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Mark Harris letters to Martha Harris

 Collection
Identifier: MSS 0605

Scope and Content Note

The Mark Harris letters to Martha Harris consists of letters, printed e-mails, faxes, and photographs that were shared over a period of fifty years between author Mark Harris and his sister, Martha Harris. The correspondence contain updates on family news, advice to Martha on education, publishing and writing, reflections on Mark's career as writer and professor, and his shared diary entries through which the two siblings attempted to reconstruct childhood memories.

The Harris siblings often shared thoughts on the social and political climate occurring at the time of their correspondence, which includes comments on racism, poverty, the Gulf War of 1991 and of 2003, and Guantanamo prison. The two also shared detailed reactions to books, making frequent recommendations.

Dates

  • Creation: 1951-2005
  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1992-1999

Creator

Language of Materials

Materials entirely in English.

Access Restrictions

The collection is open for research.

Terms Governing Use and Reproduction

Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, http://library.udel.edu/spec/askspec/

Mark Harris

American author Mark Harris was born November 19, 1922, in Mt. Vernon, New York.

Following military service from 1943-1944, Harris became a journalist and worked on a variety of newspapers and magazines for the remainder of the decade, including the Daily Item (Port Chester, NY. 1944-1945), PM (New York, NY, 1945), the International News Service (St. Louis, 1945-1946), and in Chicago for the Negro Digest and Ebony (1946-1951). Harris remained active as a journalist for most of his writing career.

Harris completed his first novel, Trumpet to the World , while he was employed in St. Louis; it was published in 1946. Two years later, Harris enrolled as an undergraduate at the University of Denver and eventually went on to receive a master's degree in English (1951) from Denver, as well as a Ph.D. in American Studies (1956) from the University of Minnesota. Harris's dissertation focused on the life and work of the American literary radical Randolph Bourne.

Even while he attended school, Harris continued to write fiction. He produced three additional novels, all of which were published by the time he received his Ph.D. Following the receipt of his doctorate, Harris began a long, productive career as a college educator teaching at San Francisco State College (1954-1968), Purdue University (1967-1970), California Institute of the Arts (1970-1973), the University of Southern California (1973-1975), the University of Pittsburgh (1976-1980), and Arizona State University-Tempe (1980-2001).

Harris may be best known for his fictional work, Bang the Drum Slowly (1956), the second volume in his trilogy devoted to the fictional baseball player, Henry Wiggen. Harris adapted this novel into a screenplay for the 1973 movie of the same name. Several of Harris's novels have received critical acclaim, notably, Something about a Soldier (1957), Wake Up Stupid (1959), The Goy (1970), and Killing Everybody (1973).

In addition to his work as a novelist, Mark Harris has produced a variety of works in other literary genres. His critical contributions include editing the poems of Vachel Lindsay in Selected Poems of Vachel Lindsay (1963) and the journals of James Boswell in Heart of Boswell (1981).

Harris has written biographies that include Vachel Lindsay's City of Discontent (1952), and Saul Bellow's Saul Bellow: Drumlin Woodchuck (1980). Harris's autobiographical books include Mark the Glove Boy; or, The Last Days of Richard Nixon (1964), an account of Harris's coverage of Nixon's unsuccessful California gubernatorial campaign; Twentyone Twice: A Journal (1966), an account of Harris' experiences in Sierra Leone as a member of the Peace Corps; and finally, Best Father Ever Invented: An Authobiography of Mark Harris (1976), which chronicles his life from late adolescence up to 1973.

Bannow, Steve. "Mark Harris," inDictionary of Literary Biography(Detroit: Gale Research, 1978). Volume 2 Enck, John. "Mark Harris: An Interview,"Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature, 6, No. 1 (Spring-Summer 1965), pp. 15-26. Eppard, Philip B. "Mark Harris," inFirst Printings of American Authors(Detroit: Gale Research, 1977). Volume I. Lavers, Norman.Mark Harris(Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1978). Includes an extensive primary and secondary bibliography.

Martha Harris

Martha Harris, sister of American author Mark Harris, was born in 1933 in Mt. Vernon, New York. After Martha Harris graduated from high school, she and her mother moved to Minnesota to live with her brother Mark's family. She later relocated to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and was active in the Socialist Workers Party. Martha Harris died November 17, 2020, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Extent

.6 linear foot (2 manuscript boxes)

Abstract

The Mark Harris letters to Martha Harris is a collection of letters, printed emails, faxes, and photographs that were shared over a period of fifty years between American author Mark Harris (1922-2007) and his sister Martha Harris (1933-2020). The letters contain updates on family news, advice to Martha on education, publishing and writing, reflections on Mark's career as writer and professor, and his shared diary entries through which the two siblings attempted to reconstruct childhood memories.

Arrangement

The letters are arranged chronologically by date.

Source

Gift of Martha Harris, 2009, 2011.

Related Materials in this Repository

MSS 0101 Mark Harris papers

MSS 0755 Martha Harris journals and correspondence

Shelving Summary

  1. Boxes 1-2: Shelved in SPEC MSS manuscript boxes

Processing

Processed and encoded by Christopher La Casse, September 2009; updated 2011.

Title
Finding aid for Mark Harris letters to Martha Harris
Status
Completed
Author
University of Delaware Library, Special Collections
Date
2009 September 22
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the University of Delaware Library Special Collections Repository

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