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Chapter 7: William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)
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Page Links: | Primary Works | Selected Bibliography 1980-Present | Study Questions | MLA Style Citation of this Web Page |
Site Links: | Chap. 7: Index | Alphabetical List | Table Of Contents | Home Page | February 2, 2008 |

Source: Gallery
of Writers
Poetry: Poems, 1909; The Tempers, 1913; Al Que Quiere!, 1917; Sour Grapes, 1921; Collected Poems 1906-1938, 1938; Paterson, 1946; The Desert Music, 1954; Journey to Love, 1955; Pictures from Breghel, 1962.Fiction: The Great American Novel, 1923; A Voyage to Pagany, 1928; Trilogy: White Mule, 1937; In the Money, 1940; and The Build-Up, 1952.
Non-Fiction: Kora in Hell: Improvisations, 1920; In the American Grain, 1925; Autobiography, 1951.
Paterson. MacGowan, Christopher (ed.). NY: New Directions, 1992.
The Last Word: Letters between Marcia Nardi and William Carlos Williams. O'Neil, Elizabeth M. (ed.). Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 1994.
Pound Williams: Selected Letters of Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams. Witemeyer, Hugh (ed.). NY: New Directions, 1996.
The Letters of Denise Levertov and William Carlos Williams. MacGowan, Christopher (ed. and introd.). NY: New Directions, 1998.
William Carlos Williams and Charles Tomlinson: A Transatlantic Connection. Magid, Barry (ed. and foreword); Witemeyer, Hugh; Tomlinson, Charles, and others. NY: Peter Lang, 1999.
The Correspondence of William Carlos Williams and Louis Zukofsky. Ahearn, Barry (ed. and introd.). Middletown, CT: Wesleyan UP, 2003.
The Humane Particulars: The Collected Letters of William Carlos Williams and Kenneth Burke. East, James H. (ed. and introd.). Columbia: U of South Carolina P, 2003.
| Top |Selected Bibliography 1980-Present
Beck, John. Writing the Radical Center: William Carlos Williams, John Dewey, and American Cultural Politics. Albany: State U of New York P, 2001.
Bernstein, Michael A. The tale of the tribe: Ezra Pound and the modern verse epic. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton UP, 1980. PS3531.O82 C2836 (includes discussion of Paterson)
Bremen, Brian A. William Carlos Williams and the Diagnostics of Culture. NY: Oxford UP, 1993.
Callan, Ron. William Carlos Williams and transcendentalism: fitting the crab in a box. NY: St. Martin's P, 1992. PS3545 .I544 Z5825
Cappucci, Paul R. William Carlos Williams' Poetic Response to the 1913 Paterson Silk Strike. Lewiston, NY: Mellen, 2002.
Crawford, T. Hugh. Modernism, Medicine, & William Carlos Williams. Norman: U of Oklahoma P, 1993.
Cushman, Stephen. William Carlos Williams and the meanings of measure. New Haven: Yale U P, 1985. PS3545 .I544 Z584
Doyle, Charles. William Carlos Williams and the American poem. NY: St. Martin's P, 1982. PS3545 .I544 Z586
Doyle, Charles. William Carlos Williams: the critical heritage. Boston: Routledge & K. Paul, 1980. PS3545.I544 Z97
Gish, Robert F. William Carlos Williams: a study of the short fiction. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1989. PS 3545 .I544 Z58784
Lloyd, Margaret G. William Carlos William's Paterson: a critical reappraisal. Rutherford, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson U P, 1980. PS3545.I544 P335
Lowney, John. The American Avant-Garde Tradition: William Carlos Williams, Postmodern Poetry, and the Politics of Cultural Memory. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell UP, 1997.
Mariani, Paul L. William Carlos Williams: a new world naked. NY: McGraw-Hill, 1981. PS3545.I544 Z628
Marsh, Alec. Money and Modernity: Pound, Williams, and the Spirit of Jefferson. Tuscaloosa: U of Alabama P, 1998.
Marzán, Julio, and David Ignatow. The Spanish American Roots of William Carlos Williams. Austin: U of Texas P, 1994.
Mester, Terri A. Movement and Modernism: Yeats, Eliot, Lawrence, Williams, and Early Twentieth-Century Dance. Fayetteville: U of Arkansas P, 1997.
Morris, Daniel. The Writings of William Carlos Williams: Publicity for the Self. Columbia: U of Missouri P, 1995.
Qian, Zhaoming. Orientalism and Modernism: The Legacy of China in Pound and Williams. Durham: Duke UP, 1995.
Sayre, Henry M. The visual text of William Carlos Williams. Urbana: U of Illinois P, 1983. PS3545 .I544 Z878
Tapscott, Stephen. American beauty: William Carlos Williams and the modernist Whitman. NY: Columbia U P, 1984. PS3545 .I544 Z887
Whittemore, Reed. William Carlos Williams: "the happy genius of the household": a centennial lecture, delivered at the Library of Congress on November 1, 1983. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1984. PS3545 .I544 Z953
| Top |William Carlos Williams (1883-1963): A Brief Biography A Student Project by Kelli Hamilton
William
Carlos Williams was born in Rutherford, New Jersey on September 17,
1883. His father, William George
Williams, was of English and Danish blood, born in England but
brought up in the West Indies. His
mother, Raquel Helene (Elena) Hoheb was born in Puerto Rico and was
of French-Spanish blood (Millett 646).
Williams only brother, Edgar, was born when he was thirteen
months old. William Carlos remarked, "Ed and I grew up
together to become as one person.
All that I experienced as a growing child and up to the time
of my marriage was shared with him" (Williams 11).
Another person who seemed to have had an influence on Williams
was his English grandmother, Emily Dickinson Wellcome, who lived with
his family for some time. His
grandmother and mother competed for him.
There were males, his father and two uncles living in the
home, but it was the women who had him in charge and both of them
wanted to make him into a gentleman. He alternately speaks gently
and fiercely of them. They
continually appear in his writings but the fierce grandmother comes
off best, since two of his very best and fiercest poems, Dedication
For A Plot Of Ground and The Wanderer, describe her directly
(Whittemore 10).
Until
1897, William Carlos attended school in Rutherford. While his father would be in Buenos Aires for a
year to set up a factory for the manufacture of Florida Water,
William Carlos, his mother, and brother went to stay in Europe.
William Carlos was sent to school at the Chateau de Lancy near
Geneva, Switzerland (Williams 28-29).
Staying in Paris in 189y formed a close friendship that lasted
until Demuth's untimely death due to an insulin overdose (Williams
152).
In the
spring of 1899, when the family returned to America, William Carlos
reentered his classes in the Rutherford Public School.
It was his first year in high school in America and after
attending the better schools of Europe, and becoming a little wilder
since turning the age of sixteen, his grades were not encouraging to
his parents. He was then enrolled in a New
York City high school. It
was the best high school in the East, Horace Mann (Williams 43). It was while attending the Horace Mann School,
under the tutelage of a man, Uncle Billy Abbott, that William Carlos
for the first time in his life felt the excitement of great books. It was only a beginning. Williams remembers "I had no full realization of
what was taking place but I was crazy about those classes, though I
wouldn't have acknowledged it to anyone.
For the first time I had actually looked at a poem and it had
interested me" (Williams 44-45).
Williams
entered the University of Pennsylvania in 1902.
He enjoyed the study of medicine but found it impossible to
keep his concentration on it. After
barely starting his studies he wanted to quit them and devote his
time to writing. But it
was money that finally made Williams decide to continue medicine, for
he realized "I was determined to be a poet; only medicine, a job I
enjoyed, would make it possible for me to live and write as I wanted
to" (Williams 50-51). While in attendance at the
University of Pennsylvania, William Carlos met and became friends
with Hilda Doolittle (H.D) and Ezra Pound, who at that time were
aspiring poets themselves (Williams 51).
He also met an aspiring artist named Charles Demuth. William
Carlos attended the Lycee Condorcet, one of the best high schools of
Paris (Williams 35).
By
1906, Williams graduated with a medical degree, and was chosen as an
intern at the old French Hospital in New York.
The following year, he interned at the Nursery and Child's
Hospital (Whitaker 13). Williams
then completed a year of graduate study in pediatrics in Leipzig,
Germany and returned to Rutherford, in 1910, where he began work as a
general practitioner (Millett 646).publication and was depressed by
its reception (Whittemore 52). Although Williams had began writing while in
college, it wasn't until 1914, that he was introduced to the public
as an Imagist, with the publication of some of his work in the
literary magazine the Glebe (Millett 646).
In
December 1912, William Carlos married Florence Herman.
Their first son, William Eric Williams, was born in 1914 and
their second son, Paul, was born in 1916.
When Florence became pregnant her father, Pa Herman, helped
them purchase a house. The
house they bought was on 9 Ridge Road in Rutherford, New Jersey. They continued to live in this home and William
Carlos practiced medicine out of it for the rest of their lives
(Whittemore 139). During her later years, while
still living in the home, William Carlos' wife Florence had the
satisfaction of finding the house declared a "state monument"
(Whittemore 145).
William
Carlos remembers always wanting to write.
He felt it was necessary to him, it permitted him to express
what he'd been turning over in his head (Kunitz 1525). A lot of what was going on in Williams' head,
evident from the young age of nine, was his love of trees and
especially of flowers. According to Alan Ostrom
"Flowers are the subject of William Carlos Williams' poems; familiar,
ordinary things" (3). Ostrom
also notes that "Williams has insisted, in prose theory as in poetic
practice, upon the necessity for drawing the poem's materials from
the familiar world, and in so doing he has turned frequently to the
world of nature, and of flowers especially, for his particulars" (3). This is evident in his book of poems, A Que Quiere
published in 1917 and Spring and All published in 1922 (Whitaker
38,60).
|
Top
| William
Carlos once said "I feel I inherited the strange personality traits
of my mother. Changing from being warm and
outgoing to moody, morose, and melancholy" (Whittemore 16). William Carlos was a man who
always lived life under a strain- physical, financial, moral, but
especially emotional. What
was going on through his innards was what gave him the versatile
range of his writings (Kunitz 1525).
Vivienne Koch finds a continuity in his work, over its span of
more than four decades, in the search for the knowledge of self.
Koch feels:
It is not extravagant to say that Williams throughout all his
difficult and passionate explorations has sought precisely that: to
know of his situation what it does to him and with him and thus, in
the end, to discover its nature, and so, perhaps, his own (1090).
It was
William Carlos' dark side coming out with his writing of Kora in Hell
in 1920. In the book, the hero
regularly steals into the darknesses, sometimes to be lonely and
free, sometimes for trysts. As Whittemore suggests "What
the book was really saying was personal and not literary. That Williams was wandering through the Passaic
world as his mother had wandered through Rome, searching out himself,
truth, and beauty" (157). It
was Williams lighter side that must have prompted him to write his
novel White Mule in 1937, which focused on the birth and early years
of his wife, Flossie (Whittemore 249).
As a true
American Modernist writer, Williams was very interested in the
technical problems of modern verse.
According to Fred Millett:
Williams felt that the proper use of the American, rather than the English, language is essential for modern American poetry, and he believes that all art depends for its assurance and firmness upon local and immediate tradition. It is the task of the modern American poet to discover a form appropriate to America (646).
In
1946, William published the first of the four books of his major
poetic work Paterson. This poem has been called his
"personal epic". Robert
Lowell sees it as "Whitman's America, grown pathetic and tragic....No
poet has written of it with such a combination of brilliance,
sympathy, and experience, with such alertness and energy" (Kunitz
1090).
Although
not the most well known of writers, William Carlos Williams has
received a number of honors in recognition of his work.
His first recognition came in 1926 when he was given the Dial
Award. In 1948 he
received the Loines Award of the National Institute of Arts and
Letters and was elected a member of the group in 1950.
Also in 1950 Williams received the National Book Award for
poetry. In 1952 he was appointed
Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress (although he did not
occupy the office because of an attack on his politics), and in 1953
he and Archibald Macleish were named double winners of the Bollingen
prize in poetry for 1952, awarded by the Yale University Library.
In 1954 Williams received the Levinson Prize for Poetry and in
1955 he received the Oscar
Blumenthal Award (Whitaker 14-15).
Dr.
Williams has honorary degrees from the University of Buffalo (1946),
Rutgers University (1950), Bard College (1950), and the University of
Pennsylvania (1952) (Whitaker 15).
A series
of strokes forced Dr. Williams, in 1951, to retire and turn over his
medical practice to his son, William Eric (Whitaker 15).
William Carlos Williams died March 4, 1963 in Rutherford, New
Jersey of cerebral thrombosis (Whittemore 350).
Williams was posthumously awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Poetry
for Pictures from Brueghel and the Gold Medal for Poetry of the
National Institute of Arts and Letters (Whittemore 354).
Alan Ostrom notes:
Over the last few years Williams has suddenly become popular, not only in the avant-garde circles but in the academic world, in college courses in American Literature. Students find themselves to his hopelessly human view of things, and teachers discover that the poems lend themselves marvelously to analysis and interpretation (xi).
Linda
Wagner-Martin also remarks that "the writings of William Carlos
Williams are a nearly inexhaustible reservoir of twentieth-century
American themes and images, given expression through a voice unique
in the history of literature (6)
Works
Cited
Kunitz,
Stanley J., ed. Twentieth Century Authors, A Biographical Dictionary
of Modern Literature. First Supplement. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1955.
Millett,
Fred B. Contemporary American
Authors. New York: Harcourt, Brace and
Company, 1940.
Ostrom,
Alan. The Poetic World Of William
Carlos Williams. London: Southern Illinois University Press, 1966.
Wagner-Martin,
Linda. "Williams' Life and Career".
Modern American Poetry. http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/s_z/williams/bio.htm
(2/19/02).
Whittemore,
Reed. William Carlos Williams Poet
From Jersey. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1975.
1. Some of William's poems directly or indirectly address the writing of poetry. Discuss what the following poems tell us about his poetic theory: "Portrait of a Lady," "Spring and All," "The Wind Increases," "The Term."
2. Analyze the specific features of Williams's use of language in "To Elsie."
3. Describe the form Williams invents in "The Ivy Crown." Discuss the effects this form has on the reader. How does the form contribute to a reader's understanding of the poem?
4. Compare the two Williams poems that derive from paintings by Brueghel: "The Dance " and "Landscape with the Fall of Icarus." Locate and study these paintings in the library. What relationship does Williams achieve between the visual and the verbal experience? Is it necessary to see the paintings to "see" the poems?
MLA Style Citation of this Web Page
Reuben, Paul P. "Chapter 7: William Carlos Williams." PAL: Perspectives in American Literature- A Research and Reference Guide. URL:http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap7/wcw.html (provide page date or date of your login).| Top |