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Meridell le sueur biography of christopher

          This biography of Arthur Le Sueur () and Marian Le Sueur ( ) was written by Marian's daughter, Meridel Le Sueur (), the noted.

        1. Download Citation | On Jan 1, , Christopher Kempf published "A Vast University of the Common People": Meridel Le Sueur and the Crafting of the.
        2. "A Vast University of the Common People": Meridel Le Sueur and the Crafting of the Nineteen-Thirties Literary Left.
        3. This biography of Arthur Le Sueur () and Marian Le Sueur ( ) was written by Marian's daughter, Meridel Le Sueur ().
        4. Christopher Kempf is the author of the poetry collections What Though the Field Be Lost (LSU, ) and Late in the Empire of Men (Four Way, ).
        5. "A Vast University of the Common People": Meridel Le Sueur and the Crafting of the Nineteen-Thirties Literary Left....

          Meridel Le Sueur

          American writer and social activist

          Meridel Le Sueur (February 22, 1900, Murray, Iowa – November 14, 1996, Hudson, Wisconsin) was an American writer associated with the proletarian literature movement of the 1930s and 1940s.

          Born as Meridel Wharton, she assumed the name of her mother's second husband, Arthur Le Sueur, the former Socialist mayor of Minot, North Dakota.

          Life and career

          Le Sueur, the daughter of William Winston Wharton and Marian "Mary Del" Lucy, was born into a family of social and political activists.[1] Her grandfather was a supporter of the Protestant fundamentalist temperance movement, and she "grew up among the radical farmer and labor groups ...

          like the Populists, the Farmers' Alliance and the Wobblies, the Industrial Workers of the World."[2] Le Sueur was heavily influenced by poems and stories that she heard from Native American women.

          "After a year studying dance and physical fitness at the American College