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The Other Carl Sandburg
 
 
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The Other Carl Sandburg [Hardcover]

Philip R. Yannella (Author)

Price: $30.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

October 1, 1996
Carl Sandburg is most remembered as a biographer of Lincoln, as the author of such schoolroom poems as "Chicago" and "Fog", and as a popular culture hero who lent his name and fame to the political campaigns of Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Adlai Stevenson, and John F. Kennedy. One mid-century commentator called him America's "cultural sweetheart". Adlai Stevenson said he was the "epitome" of the American dream.

A Sandburg existed, however, who did not resemble the traditional portrait of him. During the first two decades of his long career, the "other Carl Sandburg" was deeply involved in left-wing politics. The Other Carl Sandburg emphasizes his involvement in the internal history of the American left, his early involvement with Bolshevism and with domestic politics of the Great War, and his hard-nosed, sometimes scurrilous journalism, written under his own name and various pseudonyms during the intense class warfare of the years from 1915 to 1920.

This study of the Sandburg few us of know is based on an extraordinary amount of research in government surveillance archives, in the Carl Sandburg Collection at the University of Illinois, and in labor histories, histories of American radicalism, and American literary history. Nearly two hundred magazines and newspaper articles written by Sandburg at this time, most never cited before, serve as a backdrop for placing his first three books of poetry in their appropriate context.

This refreshing new impression of the popular icon will allow readers to discover that the "other Carl Sandburg" was at times a prescient political commentator caught up in the heated, contradictory currents of the day and a far more interesting writerthan the avuncular poet so well known in traditional portraits.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Focusing on the articles Sandburg wrote, often pseudonymously, during World War I for the International Socialist Review, Philip Yannella argues that instead of the famous folk poet, biographer of Lincoln, and sagacious patriot he fancied himself in later life, the youthful Sandburg was "a political opportunist, a journalist who was anything but objective and balanced, a far left radical even when he portrayed himself as a patriot." It is a fascinating and convincing portrait, and Yannella's book helps complete our image of one of the most beloved American poets. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Using Penelope Niven's standard 1991 biography, Carl Sandburg, and a close reading of a series of political articles Sandburg (1878-1962) wrote expressing socialist beliefs, this book attempts to redeem the reputation of the beloved but bad poet by amplifying a few years of his political life around WWI. Temple University American studies professor Yannella's political analysis of American socialism around WWI is turgid, but detailed. More problematic is his fervent conviction that during his lifetime Carl Sandburg was universally appreciated as a writer. The truth is that for the last 40 years of his life he was often derided by other American poets: e.g., the great poet Elizabeth Bishop writes in her Letters of the comic horror she felt when Sandburg suddenly appeared at a 1940s Washington, D.C., party. Yannella unconvincingly claims that Sandburg was an "extraordinary" and "wonderfully gifted" writer, presenting as good poetry Sandburg's feeble stuff like: "One child coughed his lungs away, two more have adenoids and can neither talk nor run like their mother." In his attempts to rehabilitate Sandburg, he even goes so far as to compare him, unconvincingly, to Walt Whitman, even though the two have little in common beyond the surface similarities of free-verse and populism. Sandburg fans are better off sticking to Niven's biography.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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