Kingsley Widmer

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Kingsley Widmer (1925–2009) was an American literary critic.

Kingsley Widmer
Portrait of clean-cut man in jacket and tie
BornJuly 17, 1925 Edit this on Wikidata
DiedFebruary 19, 2009 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 83)

Life and career

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Kingsley Widmer was born in Minneapolis on July 17, 1925[1] and raised in the midwest.[2] He attended the University of Wisconsin and finished his bachelor's degree (1949) and master's (1951) at the University of Minnesota. Widmer completed his doctorate at the University of Washington in 1957. He was a Ford Foundation humanities intern at Reed College in Oregon in 1955 and continued there as an instructor until 1956,[1] when he joined the English faculty of San Diego State College.[2] He became a full professor there in 1967.[1]

Widmer was a visiting professor at UC Berkeley (1960–1961), Simon Fraser University (1967), the University of Nice (1970), SUNY Buffalo (1974), the University of Tulsa (1975, 1976, 1978),[1] and taught literature at universities in Minnesota and Washington as well.[2] He lectured on American literature at Tel Aviv University as a Fulbright scholar in 1963–1964.[1]

Works

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  • Literary Censorship (1961, Wadsworth, with wife Eleanor Widmer)[1]
  • The Art of Perversity: D. H. Lawrence's Shorter Fictions (1962, University of Washington Press)[3][4]
  • Henry Miller: A Critical Study (1963, Twayne, revised 1990)[1]
  • The Literary Rebel (1965, Southern Illinois University Press)[5]
  • The Experience of Freedom: Censorship and the Teacher (1966, American Federation of Teachers)[1]
  • The Ways of Nihilism: A Study of Herman Melville's Short Novels (1970, Ward Ritchie)[6]
  • The End of Culture: Essays on Sensibility in Contemporary Society (1975, San Diego State University Press)[1]
  • Edges of Extremity: Some Problems of Literary Modernism (1980, University of Tulsa)[7]
  • Paul Goodman (1980, Twayne)[8]
  • Nathanael West (1982, Twayne)[1]
  • Counterings: Utopian Dialectics in Contemporary Contexts (1988, University of Michigan)[9]
  • Defiant Desire: Some Dialectical Legacies of D. H. Lawrence (1992, Southern Illinois University Press)[10]

Personal life

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Widmer married and had two children.[1] He was an infantryman in the U.S. Army during World War II[1] and an anarchist.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Kingsley Widmer". Gale Literature: Contemporary Authors. 2015. Gale H1000105954.
  2. ^ a b c Woodward, Robert Hanson; Clark, James Jefferson, eds. (1968). The Social Rebel in American Literature. Odyssey Press. p. 393. ISBN 978-0-672-63115-3.
  3. ^
  4. ^ Book Review Digest 1965
  5. ^ Mackenzie, Nancy K. (July 21, 1965). "End Papers (Rev. of The Literary Rebel)". The New York Times. p. 35. ISSN 0362-4331.
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  10. ^
    • Blanchard, Lydia (1994). "Review of Defiant Desire: Some Dialectical Legacies of D. H. Lawrence; D. H. Lawrence: Language and Being". Modern Fiction Studies. 40 (2): 402–404. ISSN 0026-7724. JSTOR 26284459.
    • Ingersoll, Earl (1993). "Review of Defiant Desire: Some Dialectical Legacies of D. H. Lawrence". Studies in the Novel. 25 (3): 379–380. ISSN 0039-3827. JSTOR 29532971.
    • Zytaruk, George (1993). "Review of Defiant Desire: Some Dialectical Legacies of D.H. Lawrence". The D.H. Lawrence Review. 25 (1/3): 201–203. ISSN 0011-4936. JSTOR 44235500.
  11. ^

Further reading

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