F. O. Matthiessen | |
---|---|
Born | Francis Otto Matthiessen February 19, 1902 Pasadena, California |
Died | April 1, 1950 Boston, Massachusetts |
(aged 48)
Cause of death | Suicide by jumping from a height |
Resting place | Springfield Cemetery, Springfield, Massachusetts |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Yale, Oxford and Harvard |
Occupation | Historian, literary critic, educator |
Known for | American Renaissance |
Partner | Russell Cheney |
Awards | Rhodes Scholarship |
Francis Otto Matthiessen (February 19, 1902 - April 1, 1950) was an educator, scholar and literary critic influential in the fields of American literature and American studies.[1]
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Matthiessen was an American studies scholar and literary critic at Harvard University,[2] and chaired its undergraduate program in history and literature.[3] He wrote and edited landmark works of scholarship on T. S. Eliot, Ralph Waldo Emerson, the James family (Alice James, Henry James, Henry James Sr., and William James), Sarah Orne Jewett, Sinclair Lewis, Herman Melville, Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman.
Matthiessen's best-known book, American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman (1941), discusses the flowering of literary culture in the middle of the American 19th century, with Emerson, Thoreau, Melville, Whitman and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Its focus was the period roughly from 1850 to 1855 in which all these writers but Emerson published what would, by Matthiessen's time, come to be thought of as their masterpieces: Melville's Moby-Dick, multiple editions of Whitman's Leaves of Grass, Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables, and Thoreau's Walden. The mid-19th century in American literature is commonly called the American Renaissance because of the influence of this work on later literary history and criticism. In 2009 The New York Times said that the book "virtually created the field of American literature."[1]
Matthiessen was born in Pasadena, California, where he was a student at Polytechnic School. Following the separation of his parents, he relocated with his mother to his paternal grandparents home in La Salle, Illinois. He completed his secondary education at Hackley School, in Tarrytown, New York. In 1923 he graduated from Yale University, where he was a member of Skull and Bones. He studied at Oxford University, as a Rhodes Scholar earning a B.Litt. in 1925. At Harvard University, he quickly completed his M.A. in 1926 and Ph.D. degree in 1927. Matthiessen then returned to Yale to teach for two years, before beginning a distinguished teaching career at Harvard.
Matthiessen, as a gay man in the 1930s and 1940s, chose to remain in the closet throughout his professional career, if not in his personal life – although traces of homoerotic concern are apparent in his writings.[4] In 2009, a statement from Harvard University said that Matthiessen "stands out as an unusual example of a gay man who lived his sexuality as an 'open secret' in the mid-20th century."[2][3]
Matthiessen had a 20-year romantic relationship with the painter Russell Cheney.[1] The couple shared a cottage in Kittery, Maine for decades. In planning to spend his life with Cheney, Matthiessen went as far as asking his cohort in the Yale secret society Skull and Bones to approve of their partnership (Levin 43-44). With Cheney having encouraged Matthiessen's interest in Whitman, it has been argued that American Renaissance was "the ultimate expression of Matthiessen's love for Cheney and a secret celebration of the gay artist."[1][5][6]
He was hospitalized once for a nervous breakdown in 1938-1939. After Cheney's death, Matthiessen was increasingly distraught; he committed suicide by jumping from a window in 1950.[1][2] Inquiries by HUAC into his politics may also have been a factor in his suicide: writing in 1958, Eric Jacobsen referred to Matthiessen's death as "hastened by forces whose activities earned for themselves the sobriquet un-American which they sought so assiduously to fasten on others".[7] In 1978, however, Harry Levin was more skeptical, saying only that "spokesmen for the Communist Party, to which he had never belonged, loudly signalized his suicide as a political gesture".[8]
Matthiessen was buried at Springfield Cemetery in Springfield, Massachusetts.
Matthiessen's politics were left-wing, socialist, though not dogmatically Marxist, as he felt his Christianity was incompatible with Marxist atheism. Matthiessen, who was already financially secure, donated an inheritance he received in the late 1940s to his friend, Marxist economist Paul Sweezy; Sweezy used the money, totalling almost $15,000, to found a new journal, which became the Monthly Review. F. O. Matthiessen was mentioned as an activist in Boston area so-called "Communist front groups" by Herbert Philbrick.[9]
Matthiessen's contribution to the critical celebration of 19th century American literature is considered formative and enduring. Along with several other scholars, he is regarded as a contributor to the creation of American studies as a recognized academic discipline. In 2009 Harvard established an endowed chair in LGBT studies called the F. O. Matthiessen Visiting Professorship of Gender and Sexuality.[2][3][10] Believing the post to be "the first professorship of its kind in the country,"[2] Harvard President Drew G. Faust called it “an important milestone.”[3][10] It is funded by a $1.5 million gift from the members and supporters of the Harvard Gay & Lesbian Caucus.[2][3][10][11]