“The
art of teaching is the art of assisting discovery.” – Mark Van Doren
Born in Illinois on this date in 1894, Van Doren
was a poet, creative and nonfiction writer, critic, scholar and English professor (at
Columbia University for nearly 40 years). As a teacher he inspired a generation of
influential writers and thinkers, including Thomas Merton, Allen Ginsberg and
Jack Kerouac.
And, Van Doren was literary
editor and film critic for The Nation, the oldest continuously published
literary magazine in the U.S. His
influence and body of work were recognized by The Library of Congress when he
was made a Fellow in American Letters and then elected President of the
American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Van Doren wrote many of the books
studied by up-and-coming writers in colleges and universities across the
nation, produced the award-winning verse play The Last Days of Lincoln, and won the 1940 Pulitzer Prize in poetry for
his Collected Works 1922-1938,
joining older brother Carl as one of the few sibling combinations to win the
award (Carl won in 1939).
Despite his many successes in
other genres, he considered himself a
poet first.
“The job of the poet," he said, "is to render
the world - to see it and report it without loss, without perversion. No poet ever talks about feelings. Only
sentimental people do.”
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