Stark Young
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Stark Young | |
Born | October 11, 1881 Como, Mississippi, U.S. |
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Died | January 6, 1963 (aged 81) Austin, Texas, USA |
Stark Young (October 11, 1881 - January 6, 1963) was an American teacher, playwright, novelist, painter, literary critic and essayist.
[edit] Biography
Stark Young was born in Como, Mississippi to Mary Clark Starks and Alfred Alexander Young, a local physician.
He entered the University of Mississippi at the age of 15 and graduated from that institution in 1901. He completed his Master's Degree at Columbia University in 1902.
Young taught at the University of Mississippi in 1905-1907 and then moved to the University of Texas at Austin where he established the Texas Review and became involved with theater.
In 1915 he moved to Amherst College where he taught English until he resigned to pursue other interests in 1921 and moved to New York City, New York. In New York he was appointed as an editor at Theater Arts Magazine and as drama critic for The New Republic. Young remained at The New Republic until his retirement in 1947. During this period he was involved with the theater in New York and wrote several plays.
In 1930 Young contributed to the Agrarian manifesto I'll Take My Stand and was one of 12 known as the Southern Agrarians.
Young drew on the traditions of his Southern upbringing for inspiration and generated essays, journalistic articles, and collections of stories, drawing on these sources. He also published four novels dealing with Southern themes.
"So Red the Rose," perhaps Young's finest novel, published in 1934, had a brief period of popularity as the archetype of the Southern Civil War novel, until the phenomenal success of "Gone With the Wind," later in the decade pushed Young's book into the background. Described by its author as a novel of the affections, the book is still in print.
In the 1940s Young, a self-taught artist, began painting and was the subject of two one-man exhibitions in New York. His paintings were shown in four important galleries including the Chicago Institute of Art which purchased one of his paintings for the permanent collection.
In 1951 he published his memoir, The Pavilion, which was dedicated to his friend Allen Tate.
Young received the Order of the Crown of Italy for a series of lectures on American theater given in Italian as a Westinghouse Lecturer in Italy.
He served on the board of New York University and is a member of that institution's Hall of Fame. He was a recipient of Brandeis University's Creative Arts Medallion and the South Eastern Theatre Conference's Distinguished Career Award.
Stark Young suffered a stroke in May 1959. He is buried in Friendship Cemetery in Como, Mississippi.