Syracuse Views Fall 2024
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Syracuse University Libraries’ Special Collections Research Center has acquired the archive of American translator and National Book Award winner Austryn Wainhouse. Wainhouse is best known for his complete and uncensored English translations of the Marquis de Sade’s 1791 novel “Justine” (1953), which tells of a well-intentioned young woman who finds herself subjected to all manner of sexual depravity at the hands of the clergy and civil authorities.
“The Austryn Wainhouse archive will be an invaluable resource for scholars at Syracuse University and around the world,” says Amy S. Wyngaard, SU professor of French and editor of Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures. “Mr. Wainhouse’s work in fiction and translation was at the cutting edge at a pivotal moment in American literary history. The archive is of particular importance in illuminating the processes behind Mr. Wainhouse’s translations of de Sade’s works, which transformed the face of publishing and literary studies in the 1960s.”
The Wainhouse archive includes spiral-bound notebooks containing hand-written notes and drafts, journals describing his life as an expatriate, correspondence with prominent authors (including Simone de Beauvoir, whom Wainhouse also translated into English), drafts of his satirical novel “Hedyphagetica” (1954), photographs and ephemera.
“It is with great pleasure and confidence that I chose to place the Austryn Wainhouse archive in the hands of Syracuse University and Sean Quimby [senior director of special collections, Syracuse University Libraries],” says Deborah Clayton Wainhouse, Wainhouse’s wife, of her decision to place the archive with Syracuse. “We are pleased to join such a distinguished group of collections.”
Wainhouse was born in Cambridge, Mass., and educated at Harvard University and the University of Iowa. He worked as an editor for Olympia Press, the Paris house that would become known for publishing Vladimir Nabokov, William Burroughs, Henry Miller and Samuel Beckett. Wainhouse won a National Book Award in 1971 for translating the Nobel Prize-winning scientist Jacques Monod’s book “Chance and Necessity.”
The Wainhouse archive complements the libraries’ recently cataloged records of New York publisher Grove Press, and will interest scholars researching the 20th-century literary avant-garde, the history and theory of translation and changing notions of obscenity. The archive will be available to the public in late 2014.
For more details, contact Quimby at 315-443-9759.
We want to know how you experience Syracuse University. Take a photo and share it with us. We select photos from a variety of sources. Submit photos of your University experience by sending them directly to 鶹Ʒ at…
We want to know how you experience Syracuse University. Take a photo and share it with us. We select photos from a variety of sources. Submit photos of your University experience by filling out a submission form or sending it directly…
We want to know how you experience Syracuse University. Take a photo and share it with us. We select photos from a variety of sources. Submit photos of your University experience by filling out a submission form or sending it…
We want to know how you experience Syracuse University. Take a photo and share it with us. We select photos from a variety of sources. Submit photos of your University experience using #SyracuseU on social media, fill out a submission…
We want to know how you experience Syracuse University. Take a photo and share it with us. We select photos from a variety of sources. Submit photos of your University experience using #SyracuseU on social media, fill out a submission…
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