Maxwell, William (Keepers)
MAXWELL, William (Keepers)
Nationality: American. Born: Lincoln, Illinois, 16 August 1908. Education: The University of Illinois, Urbana, B.A. 1930; Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, M.A. 1931. Family: Married Emily Gilman Noyes in 1945; two daughters. Career: Member of the Department of English, University of Illinois, 1931-33. From 1936, in the art department, then fiction editor, New Yorker; retired 1976. Awards: Friends of American Writers award, 1938; American Academy award, 1958; William Dean Howells medal, 1980; American Book Award, for paperback, 1982; Brandeis University Creative Arts Medal for Fiction, 1984; Ivan Sandrof award, National Book Critics Circle, 1994; Gold Medal for Fiction, American Academy of Arts and Letters, 1995. D. Litt.: University of Illinois, 1973. Member: Presi-dent, National Institute of Arts and Letters, 1969-72. Address: 544 East 86th Street, New York, New York 10028, U.S.A.
Publications
Novels
Bright Center of Heaven. New York, Harper, 1934.
They Came like Swallows. New York, Harper, and London, Joseph, 1937.
The Folded Leaf. New York, Harper, 1945; London, Faber, 1946.
Time Will Darken It. New York, Harper, 1948; London, Faber, 1949.
The Chateau. New York, Knopf, 1961.
So Long, See You Tomorrow. New York, Knopf, 1980; London, Secker and Warburg, 1989.
Short Stories
Stories, with others. New York, Farrar Straus, 1956; as A Book of Stories, London, Gollancz, 1957.
The Old Man at the Railroad Crossing and Other Tales. New York, Knopf, 1966.
Over by the River and Other Stories. New York, Knopf, 1977.
Five Tales. Omaha, Nebraska, Cummington Press, 1988.
Billie Dyer and Other Stories. N.p., 1992.
All the Days and Nights: The Collected Stories of William Maxwell. New York, Knopf, 1995.
Uncollected Short Stories
"Billie Dyer," in New Yorker, 15 May 1989.
"Fable Begotten of an Echo of a Line of Verse by W.B. Yeats," in Antaeus (New York), Spring-Autumn 1990.
Other
The Heavenly Tenants (for children). New York, Harper, 1946.
The Writer as Illusionist (lecture). New York, Unitelum Press, 1955.
Ancestors. New York, Knopf, 1971.
The Outermost Dream: Essays and Reviews. New York, Knopf, 1989.
Mrs. Donald's Dog Bun and His Home Away from Home (for children), illustrated by James Stevenson. New York, Knopf, 1995.
The Happiness of Getting It Down Right: Letters of Frank O'Connor and William Maxwell, 1945-1966, edited by Michael Steinman. New York, Knopf, 1996.
Editor, The Garden and the Wilderness, by Charles Pratt. New York, Horizon Press, 1980.
Editor, The Letters of Sylvia Townsend Warner. London, Chatto and Windus, 1982; New York, Viking Press, 1983.
Editor, with Susanna Pinney, Selected Stories, by Sylvia Townsend Warner. London, Chatto and Windus, 1988.
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The subjects of William Maxwell's major novels vary, but the sensibility that informs them is a Midwestern one. In both They Came like Swallows and The Folded Leaf, for example, the novelist is
reworking and focusing his recollections of an Illinois boyhood and college experience. The materials he draws on in these novels he thus shares with somewhat older writers like Sinclair Lewis and Sherwood Anderson. But these novelists were involved in labors of repudiation; their work was marked by what has been called the "revolt from the village," by a keen sense that the Midwestern setting was a stultifying one from which the writer, by a satirical and unflattering report, had to separate himself. This accent of mockery and dismissal is absent from Maxwell's novels, which render the texture of Midwestern life in the early decades of this century. It is an accent which is absent from Maxwell's Ancestors, a work of nonfiction which gives an attentive account of the writer's forebears.
In general, then, there is a cherishing of the provincial limitations that other writers have found galling. There is, in most of the novels, a precise if not loving recollection of the diversions and the limited esthetic taste that created upper-class, prosperous sensibility in "down-state" Illinois towns. They Came like Swallows, for example, tells of the impact of a mother's death on a decent and conventional Illinois household. Time Will Darken It is an account of a protracted visit which Southern relatives pay and the disruption that the visitors bring to what was a moderately happy family. The Folded Leaf, which the French critic Maurice Coindreau has referred to as the best novel about college experience, tells of the adolescent and college experiences of two young Midwestern men; it leaves them on the threshold of an uneasy maturity, a maturity far short of ideal, but the only maturity that is open to them under Midwestern conditions.
The clearest indications of Maxwell's attitude toward his American materials appears in two novels: The Folded Leaf and So Long, See You Tomorrow. The Folded Leaf is about the "coming of age" of two boys; the author draws explicit parallels between the boys' rather casual passage from youth to maturity and the "rites of passage" that anthropologists and students of comparative religion describe in the tradition-oriented societies they study. So Long, See You Tomorrow also deals with the friendship of two boys. It is friendship terminated by the sensational crime and death of the father of one of the boys. Here also Maxwell deals with studious attention to matters that other writers handle sensationally or ironically. Maxwell even allows us to see how he has collected his materials—old newspapers—as a first step to his imaginative reconstruction. Both novels contain controlled attention, free of animus.
The same sort of attention is offered adult experience in The Chateau. The American travelers at the center of this novel undergo contacts with an enigmatic culture—that of the French—which are a series of challenges that are neither mockingly presented, as in Sinclair Lewis's Dodsworth, nor offered as proof of American superiority, as in Booth Tarkington's The Plutocrat. Rather is Maxwell's prevailing note that of detached comprehension, the same sort of comprehension that the anthropologist offers the alien culture that he wishes to grasp. The anthropologist does not question the values of his "informants"; he reports those values. Such is also the attitude of Maxwell toward the aspirations of the characters he creates.
—Harold H. Watts
Cite this article
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Dreaming of the city
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 3/23/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...Balla and Boccioni echo the futuristic architecture of Antonio Sant'Elia and celebrate the cult of urban frenzy. Picasso...realised. These include the futuristic universe of Sant'Elia and Virgilio Marchi, "The Avenue of Tower Houses...
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Lines of Thought;Architects' Drawings at the Federal Reserve
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 6/30/1989; ; 700+ words
; ...sketches by Hans Poelzig, a German expressionist, and Antonio Sant'Elia, an Italian futurist, each immensely satisfying in...of columns illuminated by scintillating reds, the Sant'Elia a rapid-fire rendering of his perfervid visions of...
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Baltimore's Science Experiment
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 6/24/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...roof like huge inverted L's, the strange, translucent duct covers could have been drawn by Italian architect Antonio Sant'Elia when, with feverish imagination, he was imagining the city of the future back before World War I. If the outside...
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Still, moving.(David Claerbout)
Magazine article from: Afterimage; 5/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...something to happen while the mind creates a sweeping narrative for this motionless picture. Similarly, Kindergarten Antonio Sant'Elia, 1932 (1998) shows children suspended in time while a tree's leaves flutter in a soft wind. The Stack (2002...
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The Independent Traveller: Il Duce was my architect There are towns outside Rome which still stand as monuments to the fascism of the Thirties. By Stephen Wood
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 9/11/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...is a fluted rocket that soars upwards - a futuristic invention of the pre-Modernist architectural visionary, Antonio Sant' Elia. Pontinia is remarkable enough; but eight miles along the coast is Sabaudia, described by Le Corbusier as "a...
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DAVID CLAERBOUT
Magazine article from: Artforum; 5/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...conjures the temporal relativity created by the emotional perception of such highly charged moments. In Kindergarten Antonio Sant'Elia, 1932, 1997, Claerbout integrates two different media-a black-and-white image of a playground designed...
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THE BIG, BAD VENTS: I KNOW, IT'S ONLY ABOUT AIR FLOW, BUT I LIKE IT
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 5/26/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...points as natural, if big, seems surreal on this street - like a chunk of Utah geology or the realization of one of Antonio Sant'Elia's 1920s fantasy projects. Whether these structures are horrible (the prevalent view) or macho and sublime...
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Stephen Coates and Alex Stetter, eds. Impossible Worlds: the Architecture of Perfection.
Magazine article from: Utopian Studies; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Manhattan is illustrated, and other familiar architects in the panoply of utopian literature also get a mention: Antonio Sant'Elia, Raymond Unwin, Ernst May, Frank Lloyd Wright and Clarence Stein amongst others. But as well as the obvious...
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Travelling hopefully. (architecture of buildings associated with travel)
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review; 5/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...the trappings of ornament and ancient culture. Sixty years later, arguing from a very different standpoint, Antonio Sant'Elia echoed Ruskin's condemnation of applying traditional architectural forms and values to railway buildings: 'We...
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Back to the future
Magazine article from: New Statesman; 1/19/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...propagandists for Italian intervention. That war claimed the lives of their two greatest talents, the architect Antonio Sant'Elia and the sculptor/painter Boccioni, who had developed a style based on fragmentation, kinetic speed, garish...
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Antonio Sant' Elia
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Antonio Sant' Elia , 1888-1916, Italian architect. Associated with the movement known as futurism , he created visionary drawings of futurist...
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Sant'Elia, Antonio
Book article from: A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
Sant'Elia, Antonio. See FUTURISM .
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Futurism
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Art
...Manifesto of Futurist Architecture (1914)—by Antonio Sant'Elia (1888–1916), whose powerful and audacious...which Boccioni, its outstanding artist, and also Sant'Elia died; ironically, Marinetti had welcomed the war...
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futurism
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...and Giacomo Balla were the leading painters and Umberto Boccioni the chief sculptor of the group. The architect Antonio Sant' Elia also belonged to this school. The futurists strove to portray the dynamic character of 20th-century life; their...
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Terragni, Giuseppe
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
...patronize Modern Movement buildings. He designed the Sant'Elia Nursery School (1936–7) and the Giuliani...x2013;7), and the Casa del Fascio, Lissone (with Antonio Carminati—1938–9). A convinced...
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