Donald Grady Davidson (August 8, 1893 – April 25, 1968) was a U.S. poet, essayist, social and literary critic, and author. An English professor at Vanderbilt University from 1920 to 1965, he was a founding member of the Fugitives and the overlapping group Southern Agrarians, two literary groups based in Nashville, Tennessee.
Early life
Davidson was born on August 8, 1893 in Campbellsville, Tennessee.[1] His father, William Bluford Davidson, was "a teacher and school administrator," and his mother, Elma Wells, was "a music and elocution teacher."[1] He had two brothers, John and William. Davidson received a classical education at Branham and Hughes Military Academy, a preparatory school in Spring Hill, Tennessee. He earned both his bachelor's (1917) and master's (1922) degrees at Vanderbilt University.[1] He served as a lieutenant in the United States Army during World War I.[2]
Career
Davidson was an English professor at Vanderbilt University from 1920 to 1965.[2] While at Vanderbilt, Davidson became associated with the Fugitives, who met to read and criticize each other's verse.[2] Later, they founded a review of the same name, which launched the literary careers of the poets and critics John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate and Robert Penn Warren,[2] the poet Laura Riding, and the poet and psychiatrist Merrill Moore. He enjoyed a national reputation as a poet, in part due to the inclusion of his dramatic monologue, "Lee in the Mountains",[2] in early editions of the influential college literature textbook Understanding Poetry. Its editors were his former students Warren and Cleanth Brooks. From 1923 to 1930, Davidson reviewed books and edited the Nashville Tennessean book page, where he assessed more than 370 books.
Around 1930, Davidson began his association with the Southern Agrarians.[2] He was chiefly responsible for the decision of the group to write essays, published as the Agrarian manifesto I'll Take My Stand. Davidson shared the Agrarians' distaste for industrial capitalism and its destructive effect on American culture. Davidson's romantic outlook, however, led him to interpret Agrarianism as a straightforward politics of identity. "American" identity had become "characterless and synthetic," he argued in 1933. He encouraged Americans to embrace their identities as "Rebels, Yankees, Westerners, New Englanders or what you will, bound by ties more generous than abstract institutions can express, rather than citizens of an Americanized nowhere, without family, kin, or home." He was in favor of segregation.[3]: xxxii
In 1931, Davidson began a long association with Middlebury College's Breadloaf School of English. He bought a house in Vermont where he did much of his later writing. He taught at the Breadloaf School every summer until his death. In 1939 his textbook, American Composition and Rhetoric, was published and widely adopted for English courses in American universities.[4]: 227
Perhaps most widely read today is Davidson's two-volume history: The Tennessee (1946 and 1948), in the Rivers of America series. The second volume is notable for its critique of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and the impact of its dam-building and eminent domain land seizure on local society. Although originally a supporter of the New Deal, he was suspicious that the TVA was a plot of northern business interests to exploit and dominate the South. He denounced the TVA as an instrument of political collectivism, run by outsiders, designed to destroy the South's traditions.[5]
In 1952 his ballad opera, Singin' Billy, with music by Charles F. Bryan, was performed at the Vanderbilt Theater. His work as book page editor for the Nashville Tennessean was commemorated in 1963 with the publication of The Spyglass: Views and Reviews, 1924–1930. A comprehensive collection of his poetry, Poems: 1922–61, was published in 1966.[6]
38 works Add another?
Most Editions
Most Editions
First Published
Most Recent
Top Rated
Reading Log
Random
Showing all works by author. Would you like to see only ebooks?
Subjects
American literature, English language, English literature, General, Rhetoric, Addresses, American literature, history and criticism, American poetry, American prose literature, Bible, Biography, Civilization, English prose literature, Fiction, Fiction, general, History and criticism, Intellectual life, Musicians, fiction, Nationalism, Nationalism, united states, North carolina, fiction, Regional planning, north america, Regionalism, Sectionalism (U.S.), Sectionalism (United States)ID Numbers
- OLID: OL448166A
- ISNI: 0000000108649363
- VIAF: 5020468
- Wikidata: Q1239798
- Inventaire.io: wd:Q1239798
Links outside Open Library
No links yet. Add one?
Alternative names
- Donald Grady Davidson, Donald Davidson
July 8, 2022 | Edited by kolakowj7580 | Corrected the name from "Davidson, David" to "David Grady Davisson" -- common name misused |
July 8, 2022 | Edited by kolakowj7580 | Added new photo |
July 8, 2022 | Edited by kolakowj7580 | Update photos |
July 8, 2022 | Edited by kolakowj7580 | Added new photo |
April 1, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | initial import |