Preliminary Inventory of the American
Literary Manuscripts Records,
1930-1981
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Descriptive Summary
Title
American Literary
Manuscripts Records,
1930-1981
Creator
American Literary Manuscripts
Extent
11.5 Linear Feet,
8598 Items
Repository
Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special
Collections Library, Duke University
Language
English.
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Administrative Information
Access Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
However, patrons must sign the Acknowledgment of Legal Responsibility and Privacy Rights form before using this
collection.
Also, all or portions of this collection may be housed off-site in Duke University's Library Service Center. Consequently, there may be a 24-hour delay in obtaining these materials.
Please contact Research Services staff before visiting the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library to use this collection.
Use Restrictions
The copyright interests in this collection have
not been transferred to Duke University. For more
information, consult the copyright section of the
Regulations and Procedures of the Rare Book, Manuscript,
and Special Collections Library.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], American Literary
Manuscripts Records, Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special
Collections Library, Duke University.
Provenance
The American Literary Manuscripts Records was
received by the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special
Collections Library as a gift in 1981 and 1989.
Processing Information
Processed by RBMSCL Staff
Completed September 27, 1989
Encoded by Joshua A. Kaiser
This finding aid is NCEAD compliant.
This collection is unprocessed: materials have not been ordered and described beyond their original condition.
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Biographical Note
In 1930 Professor Jay B. Hubbell proposed to the
American Literature Group of the Modern Language
Association of America that it should gather into an index
or catalog a record of the enormous amount of manuscript
materials in American literature so researchers and users
could readily locate the materials needed. Dr. Hubbell was
then asked to form a committee to formulate a plan. The
committee, made up of Professors Hubbell, Kenneth B.
Murdock, Ralph L. Rusk, and Robert Spiller contracted the
American Historical Association, which was planning a
similar program for history materials. The two groups
decided to join forces and compile a document relating to
manuscripts of American literature and to all phases of
American history. Funding problems caused this venture to
stalemate.
The idea was kept alive, however, and in 1941
another committee chaired by Robert Spiller was formed and
instructed to gather information on materials of American
literary history. This committee prepared in essay form a
"Guide to Resources for
Research in American Literary History: A Preliminary
Survey"
from data gathered informally--for the most
part by personal interview and correspondence. The second
World War caused plans for publication to be deferred.
Using the material collected in the 1940s as a
basis for renewed efforts, a new committee chaired by Lewis
Leary was formed in 1950 to study the feasibility of
continued work, since much of the previous work had been
used in volume 3 of the
Literary History of the United
States. The issue was discussed in a seminar,
"A Survey and Inventory of
American Literary Manuscripts,"
at the 1950 meeting
of MLA. The result was formal agreement on the need for
some form of guide to manuscript resources. The seminar
recommended formation of a committee on literary resources
with Leary as chairman.
In 1951 a working committee was appointed to
devise procedures and to commence gathering of data for
eventual publication of such a guide. This committee was
composed of Joseph Jones, chairman, University of Texas;
Ernest Marchand, San Diego State College; H. Dan Piper,
California Institute of Technology; J. Albert Robbins,
Indiana University; and Herman E. Spivey, University of
Tennessee.
The purpose of this project was to provide for
scholars a helpful new aid in their perpetual search for
new material. The first edition published in 1960 indicates
the nature and scope of American literary manuscripts in
over 270 libraries pertaining to approximately 2,350
American writers. The specific primary purpose, as stated
in the preface of this publication,
"is to assist scholars, librarians, dealers,
and collectors in locating primary source materials
relating to American authors; to locate primary manuscript
sources with far greater use and accuracy than formerly; to
encourage collectors to deposit manuscripts where they
might be of greatest use and utility; and to encourage
librarians to think creatively about their collections and
to lend encouragement to manuscript departments."
The project was begun by compiling an extensive
list of writers, publishers, and critics, and then
formulating eight categories distinguished by symbols that
would accurately record the extent and variety of
holdings--manuscripts, journals, letters by and to,
documents, etc. A checklist containing some 2,000 names of
American authors was then sent to American
libraries--academic, fraternal, historical, public,
etc.--with instructions as to how to apply and to list the
eight categories of holdings. After the holdings were
compiled on cards a preliminary draft was produced and
circulated for rechecking. The resulting master file of
reporting libraries formed the 1960 edition of
American Literary
Manuscripts.
With publication of this volume, the American
Literature Section of MLA authorized continuance of the
committee with J. Albert Robbins as chairman of the new
group. In 1969 it was felt that a revision and update were
needed. The American Literature Section of MLA again
sponsored the project with John Albert Robbins as chairman
of the editorial board, which consisted of Professors A.W.
Plumstead, University of Massachusetts; Joseph V. Ridgely,
Columbia University; Kimball King, University of North
Carolina, Chapel Hill; F. Warren Roberts, University of
Texas; George Hendrick, University of Illinois; Edward P.
Nolan, University of Colorado; and John Stafford, San
Fernando Valley State College.
The 1960 list of authors was retained as a base
and expanded to include 2,750 authors, publishers, and
critics whose names were to be checked for locations and
holdings of manuscripts and other papers. The United States
was divided into first seven, then later, eight regions,
with each member of the editorial board acting as a
regional chairman. Each regional chairman then chose
regional associates within his region to solicit and
coordinate the holdings of the area assigned to him. During
the first year J. V. Ridgely and John Stafford resigned.
The Middle Atlantic region was divided into two regions and
Professors Alan Margolies of John Jay College of Criminal
Justice, CUNY, and Leo Weigant of the University of
Maryland were chosen to replace J. V. Ridgely. Professor
Thomas Wortham, University of California, Los Angeles,
replaced John Stafford in the Pacific Coast area.
Sixty-three regional associates were chosen.
The 1960 edition of
American Literary
Manuscripts was put on computer tape and print-outs
of the holdings reported by individual libraries were
distributed by the regional chairmen for rechecking,
updating, and revision along with instructions for listing
new additions and new authors. A completely new list could
be compiled if the library so desired. When all the
participating libraries and depositories completed their
listings they sent the compilations to the regional
associates who, in turn, sent them to the regional
chairmen. They edited the lists before sending them to
Professor Robbins, who did the overall editing and
transferring of the findings to computer tape. Print-outs
were again sent to the libraries for verification,
correction, and updating to 1975. When these were returned
and all corrections and additions were listed, the data was
inverted to provide an alphabetical list by author and the
master tape was sent to the publisher for machine-set
composition. The volume was printed from the computer tapes
by the University of Georgia Press in 1977.
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Collection Overview
The
American Literary
Manuscripts Records (accession #5-6-81) (8,098
items, 10.8 lf; dated 1930-1979) documents the process by
which the guide was created. It contains the correspondence
of J. A. Robbins with each of his editors for each region
of the United States (the Regional Chairmen), copies of the
directives sent to participating libraries, copies of the
master list of names to be checked, minutes of editorial
board meetings, descriptions of the project, a proposal for
a computerized updating of the census of library holdings
of American literary manuscripts, negotiations with the
publisher, grant requests, and reports. The correspondence
between Midwest Regional Chairman, George Hendrick, and his
Regional Associates is included in order to demonstrate how
the project operated. The questionnaires returned by the
libraries in that region are included. There are also ten
printouts, included as a random sampling of printouts
required. Acquired as part of the Jay B. Hubbell Center for
American Literary Historiography.
The addition (accession #89-093) (500 items, 1 lf;
dated 1962-1981) contains correspondence, background
material, page proofs, post-publication additions and
corrections, and publicity relating primarily to the 2nd
edition of
American Literary
Manuscripts published in 1977. It updates the
earlier edition published in 1960.
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Subject Headings
These are searchable subject entries for this collection. Performing a search on these subjects in the Duke University Libraries online catalog will bring up other related research materials.
-
Robbins, J. Albert (John Albert),
1914-
-
Hendrick, George.
-
American literary
manuscripts.
-
Manuscripts, American--United
States.
-
Authors,
American--Manuscripts--Catalogs.
-
American
literature--Manuscripts.
-
Catalogs, Union--United
States.
-
Book editors--United
States--Correspondence.
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Editors--United
States--Correspondence.
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Proofs.
-
Modern Language Association of America.
American Literature Section.
-
Modern Language Association of America.
American Literature Group. Committee on Manuscript
Holdings. American literary manuscripts.
-
Jay B. Hubbell Center for American
Literary Historiography.
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Preliminary Description of Unprocessed Collection
Accession 5-6-81
Box 1
Historical
Box 1
Historical File
Contains historical matter beginning with
Professor Hubbell's original proposal and continuing
through the first committee assigned to study the
feasibility of a guide to manuscripts of literary figures
to the publication of the first edition of
American Literary
Manuscripts.
Boxes 2-11
Volume
1-2
ALM II Project
Contains material relating to the
preparation and publication of the second edition of
American Literary
Manuscripts in 1977.
Box 2
Miscellany I
Contains correspondence relating to the
second edition's preliminary studies as to the need for
revision of the first edition, guidelines for revision,
formulary and varying drafts of procedures, a list of
authors to be surveyed, subvention of the project,
negotiations with the publishers, survey reports both to
the committee and to the Fels Foundation whose grant
financed the beginnings, and a directory of the
committee.
Box 3
Miscellany II
Contains minutes of committee meetings;
lists of additional authors to be considered for inclusion;
progress reports; and letters from George Hendrick to
participating libraries relating to
"checkback"
or verification of data
received. Also contains samples of print-outs, a project
summary, comments about the finished product, clippings
telling of special collections in certain libraries, and
pamphlets pertaining to bibliographies of manuscripts.
There is an obituary clipping about Inglis Fletcher among
the clippings.
Articles--
"What Happens to
Author' Manuscripts,"
by John Carter;
"Manuscript of 'The
Waste Land;'"
and
"The Father of Black
Nationalism,"
which appeared in the
New York Review of
Books for March 12, 1970. A brochure on the
Rise of Jewish
Literature is also in this box. In the pamphlet
folder are the following pamphlets:
Manuscripts for
Research,
The Ethical Structure
of Tamburlane,
Anne Goodwin Winslow:
An Annotated Check List of Her Published Works and of Her
Papers,
A Letter from the
Jackson Committee, a copy of the
CEAA
Newsletter for June 1970, and the
Bulletin of
Bibliography, Vol. 25, No. 3, which contains George
Hendrick's
"American Literary
Manuscripts in Continental Libraries."
Miscellaneous
letters concerning that article and a typescript article
"A Checklist of
American Literary Manuscripts in Australia, Canada, India,
Japan, and New Zealand"
complete Box 3.
Box 4
Correspondence of Albert Robbins
with miscellaneous people and his regional chairmen, except
for the Midwest region.
These letters are arranged
chronologically, first in a general folder for the
miscellaneous correspondents and then in separate folders
for each chairman.
Box 5
Correspondence between Albert
Robbins and George Hendrick, regional chairman of the
Midwest region.
Arranged chronologically.
Boxes 6-7
Correspondence of George Hendrick
and his regional associates
These letters are chronological within
folders for each associate.
Boxes 8-11
Volume
1-2
Reports of manuscript holdings in
the Midwest region
These are arranged first by reporting
library, then alphabetically by name of the author whose
holdings are being reported.