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Entries Tagged as 'Virginia Literature'

Poe Doesn't Love You

April 22nd, 2009 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Jill Lepore writes on Edgar Allan Poe in this week’s New Yorker: You love Poe or you don’t, but, either way, Poe doesn’t love you. A writer more condescending to more adoring readers would be hard to find. “The nose of a mob is its imagination,” he wrote. “By this, at any time, it can [...]

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Tags: Virginia Literature

‘24’ Gets All Literary

February 6th, 2009 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Yes, the new, seventh season of the FOX drama 24 is terrible. (They’ve all been terrible since Season 3; to quote Jack Twist, “I wish I knew how to quit you!”) Still, there’s a character named Ethan Kanin, which is interesting because his name looks an awful lot like Ethan Canin, the novelist and short [...]

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Tags: Virginia Literature

Not a Fan

February 6th, 2009 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Allen Tate on Edgar Allan Poe: He is like a child—all appetite without sensibility; but to be in manhood all appetite, all will, without sensibility is to be a monster; to feed spiritually upon men without sharing with them a real world is spiritual vampirism. Ouch.

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Tags: Virginia Literature

A Father's English

February 6th, 2009 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

When I sat down to write this post on Allen Tate’s novel The Fathers (1938), I didn’t intend to write about the book and what it means. (I don’t know what it means.) I only intended to reproduce one of my favorite passages. So I’ll do that here, instead. It’s a footnote, the book’s only [...]

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Tags: Virginia Literature

'It is an old country, I thought'

February 5th, 2009 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

I am reading The Fathers (1938), the only novel by Allen Tate, a poet best known for his “Ode to the Confederate Dead” (1928). Tate was born in Kentucky, but his mother, Eleanor Parke Custis Varnell, was Fairfax County-bred, and The Fathers is set at Pleasant Hill, the plantation of her youth. Tate was a [...]

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Tags: Virginia Literature

The Curious Case of Ota Benga

January 3rd, 2009 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

In this morning’s Washington Post, film reviewer Anne Hornaday writes about her own family’s connection to a name that recently has “bubble(d) up into the zeitgeist”: Ota Benga. Benga was an African pygmy who, in 1904, was brought to the United States from the Congo, where his family had been massacred and he had been [...]

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Tags: Inside the Encyclopedia · Virginia History · Virginia Literature

A Tale of the Greyhound and the Fox

July 11th, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Belle Boyd was one of the Confederacy’s most notorious spies. And her 1865 memoir, Belle Boyd in Camp and Prison, is full of so many outrageous stories that historians have long had difficulty knowing what to believe. Still, I find this paragraph from our entry to be extraordinary: “Boyd was released [from prison] in December [...]

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Tags: Virginia History · Virginia Literature

Those Docile Laughing Creatures

July 3rd, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

I’m still stuck on that sentence from Mary Tucker Magill’s Virginia history textbook: “Generally speaking, the negroes proved a harmless and affectionate race, easily governed, and happy in their condition.” It reminded me of a passage from William Styron’s The Confessions of Nat Turner, a long, lyrical, devastating paragraph that comes near the end of [...]

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Tags: Virginia History · Virginia Literature

Very Degraded in Every Way

July 2nd, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Kevin Levin, at his blog Civil War Memory, recently posted an image and an excerpt from an old Virginia history textbook. He was disgusted (and rightly so) by the book’s outlandish description of slavery, which emphasized feelings of “strong affection” between masters and their “cheerful” slaves. I was thinking of this while proofreading our entry [...]

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Tags: Inside the Encyclopedia · Textbooks · Virginia History · Virginia Literature

The Great Man’s Dirty Linen

June 24th, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · 16 Comments

Miscegenation is all the rage! It’s been the focus of a couple of entries on this blog and will, in the coming week, be a concern of the weekly history radio show BackStory. (If you’re interested in the topic, be sure to check out the episode description and then email the show at backstory[at]virginia[dot]edu. They’ll [...]

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Tags: Inside the Encyclopedia · Thomas Jefferson · Virginia Literature · Visual History

George Garrett (1929-2008)

May 27th, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

George Garrett died on Sunday at the age of 78. He was, in the words of the Virginia Quarterly Review’s blog, a “prolific author, screenwriter, professor, and beloved Charlottesville figure.” He was cofounder of the AWP, a national association of writers and writing programs. Perhaps most of all, he was a mentor to many, many [...]

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Tags: Around the State · Virginia Literature

'Only in the shadowland of myths'

May 23rd, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Meriah L. Crawford has written a great entry for us on the Virginia novelist Mary Spear Tiernan (1836–1891). Because I’ve been dwelling on Nat Turner of late, I was interested to learn that Tiernan based one of her characters on Turner. “Whoop-de-doo,” you might say, but this is a big deal because a) the character [...]

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Tags: Inside the Encyclopedia · Virginia Literature

Surpassing Fine

May 8th, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

I was sitting on my front porch the other morning reading Styron’s The Confessions of Nat Turner. It was a beautiful morning—clear, warm, breezy—and with my coffee and a decent view of the Blue Ridge, I was in heaven. So it seemed appropriate that I stumbled onto this passage, in which a traveling salesman visits [...]

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Tags: Technology · Virginia History · Virginia Literature

On the Voice of Nat Turner

May 7th, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Encyclopedia Virginia is getting its Civil War list up and running and, consequently, I am trying to get started on a whole list of my own Civil War reading. At the moment, that includes James McPherson’s Battle Cry of Freedom (whew, this is going to take me all summer!) and William Styron’s The Confessions of [...]

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Tags: Virginia History · Virginia Literature

The Real Magill

May 5th, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

The point of Encyclopedia Virginia is to collect what’s known. Sometimes, however, we stumble upon the heretofore unknown and that, for lack of a more sophisticated phrase, is pretty cool. Take the life of teacher, novelist, and historian Mary Tucker Magill (1830–1899). Our entry, by Dr. Mary Lynn Bayliss, asserts that Magill began her teaching [...]

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Tags: Inside the Encyclopedia · Virginia History · Virginia Literature

This Man is Not Edgar Allan Poe

April 29th, 2008 by Brendan Wolfe · No Comments

Beware captions. I came across this portrait in some research on Poe, and was excited: there aren’t a wide variety of images of Poe available, and none from this early on in his life, which, given his time at the University of Virginia, was of particular interest for EV. The caption pleasantly informs us that [...]

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Tags: Virginia History · Virginia Literature · Visual History