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Texas Historical
Literature 
Source: The Handbook of
Texas Online
(page 4)
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In addition to the Southern,
Western, and Urban traditions in Texas fiction, a fourth,
the Chicano tradition, has had a definite impact in the
past thirty years. Americo Paredes's folkloric study of
Texas-Mexican culture, "With His Pistol in His
Hand": A Border Ballad and Its Hero (1958)
reconstructed the story of Gregorio Cortez Lira, a
Mexican American who killed an Anglo sheriff in a
misunderstanding over the ownership of a horse. Cortez's
flight from a huge posse of Texas Rangers inspired
corridos celebrating his courage and tenacity, while
attacking the rangers for their chauvinistic racism.
Paredes's effort to overturn the romanticizing of the
rangers by such Anglo authors as Webb and Dobie made his
book a seminal text among Mexican-American intellectuals.
Many years later Paredes
published a novel written during the late 1930s titled
George Washington Gómez (1990), which, among other
things, satirized the figure of Dobie as a garrulous
racist named K. Hank Harvey, the "Historical Oracle
of the State." One Anglo writer, Chester Seltzer,
writing under the pen name Amado Muro, wrote so well of
Mexican life on the El Paso border that for many years he
was assumed to be Mexican American. His Collected Stories
appeared in 1971. Tomás Rivera became the first Chicano
author of fiction in Texas to win acclaim. In 1970 his
"...y no se lo trago la tierra" [...And the
Earth Did Not Part], a series of twelve sketches
developed in an experimental manner, won the Quinto Sol
Award. Stories from this collection have appeared in
textbook anthologies of American literature as part of
the multicultural movement of the late 1980s and 1990s.
The most prolific Chicano
novelist is Rolando Hinojosa, who since 1973 has
published a series of interrelated works under the broad
title, "The Klail City Death Trip." Set mostly
in the valley, his novels employ experimental narrative
techniques of multiple voices and documents, placing more
emphasis on dialogue and nuance than plot and character.
Estampas del valle y otras obras/Sketches of the Valley
and Other Works appeared in a bilingual edition in 1973.
This work was later recast by Hinojosa in English as The
Valley (1983) and is probably his best-known novel. Klail
City y sus alrededores [Klail City and its Surroundings],
published in 1975, won the Casa de las Americas Prize.
Generaciones y semblanzas appeared in 1977. Rites and
Witnesses, in 1982, was Hinojosa's first novel written
only in English. His other works include Dear Rafe
(1950), Partners in Crime (1985), and Becky and her
Friends (1990).
The forgotten Texas Chicano novelist is John Rechy, a
native of El Paso who has set parts of much of his
fiction in that region. He is known nationally for his
long-time association with Los Angeles and his frank
advocacy of gay themes and sensational material. His
Texas-related work includes City of Night (1964), This
Day's Death (1969), The Fourth Angel (1972), and
Marilyn's Daughter (1988). Other Chicano novels and short
stories include Max Martinez, The Adventures of the
Chicano Kid and Other Stories (1982), Joseph V.
Torres-Metzgar, Below the Summit, and Estela Portillo
Trambley, Rain of Scorpions (1975).
Three younger Chicano writers
who have received recognition are Lionel Garcia, Sandra
Cisneros, and Dagoberto Gilb. Garcia's Hardscrub (1990),
a novel about a poor Mexican family growing up on a
meager West Texas farm, shared the fiction award of the
Texas Institute of Letters in 1990. Sandra Cisneros's
politically correct vision of Hispanic feminism found a
national audience in her collection of stories, Woman
Hollering Creek (1991). Dagoberto Gilb's The Magic of
Blood (1993), a strong collection of stories about
working-class Hispanics set mostly in El Paso, won the
Texas Institute of Letters fiction award.
Short fiction also enjoyed a burst of growth in the
postwar era. Traditional stories from O. Henry to Sylvan
Karchmer were brought together in 21 Texas Short Stories
(1954), edited by William W. Peery. In 1974 James P.
White anthologized both well-known and beginning authors
in The Bicentennial Collection of Texas Short Stories. A
similar mix of established and novice authors appeared in
Texas Stories & Poems (1978), edited by Walter
McDonald and James P. White. The decade of the 1980s,
however, saw the publication of the most numerous
collections of short stories, which brought before the
public the work of a host of talented writers, including
Tom Zigal, Par Carr, James Crumley, Jan Seale, and
others.
The principal collections
include Her Work: Stories by Texas Women (1982), edited
by Lou Rodenberger; South by Southwest: 24 Stories from
Modern Texas (1986), edited by Don Graham; Prize Stories:
Texas Institute of Letters (1986), edited by Marshall
Terry; New Growth: Contemporary Short Stories by Texas
Writers (1989), edited by Lyman Grant; Common Bonds:
Stories by and about Modern Texas Women (1990), edited by
Suzanne Comer; New Growth II: Contemporary Short Stories
by Texas Writers (1993), edited by Mark Busby; and Texas
Bound: 19 Texas Stories (1994), edited by Kay Cattarulla.
Besides anthologies, numerous individual volumes of short
stories by Texas writers were published during the 1970s
and 1980s. Carolyn Osborn was one of the most productive
and artistic; her collections include A Horse of Another
Color (1977), The Fields of Memory (1984), and Warriors
and Maidens (1991). Mary Gray Hughes's The Calling (1980)
exhibited a high degree of craft, as did Dave Hickey's
resurrection of his stories from the 1960s, Prior
Convictions (1989).
Afoot in a Field of Men (1983)
by Pat Ellis Taylor (who subsequently changed her name to
Pat LittleDog) depicted the down-and-out lives of hippie
families living in an unglamorous Dallas. Marshall
Terry's Dallas Stories (1987) explored the lives of the
well-to-do in Dallas, while A. C. Greene's The Highland
Park Woman (1983) ranged from the rich suburbs of Dallas
to West Texas ranches. Robert Flynn's Seasonal Rain and
Other Stories (1986) brought together stories about West
Texas, and a second collection, Living with the Hyenas
(1995), comprised stories set in West Texas and Vietnam.
Annette Sanford's Lasting
Attachments (1989) exhibited a quiet sureness about the
lives of Texas women; Jim Sanderson's Bit by the Metal
(1993) won the 1992 Kenneth Patchen Prize; Pat Carr's
Night of the Luminaries (1986) spoke in spare rhythms of
modern themes; Janet Peery's Alligator Dance (1993)
employed an energetic vernacular style; Donley Watt's Can
You Get There From Here? (1994) used laconism to capture
a Texas voice; James Hannah's Desperate Measures (1988)
offered dark glimpses into the lives of working-class
East Texans; Jan Epton Seale's Airlift and Other Stories
(1992) concentrated on revealing the lives of women in
Texas; and James Crumley's Whores (1988) brought together
the great title story with other quite effective work.
In addition to the proliferation of fiction since World
War II, there has been increased activity in organized
study and commentary on Texas writing. If the first
decades of the century were spent in collecting stories
of farm and range, the last decades have been spent in
critical classification and commentary. Indeed the 1980s
might justly be labeled the Age of Criticism. Two major
academic conferences helped point the way. The first,
held in 1983 at the University of Texas at Austin,
resulted in the publication of The Texas Literary
Tradition: Fiction Folklore History, edited by Don
Graham, James W. Lee, and William T. Pilkington.
This book contained essays and
an extensive bibliography. A second conference was held
at North Texas State University in 1986. Centers for the
study of Texas and southwestern literature were
established at the University of North Texas and
Southwest Texas State University. Monographs and
collections of essays devoted to such authors as
Katherine Anne Porter and Larry McMurtry were plentiful.
Throughout the period much lively debate surrounded the
whole question of Texas literature. A useful collection
showing all sides is Range Wars: Heated Debates, Sober
Reflections, and Other Assessments of Texas Writing
(1989), edited by Craig Clifford and Tom Pilkington.
There were also several volumes addressing various
aspects of Texas writing. William T. Pilkington's My
Blood's Country: Studies in Southwestern Literature
(1973) was a pioneering examination of Southwestern
literature from Cabeza de Vaca to Larry McMurtry.
Pilkington's Inventing Texas: The Literature of the Lone
Star State (1981) offered a brief survey of developments
in Texas writing. A. C. Greene's The Fifty Best Books on
Texas stirred up a lot of interest. Later, James W. Lee's
Classics of Texas Fiction (1887) contained useful
commentary on additional Texas books. C. L. Sonnichsen's
From Hopalong to Hud: Thoughts on Western Fiction (1978)
included several chapters highly pertinent to Texas
writing. Don Graham's Texas: A Literary Portrait (1986)
divided the state into literary regions and reported on
interesting work about the state by famous visitors such
as Graham Greene and Gertrude Stein.
Drama remains a relatively minor genre in Texas writing,
although, according to anthologist William B. Martin,
"a solid body of respectable Texas plays does
exist." This is not a large assertion, however, and
the evidence suggests that it is about all that can be
claimed. Texas drama in the twentieth century has
generally explored the same themes as fiction. Preston
St. Vrain Jones's "Texas Trilogy," the best
known plays about Texas, depicted in rather pedestrianly
realistic terms the lives of small-town West Texas
racists, cheerleaders-cum-waitresses, and crotchety old
settlers confronting the challenges of time and
modernity.
Although they achieved
widespread popularity in the state, they did not succeed
in New York. The three plays composing the trilogy, The
Knights of the White Magnolia (1973), Lu Ann Hampton
Laferty Oberlander (1974), and The Oldest Living Graduate
(1974), rarely rise above stereotypes, and the language
mainly sticks to rural idioms heavily sprinkled with
clichés. Comparisons with Eugene O'Neill proved
premature. The work of Horton Foote poses a similar
problem. Best known for the numerous films made from his
work, Foote is a solid if unexciting dramatist of
low-keyed language, quiet action, and genteel manners.
The Trip to Bountiful (1954) and 1918 (1974-77) are
typical.
With roots in early television,
Foote may also be remembered for Harrison, Texas: Eight
Television Plays by Horton Foote (1956). Other notable
Texas plays include a number of works of strictly
regional interest. L. Ramsey Yelvington's A Cloud of
Witnesses (1955) tells, for the millionth time, the story
of the Alamo, only this time, and not the first, in
verse. Exploring small-town Texas life seems to be both a
preoccupation and severe limitation for Texas
playwrights.
Oliver Hailey's Who's Happy
Now? (1967) and Kith and Kin (1986) probe in a comic vein
the lives of close-knit small-town Texas families. Jack
Heifner's short plays, such as Vanities (1977), Porch
(1977), and Patio (1978), combine Texas comic idioms with
less sunny appraisals of lives spent in provincial
settings. Mary Rohde's Ladybuy, Ladybug, Fly Away Home
(1977) explores feminist themes in a small-town
beauty-parlor setting. James McLure exploits good-ol'-boy
stereotypes in Lone Star (1979), a study of the effect of
the Vietnam War on a returning veteran, and in Laundry
and Bourbon (1980) he examines the women in the lives of
the characters of the earlier play.
In plays such as The Night Hank
Williams Died (1989) Larry L. King has tried to tap the
same success that he enjoyed with his comic portrayal of
life in a small town in The Best Little Whorehouse in
Texas (1978), co-written with Peter Masterson. This
musical play, based upon King's journalistic piece about
the closing of the Chicken Ranch, a famous brothel
outside La Grange, Texas, had a long run on Broadway.
Also worth mentioning is John Logan's Jack Ruby,
All-American Boy (1970). One black playwright who has
utilized Texas materials is Ted Shine, whose Shoes (1970)
examines racial themes against the background of an
exclusive Dallas country club. On balance, Texas drama
has a long way to go before it produces any work equal to
that of such national dramatists as Eugene O'Neill,
Arthur Miller, or Tennessee Williams.
Before World War II Texas poetry flourished, but without
distinction. There were many local poets of modest
ability, and nearly every town counted a local versifier
or two among its denizens. State government selected a
poet laureate, but in general the poetasters honored with
the title were no more distinguished than the politicians
who appointed them. Typical is John Lang Sinclair, a
representative poet of the day who is remembered only for
the song "The Eyes of Texas."
Poets in the early part of the
century were often influenced by minor poets of the past
rather than the more invigorating new poets who were
producing the most significant American verse of the
century, such as the modernists Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot,
William Carlos Williams, and Wallace Stevens. Instead,
Texas poets chose minor nineteenth-century Southern poets
as their models, such men as Henry Timrod and Sidney
Lanier, or, in the twentieth-century, such
backward-looking poets as Rupert Brooke, a British poet
killed in World War I, or rhymesters like Joyce Kilmer,
author of "Trees."
A generous sampling of Texas
poetry during the early part of the century appears in
Hilton Ross Greer's anthology Voices of the Southwest: A
Book of Texan Verse (1923). Altogether too many of these
poems are cloyed with phony archaic
diction-"o'er" and "hath" and
"begirt"-and altogether too many invoke Love
and such personified abstractions. Few were the poems
that actually drew upon the Texas landscape or culture or
people in any convincing way. Two more anthologies, Texas
Poets (1936) and The Greater Texas Anthology of Verse
(1939), contain hundreds of poems by, as R. S. Gwynn puts
it, "stereotypical trinomial poetesses with resonant
names" such as Ura Link Eckhardt and Corrie Birdsong
Teagarden.
Gywnn concludes justly that
"a mere recitation of the table of contents of Texas
Poets surpasses the lyricism of the poems collected in
it." Easily the most prolific and best known Texas
poet of the late Twenties onward was Grace Noll Crowell,
who published twenty-two volumes between 1928 and 1959.
During her stint as poet laureate she published a small
book of Texas poems in honor of the Texas Centennial.
Bright Destiny (1936) contains her best, most concrete
work, but most of her poetry was in the inspirational
vein and is collected in Poems of Inspiration and Courage
(1965).
Still, from the 1930s there are a few poets who at least
occasionally broke away from the pallid verse of
sentimental idealism and Christian bromides and sought to
wring poems out of the Texas earth. Karle Wilson Baker,
for example, in Dreamers on Horseback (1929), tried to
capture the differing moods of Texas in her sequence
"Some Towns of Texas," and in her poem
"Song of the Forerunners" she assessed the
differing contributions made to Texas history by men and
women. Berta Hart Nance's "Cattle," from Flute
in the Distance (1935), contains the often-quoted
couplet: "Other states were carved or born,/ Texas
grew from hide and horn."
Another poet of the 1930s, long
since ignored, was Lexie Dean Robertson. Red Heels (1928)
contained some interesting realistic poems about life in
oilfield boomtowns, including "Aftermath,"
which recounts the ravages upon land and spirit following
the end of a boom. In Acorn on the Roof (1939) Robertson
included twelve Texas poems, some in dialect and all in
plain, straightforward diction. "Carbon Black,"
for example, tells in dialect the story of a woman and a
community ruined by industrial pollution, an unusual
subject for Texas poetry of that era. I Keep a Rainbow
(1932) also contained some poems dealing realistically
with homely Texas subjects. Boyce House, a Fort Worth
newspaperman known primarily for his collections of Texas
jokes and stories, wrote poems of considerable vitality.
Texas Rhythms (1936) contained
a number of original poems, including "Texas
Poets," a prescient analysis of the poetic scene in
the Centennial year. House began, "You write about
bluebonnets" and urged poets instead to write about
the events, past and present, that make Texas unique. He
mentions such available subjects as "Clyde and
Bonnie" and "Farmer Jim and Ma Ferguson,"
concluding, "And yet, Texas poets, you swoon when
you behold a dew-/ drop enfolded by a rose!"
Interestingly, Bonnie Parker, Clyde Barrow's gun moll,
wrote ballads that have more verve than the piles of
poetry about bluebonnets, mockingbirds, and the Alamo
produced by most of the poet laureates of the era.
During the 1940s and 1950s, and increasingly in the
following decades, Texas poetry had its greatest period
of development. More technically accomplished poets began
to publish, with a keener sense of English and American
poetic traditions. Several wrote in traditional meters
and genres. Arthur M. Sampley, a university-trained poet,
brought out This Is Our Time in 1943 and Selected Poems,
1937-1971 in 1971. In such volumes as Man Now (1954) and
A Beginning (1966) William Burford exhibited a technical
facility with a willingness to treat, in some poems,
specifically Texas materials.
Robert Lee Brothers, Jr.,
displayed a strong affinity with the poetry of Emily
Dickinson in tightly disciplined verse in the poems
collected in Democracy of Dust (1947) and The Hidden Harp
(1952). William Barney, deeply influenced by Robert
Frost, revealed a keen eye for Texas customs and rhythms
in Kneel from the Stone (1952) and The Killdeer Crying
(1977), edited by Dave Oliphant. Martin Staples Shockley
published a number of clever poems about Texas landscapes
and Texas critters that have been collected in Last
Roundup: Selected Published and Unpublished Works 1994).
Joseph Colin Murphey's A Return to the Landscape (1979)
presented spare, unsentimental, and at times deeply
moving portraits of Texas folk. Gene Shuford wrote of
gunfighters and other frontier topics in taut verse; his
Selected Poems appeared in 1972. Vassar Miller's poems
began appearing in book form in 1960 and were collected
in 1991 in If I Had Wheels of Love.
Intense, concentrated, and
characterized by religious and philosophical themes,
Miller's work, which has an audience beyond the state,
has little Texas resonance. Novelist R. G. Vliet also
wrote poetry of note, including Events & Celebrations
(1966), The Man with the Black Mouth (1970), and a long
ballad, Clem Maverick: The Life and Death of a Country
Music Singer (1983). One of the most prolific of the
poets of the Seventies is Dave Oliphant, who has adapted
the techniques and free-verse rhythms of William Carlos
Williams to Texas subjects. Oliphant's volumes include
Lines & Mounds (1976), Footprints (1978), Maria's
Poems (1987), and Austin (1985), a book-length poetic
history of the city that is the longest of his series of
poems titled "Texas Towns and Cities."
A number of other poets have written verse attempting to
come to grips with the specific local facts of Texas
culture and history. Charles Behlen's Perdition's
Keepsake (1978) belongs in this category, as do Sandra
Lynn's I Must Hold These Strengths (1980) and Where
Rainbows Wait for Rain: The Big Bend Country (1989);
Betsy Colquitt's Honor Card & Other Poems (1980);
Naomi Sahib Nye's Different Ways to Pray (1980) and
Hugging the Juke Box (1982); Betty Adcock's Beholdings
(1988); Jerry Bradley's Simple Versions of Disaster
(1981); and Leon Stokesbury's Often in Different
Landscapes (1976).
Among Chicano poets, Rosemary
Catacalos in Again for the First Time (1984) writes of
Mexican and Anglo lives intertwined in Texas culture,
chiefly in and around San Antonio. Ray Gonzalez in
Twilights and Chants (1987) demonstrates a feeling for
landscapes and solitudes. Carmen Tafolla's Sonnets to
Human Beings (1987) probes states of feeling and culture
among Mexican Americans. Tino Villanuevo's Scene from the
Movie GIANT (1993) is a substantial narrative poem that
relates the impact of the celebrated Hollywood film upon
a young Chicano boy living in San Marcos, Texas. Black
poets who have contributed their views of contemporary
Texas include Lorenzo Thomas and Harryette Mullen. Susan
Wood deserves mention for her precisely rendered poems in
Campo Santo.
Albert Goldbarth, a nationally
recognized poet who lived in Texas for a number of years,
produced one of the most interesting long poems in the
state's history, in his Different Fleshes: a novel/poem
(1979), a richly allusive modernist poem intermingling
Paris of the 1920s with Round Rock, Texas, from the Sam
Bass era forward. Other poets who have been active in
chapbook publication include Thomas Whitbread, David
Yates, James Hoggard, Paul Woodruff, Rick Sale, J. M.
Linebarger, Stan Rice, Paul Foreman, Terry Wiggs, and
Karl Kopp. Among the most prolific and award-winning
poets of Texas in the 1970s and 1980s is Walter McDonald,
whose poems have appeared in many national quarterlies
and collected in such volumes as Caliban in Blue and
Other Poems (1976), One Thing Leads to Another (1978),
Working Against Time (1981), and Rafting the Brazos
(1988). In the mid-1990s McDonald was probably the most
Texas-rooted poet with the highest standing in and
outside the state.
During the 1980s poetry in Texas underwent the same kind
of dialectical debate that surrounded fiction. One group
championed the "nativist" position that Texas
poets, following in the tradition of William Carlos
Williams, should develop a poetry based on local
conditions that looked inward and not to Europe or the
classical past for inspiration. The other view proposed
that poets should draw upon modernist and postmodernist
currents to produce a poetry of "otherness"
resistant to long-standing traditions of frontier
Protestant conservatism and chauvinism. Surveying Texas
poetry in 1987, William Lockwood observed that there is
"no nationally recognized poetic voice resident in
Texas."
Although his assessment is
correct, there is no dearth of Texas poets trying to find
their voice and a larger audience. Poetry in Texas
continues to be among the liveliest genres of writing.
Small presses, local quarterlies, anthologies, symposia,
and local poetry readings constantly spring up to
stimulate poetic activity. Texas in Poetry: A 150-Year
Anthology (1994), edited by Billy Bob Hill, offered
Texans a fine opportunity to assess the poetic traditions
of the state, ranging from established figures such as
William Barney and Walter McDonald to promising newcomers
such as Violette Newton and Betsy Berry. A succession of
annuals published by the University of North Texas, New
Texas '91 through New Texas '95, continues to bring
together the most recent work in short fiction and
poetry. These and other publications by regional and
small presses ensure a lively, ongoing field of poetic
production.
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