Education
and Doctor of Philosophy (1972) at Columbia University.
(For those who believe America's bohemianism began in the ...)
For those who believe America's bohemianism began in the 1960s, this biography of Edna St. Vincent Millary serves as a powerful corrective. Possessed of an electric personality and a highly original poetic voice, Millary burst on the bohemian scene in 1917 with her poem "Renascence", went to Vassar on the financial support of her poetry's admirers, and made another grand entrance into bohemia upon her arrival in Greenwich Village. Her sexuality was as incandescent as her poetry. She smoked in public, took many lovers (men and women, single and married), flouted convention sensationally, and became the embodiment of the New Woman. She was known for her ardent bisexuality and for the extraordinary number of sexual partners she took. She left such figures as Edmund Wilson begging for favors. Nancy Milford was gotten unprecedented access to Millay's letters and journals, and this is the first authorized and authoritative Millay biography.
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biographer Distinguished Lecturer
and Doctor of Philosophy (1972) at Columbia University.
Milford is best known for her book Zelda about F. Scott Fitzgerald"s wife Zelda Fitzgerald. The book started out as her master"s thesis and was published to broad acclaim in 1970. Her most recent book is Vincent Millay, which was published in 2001.
She is currently working on a biography of Rose Kennedy.
Milford received her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Michigan, then earned an Master of Arts While considering writing to be her primary career, Milford has also taught at the University of Michigan, Princeton University, Brown University, Vassar College, New York University, Bennington College, Briarcliff College, and Bard College. In 2002, she became a visiting professor at Hunter College of the City University of New York, and has since joined the permanent faculty there as a Distinguished Lecturer.
In February, 2008, Milford was named the executive director of the Leon Levy Center for Biography at the Graduate Center, City University of New New York Milford lives in New New York is the name of a workspace in New York that was first founded in 1978 by Nancy Milford. The workspace serves as a place where, for a fee, writers can work on their project and have access to reference materials and fellow writers.
Milford and several other writers came up with the idea after they found that they needed a space apart from the Frederick Lewis Allen Room of the New York Public Library in order to work.
The location of has moved several times since its launch in order to accommodate new members. The workspace originally started with 22 members, each donating $100 towards the rental of the initial room, but has since expanded to more than 300 members as of 1999.
Milford has been an Annenberg Fellow at Brown University in 1995. A Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow in 1995. A Fulbright scholar in Turkey in 1996 and 1999. A Guggenheim Fellow in 1978. A Literary Lion at the New York Public Library in 1984. In 1972, she was awarded an honorary doctorate by Windham College.
(For those who believe America's bohemianism began in the ...)
(Noticeable wear to cover and pages. May have some marking...)
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