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This chapter surveys the rise of New Criticism in American letters during the interwar years through the 1950s. It pays attention to the influence of two overlapping associations: the Fugitive Poets and the Nashville Agrarians. The Fugitives, a group of Vanderbilt English professors and Nashville notables, had formed in the years leading up to World War I to discuss current trends in literature and philosophy. The Agrarians, southern commentators trained in a variety of disciplines, collaborated on a symposium in the 1930s that decried the deleterious effects of industrial capitalism and promoted values that purportedly undergirded an agrarian economy. Together the two groups came to shape the tenets of New Criticism. New Critics mourned the turn away from formalist principles that had established the criteria by which one should evaluate literature. Agrarians bemoaned the demise of a set of values that ostensibly emerged from a labor system that championed family farming, property ownership, and small government. Both New Critics and Agrarians, then, engaged in reclamation projects as they sought to salvage what they believed to be all that was good and beautiful in the world.
John Crowe Ransom, John Orley Allen Tate and Robert Penn Warren laid the foundations for twentieth-century southern poetry at Vanderbilt University in the twenties. This chapter considers how lack of academic opportunities helped determine southern poetry's history. The poem Bells for John Whiteside's Daughterformer concerns a traumatic event, the death and funeral of an energetic young girl and consists of five quatrains that develop according to the three-stage progression of the elegy, moving from lament to praise to consolation. Ransom's student Tate of Winchester, Kentucky, hared his teacher's skepticism of a materially oriented culture and also portrayed science as the imagination's bête noire, where Ransom relied on traditional forms, realistic settings and irony. In the 1960s and 1970s the issue of race continued to tug at Warren and other southern poets, particularly Tate, who was embarrassed by the publication of a letter he wrote to editor Lincoln Kirstein in 1933.
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