James Whitehead (poet)
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James Tillotson Whitehead (March 15, 1936
St. Louis, Missouri St. Louis () is the second-largest city in Missouri, United States. It sits near the confluence of the Mississippi River, Mississippi and the Missouri Rivers. In 2020, the city proper had a population of 301,578, while the Greater St. Louis, ...
- August 16, 2003
Fayetteville, Arkansas Fayetteville () is the second-largest city in Arkansas, the county seat of Washington County, and the biggest city in Northwest Arkansas. The city is on the outskirts of the Boston Mountains, deep within the Ozarks. Known as Washington until ...
) was an American poet and novelist. He published four books of poetry and one novel, ''Joiner''.


Biography

James Whitehead was born in St. Louis in 1936. He grew up in Jackson, Mississippi, where his family moved after World War II. Standing six foot 5 inches, and known as "Big Jim" he received a football scholarship at Vanderbilt University. However, a serious injury there dashed any hopes he had of a professional career. Instead, he focused on his studies, earning a bachelor's degree in philosophy, then staying for a master's degree in English. He then went to the University of Iowa where he acquired an M.F.A. in creative writing. Whitehead then joined his college friend William Harrison in founding the creative writing program at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. They were soon joined by poet Miller Williams, and the three men continued to build what would become one the nations most distinguished writing programs. Whitehead taught at Arkansas for 34 years, from 1965 to 1999. In 2003 he died on the 44th anniversary of his marriage with Guendaline Graeber Whitehead, with whom he had seven children. He was 67. Whitehead's only published novel, Joiner, came in 1971. The story about an intellectual NFL tackle from segregated Mississippi received wide acclaim from the most respected reviewers including the New York Times, the Boston Globe and the Washington Post. In reviewing the book for Times, novelist R. V. Cassill, wrote: "What Whitehead has achieved is to sound the full range of the Deep South's exultation and lament. Once again, we are told that Mississippi is our Ireland, in literature and politics. His tirade makes an awesome, fearful and glorious impact on the mind and ear." Many people, including President Jimmy Carter considered Joiner to be “one of the South’s best novels.” Whitehead was constantly revising and experimenting, sometimes to a fault. Literary critic James S. Baumlin, on reading Whitehead's cache of unpublished manuscripts, describes Whitehead's “torturous writing process”: :Whitehead was an obsessive reviser, who would give a day’s worrying to a single word or rhythm. Such care served him well when writing poetry, given the genre’s linguistic concentration; when he wrote fiction, however, this same process led to near-paralysis—to hundreds (literally) of drafts, most starting from scratch, each subtly different from the rest, all drawing on the man’s considerable poetic powers. Whitehead published four books of poetry: "Domains," "Local Men," "Actual Size" and "Near at Hand."


Works

* ''Domains'', Louisiana State University Press, 1966 * ''Local Men'', University of Illinois Press, 1979, * ''Actual Size'' Trilobite Press, 1985 (poetry chapbook)
''Near at Hand''
University of Missouri Press, 1993,
''Joiner''
Knopf, 1971, ; University of Arkansas Press, 1991, (novel)
''The panther: posthumous poems''
Editor Michael Burns, University of Arkansas Press, 2008, *''For, from, about James T. Whitehead: poems, stories, photographs, and recollections'', Editor Michael Burns, Photographer Bruce West, Moon City Press, 2009,


Awards

* 1972
Guggenheim Fellowship Guggenheim Fellowships are grants that have been awarded annually since by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to those "who have demonstrated exceptional capacity for productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the ar ...
in Fiction * Robert Frost Fellowship in Poetry, from Bread Loaf Writers' Conference


References


External links


"Memories of UA educator live in new book"
''Northwest Arkansas Times'', July 12, 2009 {{DEFAULTSORT:Whitehead, James 20th-century American poets Writers from St. Louis 1936 births 2003 deaths Vanderbilt University alumni Iowa Writers' Workshop alumni University of Arkansas faculty Poets from Missouri