A sheltered life can be a daring life as well.
For all serious daring starts from within."
Eudora Welty, "On Writing"
Eudora Alice Welty (April 13, 1909 – July 23, 2001) was an American author of short stories and novels about the American South. Her book, The Optimist's Daughter, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1973. Welty was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, among numerous awards. She was the first living author to have her works published by the Library of America. Her house in Jackson, Mississippi, is a National Historic Landmark and open to the public as a museum. Eudora Welty was born into a loving family in Jackson, Mississippi on April 13, 1909. Welty was the daughter of Christian and Chestina Welty. She grew up with brothers Edward and Walter. [1] In her early life, her family was vitally important in instilling in her all the qualities that would make her such a great author. Eudora’s mother was a well-read schoolteacher who taught Eudora the alphabet. Eudora soon developed her own love of reading, reinforced by her mother who believed that “any room in our house, at any time in the day, was there to read in, or to be read to” (Welty 841). Her father, who worked as an insurance executive, was intrigued by gadgets and machines and inspired in Eudora a love of all things mechanical. She later would use technology for symbolism in her stories and would also become an avid photographer, like her father (Johnston). Eudora was a pioneering and adaptable young woman; she succeeded at multiple colleges in a time when most women didn’t even attend college. From 1925 to 1927, she studied at Mississippi College for Women and then transferred to University of Wisconsin to complete her studies in English Literature. Next, she journeyed to Columbia University, in New York. Here she studied advertising at the suggestion of her father, but she graduated at the height of the Great Depression and struggled to find work in New York. She returned to Jackson in 1931, and soon after suffered the death of her father, who died of leukemia. She took a job at a local radio station and wrote about Jackson society for the Tennessee newspaper Commercial Appeal (Makowsky 341-342). In 1935, she made an influential career choice when she began to work for the Works Progress Administration. As a publicity agent, she collected stories, conducted interviews, and took photographs of daily life in Mississippi. It was here that she got a chance to observe the Southern life and human relationships that she would later use in her short stories (Marr 52). During this time she also held meetings in her house with fellow writers and friends, a group she called the Night-Blooming Cereus Club. Three years later, she left her job and truly began her career as a writer (Johnston). In 1936, she published “The Death of a Traveling Salesman” in the literary magazine Manuscript, and then proceeded to publish stories in several other noted publications, including the New Yorker (Marr 50). She solidified her place as an influential southern writer when she penned her first book of short stories, A Curtain of Green. Her newfound success won her a seat on the staff of the New York Times book review and also a Guggenheim Fellowship grant that allowed her to travel to France, England, Ireland, and Germany (“Eudora Welty”). While abroad, she spent some time as a resident lecturer at Oxford and Cambridge. Then, in 1960, she returned home to Jackson once again to look after her elderly mother and two brothers (Makowsky 342). Six years later, Eudora’s family was gone; at 52 she had no immediate family left. She continued to write, and won a Pulitzer Prize in 1973 for her novel, The Optimist’s Daughter (“Eudora Welty”).
Welty's first short story, "Death of a Traveling Salesman", appeared in 1936. Her work attracted the attention of author Katherine Anne Porter, who became a mentor to Welty and wrote the foreword to Welty's first short story collection, A Curtain of Green, in 1941. The book immediately established Welty as one of American literature's leading lights and featured the stories "Why I Live at the P.O.", "Petrified Man", and the frequently anthologized A Worn Path. Excited by the printing of Welty's works in publications such as the Atlantic Monthly, the Junior League of Jackson, of which Welty was a member, requested permission from the publishers to reprint some of her works. Turning out over forty short stories, five novels, three works of nonfiction, and one children’s book, the following is only a sampling of Welty's works. “Why I Live at the P.O.” (1941): This short story was published with two others in 1941 by The Atlantic Monthly (Marrs 70). It was republished later that year in Welty’s first collection of short stories, A Curtain of Green. The story is about Sister, and how she ends up living at the P.O. as a result of her aggravating family. Seen by critics as quality Southern literature, the story comically captures family relationships. Like most of her short stories, Welty masterfully captures Southern idiom and places importance on location and customs (Hauser “A Curtain of Green”). The Robber Bridegroom (1942): As the debut novel in Welty’s literary career, this work was a surprise to some. The book deviated from the psychologically-inclined path she seemed to be travelling down by presenting static, fairy-tale characters. Some critics suggest that she was worried about “encroaching on the turf of the male literary giant to the north of her in Oxford, Mississippi-William Faulkner” (Makowsky 347), and therefore wrote in a fairy-tale style instead of a historical one. Whether or not critics and readers liked or disliked the book, most saw it as a modern Southern fairy-tale and noted that it employs themes and characters reminiscent of the Grimm Brothers’ works (Hauser “Miss Welty’s Fairy Tale”). The Optimist's Daughter (1972): Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, this is believed by some to be Welty’s novel writing at its finest (“Eudora Welty”). It was written at a much later date than the bulk of her work and shows that over this lapse in writing she did nothing but improve. As New York Times writer Howard Moss states, the book is “a miracle of compression, the kind of book, small in scope but profound in its implications, that rewards a lifetime of work”. The plot focuses on family struggles when the daughter and the second wife of a judge confront each other in the limited confines of a hospital room while the judge undergoes eye surgery.
At the center of Eudora Welty’s first published story, “Death of a Traveling Salesman,” Bowman, the bachelor businessman, suddenly understands both his years of loneliness and the relationship between the older man and the girl who have rescued him from his wrecked car. He sees there: “A marriage, a fruitful marriage. That simple thing. Anyone could have had that.” This crucial moment augurs the “fruitful” subject that permeates Welty’s fiction: the intimate and often strange relationships within families. Welty is the twentieth-century master of her subject, and the century’s most gifted and radical practitioner of the short story. She won most of the major literary prizes during her career, including the Pulitzer Prize and the French Légion d’Honneur. Only the Nobel Prize eluded her, and many believe this to be one of that committee’s great oversights. Even a generic description of Welty’s oeuvre—four collections of stories, five novels, two collections of photographs, three works of non-fiction (essay, memoir, book review), and one children’s book—shows Welty’s wide scope as an artist, and reading through her work reveals an astonishing tonal range in subject and style, the most expansive of any twentieth-century American writer.
Born in Jackson, Mississippi at a time when that city had not yet lost its rural atmosphere, Welty grew up in the bucolic South she so often evokes in her stories. She attended the Mississippi State College for Women and the University of Wisconsin, where she majored in English Literature, then studied advertising at Columbia University; however, graduating at the height of the Great Depression, she was unable to find work in her chosen field. Returning to Jackson in 1931, Welty worked as a part-time journalist and copywriter and as a WPA photographer. The latter job took her on assignments throughout Mississippi, and she began using these experiences as material for short stories. In June, 1936, her story "Death of a Traveling Salesman" was accepted for publication in the journal Manuscript, and within two years her work had appeared in such prestigious publications as the Atlantic and the Southern Review. Critical response to Welty's first collection of stories, A Curtain of Green (1941), was highly favorable, with many commentators predicting that a first performance so impressive would no doubt lead to even greater achievements. Yet when The Wide Net, and Other Stories was published two years later, several critics, most notably Diana Trilling, deplored Welty's marked shift away from the colorful realism of her earlier stories toward a more impressionistic style, objecting in particular to her increased use of symbol and metaphor to convey themes. Other critics responded favorably, including Robert Penn Warren, who wrote that in Welty's work, "the items of fiction (scene, action, character, etc.) are presented not as document but as comment, not as a report but as a thing made, not as history but as idea." As Welty continued to refine her vision her fictional techniques gained wider acceptance. Indeed, her most complex and highly symbolic collection of stories, The Golden Apples, won critical acclaim, and she received a number of prizes and awards throughout the following decade, including the William Dean Howells Medal of the Academy of Arts and Letters for her novella The Ponder Heart (1954). Occupied primarily with teaching, traveling, and lecturing between 1955 and 1970, Welty produced little fiction. Then, in the early 1970s, she published two novels, Losing Battles (1970), which received mixed reviews, and the more critically successful The Optimist's Daughter (1972), which won a Pulitzer Prize. Although Welty has published no new volumes of short stories since The Bride of Innisfallen in 1955, the release of her Collected Stories in 1980 renewed interest in her short fiction and brought unanimous praise. In addition, the 1984 publication of Welty's One Writer's Beginnings, an autobiographical work chronicling her own artistic development, further illuminated her work and inspired critics to reinterpret many of her stories.
In his seminal 1944 essay on The Wide Net, and Other Stories, Robert Penn Warren located the essence of Welty's fictional technique in a phrase from her story "First Love": "Whatever happened, it happened in extraordinary times, in a season of dreams." It is, states Warren, "as though the author cannot be quite sure what did happen, cannot quite undertake to resolve the meaning of the recorded event, cannot, in fact, be too sure of recording all of the event." This tentative approach to narrative exposition points to Welty's primary goal in creating fiction, which is not simply to relate a series of events, but to convey a strong sense of her character's experience of that specific moment in time, always acknowledging the ambiguous nature of reality. In order to do so, she selects those details which can best vivify the narrative, frequently using metaphors and similes to communicate sensory impressions. The resulting stories are highly impressionistic. Welty typically uses traditional symbols and mythical allusions in her work and, in the opinion of many, it is through linking the particular with the general and the mundane with the metaphysical that she attains her transcendent vision of human existence.