CARRUTH, HAYDEN


Meaning of CARRUTH, HAYDEN in English

born Aug. 3, 1921, Waterbury, Conn., U.S. American poet and literary critic. Carruth was educated at the University of North Carolina (B.A., 1943) and the University of Chicago (M.A., 1948). He worked as an editor for several magazines, including Poetry. Much of Carruth's poetry is an examination of the ordinary expressed in a variety of restrained and tightly controlled forms. His concern with sanity and madness is a reflection of his own experiences. During hospitalization for psychiatric illness and alcoholism in 1953, he began a long poem later published as The Bloomingdale Papers (1975), which was viewed by some critics to be more valuable as a psychiatric document than as a literary one. In it, Carruth uses elements of psychiatric confinementsuch as the hospital routines and psychotic interludesto examine the human condition. Brothers, I Loved You All (1978), often considered his best work, uses imagery from jazz. Carruth's other volumes of collected poems include North Winter (1964), For You (1970), Almanach du Printemps Vivarois (1979), Lighter than Air Craft (1985), Sonnets (1989), and Scrambled Eggs and Whiskey: Poems, 19911995 (1996), which won a National Book Award. His works of literary criticism include After The Stranger: Imaginary Dialogues with Camus (1965) and Effluences from the Sacred Caves: More Selected Essays and Reviews (1983). Reluctantly, a collection of autobiographical essays, appeared in 1998.

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.