jacobsen Eric 1958 Translation a Traditional Craft Copenhagen Gyldendalske Boghandel pp 9 10 Harrington Michael Summer 1955 Fictional Biography New International Retrieved November 16 2013 Baltimore Sun Archived 2013 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 25 2013 Eliot Book Room Exhibits Treasures Harvard Crimson Retrieved March 22 2013 Eliot House Facilities eliot harvard edu Archived from the original on January 1 2012 Retrieved January 25 2012 a b c Associated Press June 3 2009 Harvard to Endow Chair in Gay Lesbian Studies FOXNews com Retrieved June 4 2009 Harvard Gay amp Lesbian Caucus F O Matthiessen Visiting Professorship of Gender and Sexuality HGLC org Archived from the original on June 12 2009 Retrieved June 4 2009 About our name change from HGLC to HGSC Retrieved June 6 2018 Ferreol Michelle Denise L October 4 2012 Harvard Establishes the First LGBTQ Faculty Position in the United States The Harvard Crimson Retrieved October 4 2012 Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences Registrar s Office Archived 2013 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 25 2013 Robert Reid Pharr Named 2016 Matthiessen Professor Archived from the original on February 11 2017 Retrieved September 26 2017 F O Matthiessen Visiting Professorship of Gender and Sexuality Retrieved June 6 2018 Welcome Reception for Mel Y Chen 2020 F O Matthiessen Visiting Professor of Gender and Sexuality Retrieved January 22 2022 C Riley Snorton is the 2023 F O Matthiessen Visiting Professor of Gender and Sexuality Retrieved November 5 2023 Further reading editMonthly Review Vol 2 No 6 October 1950 entire edition dedicated to FOM with two essays by FOM and essays and statements by friends and scholars including Leo Marx Paul Sweezy Alfred Kazin Corliss Lamont Kenneth Murdock May Sarton and Richard Wilbur Arac Jonathan F O Matthiessen Authorizing an American Renaissance The American Renaissance Reconsidered Eds Walter Benn Michaels and Donald Pease Baltimore Johns Hopkins UP 1985 Hyde Louis ed Rat and the Devil Journal Letters of F O Matthiessen and Russell Cheney Hamden Connecticut Archon Books 1978 ISBN 1 55583 110 9 ISBN 0 208 01655 4 Leverenz L David Manhood and the American Renaissance Ithaca NY Cornell UP 1989 Levin Harry The Private Life of F O Matthiessen New York Review of Books 25 12 July 20 1978 pp 42 46 abstract online full text for subscribers only Marcus Greil The Old Weird America New York Henry Holt Picador pp 90 124 Phelps Christopher May 1999 Introduction a Socialist Magazine in the American Century Monthly Review 51 1 1 doi 10 14452 MR 051 01 1999 05 1 Reynolds David Beneath the American Renaissance The Subversive Imagination in the Age of Emerson and Melville Cambridge Mass Harvard UP 1988 Spark Clare F O Matthiessen martyr to McCarthyism 29 December 2010 YDS The Clare Spark Blog December 29 2010 Stern Frederick C F O Matthiessen Christian Socialist as Critic Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press 1981 Sundquist Eric J To Wake the Nations Race and the Making of American Literature Cambridge Mass Harvard UP 1993 Toibin Colm Love in a Dark Time New York Scribner 2004 Ward John William 1955 Andrew Jackson Symbol for an Age New York Oxford University Press Marx Leo 1964 The Machine in the Garden Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America New York Oxford University Press Ward John William 1969 Red White and Blue Men Books and Ideas in American Culture New York Oxford University PressExternal links editF O Matthiessen at Find a Grave Gayle Rubin s faculty page at the University of Michigan s website Retrieved November 25 2013 Henry Abelove s faculty page at Wesleyan University s website Retrieved April 4 2012 A public conversation with Henry Abelove on YouTube reflections on Matthiessen from 11 48 through 19 10 minutes YouTube Harvard s Carr Center for Human Rights Policy Retrieved March 22 2013 F O Matthiessen Papers Yale Collection of American Literature Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title F O Matthiessen amp oldid 1217519639, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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