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Sherwood Anderson 18761941

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Title: Sherwood Anderson 18761941


1
Sherwood Anderson(1876-1941)
  • "The young man's mind was carried away by his
    growing passion for dreams. One looking at him
    would not have thought him particularly sharp.
    With the recollection of little things occupying
    his mind he closed his eyes and leaned back in
    the car seat. He stayed that way for a long time
    and when he aroused himself and again looked out
    of the car window the town of Winesburg had
    disappeared and his life there had become but a
    background on which to paint his dreams of his
    manhood."
  • (from Winesburg, Ohio)

2
Winesburg, Ohio http//www.bartleby.com/156/
This collection of short stories allows us to
enter the alternately complex, lonely, joyful,
and strange lives of the inhabitants of the small
town of Winesburg, Ohio.
3
Lifehttp//www.kirjasto.sci.fi/shanders.htm
  • Writer whose prose style, derived from everyday
    speech, influenced American short story writing
    between World Wars I and II.
  • Anderson made his name as a leading naturalistic
    writer with his masterwork, WINESBURG, OHIO
    (1919), a picture of life in a typical small
    Midwestern town, as seen through the eyes of its
    inhabitants.

4
Lifehttp//www.kirjasto.sci.fi/shanders.htm
  • Anderson's episodic bildungsroman has been
    compared often to Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River
    Anthology. cf http//www.kirjasto.sci.fi/emasters
    .htm
  • Bildungsroman (German, from Bildung education
    Roman novel.) A novel dealing with one person's
    formative years or spiritual education.

5
Edgar Lee Masters (1869-1950)
  • Life all around me here in the village Tragedy,
    comedy, valor and truth, Courage, constancy,
    heroism, failure - All in the loom, and oh what
    patterns!
  • 'Petit, the Poet,' from Spoon River Anthology

6
Sherwood Anderson Early Life
  • Sherwood Anderson was born in Camden, Ohio.
  • His parents led a transient life, moving from one
    place to another after work.
  • His father had served in the Union Army and
    declined from the saddlery-and-harness business
    into odd jobs of house- and sign-painting.
  • Anderson attended school only intermittently,
    while helping to support his family by working as
    a newsboy, housepainter, stock handler, and
    stable groom.
  • At the age of 17 he moved to Chicago where he
    worked as a warehouse laborer and attended
    business classes at night.
  • During the Spanish-American war Anderson fought
    in Cuba and returned after the war to Ohio, for a
    final year of schooling at Wittenberg College,
    Springfield.

7
Career/Chicago Group
  • For the next few years Anderson moved restlessly
    around Ohio.
  • His life calmed down for some time with marriage
    and with work as a paint manufacturer.
  • After suffering an emotional crisis - more or
    less orchestrated by Anderson himself - because
    of the conflicting demands of his family,
    business and creative life, he left his wife,
    'bourgeois lifestyle', and moved to Chicago.
  • There he took again a job in advertising and
    joined the so-called Chicago Group, which
    included such writers as Theodore Dreiser and
    Carl Sandburg.

8
WINDY MCPHERSON'S SON (1916), MARCHING MEN
(1917), and Winesburg, Ohio (1919)
  • Anderson's two first novels both containing the
    psychological themes of inner lives of Midwestern
    villages, the pursuit of success and
    disillusionment.
  • His third novel, Winesburg, Ohio, was "half
    individual tales, half long novel form", as the
    author himself described it.

9
WINDY MCPHERSON'S SON (1916), MARCHING MEN
(1917), and Winesburg, Ohio (1919)
  • It consisted of twenty-three thematically related
    sketches and stories. (Episodic sketches)
  • Written in a simple, realistic language
    illuminated by a muted lyricism, Anderson
    dramatized crucial episodes in the lives of his
    characters.
  • The narrative is united by the appearance of
    George Willard, a young reporter, who is in
    revolt against the narrowness of the small-town
    life and who acts as a counterpoint to the other
    people of the town.

10
WINDY MCPHERSON'S SON (1916), MARCHING MEN
(1917), and Winesburg, Ohio (1919)
  • The individual tales of Winesburg, Ohio, and
    Anderson's other collections of short stories,
    THE TRIUMPHS OF THE EGG (1921), HORSES AND MEN
    (1932), and DEATH IN THE WOODS (1933), directed
    the American short story away from the neatly
    plotted tales of O. Henry and his imitators.
  • The stories in these books are characterized by a
    casual development, complexity of motivation, and
    an interest in psychological process.

11
The First Dial Award
  • In 1921 Anderson received the first Dial Award
    for his contribution to American literature.
  • He travelled widely in Europe - in Paris he met
    Gertrude Stein, whose work he much admired.
  • "She is an American woman of the old sort, one
    who cares for the handmade goodies and who scorns
    the factory-made foods, and in her own great
    kitchen she is making something with her
    materials, something sweet to the tongue and
    fragrant to the nostrils."

12
Back to the States
  • After he returned back to the United States, he
    settled in New Orleans, where he shared an
    apartment with William Faulkner.
  • He wrote, among others, the novel DARK LAUGHTER
    (1925), which became a bestseller.
  • In the story the disillusioned protagonist
    travels down the Missisippi imagining the kind of
    book Mark Twain might now write.

13
New York - Europe
  • From New Orleans Anderson moved to New York for
    some time, and from there finally to Marion,
    Virginia, where he built a country house, and
    worked as a farmer and journalist.
  • He travelled again in Europe and wrote to his son
    John, a young painter "I've a notion that, in
    America, you will be less bothered with
    homosexuality inclined men. However the arts have
    always been a refuge for such men. They are, as I
    think you have guessed, the less vigorous men.
    There is some distinct challenge of life they do
    not want to meet, and can't meet."

14
Newspaper pieces
  • In 1927 he bought both of Marion's weekly
    newspapers, one Republican, one Democrat, and
    edited them for two years.
  • To earn extra income he continued his series of
    lectures throughout the country.
  • Commissioned by Today magazine, Anderson studied
    the labor conditions during the Depression and
    collected his articles in PUZZLED AMERICA (1935).
  • Anderson's newspaper pieces were collected in
    HELLO TOWNS (1929), RETURN TO WINESBURG (1967)
    and THE BUCK FEVER PAPERS (1971).

15
Later life
  • Anderson's best works influenced almost every
    important American writer of the next generation.
  • He also encouraged William Faulkner and Ernest
    Hemingway in their writing aspirations.
  • Anderson died of peritonitis on an unofficial
    good-will tour to South America, at Christobal,
    Canal Zone, on March 8, in 1941.
  • After his death, Anderson's reputation soon
    declined, but in the 1970s, scholars and critics
    have found a new interest in his work.

16
autobiographical
  • During his lifetime Anderson wrote two
    autobiographical works, A STORY-TELLER'S STORY
    (1924) and semifictional TAR A MIDWEST CHILDHOOD
    (1926).
  • His MEMOIRS (1942) and LETTERS (1953) were
    published posthumously, as the more definitive
    THE MEMOIRS OF SHERWOOD ANDERSON (1969).

17
Autobiography vs. fiction
  • In A Story-Teller Story the author explained why
    he disregarded dates in his autobiographies "I
    think it was Joseph Conrad who said that a writer
    only began to live after he began to write. It
    pleased me to think I was after all but ten years
    old. Plenty of time ahead for such a one. Time to
    look about, plenty of time to look about."

18
Andersons Influence
  • He wrote many tales depicting small-town life in
    the Midwest and had his first great success with
    Winesburg, Ohio (1916), an important work of
    experimental fiction set in a small-town
    environment.
  • Anderson wrote simple, direct sentences,
    transferred his point-of-view to outside
    observers, and portrayed a slice of life rather
    than the large panorama of an epic tale many
    subsequent writers, such as Hemingway and
    Faulkner, were influenced by his style.

19
Winesburg, Ohio
  • http//sz.fl.hfu.edu.tw/hbchang/AM/Shared20Docume
    nts/Winesburg_Ohio_by_Sherwood_Anderson.pdf

20
  • http//andersonproject.winesburg.com/
  • http//andersonproject.winesburg.com/hisworks.htm
  • The Sherwood Anderson Review http//oncampus.rich
    mond.edu/academics/journalism/01summer.html
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