susanglickman.com |
SHELDON PAUL ZITNER 1924-2005
Sheldon Zitner died on Tuesday April 26, 2005. He was 81 years old and had been in poor
health for some time, though his mind was as sharp as ever. Born and raised in New York, he taught
literature at the Hampton Institute in Virginia and at Grinnell College in Iowa
from 1957 to before becoming a professor at the University of Toronto in
1969. Though I never took a course from
the man universally revered and feared as "the great and terrible
Zitner", he agreed to supervise my doctoral dissertation on Shakespeare's
dramaturgy. Through the process, I grew
to respect his capacious knowledge not only of literature, but of art
(including Japanese prints, Chinese porcelain and African sculpture) and music
(from music hall to opera), wine and food.
I cherished his sardonic wit, admired his perspicacity, and was inspired
by his eloquence. In recent years, as
we went to chamber music concerts together and read each other's poems, as he
saw my children grow up and I saw his beloved daughter Julia marry and move to
England, our relationship moved from that of student and teacher into a
profound friendship which meant more to me than I can say.
Sheldon Zitner began as a
poet, publishing works in Poetry and The Nation at an early age, but in the
context of an academic life his writing was to become more often analytical and
interpretive than creative. His first
publications were essentially manuals--A
Preface to Literary Analysis (1964), The
Practice of Criticism (1966), and The
Practice of Modern Literary Scholarship (1969) -- but he soon found his way
to those elegant and highly original interpretations of Elizabethan literature
that were to make his reputation. These
included editions of The Mutabilitie
Cantos of Edmund Spenser (1968),
Francis Beaumont 's comedy The Knight of
the Burning Pestle (1984), and Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing (1998).
He also produced a groundbreaking introduction to All's Well that Ends Well for the Twayne critical series (1989),
and many articles which, like his piece on Aumerle's Conspiracy, have become
classics. (I once taught a second-year
Shakespeare course at U of T in which a student plagiarized this last essay,
perhaps thinking that the observations that Zitner made so persuasively were
already common knowledge and not the original contributions they were to the
field!)
Only with his retirement
from the University of Toronto was Sheldon Zitner to return to his first love,
poetry, with all the passionate commitment he had brought to his teaching
career. His first collection, The Asparagus Feast, was published by
the Hugh MacLennan Poetry Series of McGill-Queen's University Press in
1999. It was an immediate success,
earning responses such as:
"A wise and learned voice ... accomplished,
beautiful, and moving poems." The Globe and Mail
"A feast indeed it is: rich in language and
imagery, delicately flavoured with allusions gleaned from extensive reading and
travel, peppered with a mischievous wit."
The Malahat Review
The Asparagus Feast went into a second edition, a rare event indeed for a first book of
poetry, and McGill-Queen's was happy to publish Zitner's next volume, Before We Had Words, in 2002. Books
in Canada greeted the event with the comment that:
"The emergence of Sheldon Zitner as a major
figure in Canadian poetry is itself a matter for rejoicing. Before
We Had Words is a work of wit, passion, and discipline. He deserves all the honour we can give
him,"
"Sheldon
Zitner's writing combines energy and wisdom, vigour and
experience. In one poem he speaks of an art
that,
distrusting show, 'achieves elegance without forgetting beginnings and
their
frugal joys.' His own work
delivers just this mixture of
gusto and refinement, memory
and activity. Staying close to things of the earth and
early loves,
it lives in the here and now, thinking
and dreaming ... This new
book grapples with our 'thought-
encumbered images' in a poetry
that 'means to
cherish not to awe.' Its success is our
enlightenment and pleasure."
He himself will be sorely missed.
© copyright Susan Glickman 2005