Rosemary Daniell

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Rosemary Daniell
BornRosemary Hughes
November 29, 1935
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
OccupationPoet, Author, Teacher
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Period1975-present
GenrePoetry, Non-fiction, Fiction
Notable worksA Sexual Tour of the Deep South, Fatal Flowers, Sleeping with Soldiers
SpouseLaurens Ramos (m.1952; div, 1955) Sidney S. Daniell (m. 1956; div 1968) Jonathan S. Coppelman (m. 1969; div 1976) Timothy Zane Ward (m.1987)
ChildrenLaurens David Ramos (born, 1952; died, 2009),Laura Christine Daniell (born, 1957, died 2022), Darcy Anne Daniell (born, 1959; died, 2020)

Rosemary Daniell (born on 29 November 1935) is an American second-wave feminist poet and author. She is best known for her controversial poetry collection, An acting Tour of the Deep South and memoirs Fatal Flowers: On Sin, Sex, and Suicide in the Deep South and Sleeping with Soldiers: In Search of the Macho Man.[1][2]

Early life and education[edit]

Born Rosemary Hughes in Atlanta, Georgia, on November 29, 1935, Daniell is the older of two daughters born to Melissa Ruth Connell and Parker McDonald Hughes. Following her family's move to Tucker, Georgia, Daniell dropped out of Tucker High School at the age of 16 to marry her first husband, Laurens Ramos.[1]

Career[edit]

Daniell has authored ten books of poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction, appeared on various national television and radio shows, and lectured at numerous literary venues. Her work has been featured in more than 32 literary and small press publications, 20 magazines, and 19 anthologies, as well as theater and mixed media productions.[1] Daniell's 1969 article The Feminine Frustration was published in the June 1970 issue of Atlanta Magazine, the first trade magazine article to cover second-wave feminism in the Southeast.[2]

Formative experiences and early career[edit]

In 1975, Daniell's mother committed suicide and her father died of cancer. That same year, she published her first book of poetry, A Sexual Tour of the Deep South, a book which stirred controversy in the Bible Belt but was hailed by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the best works of feminist literature of the era.[1][3] While her poetry collection The Feathered Trees, published the following year, focused mostly on nature, Daniell's subsequent book Fort Bragg & Other Points South (1988) saw her return to writing about women's sexual experiences.[1][4]

While Daniell criticizes the traditional role of the Southern woman, her writing does not attack the South, but rather exposes the mythology of the Southern woman and provides a reinterpretation of the South. She breaks the silence about women's private lives - anger and sex - and in the process addresses the myth of the South as a region of moral degeneration and libido.[1][4]

Her first memoir, Fatal Flowers: On Sin, Sex, and Suicide in the Deep South (1980), was partially inspired by both her mother's unrealized talents as a writer and her subsequent suicide. Fatal Flowers describes the year Daniell's parents died and her extended period of sexual experimentation following the loss, ending when she founded the Zona Rosa writing group and met the man who was to become her fourth husband.[4] Daniell examines the mythology of the Southern woman: "materialistic, often the wife of a powerful man, always serving as a perfect hostess, and one loyal to her home and land." [citation needed]. She argues that these stereotypes both inhibit women's freedom and stunt their personal growth, thus hindering the expression of their creativity.[1]

Daniell's second memoir, Sleeping with Soldiers (1985), draws from her experience working as one of the first women on an oil rig. She describes the men she's attracted to as "macho men": physically strong and courageous risk-takers "who communicate viscerally and emotionally rather than intellectually."[1]

A self-described "high-school dropout,"[5] Daniell has said of her work: "During a bout with postpartum depression, I saw the flyer listing a Modern Poetry class in Emory University... I knew I — a high school dropout and literary virgin who had never heard of T.S. Eliot or Emily Dickinson — was meant to be there[citation needed].

Before long, she was invited to join a poetry group made up primarily of Emory professors, and which the well-known poet James Dickey soon joined to lead. "When I began reading some new poets - Anne Sexton, Sylvia Plath - [I] was stunned by both their virtuosity and their accuracy. But when I told Dickey how much I liked these new poets, he was angry, saying, They're just shrill, hysterical females who write about throwing their abortions in the gutter. Then I began to ask, who is Dickey - or any man - to say what is right about women's experiences? From that point forward my writing began to change… I now began to write directly out of my experience as a woman... I broke the taboo with which I and all the Southern women I knew had been brought up: never speak directly about anger or sexuality."[4][3] Daniell's contributions to second-wave feminism[2] are profiled in the book Feminists Who Changed America,1963-1975 by Barbara J. Love, editor and foreword by Nancy F. Cott. In 1981, Daniell founded a series of creative writing workshops for women in Savannah, Georgia.

Daniell's first book about her workshops, The Woman Who Spilled Words All Over Herself: Writing and the Zona Rosa Way, was published by Faber and Faber in 1997; her second book about the writing workshops, Secrets of the Zona Rosa: How Writing (and Sisterhood) Can Change Women's Lives, was published by Henry Holt in 2006.

Daniell was awarded the Governor's Award in the Humanities in 2008 for her contributions to Georgia's literary heritage.[1]

Teaching and the Zona Rosa writing group[edit]

In the 1970s, Daniell became involved in activities that encouraged the appreciation of writers and writing. During 1971 - 72, she served as Director of Poetry in the Schools, a joint program of the National Endowment for the Arts and the Georgia State Council for the Arts, a national program that allowed students to work with published poets. During that time, she initiated and led a number of writing workshops in various locations, including the Georgia Correctional Institute for Women, and the Wyoming Women's Center in Lusk, Wyoming.[1]

Daniell's writing workshops have served thousands of people across America and Europe and have been profiled by People and Southern Living.[1][5] To date, over 400 participants have become published authors, and many have won literary awards. John Berendt attended the Savannah Zona Rosa group for feedback on parts of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, and Pat Conroy was a frequent visitor, as is New York Times best-selling author Bruce Feiler. New York editor and author Lauren Marino has taken part in recently Zona Rosa workshops.

Bibliography[edit]

Poetry[edit]

  • A Sexual Tour of the Deep South (Push Button Publishing, 1994; Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1975)
  • The Feathered Trees (a chapbook; Sweetwater Press; 1976).
  • Fort Bragg & Other Points South (Henry Holt and Company, 1988).
  • The Murderous Sky: Poems of Madness & Mercy, (Lavender Ink Press, 2021).

Nonfiction[edit]

  • Fatal Flowers: On Sin, Sex & Suicide in the Deep South (memoir; Hill Street Press, 1999; Henry Holt and Company, 1989; Avon Books, 1981; Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1980).
  • Sleeping with Soldiers (memoir; Hill Street Press, Warner Books, 1986; Granada, England, 1986; Edizioni Frassinelli, Italy, 1986; Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1985). It was also a part of the Book of the Month Club Collection of Erotic Classics.
  • The Woman Who Spilled Words All Over Herself: Writing & Living the Zona Rosa Way, (Faber & Faber, 1997; paper, 1998).
  • Confessions of a (Female) Chauvinist (essays; Hill Street Press, 2001)
  • Secrets of the Zona Rosa: How Writing (and Sisterhood) Can Change Women's Lives, (Henry Holt and Company, 2006)

Fiction[edit]

  • The Hurricane Season, (William Morrow & Company, 1992)

Literary and small press – Poetry[edit]

  • The Atlantic Monthly: "Bridal Luncheon;" Volume 214, No. 2; August 1964.
  • Poetry Northwest: "Black Animals," "Green Frogs," and "Ducks;" Volume V, Number 5; Spring, 1964.
  • Shenandoah: The Washington and Lee University Review:" "The Mountain Was My Father;" Summer, 1965.
  • Poem: "The Feathered Trees," "The Birthday," "In the Waiting Room of a Mental Hospital," and "The Wild Birds;" No. 3-4, November 1968. "The Brown Slopes of Innocence," No. 1, November 1967.
  • The Virginia Quarterly Review: "The Creek;" Volume 43, Number l; Winter, 1967
  • The Great Speckled Bird: "The Doll;" October 11, 1970. Also, "The Distant War" and "How to Make Your Own Napalm;" May 5, 1969. Also, "A French Kiss for Inez Garcia."
  • South and West: "Garden Club Meeting;" Volume 9, No. l; Summer, 1970. "Coffee Break" and "Tea Party;" Volume 7, No. 4; Spring, 1969.
  • TriQuarterly: "Tiger Lilies;" Number Fifteen; Spring, 1969.
  • Descant: "Roman Forms in America" and "The Swimmer;" Volume Thirteen, Number Four; Summer, 1969.
  • The Literary Review: "Facing Eros" and "Jack and I in Georgia: 1945;" Summer, 1969.
  • The Dekalb Literary Arts Journal: "April in Georgia, 1971;"1972. "Georgia Road" and "The Quickening;" Volume 1, Number l; Fall, 1966.
  • Archon: Literary Art Magazine of Emory University:" "Tulips;" Spring, 1971.
  • The New Orleans Review: "A Week in February," "Shiksa," and "Declaration Day;" Volume 4, No. 4, 1975. "The State of Georgia" and "Talking of Stars;" Volume 4, No. 3; 1974. "The Angel Stud." Volume 3, No. 2; 1973. "Over Chattanooga," Volume 3, No. 4; 1973. "The Bible Salesman;" Volume 3, No. 1; 1972.
  • The New York Quarterly: "I Want;" Number 16, 1974. "What's Happening;" Number 13, Winter, 1973.
  • The Drunken Boat: "Oh, Men!" Number 1, 1973.
  • The Georgia State University Review, 1977-78: "Blood Brother."
  • Negative Capability: "Valentine's Day, 1982;" Volume VII, Numbers I & II, 1987. "Sewing;" Volume II, Number IV, Fall, 1982.
  • Paintbrush: "The Color of Halcyon Days" and "Yellow Birds;" Volume X, Nos. 19 & 20, Spring & Autumn, 1983.
  • The Chattahoochee Review: "The Power of Love" and "Accommodations;" Volume XVII - Number 3, Spring, 1997. "Sex in Savannah" and "A Lisp for Myth Amerika;" Volume V - Number 4, Summer, 1985. "A Pile of Chopped Pine Logs" and "Of Money and Class, and the Plight of the Working Man;" Volume V - Number 3, Spring, 1985.
  • The American Voice: "Values, or the Christ of the White Shag Carpet," No. 40, Summer, 1996; "Chocolate Eclairs," No. 33, Summer, 1994; "Fort Bragg," No. 5, Winter, 1986. "Loss of the Soul & Other Sicknesses;" No. 3, Summer, 1986.
  • Arrival: "Craving Hollywood;" Summer, 1987.
  • Explicit Lyrics: "Portrait: Boy with Dog;" Number One, 1999.
  • Caprice: "The Cowgirl Tells Her Daughter about Life," "The Elephant Maiden," Fall, 1996; "The Chef;" March 1990.
  • Kalliope: "Southern Suttee, or What Grandmother Knew," Winter, 2001; "Death of the Drum Fish," "Intimate Terrorists" (nominated for Pushcart Prize); Fall, 1996.
  • Arts & Letters: "What Keith the Hunter Says About the Deer in the Hills" and "For Jesus, Eyes Blazing;" Spring, 2002.
  • Web Del Sol, an online chapbook of selected poems, 2002
  • The Copenhagen Review: "Rooms, or the Comfort of Enclosed Spaces," "One-Eyed Jack," "Miracles Are Like That;" No. Three, 2008.
  • The Double Dealer: "Sacred Things," 2009
  • Minerva Rising: "When I Had Balls for a Day," 2016

Literary and small press – prose[edit]

  • Teachers & Writers Collaborative: "My High School English Teacher," January–February, 1986.
  • Helicon Nine: "A Piece of White Satin" (short story); Number 17/18, 1987
  • Habersham Review: "Of Cudden Lily Rising" (short story); Volume I, Number 2; Spring, 1992.

Literary and small press publications – other[edit]

  • Editor: Dracula and Other Poems, An Anthology of Poems by Students in Georgia Schools. Also: Joy to the Word!, a pamphlet describing my experiences as poet in residence in Georgia schools; printed by the Georgia Council for the Arts; 1973.
  • Paintbrush: Interview with Rosemary Daniell; Volume III, Number 5; Spring 1976.
  • Negative Capability: Interview with Rosemary Daniell, Volume III, Number IV; Fall 1983.
  • Habersham Review: Interview with Rosemary Daniell, Volume I, Number 2; Spring, 1992.
  • Kalliope: Interview with Rosemary Daniell; Fall, Number 3, 1996.
  • The Chattahoochee Review: Interview with Rosemary Daniell; Volume XVII - Number 3, Spring, 1997.

Anthologies[edit]

  • We Become New: Poems by Contemporary American Women: "Girl Friends," "Before the Fall," "To a Family Man in His Family Room," and "I Want"(poems); Bantam Press, 1976.
  • Sojourner: "Girl Friends" (a poem); Interart Center, New York City; 1976.
  • Cafe at Saint Marks: The Apalachee Poets: "Liturgy" (a poem); The Apalachee Poetry Center, Tallahassee, Florida; 1976.
  • White Trash: "The Operation" and "A Week in February" (poems); The New South Company, 1976.
  • The Callanwolde Poets: "The Brown Slopes of Innocence" The Tinhorn Press; 1976.
  • Southern Poetry: The Seventies: "Of Jayne Mansfield, Flannery O'Connor, My Mother & Me;" University of North Carolina Press, 1977.
  • Finished Product: An Anthology of Atlanta Poets: "Of Jayne Mansfield, Flannery O'Connor, My Mother & Me;" The Poetry Factory, 1978.
  • Contemporary Southern Poetry: "Of Jayne Mansfield, Flannery O'Connor, My Mother & Me" (a poem); University of Louisiana Press, 1980.
  • Woman Poet: The South: "A Kiss for Inez Garcia" (a poem); Women-in-Literature, Inc., 1989.
  • Lips Unsealed: Confidences from Contemporary Women Writers: "Stains on a Piece of White Satin" (fiction) and "In Search of the Macho Man" (memoir); Capra Press, 1990.
  • Touching Fire: A Collection of Erotic Writing by Women: "Talking of Stars" (a poem); Crossing Press, 1990.
  • Georgia Voices: Fiction Edited by Hugh Ruppersburge; University of Georgia Press, 1992.
  • The Time of Our Lives: "Sleeping With Soldiers" (an excerpt); The Crossing Press, 1993.
  • Literary Savannah, edited by Patrick Allen and published by Hill Street Press, 1998.
  • Georgia Voices: Poetry Edited by Hugh Ruppersburge; University of Georgia Press, 2000.
  • How I Learned to Cook: Edited by Margot Perin; Jeremy P. Tarcher, 2004.
  • Stirring Up a Storm; Edited by Marilyn Jaye Lewis; Thunder's Mouth Press, 2005.
  • Desire: Women Write About Wanting; Edited by Lisa Solod Warren. Seal, Press, 2007.
  • Sugar in My Bowl: Real Women Write About Real Sex; Edited by Erica Jong. Ecco/ HarperCollins, 2011.

Trade/other publications[edit]

  • Atlanta Gazette: Mesas to Magnolias: A Southern Woman in the West;" August 1977.
  • Playgirl: "In Search of the Macho Man," December 1982.
  • Harper's Bazaar: "The Lure of the Hard Hat," November 1984.
  • Mademoiselle: "Sinfully Sexy: 14 Red-Hot Men," March 1986
  • Atlanta Journal-Constitution: "A Family Christmas in the West," December 25, 1986. "Growing up Southern: Of Dirt and Flowers of All Kinds;" July 22, 1984.
  • Us: "She's in the Army Now," January 1987. "Down South: The Jim Williams Murder Trials," May 1986. "Suicide in Coral Springs: The Tina Mancini Story," June 1987
  • "The Drinking Season," January 1987; "The Southern Body," October 1986.
  • Mother Jones: "Cora Lee Johnson: Heroes for Hard Times," January 1988. Excerpt, Sleeping With Soldiers; January 1985. "Secrets, Shackles and Shame: The Ginny Foat Trial:" July 1984. "Southern Discomfort: Slipping Down the Economic Slopes in Savannah;" November 1984.
  • Southern: "Blood, Heat, Mayhem: A Memoir;" September 1988.
  • Self: "The Right Guy;" September 1988."
  • Diversion: "City Diary, Savannah;" October 1988. "Mexico's Spicy Colonial Trail," October 1989.
  • Physicians Lifestyle: "An Insider's Guide to Savannah," April 1990.
  • Geo (German Edition): "Blood, Heat, Mayhem: a Memoir;" December 1991.
  • Changes: "In the Heart of the Heart of Darkness: When Suicide Runs in the Family;" April 1992. "Codependency: When Loves Goes Haywire;" February 1992.
  • The Chicago Tribune: "The Tailhook Incident;" September 1992
  • Golden Isles Magazine: The Hurricane Season (an excerpt); October 1992.
  • Travel and Leisure: "Savannah: City of Secrets and Seduction;" April 1993.
  • Men's Fitness: "Why I Like Tough Guys (the Real Kind);" 1996
  • Southern Living: "Georgia, My State of Everything;" 1998
  • Atlanta: "Before and After: The Pill and Me," June 2000; "The Gifts the Poet Gave Me (a memoir of James Dickey)," January 1998; "Bad Girls & Artists: The Price Southern Women Pay for Breaking the Rules," October 1997. "In Search of the New Southern Belle," January 1985."Living the Fairy Tale by the Sea," July 1984. "Travel Reachable Beaches," June 1984; "Women's Liberation: The Feminine Frustration," June 1970. Also, "Culture: The Georgia Arts Council;" "James Dickey: A Strong, Clean Wind;" Human Dynamics: Enhancing the Inner Man; "The Yerkes Primate Center: Vanguard in the Human Jungle;" 1966–76.
  • Atlanta Woman: "The Only Risk in Life Is Not Taking One;" premiere issue, 2002.

Book reviews[edit]

  • New York Native: Women Folks: Growing up Down South, by Shirley Abbott; May 20, 1984.
  • Atlanta: Beyond Power: On Women, Men, Morals, by Marilyn French; January 1986. An Indian Attachment, by Sarah Lloyd; April 1985.
  • The Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Shooting Rats at the Bibb County Dump (poems) by David Bottoms; June 8, 1980. Meditations in an Emergency (poems) by Frank O'Hara. Also, over twenty reviews of other books of contemporary poetry by such poets as Diane Wakoski, Erica Jong, and Robert Duncan; 1966–72.
  • The Philadelphia Inquirer: Collected Stories by Carson McCullers; September 20, 1987. The Myth of Women's Masochism by Paula Caplan, November 3, 1985.
  • New York Woman: Self-Consciousness by John Updike, This Boy's Life by Tobias Wolff: April 1989. Wordstruck by Robert MacNeil. Loving Rachel by Jane Bernsteln; November, 1988. Grown Up Fast: A True Story of Teenage Life in Suburban American by Betsy Israel; September, 1988.
  • Newsday: Any Woman's Blues by Erica Jong; January 21, 1990.
  • New York Times Book Review: "Rootie Kazootie" by Lawrence Naumoff; March 11, 1990. Heart of the Country by Fay Weldon; December 11, 1988. Zami: A New Spelling of My Name and Chosen Poems Old and New by Audre Lorde; December 19, 1982. Miss Undine's Living Room by James Wilcox; October 18, 1988. Among Birches by Rebecca Hill, April 27, 1986.
  • Los Angeles Times Book Review: Southern Daughter: The Life of Margaret Mitchell by Darden Asbury Pyron; September 1992.

Grants and awards[edit]

  • Harcourt, Brace & World Fellowship in Poetry; Writers' Conference of the University of Colorado; summer, 1969
  • National Endowment for the Arts grant for poetry 1974 - 75
  • The New Orleans Review: Annual Poetry Award, 1975
  • The Ossabaw Foundation; residency; spring, 1979
  • National Endowment for the Arts grant for fiction; 1981–82
  • Georgia Council for the Arts and Humanities: Artist-Initiated Grant in Fiction; 1987
  • The Ucross Foundation; residency; August 1998; September 1993
  • The Corporation of Yaddo; residency; August 1994.
  • The Palimpsest Prize: Hill Street Press for a most-requested out-of-print book: Fatal Flowers: On Sin, Sex, and Suicide in the Deep South; Fall, 1999.
  • The Writers' Colony at Dairy Hollow; residencies; August 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
  • Governor's Award for the Arts and Humanities for her contributions to Georgia's literary heritage, 2008
  • William Faulkner-William Wisdom competition, Gold Medal, Poetry; 2009
  • Hambidge Center for the Arts; residency; August 2016, 2015, 2013
  • William Faulkner-William Wisdom, Gold Medal, Poetry Collection: The Murderous Sky; 2019
  • William Faulkner-William Wisdom competition; Gold Medal, Non-fiction Book: My Beautiful Tigers: Forty Years as The Mother of an Opioid Addicted Daughter and a Schizophrenic Son, 2020

Theatre[edit]

  • Native Voices: Rosemary Daniell's voice and work produced in Monologue, along with that of Conrad Aiken and Flannery O'Connor: City Lights Theater, Savannah, Georgia, 1996.

Television and Movies[edit]

  • Sleeping with Soldiers :optioned to producer Anath White, 1990–1993.
  • In Search of the Macho Man: My Short Life as a Woman Aboard an Offshore Oil Rig: Feature film rights purchased by CBS; 1980.

Mixed media[edit]

  • To the Machine I Love: Writer-director-actor; film, slides, electronic sound, poetry, and dance; produced with funds granted through the Georgia Council for the Arts; presented in the Studio Theater of the Atlanta Cultural Center, 1969.
  • Photolithography, with photographer Jim Holmes; Savannah Fine Arts Center; Savannah, Georgia; 1993.
  • Southern Icons: Photographs by Southern photographers with text by Southern authors, 2016

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Tso, Yi-Hsuan. "Rosemary Daniell". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Georgia. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Love, Barbara J (October 2006). Feminists Who Changed America, 1963-1975. Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-252-09747-8. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b Hinzen, Parul (3 April 2014). "'70s era rabble-rouser Rosemary Daniell nurtures new writer". Atlanta Journal and Constitution. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d Crosby, Gayla. "20 Questions answered by Rosemary Daniell". Wow! Women on Writing. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Rosemary Daniell". Wide Open Writing. Wide Open Writing March 17, 2021. Retrieved 7 April 2021.

External links[edit]