Carl Bode Explained

Carl Bode (March 14 1911 – January 5 1993) was an author, poet, professor of English and American Studies at the University of Maryland, and officer of several literary and cultural organizations.[1] He wrote and edited over 30 books, including The American Lyceum, Antebellum Culture, Mencken, the first full biography to be published after H.L. Mencken's death, as well as Maryland, a 350-year history of the state. Bode edited The Collective Poems of Henry Thoreau, The Best of Thoreau's Journals, and The Portable Emerson among others.[2]

He was the founder of the American Studies Association and the Mencken Society, and was president of the Popular Culture Association and the Thoreau Society of America.[3] He was awarded fellowships both by the Guggenheim and Ford Foundations and was named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature while serving as cultural attaché at the American Embassy in London. He also taught at the University of Maryland for 40 years.[4]

List of published works

Edited works

Poetry, biographies, and other written works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Collection: Carl Bode papers Archival Collections. 2020-06-26. archives.lib.umd.edu.
  2. Web site: Carl Bode. 2020-06-26. Library of Congress.
  3. Web site: Carl Bode Penguin Random House. 2020-06-26. PenguinRandomhouse.com. en-US.
  4. Web site: Carl Bode (1911-1993) - DC Poetry: A Splendid Wake. 2020-06-26. wikis.library.gwu.edu.
  5. Rosenberg. Norman. 1991-01-01. Book Review: The Editor, the Bluenose, and the Prostitute: H.L. Mencken's History of the "Hatrack" Censorship Case. Edited by Carl Bode.. Constitutional Commentary.
  6. News: Lambert . Bruce . January 7, 1993 . Dr. Carl Bode, 81, a Scholar of American Culture . New York Times . January 12, 2015 . January 12, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150112090840/https://www.nytimes.com/1993/01/07/arts/dr-carl-bode-81-a-scholar-of-american-culture.html . bot: unknown .