Van Doren, Mark

Van Doren, Mark

1894–1973, American poet and critic, b. Hope, Vermilion co., Ill., grad. Univ. of Illinois, 1914, Ph.D. Columbia, 1920; brother of Carl Van DorenVan Doren, Carl (Clinton),
1885–1950, American editor and author, b. Hope, Vermilion co., Ill., grad. Univ. of Illinois, 1907, Ph.D. Columbia, 1911; brother of Mark Van Doren. He lectured at Columbia from 1911 and was an associate in English until 1930.
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. He taught English at Columbia (1920–59), where he was a renowned and dedicated teacher. He was also on the staff of the Nation (1924–28, 1935–38). With Carl Van Doren he wrote American and British Literature since 1890 (1939). He wrote critical studies of various authors, including John Dryden (1920) and Nathaniel Hawthorne (1949), compiled several anthologies, and collected his lectures on poetry in The Noble Voice (1946). As a poet Van Doren was deeply influenced by Wordsworth. Among his volumes of poems are Collected Poems, 1922–1938 (1939; Pulitzer Prize) and Morning Worship and Other Poems (1959). Other writings include novels and a play, The Last Days of Lincoln (1959). He also wrote the influential Liberal Education (1943).

Bibliography

See his collected stories (3 vol., 1962–68) and collected poems (1963 and 1969); his autobiography (1958); the memoirs of his wife, Dorothy Graffe Van Doren, The Professor and I (1959).

Van Doren, Mark

(1894–1972) poet, teacher, writer; born in Hope, Ill. (brother of Carl Van Doren). He studied at the University of Illinois (B.A. 1914; M.A. 1915), and Columbia University (Ph.D. 1920), where he taught English (1920–59). He also taught at St. John's College (Maryland) (1937–57), and Harvard (1963). A prolific scholar and writer, he wrote children's books, critical studies, and plays, notably The Last Days of Lincoln (1959). He is best known for his carefully crafted poetry, as in Collected and New Poems, 1924–1963 (1963). He lived in New York City and Falls Village, Conn.