Robert Fitzgerald
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- In full:
- Robert Stuart Fitzgerald
- Died:
- January 16, 1985, Hamden, Connecticut (aged 74)
- Awards And Honors:
- Bollingen Prize (1961)
Robert Fitzgerald (born October 12, 1910, Geneva, New York, U.S.—died January 16, 1985, Hamden, Connecticut) American poet, educator, and critic who was best known for his translations of Greek classics.
Fitzgerald grew up in Springfield, Illinois, and attended Harvard University, from which he received a B.A. in 1933. He worked as a journalist at the New York Herald Tribune (1933–35) and Time magazine (1936–49) and in 1946 began teaching at Sarah Lawrence College. He later held positions at a number of universities, including Princeton, Harvard, and Notre Dame. From 1984 to 1985 Fitzgerald was poetry consultant to the Library of Congress (now poet laureate consultant in poetry) but served in a limited capacity due to poor health.
In 1931 Fitzgerald’s poetry began to appear in literary journals. Four years later his first collection, Poems, was published. His later works include A Wreath for the Sea (1943), In the Rose of Time: Poems 1931–1956 (1956), and Spring Shade: Poems, 1931–1970 (1971). Beginning in the mid-1930s Fitzgerald began translating ancient Greek plays. With the American critic and poet Dudley Fitts, he translated works by Sophocles (The Antigone of Sophocles [1939] and Oedipus Rex [in The Oedipus Cycle, 1949]) and Euripides (The Alcestis of Euripides, 1936). He also translated Sophocles’ Oedipus at Colonus (1941), Homer’s The Odyssey (1961) and The Iliad (1963), and Virgil’s Aeneid (1983). Praised for their boldness and clarity, many of Fitzgerald’s translations of the classics became standard texts. In 1961 he won the first Bollingen Award given for the translation of poetry for his version of The Odyssey, published that year. Fitzgerald also edited collections of James Agee’s poetry and short prose and, with his wife, Sally, a collection of the occasional prose of Flannery O’Connor (Mystery and Manners, 1969). The criticism of literature is the topic of his Enlarging the Change: The Princeton Seminars in Literary Criticism, 1949–1951 (1985).