Title: | Corman mss. IV |
Collection No.: | LMC 2623 |
Dates: | 1991-1998 |
Quantity: | Quantity: 1 folio |
Abstract: | The Corman mss. IV, 1991-1998, consists mostly of letters from poet, translator and editor Cid Corman, 1924-2004, to poet and publisher Darrin Daniel. They relate in part to the publication of Corman's poetry by Daniel at Cityful Press, but range broadly over literary and other matters. |
Location: | Lilly - Folio |
Language: | Materials are in English . |
Repository: | Lilly Library 1200 E. Seventh St. Bloomington, Indiana 47405-5500 Business Number: 812-855-2452 liblilly@iu.edu URL: https://libraries.indiana.edu/lilly-library |
Named Sidney, Corman was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts. He received his B.A. from Tufts University in 1945 and did graduate work at the Universities of Michigan and North Carolina. In 1949 Corman created "This is Poetry" a radio program airing on WMEX in Boston which ran for three years. His next venture was a poetry magazine, Origin which featured and sometimes debuted such poets as Robert Creeley, William Bronk, Denise Levertov, Lorine Niedecker, Charles Olson, and Louis Zukofsky. Corman hit later established Origin Press, publishing some of these same authors as well as his own works. In the late 1950s he moved to Kyoto, Japan where he found work as a private teacher of English and poetry. He married Shizumi Konishi in 1965 and opened C.C.'s, a coffee and dessert shop that also served as a venue for poetry readings. He lived in the States several times over the years, but in 1982 moved permanently to Kyoto where he remained until his death in March 2004. His published works include over 100 books and pamphlets of poetry, translations of French, Italian and Japanese poets, and several volumes of essays.
Lorine Niedecker, 1903-1970, was a twentieth century, Wisconsin, Objectivist poet. She spent most of her early life in rural isolation, only surrounded by the sounds of the river and natural landscapes near her which strongly influenced her poetry. Niedecker is best known as a "poet of place" and wrote specifically about the Rock River and Blackhawk Island near Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. From the mid-1940s to 1960 Niedecker did not publish her work due to isolation and the difficulties that caused for getting published. In the 1960s, there was a revival of interest in her work which created friendship between Niedecker and other notable poets like Cid Corman and Basil Bunting. It was this revival that caused Niedecker to go back to writing until her death in 1970 from a cerebral hemorrhage.
Darrin Daniel is poet and publisher of Corman's poetry. He has published collections of his own poetry, such as Harry Smith: Fragments of a Northwest Life, and is also is a contributor to journals and magazines like Rain Taxi Review of Books and Portlandia. Daniel is also the founder of Cityful Press, which has been publishing writers at all career stages since 1991, and he is currently the executive director of Cup of Excellence.
The Corman mss. IV, 1991-1998, consist mostly of letters from poet, translator and editor Cid Corman, 1924-2004, to poet and publisher Darrin Daniel. They relate in part to the publication of Corman's poetry by Daniel at Cityful Press, but range broadly over literary and other matters. Also present is a draft of Corman's poem The Ultimate Wise Guy and some notes concerning Corman and poet Lorine Niedecker.
Collection size: 67 items
This collection is arranged following original order.
This collection is open for research.
Many collections are housed offsite; retrieval requires advance notice. Please make an appointment a minimum of one week in advance of your visit.
Photography and digitization may be restricted for some collections. Copyright restrictions may apply. Before publishing, researchers are responsible for securing permission from all applicable rights holders, then filling out the Permission to Publish form.
[Item], Corman mss. IV, Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.
Gift: 2008