Cleanth Brooks has been named the 1985 Jefferson Lecturer by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Mr. Brooks, who is best known for his works of literary theory and his expositions of William Faulkner, is one of the last of the band of prophets who found themselves at Vanderbilt University in the l 920’s. Too young to contribute to I’ll Take My Stand (published in 1928, the year of his graduation), Mr. Brooks did supply “A Plea to the Protestant Churches” for the later volume, Who Owns America? A devout Anglican, Cleanth Brooks took an active role in the struggle to save the Prayerbook, and for the half-century celebration of the Agrarian manifesto he wrote an essay on “The Enduring Faith” for Why the South Will Survive. The NEH has honored itself and the American people by recognizing the merits of a man who gives old meaning to the phrase “a gentleman and a scholar.” cc
March 1985April 21, 2022By Herbert London
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