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Arthur Scouten papers, 1918-2002.
Kislak Center for Special Collections - Manuscripts Ms. Coll. 1426
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- Format:
- Other
- Author/Creator:
- Scouten, Arthur H. (Arthur Hawley), 1910-1995, creator.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616.
- Shakespeare, William.
- University of Pennsylvania.
- College teachers.
- Drama--History and criticism.
- Drama.
- Dramatic criticism.
- Education.
- English literature.
- English literature--17th century.
- English literature--18th century.
- Shakespeare, William, 1564-1616--Criticism and interpretation--History--20th century.
- Genre:
- Correspondence.
- Research notes.
- Physical Description:
- 4 boxes (1.4 linear foot)
- Arrangement:
- Organized into 3 series: I. Personal and academic materials; II. Correspondence; and III. Research.
- Place of Publication:
- 1918-2002.
- Biography/History:
- Arthur Hawley "Joe" Scouten was a scholar of British literature whose work focused primarily on Jonathan Swift, William Shakespeare, and eighteenth-century English drama more generally. He taught English at the University of Pennsylvania from 1947 to 1980, achieving the rank of Associate Professor in 1950 and Professor in 1960. He was known for his passionate teaching style and reportedly never used a teaching assistant even in large lecture classes, preferring to personally help each student develop on an individual basis. His students' many commendations and reminiscences are collected in Box 1 Folder 4 of this collection. Some of the most notable among his many scholarly contributions include editing the volume Lear from study to stage: essays in criticism with Jack Ogden (research materials for which are collected in Box 1 Folder 18 of this collection) as well as compiling Part III (1729-1747) of The London stage. In the course of this latter project, Scouten rediscovered a suppressed Restoration play, The country gentleman. He is also remembered for his central role in helping the University of Pennsylvania acquire the Teerink collection of Jonathan Swift books, some 1,800 Swift-related items. A letter from Teerink concerning that collection is included in Box 1 Folder 6. Scouten was born in Kapropita, Kenya in 1910 to missionaries Oren and Margaret Fraser Scouten. After his father's death, the young Scouten, his mother, and his infant sister moved back to the United States, where Scouten was sent to work to support the family before graduating high school and briefly attending a religious college. Uninterested in becoming a clergyman, Scouten worked odd jobs for a few years, during which time he developed an immense passion for literature and history. In 1931, he enrolled at Louisiana State University, earning his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. all at that institution in 1935, 1938, and 1942 respectively. While at LSU Scouten witnessed the rise of New Criticism firsthand, becoming a student and mentee of such figures as Cleanth Brooks and Robert Penn Warren. Within his first decade at Penn, Scouten received fellowships from the Ford Foundation, the Guggenheim, and the Folger Shakespeare Library. After nearly 40 years of teaching, over which period he advised some 55 Ph.D. students on a wide range of subjects, Scouten retired to St. Germain-en-Laye near Paris. He remained a prodigious correspondent until his death in 1995. The A.H. Scouten Memorial Fund was established at Penn in 1998 to provide books and other materials in the fields of study to which Scouten devoted his professional life--theater history, the eighteenth century, and Jonathan Swift.
- Summary:
- This collection is divided into three series: I. Personal and academic materials; II. Correspondence; III. Research. I. Personal and academic materials contains some biographical and memorial materials and a number of his school and work records, such as his CV, LSU transcripts, and various lists of students from his classes. II. Correspondence contains much, but not all of the correspondence included in this collection. Researchers should note that some correspondence is also included among his research materials. His correspondents include family, students, former students, and colleagues; though colleagues are by far the most well-represented. Major figures in twentieth-century literary theory and criticism such as Robert Penn Warren and Stanley Fish occasionally appear in the correspondence. It should be noted that the vast majority of the correspondence consists of xerox copies and the location of the originals is not known. III. Research is organized according to project. Occasionally, these files contain preliminary drafts or fragments of drafts of original scholarly articles; though more often, they contain only articles not written by Scouten, notes, summaries, bibliographies, letters, and other research materials. Though most noted as a Jonathan Swift scholar, this collection contains very little relating to Swift, focusing instead primarily on Shakespeare (Box 1 Folders 13-16, 18).
- OCLC:
- 1137323061
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