Twentieth-century literary papers include representatives of a wide array of movements, forms, and points of view. The papers of western writers Owen Wister and Zane Grey reflect the popularity of local color writing at the turn of the century and of regional fiction in the 1920s and 1930s. The collections of Benjamin Holt Ticknor, Hiram Haydn, Oscar Williams, and Ken McCormick provide the perspective of literary agents and editors. Works by women range from those of the poet Muriel Rukeyser–who was concerned with the Spanish Civil War, women’s rights, and the Vietnam War–to those of novelist-philosopher Ayn Rand–who championed individualism, capitalism, and anticommunism. Small but interesting collections exist for the poets Langston Hughes, Robert Frost, John Ciardi, and Louis Simpson. The division has a particular attachment to the papers of poet-dramatist Archibald MacLeish, who served as Librarian of Congress during World War II and reorganized the entire agency. The rich correspondence in MacLeish’s papers include several outspoken letters from Ernest "Papa" Hemingway about the incarceration of poet Ezra Pound for pro-Fascist war broadcasts from Italy. Some other modern fiction writers represented by major collections are James M. Cain, James A. Michener, Shirley Jackson, Bernard Malamud, Truman Capote, and Philip Roth.
Theatrical papers also have a long history in the division. Actress Frances "Fanny" Kemble caused a stir visiting the Capitol during highly oratorical pre-Civil War sessions, and some seventy-five items of her papers are here. A much larger collection ********s the career of classical actress Charlotte Cushman. The John Thompson Ford Papers are a rich source for theatrical history from the manager’s side, also providing interesting information on the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln at Ford’s Theatre. Twentieth-century theatrical records include newer manifestations of the performing arts. Represented by major collections are film actress Lillian Gish; playwright and diplomat Clare Boothe Luce; Broadway and Hollywood director Joshua Logan; television performer Sid Caesar; actor Vincent Price; humorist and actor Groucho Marx; and well-known theatrical couples Ruth Gordon and Garson Kanin and Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronyn.
The Library of Congress also holds some remarkable fine arts-related collections. The work of both amateur and professional artists–such as George R. West, D. M. N. Stouffer, and Charles Reed–may be discovered in collections ********ing nineteenth-century scientific explorations, diplomatic missions, and military engagements. More famous artists, like portrait painter and inventor Samuel Finley Breese Morse and painter and etcher James McNeill Whistler, are represented by their own collections. The Whistler collection, which was compiled by Joseph and Elizabeth Robins Pennell, is one of the finest sources in the world for information on Whistler and his contemporaries as well as on the earlier pre-Raphaelite painters and their patrons. Sculptors Paul Wayland Bartlett, John Gutzon de la Mothe Borglum, Jo Davidson, Daniel Chester French, Vinnie Ream Hoxie, Adelaide Johnson, Lee Oskar Lawrie, and William Zorach all have collections of papers in the Manuscript Division. Correspondence, client files, designs, drawings, photographs, and other materials (divided among the Library’s custodial divisions) ******** the influential career of industrial designer Raymond Loewy and filmmakers and designers Charles and Ray Eames.
The papers of photographer Frances Benjamin Johnston, celebrated chiefly for her portraits of prominent personalities, also include information on her photographs of southern gardens and architecture. Similarly, the papers of architects Montgomery C. Meigs, William Thornton, Charles Follen McKim, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe ******** the design and construction of America’s built environment, from bridges and aqueducts, to the United States Capitol, to award-winning modern commercial and residential structures.
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