Select date

October 2024
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

Remembering Robinson Jeffers (January 10, 1887–January 20, 1962)

10-1-2024 < Counter Currents 26 456 words
 

Robinson Jeffers, January 10, 1887–January 20, 1962


331 words


Robinson Jeffers was born on January 10, 1887.


Once regarded as one of the greatest American poets, Jeffers is largely forgotten by the literary establishment today, no doubt because of his politically incorrect subjects and views. A Nietzschean who was accused of fascist sympathies (which he denied), he celebrated nature and the outdoors in his work, eschewing the abstruse modernist style that was fashionable in his day. He opposed the entry of the United States into the Second World War, and published a poem toward this end, “A Day is a Poem,” in 1941. His 1948 volume, The Double Axe and Other Poems, is filled with criticisms of the US and its actions and policies, and the publisher insisted on excising ten of the more controversial poems from the book, which were only published posthumously. Although the Second World War particularly inspired his ire, he had always been critical of America, which he had already accused of slipping “into the mould of its vulgarity, heavily thickening to empire” in his 1923 poem, “Shine, Perishing Republic.” He continued to write after 1948, but as a result of the controversy surrounding his politics, his work declined into obscurity throughout the remaining years of his life, and remains so today.


You can buy Jonathan Bowden’s Reactionary Modernism here.


Jonathan Bowden was particularly enamored of Jeffers, and in 2007 he gave a lecture entitled “Robinson Jeffers: Misanthrope Extraordinaire,” the text and audio of which is available on this site, here. Bowden also spoke about Jeffers during the last interview he gave before his untimely death, which was given to Counter-Currents Radio; the text and audio can be accessed here.


Counter-Currents has run the following excerpts from Jeffers’ work:



See also posts tagged Robinson Jeffers for those where he is mentioned in passing.


In spite of his obscurity, Jeffers does retain a following, and many of his works can be found for sale both new and secondhand.










Print