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Encyclopedia > John Crow Ransom

Image:Ransom.jpg


John Crowe Ransom (April 30, 1888 - July 3, 1974) was an United States poet, essayist, and social commentator.


John Crowe Ransom was born in Pulaski, Tennessee. He was the son of a Methodist minister.


At age fifteen, Ransom entered Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee and graduated from that institution in 1909 at age 21. From 1910 to 1913 he was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University in England.


In 1914 Ransom was appointed to the English department at Vanderbilt. His career was interrupted by World War I where he served as an artillery officer in France.


After the war, Ransom returned to Vanderbilt as a member of the English department faculty. He was associated with the group of writers there known as the Fugitives.


In 1930 Ransom joined with 11 other Southern Agrarians to publish the agrarian manifesto I'll Take My Stand which bemoaned the tide of modernism that appeared to be sweeping away traditional southern and American culture. In the 1930s Ransom published various essays influenced by his agrarian beliefs, but by 1945 Ransom turned away from the agrarian position.


His collection of essays, God Without Thunder was published in that same year which was followed by two other volumes, The World's Body in 1938 and The New Criticism in 1941.


In 1937 Ransom departed Vanderbilt and accepted a position at Kenyon College in Ohio.


In 1945 his Selected Poems was published. After arriving at Kenyon he became the editor of the Kenyon Review and remained in that position until 1959.


In 1966 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.


In 1972 a collection of unpublished essays from the Kenyon Review were published.


Ransom died in Gambier, Ohio. He is buried behind Chalmers Library on the campus of Kenyon College.


  Results from FactBites:
 
John Crowe Ransom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (355 words)
John Crowe Ransom was born in Pulaski, Tennessee.
At age fifteen, Ransom entered Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee and graduated from that institution in 1909 at age 21.
In 1914 Ransom was appointed to the English department at Vanderbilt.
Ransom_John_tn (1301 words)
John Crowe Ransom, a member of the Fugitive group at Vanderbilt University, is known for his poetry, which allows for individual readers' interpretation.
John Crowe Ransom was born on April 30, 1888 in Pulaski, Tennessee, the next to the youngest of four children, two boys and two girls, of John James Ransom and the former Ella Crowe.
Ransom, being an Agrarian, never organized himself into an active movement, however, and although they wrote and lectured for a cause, the filminess of their coarse utopia was demonstrated when the depression laid waste to the Agrarian South.
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