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Louis D. Rubin Jr.

Louis Decimus Rubin Jr. (November 19, 1923 – November 16, 2013) was a noted American literary scholar and critic, writing teacher, publisher, and writer.[1] He is credited with helping to establish Southern literature as a recognized area of study within the field of American literature, as well as serving as a teacher and mentor for writers at Hollins College and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill;[1] and for founding Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, a publishing company nationally recognized for fiction by Southern writers.[2] He died in Pittsboro, North Carolina and is buried at the Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim Cemetery in Charleston, South Carolina.[3]

Louis D. Rubin Jr.

Early life and education edit

 
The Rubins lived at 2 North Allan Park, Charleston, South Carolina during the 1920s.

Louis D. Rubin Jr. was born in Charleston, South Carolina, the eldest of the three children of Louis D. Rubin Sr. and Jeanette Weinstein Rubin.[4] His father, who later became well known in Virginia as an amateur weather forecaster[5] and published a book on weather forecasting,[6] owned an electrical supply business.[4] Rubin studied for two years at the College of Charleston, then was drafted into the U.S. Army during World War II;[7] he studied Italian at Yale University as part of the Army Specialized Training Program, then worked as a journalist for the base newspaper at Fort Benning.[8] After the war he received a B.A. from the University of Richmond in 1946, and an M.A. and Ph.D from the Johns Hopkins University in 1949 and 1954, respectively.[1] Rubin's childhood in Charleston and experience as a Jew growing up in the American South were among subjects he explored in three novels and a series of nonfiction memoirs.[2] The city had been economically and culturally stagnant since the end of the Civil War in 1865, but in the 1920s and 1930s saw a growing tourist industry and the stirrings of economic modernization[9] that brought the contrasts between Charleston's insularity and modern America to his attention.[10]

Journalism and early academic career edit

Rubin's early ambition was to be a journalist. In his memoir, An Honorable Estate: My Time in the Working Press, Rubin describes a career that began with covering local news and sports for several Charleston newspapers and at the Army paper at Ft. Benning during the war, then continued after the war with stints as a reporter, editor, and rewrite man for papers in Hackensack, NJ and Staunton, VA, and with the Associated Press in Richmond, VA.[8] Having grown frustrated with the lack of creativity at his rewrite job with the Associated Press, he took advantage of GI Bill benefits to enroll in 1948 in the Department of Writing, Speech and Drama (later the Writing Seminars) at Johns Hopkins.[8]

In his years at Hopkins, a period during which he married Eva Redfield in 1951 and worked part-time as a newspaper copy editor, Rubin studied under poet Elliott Coleman and historian C. Vann Woodward, served as editor of The Hopkins Review, and taught creative writing (an early student was novelist John Barth).[8] A Hopkins Review symposium led to the 1953 book that he co-edited (with Robert Jacobs), Southern Renascence: The Literature of the Modern South, which focused on the literature of the Southern Renaissance and helped define the canon of modern southern writers that included the Agrarians, William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, and others.[1] After receiving a Ph.D in an interdepartmental program in aesthetics and literary theory, he served as Executive Secretary for the American Studies Association from 1954–1956, and taught at the University of Pennsylvania.[7]

In 1956 and 1957 Rubin briefly returned to journalism as an editorial writer for the Richmond News Leader, which was ardent in its support of Virginia's segregationist policy of Massive Resistance. His own liberal political views were marginalized by the editorial page's editor, James J. Kilpatrick, who assigned him only non-political topics.[2] Literary scholar Fred Hobson has argued that Rubin's frustration with the paper's racial politics converted him from an idyllic to a more critical attitude regarding the treatment of race by Southern literary writers, and informed his later scholarly work.[2]

Years at Hollins College and UNC–Chapel Hill edit

Rubin joined the faculty at Hollins College (now Hollins University) in 1957,[7] soon becoming a full professor and chairman of the Department of English.[11] He brought noted authors such as Eudora Welty, Howard Nemerov and William Golding to campus as writers-in-residence, founded the Hollins Critic literary journal, and in 1960 established a co-ed graduate-level creative writing program at the women's college.[11] Rubin's tenure at Hollins (1957–67) coincided with societal changes that saw women from the school aspiring to make a mark professionally in the arts, the sciences, and in business. He served as mentor and writing teacher to many of them, including novelists Lee Smith, Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey, Annie Dillard, and Sylvia Wilkinson; poets Jane Gentry Vance and Elizabeth Seydel Morgan; literary editor Shannon Ravenel; literary critics Anne Goodwyn Jones and Lucinda MacKethan; and many more.[11] During this period he also published a number of influential critical studies, including The Faraway Country: Writers of the Modern South (1963), and founded the Southern Literary Studies series at Louisiana State University Press.[7]

Rubin moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina in 1967 to join the faculty of the Department of English at the University of North Carolina as professor, and later was named to the University Distinguished Professor chair there.[7] He continued to be a leading voice in the study of the American South, co-founding the Southern Literary Journal with C. Hugh Holman, and co-founding the Society for the Study of Southern Literature there.[7] His publications included major bibliographic, historical, and critical volumes, including A Bibliographical Guide to the Study of Southern Literature (1969) and The History of Southern Literature (1985) that solidified the field of study that his first book had helped to establish.[1] Many of Rubin's students at UNC-Chapel Hill went on to become noted scholars in their own right, and he continued to teach courses in creative writing and English to future novelists including Jill McCorkle and Kaye Gibbons. He also helped establish the careers of many literary scholars, among them Joseph M. Flora, Fred Hobson, and MaryAnn Wimsatt. He retired from teaching in 1989.[7]

Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill edit

In 1982, Rubin and his former student, Shannon Ravenel, co-founded Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, an independent literary publishing company.[7] The company's editorial offices were initially in Rubin's garage in Chapel Hill and Ravenel's home in St. Louis.[12] Despite shaky finances, the company successfully introduced a number of new writers, most of whom were Southern fiction writers; these included Rubin's former students Jill McCorkle and Kaye Gibbons, as well as Clyde Edgerton, Dori Sanders, and Larry Brown.[13] The company was acquired in 1989 by Workman Publishing[14] and has gone on to publish a number of best-selling books.[15] Rubin stayed on for two years as its chief editor and publisher, then retired from publishing in 1991, though he continued to edit some books for Algonquin.[7] He was given the Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award by the National Book Critics Circle in 2004 for his work at Algonquin and as a writing teacher.[16] He was named to the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame in 1997.[17]

Notable works edit

Literary history and criticism edit

  • Southern Renascence: The Literature of the Modern South (coedited with Robert D. Jacobs, 1953)
  • Thomas Wolfe: The Weather of His Youth (1955)
  • No Place on Earth: Ellen Glasgow, James Branch Cabell, and Richmond-in-Virginia (1959)
  • The Faraway Country: Writers of the Modern South (1963)
  • The Curious Death of the Novel: Essays in American Literature (1967)
  • The Teller in the Tale (1967)
  • George W. Cable: The Life and Times of a Southern Heretic (1969)
  • A Bibliographical Guide to the Study of Southern Literature (editor, 1969)
  • The Writer in the South (1972)
  • Black Poetry in America: Two Essays in Interpretation (1974)
  • William Elliott Shoots a Bear: Essays on the Southern Literary Imagination (1976)
  • The Wary Fugitives: Four Poets and the South (1978)
  • The American South: Portrait of a Culture (editor, 1980)
  • A Gallery of Southerners (1982)
  • The History of Southern Literature (editor, 1985)
  • The Edge of the Swamp: A Study in the Literature and Society of the Old South (1989)
  • The Mockingbird in the Gum Tree: A Literary Gallimaufry (1991)
  • Babe Ruth's Ghost: And Other Historical and Literary Speculations (1996)
  • Where the Southern Cross the Yellow Dog: On Writers and Writing (2005)

History, memoir, and short fiction edit

  • Virginia: A Bicentennial History (1977)
  • The Boll Weevil and the Triple Play (1979)
  • Before the Game (1988)
  • Small Craft Advisory: A Book about the Building of a Boat (1991)
  • Seaports of the South: A Journey (1998)
  • A Memory of Trains: The Boll Weevil and Others (2000)
  • An Honorable Estate: My Time in the Working Press (2001)
  • My Father's People: A Family of Southern Jews (2002)
  • The Summer the Archduke Died: On Wars and Warriors (2008)
  • Uptown and Downtown in Old Charleston: Sketches and Stories (2010)

Anthologies and writing instruction edit

  • The Literary South (1979)
  • The Algonquin Literary Quiz Book (with Julia Randall and Jerry Leith Mills, 1990)
  • A Writer's Companion (with Jerry Leith Mills, 1995)

Novels edit

  • The Golden Weather (1961)
  • Surfaces of a Diamond (1981)
  • The Heat of the Sun (1995)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Bassett, John A. (2002). Joseph M. Flora (ed.). The Companion to Southern Literature: Themes, Genres, Places, People, Movements, and Motifs. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. p. 752. ISBN 0807126926. Retrieved 24 October 2013. Bassett, John A. Rubin, Louis D., Jr.
  2. ^ a b c d Hobson, Fred C. (2005). The Silencing of Emily Mullen and Other Essays . Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 97–112, 146–164. ISBN 0807130974.
  3. ^ "Dr Louis Decimus Rubin, Jr. (1923-2013)". Find a Grave. Retrieved October 9, 2014.
  4. ^ a b Rubin, Louis D. Jr. (2002). My Father's People: A Family of Southern Jews. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 98–99. ISBN 0807128082. weinstein.
  5. ^ Olsen, Ted (2004). CrossRoads: A Southern Culture Annual. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press. p. 269. ISBN 0865548668.
  6. ^ Rubin, Louis D. Sr. (1984). The Weather Wizard's Cloud Book. Chapel HIll, NC: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill. ISBN 0912697105.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Davis, David A. "Louis D. Rubin (1923—)". Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Foundation for the Humanities. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d Rubin, Louis D. Jr. (2001). An Honorable Estate. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 31–33, 58, 93, 111–121. ISBN 0807127329.
  9. ^ Brundage, William Fitzhugh (2005). The Southern Past: A Clash of Race and Memory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 200. ISBN 0674018761.
  10. ^ Rubin, Louis D. Jr. (1991). Small Craft Advisory: A Book about the Building of a Boat. New York, NY: Atlantic Monthly Press. p. 35. ISBN 0871135337.
  11. ^ a b c Parrish, Nancy (1998). Lee Smith, Annie Dillard, and the Hollins Group: A Genesis of Writers. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 41–60. ISBN 0807122432.
  12. ^ McClurg, Jocelyn (22 September 1989). "Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill: The Little Publisher That Could". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  13. ^ Galliard, Frye (2013). The Books that Mattered: A Reader's Memoir. Montgomery, AL: New South Books. pp. 107–108. ISBN 978-1588382870.
  14. ^ Covington, Howard E. and Marian A. Ellis (2001). The North Carolina Century: Tar Heels who Made a Difference, 1900-2000. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. 99. ISBN 0807827576.
  15. ^ Kelley, Pam (17 April 2011). . Raleigh News & Observer. Archived from the original on 11 November 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  16. ^ National Book Critics Circle. "Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award". National Book Critics Circle. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  17. ^ North Carolina Writers Network. "North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame 1977". North Carolina Writers Network. Retrieved 24 October 2013.

External links edit

  • Louis D. Rubin, Jr. at Library of Congress, with 68 library catalog records
  • Louis D. Rubin (Sr.) at LC Authorities, with 3 records

louis, rubin, louis, decimus, rubin, november, 1923, november, 2013, noted, american, literary, scholar, critic, writing, teacher, publisher, writer, credited, with, helping, establish, southern, literature, recognized, area, study, within, field, american, li. Louis Decimus Rubin Jr November 19 1923 November 16 2013 was a noted American literary scholar and critic writing teacher publisher and writer 1 He is credited with helping to establish Southern literature as a recognized area of study within the field of American literature as well as serving as a teacher and mentor for writers at Hollins College and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 1 and for founding Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill a publishing company nationally recognized for fiction by Southern writers 2 He died in Pittsboro North Carolina and is buried at the Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim Cemetery in Charleston South Carolina 3 Louis D Rubin Jr Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Journalism and early academic career 3 Years at Hollins College and UNC Chapel Hill 4 Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill 5 Notable works 5 1 Literary history and criticism 5 2 History memoir and short fiction 5 3 Anthologies and writing instruction 5 4 Novels 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp The Rubins lived at 2 North Allan Park Charleston South Carolina during the 1920s Louis D Rubin Jr was born in Charleston South Carolina the eldest of the three children of Louis D Rubin Sr and Jeanette Weinstein Rubin 4 His father who later became well known in Virginia as an amateur weather forecaster 5 and published a book on weather forecasting 6 owned an electrical supply business 4 Rubin studied for two years at the College of Charleston then was drafted into the U S Army during World War II 7 he studied Italian at Yale University as part of the Army Specialized Training Program then worked as a journalist for the base newspaper at Fort Benning 8 After the war he received a B A from the University of Richmond in 1946 and an M A and Ph D from the Johns Hopkins University in 1949 and 1954 respectively 1 Rubin s childhood in Charleston and experience as a Jew growing up in the American South were among subjects he explored in three novels and a series of nonfiction memoirs 2 The city had been economically and culturally stagnant since the end of the Civil War in 1865 but in the 1920s and 1930s saw a growing tourist industry and the stirrings of economic modernization 9 that brought the contrasts between Charleston s insularity and modern America to his attention 10 Journalism and early academic career editRubin s early ambition was to be a journalist In his memoir An Honorable Estate My Time in the Working Press Rubin describes a career that began with covering local news and sports for several Charleston newspapers and at the Army paper at Ft Benning during the war then continued after the war with stints as a reporter editor and rewrite man for papers in Hackensack NJ and Staunton VA and with the Associated Press in Richmond VA 8 Having grown frustrated with the lack of creativity at his rewrite job with the Associated Press he took advantage of GI Bill benefits to enroll in 1948 in the Department of Writing Speech and Drama later the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins 8 In his years at Hopkins a period during which he married Eva Redfield in 1951 and worked part time as a newspaper copy editor Rubin studied under poet Elliott Coleman and historian C Vann Woodward served as editor of The Hopkins Review and taught creative writing an early student was novelist John Barth 8 A Hopkins Review symposium led to the 1953 book that he co edited with Robert Jacobs Southern Renascence The Literature of the Modern South which focused on the literature of the Southern Renaissance and helped define the canon of modern southern writers that included the Agrarians William Faulkner Eudora Welty and others 1 After receiving a Ph D in an interdepartmental program in aesthetics and literary theory he served as Executive Secretary for the American Studies Association from 1954 1956 and taught at the University of Pennsylvania 7 In 1956 and 1957 Rubin briefly returned to journalism as an editorial writer for the Richmond News Leader which was ardent in its support of Virginia s segregationist policy of Massive Resistance His own liberal political views were marginalized by the editorial page s editor James J Kilpatrick who assigned him only non political topics 2 Literary scholar Fred Hobson has argued that Rubin s frustration with the paper s racial politics converted him from an idyllic to a more critical attitude regarding the treatment of race by Southern literary writers and informed his later scholarly work 2 Years at Hollins College and UNC Chapel Hill editRubin joined the faculty at Hollins College now Hollins University in 1957 7 soon becoming a full professor and chairman of the Department of English 11 He brought noted authors such as Eudora Welty Howard Nemerov and William Golding to campus as writers in residence founded the Hollins Critic literary journal and in 1960 established a co ed graduate level creative writing program at the women s college 11 Rubin s tenure at Hollins 1957 67 coincided with societal changes that saw women from the school aspiring to make a mark professionally in the arts the sciences and in business He served as mentor and writing teacher to many of them including novelists Lee Smith Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey Annie Dillard and Sylvia Wilkinson poets Jane Gentry Vance and Elizabeth Seydel Morgan literary editor Shannon Ravenel literary critics Anne Goodwyn Jones and Lucinda MacKethan and many more 11 During this period he also published a number of influential critical studies including The Faraway Country Writers of the Modern South 1963 and founded the Southern Literary Studies series at Louisiana State University Press 7 Rubin moved to Chapel Hill North Carolina in 1967 to join the faculty of the Department of English at the University of North Carolina as professor and later was named to the University Distinguished Professor chair there 7 He continued to be a leading voice in the study of the American South co founding the Southern Literary Journal with C Hugh Holman and co founding the Society for the Study of Southern Literature there 7 His publications included major bibliographic historical and critical volumes including A Bibliographical Guide to the Study of Southern Literature 1969 and The History of Southern Literature 1985 that solidified the field of study that his first book had helped to establish 1 Many of Rubin s students at UNC Chapel Hill went on to become noted scholars in their own right and he continued to teach courses in creative writing and English to future novelists including Jill McCorkle and Kaye Gibbons He also helped establish the careers of many literary scholars among them Joseph M Flora Fred Hobson and MaryAnn Wimsatt He retired from teaching in 1989 7 Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill editIn 1982 Rubin and his former student Shannon Ravenel co founded Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill an independent literary publishing company 7 The company s editorial offices were initially in Rubin s garage in Chapel Hill and Ravenel s home in St Louis 12 Despite shaky finances the company successfully introduced a number of new writers most of whom were Southern fiction writers these included Rubin s former students Jill McCorkle and Kaye Gibbons as well as Clyde Edgerton Dori Sanders and Larry Brown 13 The company was acquired in 1989 by Workman Publishing 14 and has gone on to publish a number of best selling books 15 Rubin stayed on for two years as its chief editor and publisher then retired from publishing in 1991 though he continued to edit some books for Algonquin 7 He was given the Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award by the National Book Critics Circle in 2004 for his work at Algonquin and as a writing teacher 16 He was named to the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame in 1997 17 Notable works editLiterary history and criticism edit Southern Renascence The Literature of the Modern South coedited with Robert D Jacobs 1953 Thomas Wolfe The Weather of His Youth 1955 No Place on Earth Ellen Glasgow James Branch Cabell and Richmond in Virginia 1959 The Faraway Country Writers of the Modern South 1963 The Curious Death of the Novel Essays in American Literature 1967 The Teller in the Tale 1967 George W Cable The Life and Times of a Southern Heretic 1969 A Bibliographical Guide to the Study of Southern Literature editor 1969 The Writer in the South 1972 Black Poetry in America Two Essays in Interpretation 1974 William Elliott Shoots a Bear Essays on the Southern Literary Imagination 1976 The Wary Fugitives Four Poets and the South 1978 The American South Portrait of a Culture editor 1980 A Gallery of Southerners 1982 The History of Southern Literature editor 1985 The Edge of the Swamp A Study in the Literature and Society of the Old South 1989 The Mockingbird in the Gum Tree A Literary Gallimaufry 1991 Babe Ruth s Ghost And Other Historical and Literary Speculations 1996 Where the Southern Cross the Yellow Dog On Writers and Writing 2005 History memoir and short fiction edit Virginia A Bicentennial History 1977 The Boll Weevil and the Triple Play 1979 Before the Game 1988 Small Craft Advisory A Book about the Building of a Boat 1991 Seaports of the South A Journey 1998 A Memory of Trains The Boll Weevil and Others 2000 An Honorable Estate My Time in the Working Press 2001 My Father s People A Family of Southern Jews 2002 The Summer the Archduke Died On Wars and Warriors 2008 Uptown and Downtown in Old Charleston Sketches and Stories 2010 Anthologies and writing instruction edit The Literary South 1979 The Algonquin Literary Quiz Book with Julia Randall and Jerry Leith Mills 1990 A Writer s Companion with Jerry Leith Mills 1995 Novels edit The Golden Weather 1961 Surfaces of a Diamond 1981 The Heat of the Sun 1995 See also editLibrary of Virginia Fellowship of Southern Writers List of Guggenheim Fellowships Awarded in 1957 North Carolina Award Sam Ragan AwardsReferences edit a b c d e Bassett John A 2002 Joseph M Flora ed The Companion to Southern Literature Themes Genres Places People Movements and Motifs Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press p 752 ISBN 0807126926 Retrieved 24 October 2013 Bassett John A Rubin Louis D Jr a b c d Hobson Fred C 2005 The Silencing of Emily Mullen and Other Essays Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press pp 97 112 146 164 ISBN 0807130974 Dr Louis Decimus Rubin Jr 1923 2013 Find a Grave Retrieved October 9 2014 a b Rubin Louis D Jr 2002 My Father s People A Family of Southern Jews Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press pp 98 99 ISBN 0807128082 weinstein Olsen Ted 2004 CrossRoads A Southern Culture Annual Macon GA Mercer University Press p 269 ISBN 0865548668 Rubin Louis D Sr 1984 The Weather Wizard s Cloud Book Chapel HIll NC Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill ISBN 0912697105 a b c d e f g h i Davis David A Louis D Rubin 1923 Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Foundation for the Humanities Retrieved 24 October 2013 a b c d Rubin Louis D Jr 2001 An Honorable Estate Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press pp 31 33 58 93 111 121 ISBN 0807127329 Brundage William Fitzhugh 2005 The Southern Past A Clash of Race and Memory Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 200 ISBN 0674018761 Rubin Louis D Jr 1991 Small Craft Advisory A Book about the Building of a Boat New York NY Atlantic Monthly Press p 35 ISBN 0871135337 a b c Parrish Nancy 1998 Lee Smith Annie Dillard and the Hollins Group A Genesis of Writers Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press pp 41 60 ISBN 0807122432 McClurg Jocelyn 22 September 1989 Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill The Little Publisher That Could The Los Angeles Times Retrieved 24 October 2013 Galliard Frye 2013 The Books that Mattered A Reader s Memoir Montgomery AL New South Books pp 107 108 ISBN 978 1588382870 Covington Howard E and Marian A Ellis 2001 The North Carolina Century Tar Heels who Made a Difference 1900 2000 Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press p 99 ISBN 0807827576 Kelley Pam 17 April 2011 How a Little Publisher Made Good with Great Writing Raleigh News amp Observer Archived from the original on 11 November 2013 Retrieved 24 October 2013 National Book Critics Circle Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award National Book Critics Circle Retrieved 24 October 2013 North Carolina Writers Network North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame 1977 North Carolina Writers Network Retrieved 24 October 2013 External links editLouis D Rubin Jr at Library of Congress with 68 library catalog records Louis D Rubin Sr at LC Authorities with 3 records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis D Rubin Jr amp oldid 1185196689, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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