Afbeelding auteur

Diana Trilling (1905–1996)

Auteur van Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor

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Werken van Diana Trilling

Gerelateerde werken

The Portable D.H. Lawrence (1947) — Redacteur — 289 exemplaren
The Best American Essays 1998 (1998) — Medewerker — 190 exemplaren
The Jewish Writer (1998) — Medewerker — 52 exemplaren
The selected letters of D. H. Lawrence (1958) — Redacteur — 20 exemplaren

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Officiële naam
Trillling, Diana Rubin
Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Rubin, Diana (birth name)
Geboortedatum
1905-07-21
Overlijdensdatum
1996-10-23
Graflocatie
Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York, USA
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Woonplaatsen
New York, New York, USA
Wellfleet, Massachusetts, USA
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Opleiding
Radcliffe College (BA|1924)
Beroepen
literary critic
writer
essayist
Relaties
Trilling, Lionel (husband)
Organisaties
The Nation (magazine)
Korte biografie
Diana Rubin Trilling was born to emigré Polish Jews in the USA. Like her mother, Diana did not have a typical Jewish childhood. Until 1914, when they moved to Brooklyn, the family lived in Westchester County, New York, an area somewhat remote from Eastern European Jewish culture. Diana graduated from Radcliffe College. In 1929, she married Lionel Trilling, who became the first Jewish tenured professor of English at Columbia University, and had one son. The couple were members of the circle of writers and thinkers of the 1930s to the 1950s known as the New York Intellectuals. Diana Trilling's first professional ambition was to become a singer, but this was not successful. Her writing career began until 1941, when an editor of The Nation magazine asked Lionel Trilling to recommend someone to write unsigned reviews of recent fiction for the magazine, and Diana suggested herself for the job. Her reviews for The Nation, later collected under the title Reviewing the Forties (1978), examined the most important authors of the day, including Sartre, Bellow, Welty, Capote, Hersey, Maugham, Waugh, and Orwell. The Trillings were staunch anti-Communists, a position Diana wrote "was seldom far from the surface of my reviews." In 1948, Diana Trilling left the Nation to become an independent critic. Her subjects included the Oppenheimer, the Profumo and Hiss cases, Edith Wharton, and the Beat Generation, among many others. Her book Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor (1981) offered a profile of a middle-class woman on trial for murder after the first wave of 1970s feminism. Her last book was The Beginning of the Journey (1993), a chronicle of her marriage.

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Statistieken

Werken
11
Ook door
5
Leden
235
Populariteit
#96,241
Waardering
½ 3.7
ISBNs
24
Talen
2

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