Louis Filler

Louis Filler

---- Louis Filler (August 27, 1911December 22, 1998), Dubossary ("Odessa") -born, Philadelphia-reared, Columbia-trained scholar, bibliographer, and anthologist, who taught American civilization at Antioch College and supported historical essays on muckrakers, abolition, and other reform movements with anthologies and edited works.

Paine and Emerson, Bellamy and George, Veblen and Upton Sinclair . . . [and] Melville [who] wrote about the indignities suffered by able seamen . . . coped with their own times. Can we cope with ours [by means of] stories and essays . . . live readers to appreciate live prose . . .an informed critical taste . . . knowledge, data, and a memory for past experience . . . [and] is there a better phrase for this than "social significance"? ("The Question of Social Significance," Union Review 1:1:66-71, 1962)

Emerson and Thoreau were radicals, and were so perceived in their own time. ("Wendell Phillips and the Necessity for Radicalism," Introduction to Wendell Phillips on Civil Rights and Freedom, 1965, p. ix)

Works

Books:

Edited Works:



Introductions:

Also in Published Volumes:

Among Other Articles and Reviews:

Verse:

  • Two Poems, 1935

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