Tillie Olsen
Tillie Olsen | |
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Olsen in 2001
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Born | January 14, 1912 Wahoo, Nebraska, U.S. |
Died | January 1, 2007 (aged 94) Oakland, California, U.S. |
Occupation | Author |
Tillie Lerner Olsen (January 14, 1912 – January 1, 2007)[1] was an American writer associated with the political turmoil of the 1930s and the first generation of American feminists.
Contents
Biography[edit]
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Olsen was born to Russian Jewish immigrants in Wahoo, Nebraska and moved to Omaha while a young child. There she attended Lake School in the Near North Side through the eighth grade, living among the city's Jewish community. At age 15, she dropped out of Omaha High School to enter the work force. Over the years Olsen worked as a waitress, domestic worker, and meat trimmer. She was also a union organizer and political activist in the Socialist community. In 1932, Olsen began to write her first novel Yonnondio, the same year she gave birth to Karla, the first of four daughters.
In 1933, Olsen moved to California where she continued her union activities. In the 1930s she joined the American Communist party. She was briefly jailed in 1934 while organizing a packing house workers' union (the charge was "making loud and unusual noise"), an experience she wrote about in The Nation and The Partisan Review. She later moved to San Francisco, California, where in 1936 she met and lived with Jack Olsen, who was an organizer and a longshoreman. In 1937, she gave birth to her second child, her first child with her future husband Jack Olsen, whom she married in 1944, on the eve of his departure for service in World War II.[2][3][4] San Francisco remained her home until her 85th year when she moved to Berkeley, California, to a cottage behind the home of her youngest daughter.[citation needed]
Olsen died on January 1, 2007, in Oakland, California, aged 94.[citation needed]
Writing[edit]
She attempted to introduce the challenges of her own life and contemporary social/political circumstances into a novel which she began in the 1930s, when she was only 19. Although only an excerpt of the first chapter was published in The Partisan Review in 1934, it led to a contract for her with Random House. Olsen abandoned the book, however, due to work, child rearing, and household responsibilities. Decades later in 1974, her unfinished novel was published as Yonnondio: From the Thirties.
Olsen first published a book in 1961, Tell Me a Riddle, a collection of four short stories, most linked by the characters in one family. Three of the stories were from the point of view of mothers. "I Stand Here Ironing" is the first and shortest story in the collection, about a woman who is grieving about her daughter's life and about the circumstances that shaped her own mothering. "O Yes" is the story of a white woman whose young daughter's friendship with a black girl is narrowed and ended by the pressures of junior high school. "Hey Sailor, What Ship?", is told by an aging merchant marine sailor whose friendship with a San Francisco family (relatives of the main character in "Tell Me a Riddle") is becoming increasingly strained due to his alcoholism. (In later editions of the book, "Hey Sailor, What Ship?" appears as the second story in the collection). The title story is really a novella, and tells the story of an elderly Jewish immigrant couple facing the wife's death and trying to make sense out of the world in which they find themselves.[citation needed]
Each of the short stories in the collection Tell Me a Riddle was featured in Best American Short Stories the year it was published. It was awarded the O. Henry Prize in 1961 for best American short story. In 1968, Olsen signed the “Writers and Editors War Tax Protest” pledge, vowing to refuse to pay taxes in protest against the Vietnam War.[5]
Olsen's non-fiction volume, titled Silences, was an analysis of authors' silent periods in literature, including writer's blocks, unpublished work, and the problems that working-class writers, and women in particular, have in finding the time to concentrate on their art. One of her observations was that prior to the late 20th century, all the great women writers in Western literature either had no children or had full-time housekeepers to raise the children. The second part of the book was a study of the work of little-known writer Rebecca Harding Davis. Olsen researched and wrote the book in the San Francisco Public Library.[citation needed]
Once her books were published, Olsen became a teacher and writer-in-residence at numerous colleges, such as Amherst College, Stanford University, MIT, and Kenyon College. She was the recipient of nine honorary degrees, National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, and a Guggenheim Fellowship.[6] Also among the honors bestowed upon Olsen was the Rea Award for the Short Story, in 1994, for a lifetime of outstanding achievement in the field of short story writing.
Legacy[edit]
Though she published little, Olsen was very influential for her treatment of the lives of women and the poor. She drew attention to why women have been less likely to be published authors (and why they receive less attention than male authors when they do publish). Her work received recognition in the years of much feminist political and social activity. It contributed to new possibilities for women writers. Olsen's influence on American feminist fiction has caused some critics to be frustrated at simplistic feminist interpretations of her work.[7] In particular, several critics have pointed to Olsen's Communist past as contributing to her thought.[8] Olsen's fiction awards, and the ongoing attention to her work, is often focused upon her unique use of language and story form, a form close to poetry in compression and clarity, as well as upon the content.
Reviewing Olsen's life in The New York Times Book Review, Margaret Atwood attributed Olsen’s relatively small output to her full life as a wife and mother, a “grueling obstacle course” experienced by many women writers. Her book Silences “begins with an account, first drafted in 1962, of her own long, circumstantially enforced silence,” Atwood wrote. “She did not write for a very simple reason: A day has 24 hours. For 20 years she had no time, no energy and none of the money that would have bought both.”[9]
Tillie Olsen: A Heart in Action is a 2007 documentary film directed and produced by Ann Hershey on the life and literary influence of Olsen.[citation needed]
Major works[edit]
- Tell Me A Riddle, Lippincott, 1961. Reprinted, Rutgers University Press, 1995
- Yonnondio: From the Thirties, Delacorte, 1974. Reprinted, Dell, 1989.
- Silences, Delacorte, 1978. Reprinted, Dell, 1989. Reprinted, The Feminist Press, 2003.
- Mothers to Daughter, Daughter to Mother: Mothers on Mothering: A Daybook and Reader, The Feminist Press, 1989.
- Mothers & Daughters: That Special Quality: An Exploration in Photographs with Estelle Jussim, Aperture, 1995.
- The Riddle of Life And Death with Leo Tolstoy, The Feminist Press, 2007.
References[edit]
- ^ Bosman, Julie (2007-01-03). "Tillie Olsen, Feminist Writer, Dies at 94". New York Times. Retrieved 2007-04-17.
- ^ http://tillieolsen.com/Tillie_biography.html
- ^ http://www.enotes.com/contemporary-literary-criticism/olsen-tillie
- ^ http://www.progressive.org/mag_intv1199
- ^ “Writers and Editors War Tax Protest”, New York Post, January 30, 1968.
- ^ Tillie Olsen Retrieved on 2007- 12-04
- ^ See Schultz.
- ^ See Rosenfeldt and Dawahare.
- ^ Bosman, Julie (2007-01-03). "Tillie Olsen, Feminist Writer, Dies at 94". New York Times. Retrieved 2007-04-17.
Further reading[edit]
- Coiner, Constance. Better Red: The Writing and Resistance of Tillie Olsen and Meridel Le Sueur. Oxford University Press, 1995.
- Dawahare, Anthony. "'That Joyous Certainty': History and Utopia in Tillie Olsen's Depression-Era Literature", Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 44, No. 3. (Autumn, 1998), pp. 261–75.
- Hedges, Elaine and Shelley Fisher Fishkin, eds. Listening to Silences: New Essays in Feminist Criticism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994.
- Rosenfelt, Deborah. "From the Thirties: Tillie Olsen and the Radical Tradition." Feminist Studies, Vol. 7, No. 3. (Autumn, 1981), pp. 371–406.
- Schultz, Lydia A. "Flowing against the Traditional Stream: Consciousness in Tillie Olsen's 'Tell Me a Riddle.'" MELUS, Vol. 22, No. 3, Varieties of Ethnic Criticism. (Autumn, 1997), pp. 113–31.
Research resources[edit]
- Tillie Olsen Papers, 1930-1990(call number M0667; ca. 62 linear ft.) are housed in the Department of Special Collections and University Archives at Stanford University Libraries
External links[edit]
- Tillie Olsen Film Project
- Biography on GradeSaver
- Bibliography from Creighton University
- Obituary/appreciation by Anthony Dawahare in Reconstruction 8.1, 2008
- "Tillie Olsen" by Abigail Martin in the Western Writers Series Digital Editions at Boise State University
- Better Red: The Writing and Resistance of Tillie Olsen and Meridel Le Sueur by Constance Coiner
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- 1912 births
- 2007 deaths
- People from Saunders County, Nebraska
- Jewish American writers
- Members of the Communist Party USA
- Jews and Judaism in Omaha, Nebraska
- American women short story writers
- American feminists
- Jewish feminists
- Jewish women writers
- American people of Russian-Jewish descent
- American tax resisters
- Writers from Omaha, Nebraska
- Amherst College faculty
- Stanford University faculty
- Kenyon College faculty
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology faculty
- Guggenheim Fellows
- Communist women writers
- Jewish American short story writers
- Disease-related deaths in California