<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ead xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
  xsi:schemaLocation="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9 ead.xsd" relatedencoding="MARC21">
  <eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" id="a0" audience="internal" repositoryencoding="iso15511"
    countryencoding="iso3166-1" scriptencoding="iso15924" dateencoding="iso8601">
    <eadid mainagencycode="US-txauhrh" countrycode="US" encodinganalog="852$a"
      >urn:taro:utexas.hrc.00051</eadid>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper>Elizabeth Hardwick: </titleproper>
        <subtitle>An Inventory of Her Papers at the Harry Ransom Center</subtitle>
        <author encodinganalog="245$c">Jennifer B. Patterson, Liz Murray</author>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher encodinganalog="260$b">University of Texas at Austin</publisher>
        <date encodinganalog="260$c" calendar="gregorian" era="ce">1993</date>
      </publicationstmt>
    </filedesc>
    <profiledesc>
      <creation>Text converted and initial EAD tagging provided by Apex Data Services, <date
          era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2000.</date></creation>
      <langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn"
          >English.</language></langusage>
    </profiledesc>
    <revisiondesc>
      <change>
        <date>Tue Jul 22 15:08:17 CDT 2003</date>
        <item>urn:taro:utexas.hrc.00051 converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.xsl
          (20030505).</item>
      </change>
      <change>
        <date>February 2012</date>
        <item>Series description tagging updated by Nicole Davis</item>
      </change>
      <change>
        <date normal="2025" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">2025 June 23</date>
        <item>Finding Aid merged by Amy Armstrong.</item>
      </change>
    </revisiondesc>
  </eadheader>
  <archdesc level="collection">
    <did id="a1">
      <head>Descriptive Summary</head>
      <origination label="Creator">
        <persname encodinganalog="100" source="lcnaf">Hardwick, Elizabeth, 1916-2007</persname>
      </origination>
      <unittitle label="Title" encodinganalog="245$a">Elizabeth Hardwick Papers</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" label="Dates:"
        normal="1934/2001">1934-2001</unitdate>
      <unitid label="Call Number: " countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-txauhrh"
        encodinganalog="099"> Manuscript Collection MS-01829</unitid>
      <physdesc label="Extent:" encodinganalog="300$a">
        <extent>10 boxes (4.20 linear feet)</extent>
      </physdesc>
      <repository label="Repository:" encodinganalog="852$a">
        <extref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:show="new"
          xlink:actuate="onRequest" xlink:href="http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/">
          <corpname><subarea>Harry Ransom Center, </subarea>The University of Texas at Austin
          </corpname>
        </extref>
      </repository>
      <abstract label="Abstract:" encodinganalog="520$a">The papers contain manuscripts of
        Hardwick's writings, particularly <title render="italic">Bartleby in Manhattan</title> and
          <title render="italic">Sleepless Nights</title>, book reviews, conference papers and
        lectures, introductions, short stories, and tributes. In addition, there are articles,
        awards, biographical information, correspondence with friends and husband Robert Lowell, and
        photographs of Hardwick, Robert Lowell, and others.</abstract>
      <langmaterial label="Language: " encodinganalog="546$a">
        <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn">English</language>
      </langmaterial>
    </did>
    <bioghist id="a2" encodinganalog="545">
      <head>Biographical Sketch</head>
      <p>Born July 27, 1916, Elizabeth Hardwick grew up with ten brothers and sisters in Lexington,
        Kentucky. She attended local schools, and received a master's degree in English from the
        University of Kentucky in 1939. Shortly thereafter, Hardwick moved to New York, and began
        classes at Columbia University, where she would matriculate for the next two years.</p>
      <p>The contrast between life in Kentucky and in New York inspired Hardwick to write her first
        novel, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">The Ghostly Lover</title>, which was published in 1945. The plot focused on
        the emotional development of a southern women who has moved to New York, which she adopts as
        her home. Hardwick received critical attention for her talented prose style, as well as her
        descriptions of people and places.</p>
      <p>After the book was published, Philip Rahv, an editor of the <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Partisan Review</title>, asked Hardwick to become a contributor. Her
        appearance in this journal marked the beginning of a long career in literary and social
        criticism. She went on to publish well-received essays in <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Partisan Review</title>, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New Republic</title>, and <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Harper's</title>. In 1947, Hardwick won a Guggenheim Fellowship for
        fiction.</p>
      <p>Two years later, Hardwick met and married the poet Robert Lowell. They spent the next
        decade traveling in Europe and moving around the United States where Lowell taught poetry at
        the University of Iowa, the University of Indiana, and the University of Cincinnati. In
        1954, they settled in Boston, where they would remain for the next six years. While in
        Boston, Hardwick published a second novel, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Simple Truth</title>, in 1955, and
        gave birth in 1957 to her only child, Harriet Lowell.</p>
      <p>The Lowells returned to Manhattan in 1960, and Hardwick began editing a compilation of
        letters by William James, which was published the next year. In 1963, a printer's strike
        shut down the book review offices of <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New York Times</title> and the
          <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Herald Tribune</title>. Hardwick, who had long bemoaned the state of book
        reviewing in the United States, met with a group of friends to found the <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">New York Review of Books</title>. The NYRB became one of the most
        controversial and intellectually challenging journals in the United States, and Hardwick
        served as an advisory editor since its founding.</p>
      <p>Hardwick continued to publish critical essays throughout the 1960s and 1970s, and was the
        first woman to win the George Jean Nathan Award for outstanding drama criticism in 1967.
        Many of her essays were compiled and published in book form in <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">A view of My Own: Essays on Literature and Society</title> (1962), <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Seduction and Betrayal: Women and Literature</title> (1974), and <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Bartleby in Manhattan</title> (1986).</p>
      <p>Hardwick's third novel, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Sleepless Nights</title>, was published
        in 1979. Its semi-autobiographical nature, focusing on the reminiscences of a woman named
        Elizabeth, received almost unanimous critical acclaim. <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Sleepless Nights</title> was nominated for a National Book Critics Circle
        Award in 1980.</p>
      <p>Hardwick continued to be an influential literary and social commentator. Anne Tyler wrote
        of her, “Whatever her subject, Hardwick has a gift for coming up with descriptions so
        thoughtfully selected, so exactly right, that they strike the reader as inevitable.”
        Hardwick died in Manhattan on December 2, 2007, at the age of ninety-one.</p>
    </bioghist>

    <scopecontent id="a3" encodinganalog="520$b">
      <head>Scope and Contents</head>
      <p><emph render="boldunderline">1991 Acquisition</emph></p>
      <p>Seven boxes of creative works, correspondence, printed material, articles and photographs,
        1934-1991 (bulk 1960-90) represent Elizabeth Hardwick's life and career. The material is
        arranged in two series, and follows Hardwick's original arrangement where possible. The
        Works series (four boxes, 1956-1991, bulk 1975-1985) represents Hardwick's work as a
        novelist and literary critic. The Personal series (three boxes, 1934-1989, bulk 1970-89)
        documents Hardwick's life, activities, friendships, and her relationship with her husband,
        Robert Lowell.</p>
      <p>In conjunction with books and journals donated by Hardwick now housed in the HRC book
        collections, the materials in the first series offer an almost complete archive of her
        published works. The typescripts of many unpublished articles, as well as lectures and
        presentations, can also be found in the collection. Of particular interest are the
        manuscript drafts of her 1979 novel, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Sleepless Nights</title>. This book is
        the most fully documented in the collection, and includes four folders of reviews from
        around the world.</p>
      <p>The material in the second series is made up largely of correspondence, but also includes
        photographs, interviews, awards and honors given to Hardwick, as well as materials she
        accumulated following the death of her husband, Robert Lowell. The correspondence to
        Hardwick is arranged alphabetically in two groupings. The first of these includes general
        correspondence, and is notable for its inclusion of many significant authors, who were
        friends of Hardwick's, discussing their works or giving their opinions on recent literature
        and events. Of particular interest is the collection of letters from Robert Lowell, dating
        1949 to 1977, as well as letters from Hardwick's close friend, Mary McCarthy. The series
        also includes a large number of condolence letters written to Hardwick on the death of
        Lowell, as well as a small amount of correspondence from Hardwick, and letters from Lowell
        to his daughter, Harriet.</p>
      <p>The collection gives a good overview of Hardwick's writing career. Less well documented,
        however, are the events of her personal life. The collection lacks information on her
        activities prior to 1949, and does not include manuscripts of her earliest publications. The
        collection documents more fully Hardwick's career and life in the 1970s and 1980s.</p>
      <p>The collection should be of particular interest to scholars of Robert Lowell, and
        references to him are found throughout the second series. Many of Hardwick's correspondents
        refer to him in their letters, and his frequent letters to Hardwick illuminate his life and
        writing career. The group of condolence letters Hardwick received upon his death contain
        personal reminiscences from a number of distinguished authors, such as Stephen Spender,
        Lillian Hellman, and Adrienne Rich. Further, two folders of notes and correspondence
        relating to the publication of two books about Lowell, by Ian Hamilton and C. David Heymann,
        contain biographical information contributed by Elizabeth Hardwick, as well as her
        disagreements with passages in the works.</p>

      <p><emph render="bold">Series I: Works, 1956-1991, bulk 1975-1985 (boxes 1-4)</emph></p>

      <p>The first series divides Hardwick's works into two subseries--the first is arranged
        alphabetically by title regardless of genre, and consists of novels, essays, short stories,
        and critical reviews. The second follows Hardwick's original grouping under the title <emph
          render="doublequote">Uncollected essays, written after the publication of <title
            xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
            xlink:href="">Bartleby in Manhattan</title>.</emph> However, some works found in the
        first alphabetical arrangement are also uncollected and were written after the publication
        of the book. (An index to the works is provided in this finding aid). A third subseries
        contains newspaper and journal reviews of Hardwick's works.</p>
      <p>The material in this series includes handwritten notes, typed and carbon copy manuscripts,
        published articles, proof copies, and reviews of articles and books published by Hardwick.
        The creation and publication of two of Hardwick's books, <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Bartleby in Manhattan</title> (1986) and <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Sleepless Nights</title> (1979), are well documented, and include
        typewritten drafts, layouts, and galley proofs. The range of topics covered in essay form
        illustrates Hardwick's interest in literature and social issues. Over half of the essays in
        the series address literary topics, with an emphasis on modern writers and book reviews. Of
        particular interest are the writings devoted to women writers, such as Mary McCarthy, Doris
        Lessing, Edith Wharton, Gertrude Stein, Katherine Anne Porter, and Simone Weil. The essays
        covering social issues include such subjects as popular religious figures, Communism, Martin
        Luther King, Lee Harvey Oswald, contemporary mores, and aging. Also included in this series
        are theater reviews, short stories, addresses, and presentations. Most of the essays are in
        typewritten form, with handwritten emendations. A significant number of the works are also
        represented by galley proofs. A number of essays have been grouped under the title <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Bartleby in Manhattan</title>. However, earlier versions of some of these
        essays can also be found in the first subseries.</p>
      <p>This series spans five decades, but the vast majority of materials appear to date from the
        1970s and 1980s. This is especially true of manuscripts, since the earlier works are
        exclusively published articles.</p>

      <p><emph render="bold">Series II. Personal, 1934-1989, bulk 1970-1989 (boxes 5-7)</emph></p>

      <p>The material in this series has been divided into three subseries, the largest of which is
        the first, Correspondence, 1949-1989, bulk 1970-1984. This subseries has been further
        divided into four groupings, which follow Hardwick's arrangement--general letters to
        Hardwick, letters from Hardwick, letters from Robert Lowell to other family members, and
        condolence letters written to Hardwick upon the death of Lowell. Each grouping is in
        alphabetical order, and Hardwick's original listing of the correspondents can be found in
        the folders. Hardwick's incoming correspondence ranges from intimate letters from close
        friends, such as Mary McCarthy, Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Craft, Angela Carter, Nadine
        Gordimer, Stephen and Natasha Spender, and Gore Vidal, to single letters from acquaintances
        and colleagues. The group of letters written to Hardwick upon the death of Robert Lowell is
        notable because many correspondents offer personal reminiscences of Lowell.</p>
      <p>The correspondence is largely literary in nature, and interesting because many friends of
        Hardwick, who are writers themselves, offer opinions on Hardwick's writing as well as their
        own and that of other writers. Other correspondents discuss important social issues. Mary
        McCarthy's letters are particularly insightful. Of particular interest to scholars of Robert
        Lowell are the many letters discussing his activities and mental state.</p>
      <p>Within the correspondence of this subseries are found four folders of letters from Robert
        Lowell to Hardwick written between 1949 and 1977. Especially well documented are Lowell's
        final years, when he wrote regularly to Hardwick and their daughter, Harriet. It should be
        noted that Hardwick's chronological arrangement of these letters has been maintained, and
        that undated correspondence can be found at the back of each folder.</p>
      <p>The Activities subseries spans the years 1934-1989, but most of the material falls between
        1979 and 1989. It includes honors and awards Hardwick received as well as articles about
        her. Of particular interest is the folder of photographs, which contains pictures of
        Hardwick, as well as three that had belonged to Robert Lowell, with notations on the
        backs.</p>
      <p>The final subseries, titled Robert Lowell, 1976-1987, contains materials that Hardwick
        collected about Lowell after his death. Included are memorials to the poet, written by Frank
        Bidart and Blair Clark. The two folders of material devoted to the posthumous biographies of
        Lowell offer Hardwick's insight into Lowell's life, as well as her disagreements with the
        biographers' work.</p>

      <p><emph render="boldunderline">2002 Acquisition</emph></p>
      <p>This accretion includes Hardwick's writings and correspondence, as well as articles about her,
        awards, biographical information, and reviews. While the bulk of the material is recent
        (1990-2000), her writings date from 1959. The papers are organized in three series: Series
        I. Works, 1959-2000, Series II. Correspondence, 1970-2001, and Series III. Career-related
        Material.</p>
      <p>Series I. Works, 1959-2000, contains material for several books, as well as articles, book
        reviews, conference papers and lectures, introductions, short stories, and tributes.
        Material for her books includes typescripts and proofs for the introduction to <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">American Fictions</title> (1999), <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Sight-Readings</title> (1998), and <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Herman Melville</title> (2000). Also present is a privately printed
        collection of short stories, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">New York Stories</title> (1996).</p>
      <p>Hardwick's articles appeared in a variety of publications such as <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Granta</title>, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Harper's</title>, <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">The New Republic</title>, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New York Review</title>, <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">The New Yorker</title>, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Opera News</title>, <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Three Penny Review</title>, <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Vanity Fair</title>, and <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Vogue</title>, on topics including Anton
        Chekhov, Faye Dunaway, Henrik Ibsen, Henry James, Herman Melville's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote"
          xlink:href="">Billy Budd,</title> Katherine Anne Porter, O. J. Simpson, and Gertrude
        Stein, as well as places such as Selma, Alabama; Lexington, Kentucky; Maine, and New York
        City.</p>
      <p>Hardwick's book reviews for <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New Republic</title>, <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">New York Review</title>, <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New York Times Book Review</title>,
        and <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">The New Yorker</title> cover a wide range of subjects including the Menendez
        brothers, Edmund Wilson, the racehorse <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Seabiscuit,</title> poet Delmore
        Schwartz, editor Willie Morris, Henry James, and Thomas Wolfe, as well as authors Richard
        Ford, Nigel Hamilton, and Philip Roth.</p>
      <p>Introductions to books include Machado de Assis's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Dom Casmurro</title>, Henry James's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Daisy Miller</title>, Mary McCarthy's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Intellectual Memoirs</title>, Herman Melville's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Moby Dick</title> and <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Redburn</title>, V. S. Naipaul's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">A Bend in the River</title>, Susan Sontag's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Reader</title>, and Italo Svevo's <title
          xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
          xlink:href="">Zeno's Conscience</title>.</p>
      <p>Hardwick's friendships and professional associations are reflected in her tributes,
        requested for a variety of publications and occasions, for individuals such as Harvard's
        Bill Alfred, author William Gaddis, journalist Murray Kempton, writer/philosopher Jonathan
        Lieberson, J. F. Powers, and Peter Taylor.</p>
      <p>The correspondence in Series II includes letters (1970-2001) from Hardwick's Boston friend
        Esther Brooks; Robert Lowell's aunt, Sarah Winslow Cotting; and Robert Lowell's first
        cousin, Alice Meade, and her daughter Devie. The general correspondence includes letters
        from Louis Begley, Richard Ford, Nadine Gordimer, Aidan Higgins, John Gregory Dunne, Carolyn
        Kizer, David Laskin, Alison Lurie, Janet Malcolm, W. S. Merwin, Larry McMurtry, Cynthia
        Ozick, Robert Stone, Peter Taylor, and John Updike.</p>
      <p>Series III. Career-related Material provides additional information about Hardwick
        including articles and biographical information; awards and honors; photographs of Hardwick,
        Robert Lowell, and others; and reviews of <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
          xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Sleepless Nights</title>.</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <arrangement>
      <head>Note to Researchers</head>
      <p>The inventory for the Elizabeth Hardwick Papers is a conflation of one finding aid created in
        1993 and a preliminary inventory created for a minimally processed addition received in
        2002. The 2002 addition was appended to the end of the original finding aid. Because both
        descriptions began the box numbering with Box 1, the 2002 addition is differentiated by
        adding the letter "a" to the original box number (e.g., Box 1a, Box 2a, etc.). The
        inventories were combined in 2025 to comply with a new content management system.</p>
    </arrangement>

    <acqinfo id="a19" encodinganalog="541">
      <head>Acquisition</head>
      <p>Gift, 1991 (G 8738); Purchase, 2002 (R 15001)</p>
    </acqinfo>
    <accessrestrict id="a14" encodinganalog="506">
      <head>Access</head>
      <p>Open for research. Photocopies of letters belonging to Princeton University may not be
        photographed or reproduced without permission. Correspondence from Darryl Pinckney is restricted until 2039.</p>
    </accessrestrict>
    <processinfo id="a20" encodinganalog="583">
      <head>Processed by</head>
      <p>Jennifer B. Patterson, 1993; Liz Murray, 2002</p>
    </processinfo>
    <controlaccess id="a12">
      <head>Index Terms</head>
      <controlaccess>
        <head>Correspondents</head>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Anzilotti, Rolando.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Bidart, Frank, 1939- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Bishop, Elizabeth, 1911-1979.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Boyers, Robert.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Brinnin, John Malcolm, 1916- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Eberhart, Helen Elizabeth.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Epstein, Jacob.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Fremont-Smith, Eliot, 1929- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Giroux, Robert.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Goldberg, Lynn.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Gray, Francine du Plessix.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Howard, Richard, 1929- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Howe, Irving.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Kazin, Alfred, 1915- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Lowell, Robert, 1917-1977.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">McCarthy, Mary, 1912- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">McPherson, William.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Merwin, W. S. (William Stanley), 1927-
          .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Oates, Joyce Carol.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Orwell, Sonia.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Ostroff, Anthony, 1923- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Phillips, Robert S. </persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Rich, Adrienne Cecil.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Richards, I. A. (Ivor Armstrong), 1893-
          .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Roth, Philip.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Schlesinger, Arthur Meier, 1917- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Spender, Natasha Litvin.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Spender, Stephen, 1909- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Stern, Richard G., 1928- .</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Updike, John.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Valentine, Jean.</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Vidal, Gore, 1925- .</persname>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <head>Subjects</head>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">American fiction--20th century.</subject>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">American fiction--Women writers.</subject>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Literature--History and criticism.</subject>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <head>Document Types</head>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Awards.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Biographies.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Book reviews.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Eulogies.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Galley proofs.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Photographs.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Postcards.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Scripts.</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Speeches.</genreform>
      </controlaccess>
    </controlaccess>

    <separatedmaterial encodinganalog="544">
      <head>Separated Material</head>
      <p>Books that arrived with the Elizabeth Hardwick Papers were transferred to the Ransom Center
        Library and are described in the University of Texas library catalog. Awards were transfered
        to the Center's Personal Effects Collection. One VHS tape was transferred to the Center's
        Moving Image Collection.</p>
    </separatedmaterial>

    <dsc type="in-depth">
      <head>Elizabeth Hardwick Papers--Folder List</head>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Series I: Works, <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956-1991, bulk 1975-1985
            </date></unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Subseries A: General works, 1956-1987, bulk 1979-1987</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">1</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>A-B</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
                  render="italic" xlink:href="">Bartleby in Manhattan</title>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">1</container>
                <container type="folder">2-3</container>
                <unittitle>Collected Essays</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">1</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>Duplicated page proofs</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">1</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>Repro proofs</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>C-E</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">2</container>
              <unittitle>F-I</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>J-S</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
                  render="italic" xlink:href="">Sleepless Nights</title>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">2</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>Early drafts</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">2</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>Draft</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">3</container>
                <container type="folder">1</container>
                <unittitle>Draft</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">3</container>
                <container type="folder">2</container>
                <unittitle>Carbon copy draft</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">3</container>
                <container type="folder">3</container>
                <unittitle>Repro proofs</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">3</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>Layout and bluelines</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>T-Z</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Subseries B: Uncollected essays, written after the publication of <title
                xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic"
                xlink:href="">Bartleby in Manhattan</title>, 1979-1991</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">6</container>
              <unittitle>Women writers</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>Other substantial articles on American and foreign writers</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>Commencement Day Address, Smith College, <date era="ce"
                  calendar="gregorian">1984</date></unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">2</container>
              <unittitle>Addresses and presentations</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Subseries C: Reviews, 1962-1984</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>General</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
                  render="italic" xlink:href="">Sleepless Nights</title>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">4</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January - May, 1979</date>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">4</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June - August, 1979</date>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">4</container>
                <container type="folder">6</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1979 - October 1983</date>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">4</container>
                <container type="folder">7</container>
                <unittitle><date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Undated &amp;
                  </date>Swedish</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Series II. Personal, <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934-1989, bulk
              1970-1989</date></unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Subseries A: Correspondence, 1949-1989</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>Incoming correspondence</unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">5</container>
                <container type="folder">1</container>
                <unittitle>A-F</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">5</container>
                <container type="folder">2</container>
                <unittitle>G-L</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <unittitle>Robert Lowell</unittitle>
              </did>
              <c05>
                <did>
                  <container type="box">5</container>
                  <container type="folder">3</container>
                  <unittitle>
                    <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949-1961</date>
                  </unittitle>
                </did>
              </c05>
              <c05>
                <did>
                  <container type="box">5</container>
                  <container type="folder">4</container>
                  <unittitle>
                    <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1963-1969</date>
                  </unittitle>
                </did>
              </c05>
              <c05>
                <did>
                  <container type="box">5</container>
                  <container type="folder">5</container>
                  <unittitle>
                    <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1970</date>
                  </unittitle>
                </did>
              </c05>
              <c05>
                <did>
                  <container type="box">5</container>
                  <container type="folder">6</container>
                  <unittitle>
                    <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1971-77</date>
                  </unittitle>
                </did>
              </c05>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">5</container>
                <container type="folder">7</container>
                <unittitle>Mary McCarthy</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">1</container>
                <unittitle>M-R</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">2</container>
                <unittitle>S-Z</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">6</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>Outgoing correspondence</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">6</container>
              <container type="folder">4</container>
              <unittitle>Letters from Robert Lowell to Charlotte Winslow Lowell &amp; Harriet
                Lowell</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>Letters received by Elizabeth Hardwick on the death of Robert
                Lowell</unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>A-F</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">6</container>
                <unittitle>G-M</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">7</container>
                <unittitle>N-S</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">1</container>
                <unittitle>T-Z</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">2</container>
                <unittitle>Telegrams</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Subseries B: Activities, 1934-1989, bulk 1979-1989</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">7</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>Awards &amp; Honors</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">7</container>
              <container type="folder">4</container>
              <unittitle>Interviews &amp; Articles</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">7</container>
              <container type="folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>Photographs</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>
        <c02 level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Subseries C: Robert Lowell, 1976-1987</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">7</container>
              <container type="folder">6</container>
              <unittitle>Written memorials to Lowell</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">7</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>Correspondence and notes on biography of Lowell by Ian Hamilton</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">7</container>
              <container type="folder">8</container>
              <unittitle>Correspondence and note on biography of Lowell by C. David
                Heymann</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>
      </c01>

      <c01 level="collection">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Addition (Reg. no. 15001), 2002</unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 level="series">
          <did>
            <unittitle>I. Works, <unitdate type="inclusive">1959-2000</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">1a</container>
              <container type="Folder">1</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
                  render="italic" xlink:href="">American Fictions</title>, introduction</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">1a</container>
              <container type="Folder">2-3</container>
              <unittitle>Articles by Hardwick</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">1a</container>
              <container type="Folder">4-6</container>
              <unittitle>Book reviews</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">1a</container>
              <container type="Folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>Conference papers and lectures</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
                  render="italic" xlink:href="">Herman Melville</title>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="Box">1a</container>
                <container type="Folder">8</container>
                <unittitle>Corrected typescript</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="Box">2a</container>
                <container type="Folder">1-2</container>
                <unittitle>Uncorrected proofs, book blurb, correspondence, and reviews</unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">2a</container>
              <container type="Folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>Introductions by Hardwick</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">2a</container>
              <container type="Folder">4-5</container>
              <unittitle>Short stories including <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
                  xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">New York
                Stories</title></unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">2a</container>
              <container type="Folder">6-7</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
                  render="italic" xlink:href="">Sight-Readings</title>, publisher's edited copy, and
                reviews</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">2a</container>
              <container type="Folder">8</container>
              <unittitle>Tributes</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>

        <c02 level="series">
          <did>
            <unittitle>II. Correspondence, <unitdate type="inclusive"
              >1970-2001</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>General</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">2</container>
              <unittitle>Brooks, Esther</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>Cotting, Sarah Winslow</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">4</container>
              <unittitle>Meade, Alice and Devie</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>

        <c02 level="series">
          <did>
            <unittitle>III. Career-related Material</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>Articles about Hardwick</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">6</container>
              <unittitle>Awards, biographical information, and honors</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>Photographs of Hardwick, Robert Lowell, and others</unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="Box">3a</container>
              <container type="Folder">8</container>
              <unittitle>Reviews of <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
                  xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Sleepless
                Nights</title></unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>



      </c01>



    </dsc>
    <odd type="index">
      <head>Elizabeth Hardwick Papers--Index of Correspondents</head>
      <p>The following index does not include the 2002 addition.</p>
      <list type="simple">
        <item> Adams, Alice--5.1 </item>
        <item> Adler, Renata (The New Yorker)--6.5 </item>
        <item> Alfred, William--7.2 </item>
        <item> Alvarez, A. (Alfred)--6.5 </item>
        <item> Ammons, Archie (A.R.)--5.1 </item>
        <item> Anderson, William Grenville Harvard College--6.5 </item>
        <item> Anzilotti, Gloria Italiano--7.2 </item>
        <item> Anzilotti, Rolando--6.5,7.2 </item>
        <item> Ashbery, John--6.5 </item>
        <item> Atlas, James (New York Times Book Review)--7.8 </item>
        <item> Austin, Sally--6.5 </item>
        <item> Axelrod, Stephen Gould--6.5 </item>
        <item> Barnes, Julian--5.1 </item>
        <item> Bengis, Ingrid--6.5 </item>
        <item> Berberova, Nina Nikolaevna--2.3 </item>
        <item> Berlin, Isaiah--6.5 </item>
        <item> Berryman, John--5.1 </item>
        <item> Bidart, Frank--7.6,7.8 </item>
        <item> Bishop, Elizabeth--5.1 </item>
        <item> Booth, Margaret--7.2 </item>
        <item> Booth, Philip--5.1,7.2 </item>
        <item> Boyers, Roberts--5.1 </item>
        <item> Boyle, Kay--5.1 </item>
        <item> Brinnin, John Malcolm--5.1, 6.5 </item>
        <item> Brooks, Esther--7.6 </item>
        <item> Brustein, Robert Sanford--6.5 </item>
        <item> Cameron, Hamish C.--6.5 </item>
        <item> Cameron, Peggie--6.5 </item>
        <item> Carlisle, Olga Andreyev--5.1 </item>
        <item> Carter, Angela--5.1 </item>
        <item> Carter, Elliott--6.5 </item>
        <item> Carter, Helen--6.5 </item>
        <item> Chace, James--6.5 </item>
        <item> Chase, Richard Volney--5.1 </item>
        <item> Chute, Joy--4.3 </item>
        <item> Clark, Blair--5.1 </item>
        <item> Clemons, Walter--5.1 </item>
        <item> Cori, Anne--6.5 </item>
        <item> Cori, Carl--6.5 </item>
        <item> Cotting, C.E.--6.5 </item>
        <item> Cousins, Norman--6.5 </item>
        <item> Craft, Robert--5.1 </item>
        <item> Crichton, Judy--6.5 </item>
        <item> Curtis, John (Weidenfeld &amp; Nicolson)--4.4 </item>
        <item> Dickey, James--7.2 </item>
        <item> Dunne, Joan Didion--6.5 </item>
        <item> Dupee, Andy--7.2 </item>
        <item> Dupee, Frederick (F.W.)--7.2 </item>
        <item> Eberhart, Betty--6.5,7.2 </item>
        <item> Eberhart, Richard--7.2 </item>
        <item> Eissler, K.R. (Kurt Robert)--6.5 </item>
        <item> Ehrenpreis, Irvin--5.1 </item>
        <item> Engel, Monroe--5.1 </item>
        <item> Epstein, Jacob (Random House, Inc.)--4.4,6.5 </item>
        <item> Faber &amp; Faber, London--7.2 </item>
        <item> Fiction Department (The New Yorker)--1.1,2.2 </item>
        <item> Fitz-Gerald, Clark B.--6.5 </item>
        <item> Fitzgerald, Sally--6.5 </item>
        <item> Flint, Robert W.--2.2,5.1 </item>
        <item> Fremont-Smith, Eliot (Village Voice)--7.8 </item>
        <item> Giroux, Robert--(Farrar, Straus &amp; Giroux, Inc.)--7.8 </item>
        <item> Goldberg, Lynn (Random House, Inc.)--4.4 </item>
        <item> Gordimer, Nadine--5.2 </item>
        <item> Gordon, Mary--5.2 </item>
        <item> Gowrie, Mrs. Grey (Bingo)--6.6 </item>
        <item> Goyen, William--6.6 </item>
        <item> Gray, Cleve--7.2 </item>
        <item> Gray, Francine du Plessix--5.2,6.6,7.2 </item>
        <item> Gray, Hanna Holborn (Yale University)--6.6 </item>
        <item> Guest, Barbara--6.6 </item>
        <item> Halsey, Alexandra (Random House, Inc.)--4.4 </item>
        <item> Hamilton, Ian--7.7 </item>
        <item> Hampshire, Stuart--5.2 </item>
        <item> Haskell, Molly--5.2 </item>
        <item> Hecht, Anthony (Univ. of Rochester)--6.6 </item>
        <item> Hellman, Lillian--6.6 </item>
        <item> Heymann, C. David--7.8 </item>
        <item> Howard, Richard--5.2,6.6 </item>
        <item> Howe, Fanny--6.6 </item>
        <item> Howe, Irving--5.2,6.6 </item>
        <item> Howe, Molly--6.6 </item>
        <item> Jacoby, Tamar (New York Review of Books)--7.8 </item>
        <item> James, Holly--6.6 </item>
        <item> Jarrell, Mary--6.6 </item>
        <item> Jones, Gayl--5.2 </item>
        <item> Kazin, Alfred--5.2,6.6 </item>
        <item> Knights, Elizabeth--5.2 </item>
        <item> Koch, Kenneth--6.6 </item>
        <item> Kunitz, Stanley--7.2 </item>
        <item> Lee, Lance--6.6 </item>
        <item> Leontief, Estelle--6.6 </item>
        <item> Levy, Paul--5.2 </item>
        <item> Lowell, Robert--5.3-5.6,6.4,7.8 </item>
        <item> Lurie, Alison--6.6 </item>
        <item> McCarthy, Elizabeth--7.8 </item>
        <item> McCarthy, Mary--4.3,5.7 </item>
        <item> Macdonald, Dwight--6.6 </item>
        <item> McPherson, Bill (Washington Post)--6.1,6.6 </item>
        <item> Macauley, Robie--6.6 </item>
        <item> Malamud, Bernard--6.6 </item>
        <item> Marlowe, Sylvia--6.1 </item>
        <item> Marquand, John Phillips--6.6 </item>
        <item> Mattfeld, Jacquelyn A. (Barnard College)--6.6 </item>
        <item> Mazzocco, John--6.6 </item>
        <item> Meade, Mrs. Alia Winslow--6.6 </item>
        <item> Meredith, Bill--6.6 </item>
        <item> Merrill, James--6.6 </item>
        <item> Merwin, W.S.--6.1,6.6 </item>
        <item> Miller, Karl--6.6 </item>
        <item> Moss, Howard (The New Yorker)--6.6 </item>
        <item> Mostyn-Owen, Gaia Servadio--6.1 </item>
        <item> Mumford, Lewis--6.1 </item>
        <item> Myers, John Bernard--6.6 </item>
        <item> Nabokov, Nicholas--6.7 </item>
        <item> Noël, Lord Annon--6.1 </item>
        <item> Nolan--6.1 </item>
        <item> Nolan, Jim--6.7 </item>
        <item> Nolan, Sidney--7.2 </item>
        <item> Oates, Joyce Carol--2.2,6.1 </item>
        <item> O'Doherty, Barbara--6.7 </item>
        <item> O'Doherty, Brian--6.7 </item>
        <item> Orwell, Sonia--6.1,6.7 </item>
        <item> Ostroff, Anthony--6.1,6.7 </item>
        <item> Ostroff, Miriam--6.7 </item>
        <item> Paris review--7.4 </item>
        <item> Parker, Judith--6.7 </item>
        <item> Peters, Svetlana Allilueva--6.1 </item>
        <item> Phillips, Robert--6.1,6.7 </item>
        <item> Pinckney, Darryl--7.2 </item>
        <item> Poirer, Richard--2.2 </item>
        <item> Prichett, V.S.--6.7 </item>
        <item> Pyle, John W.--6.7 </item>
        <item> Quindlen, Anna--6.7 </item>
        <item> Rahv, Philip--6.1 </item>
        <item> Reeve, Frank--6.7 </item>
        <item> Rich, Adrienne--6.1,6.7 </item>
        <item> Richards, Dorothy--6.1,6.7 </item>
        <item> Richards, I.A.--6.1,6.7 </item>
        <item> Ricks, Christopher B.--6.7 </item>
        <item> Rosen, Charles--6.7 </item>
        <item> Roth, Philip--6.1,6.7 </item>
        <item> Rothschild, Emma--6.7 </item>
        <item> Rushmore, Robert--6.1 </item>
        <item> Salty, Shelley (New York Review of Books)--7.8 </item>
        <item> Savage, Rowena (Weidenfeld (Publishers) Inc.)--4.3 </item>
        <item> Schickel, Richard--6.2 </item>
        <item> Schlesinger, Arthur M.--6.2,6.7 </item>
        <item> Schwartz, Lloyd--6.7 </item>
        <item> Scott, Nathan--6.7 </item>
        <item> Sedgewick, Sally--6.7 </item>
        <item> Seidel, Frederick--6.2 </item>
        <item> Sharaf, James A. (Harvard University)--7.8 </item>
        <item> Silvers, Robert B. (New York Review of Books)--2.3 </item>
        <item> Simpson, Eileen B.--6.7 </item>
        <item> Smith, William Jay--6.7 </item>
        <item> Solomon, Barbara--6.7 </item>
        <item> Sontag, Susan--6.2 </item>
        <item> Spender, Natasha--6.2,6.7 </item>
        <item> Spender, Stephen--6.2,6.7,7.7 </item>
        <item> Stafford, Jean--7.8 </item>
        <item> Starr, Mrs. Milton--6.7 </item>
        <item> Steel, Ronald--6.7 </item>
        <item> Stern, Dick--6.2,6.7 </item>
        <item> Straus, Dorothea--6.7 </item>
        <item> Stravinsky, Vera--5.1 </item>
        <item> Strong, Amy--6.7 </item>
        <item> Strong, Herbert--6.7 </item>
        <item> Styron, Nell Joslin--6.7 </item>
        <item> Styron, William--6.7 </item>
        <item> Sweeney, Francis--7.2 </item>
        <item> Tate, Allen--6.2 </item>
        <item> Taylor, Peter H.--6.2 </item>
        <item> Thomas, Harris H.--7.1 </item>
        <item> Thompson, Jack--6.2 </item>
        <item> Thompson, John--4.4 </item>
        <item> Thorup, Kirsten--6.2 </item>
        <item> Updike, John--3.7,6.2 </item>
        <item> Valentine, Jean--6.2,7.1 </item>
        <item> Vanden Heuvel, Jean (Stein)--7.1 </item>
        <item> Vidal, Gore--6.2,7.2 </item>
        <item> Voznesensky, Andrei--7.2 </item>
        <item> Wakoski, Diane--6.2 </item>
        <item> Walker, Gillian--7.1 </item>
        <item> Wanning, Andrew--7.1 </item>
        <item> Warren, Austin--6.2 </item>
        <item> Weisgall, Hugo--7.1 </item>
        <item> Weisgall, Nathalie--7.1 </item>
        <item> West, James--7.2 </item>
        <item> Wheelock, John Hall--6.2 </item>
        <item> Williams, Galen (Poets &amp; Writers)--7.1 </item>
        <item> Winslow, John--7.1 </item>
        <item> Winslow, Libby--7.1 </item>
        <item> Winter, Liberty--7.1 </item>
        <item> Worth, Irene--7.1 </item>
        <item> Zander, Ben--7.1 </item>
      </list>
    </odd>
    <odd type="index">
      <head>Elizabeth Hardwick Papers--Index of Works</head>
      <p>The following index does not include the 2002 addition.</p>
      <list type="simple">
        <item> Accepting the Dare: Maine--1.1 </item>
        <item> America and Dylan Thomas--1.1 </item>
        <item> American Fictions--1.1 </item>
        <item> The Apothesis of Martin Luther King--1.2 </item>
        <item> Auschwitz in New York--1.2 </item>
        <item> Bartleby in Manhattan [essay]--1.1, 1.3 </item>
        <item> Bartleby in Manhattan--1.2-1.5 </item>
        <item> [Billy Graham]--1.1 </item>
        <item> Boston--1.1 </item>
        <item> A Bunch of Reds--1.1, 1.2 </item>
        <item> Celebration for Mary McCarthy, Vassar College--4.2 </item>
        <item> Church Going--2.1 </item>
        <item> The Coming of Age--2.1 </item>
        <item> Commencement Address, Smith College--4.1 </item>
        <item> Contemporary Women Fiction Writers--4.2 </item>
        <item> [The Cost of Living]--2.1 </item>
        <item> The Crown Jewels: Letters by Stalin's Daughter, Svetlana--1-3 </item>
        <item> Dead Souls--2.1 </item>
        <item> A Death at Lincoln Center--1.2 </item>
        <item> Domestic Manners--1.2, 2.1 </item>
        <item> Doris Lessing--2.1 </item>
        <item> Edith Wharton--3.6 </item>
        <item> English Visitors in America -- see Imagining America </item>
        <item> Eye-Witness Art News--2.1 </item>
        <item> The Faithful--2.2 </item>
        <item> Foreword to The Ghostly Lover--2.2 </item>
        <item> Foreword to The Simple Truth--4.2 </item>
        <item> [George Balanchine]--2.2 </item>
        <item> Gertrude Stein--3.6 </item>
        <item> Grub Street: New York--2.2 </item>
        <item> [Henry James]--2.2 </item>
        <item> Ibsen's secrets--2.2 </item>
        <item> Introduction to The Best Plays of 1987--2.2 </item>
        <item> John Updike--3.7 </item>
        <item> Katherine Anne Porter--3.6 </item>
        <item> Manhattan Letter--4.2 </item>
        <item> Margaret Fuller--3.6 </item>
        <item> A Meeting with V.S. Naipaul--2.3 </item>
        <item> Memoirs, Conversations and Diaries--2.3 </item>
        <item> Militant Nudes--1.2 </item>
        <item> Morgan Library Memorial Service [for Mary McCarthy]--4.2 </item>
        <item> Nabokov: Master Class--1.3, 2.3 </item>
        <item> Nadine Gordimer--3.6 </item>
        <item> Norman Mailer--3.7 </item>
        <item> [Notes for address at the Whting Awards Ceremony, 1989]-4.2 </item>
        <item> [Notes for appearance at memorial service for Bruce Chatwin at the Manhattan Theatre
          Club]--4.2 </item>
        <item> [Notes for Phi Beta Kappa Address at the University of Kentucky]--4.2</item>
        <item> [Notes for talk to graduate students in English Department at Columbia
          University]--4.2 </item>
        <item> Notes: Literature, Tradition, and Values--4.2 </item>
        <item> The Oswald Family--1.2 </item>
        <item> Presentation of the MacDowell Medal to Mary McCarthy--4.2 </item>
        <item> Presentation to Peter Taylor of the Gold Medal for the Short Story--4.2</item>
        <item> Reading--2.3 </item>
        <item> Reflections on Simone Weil--2.3 </item>
        <item> [Review of Tolstoy Remembered, Ada, Countess of Blessington, and A Captive Time of
          Year: My Years with Pasternak]--2.3 </item>
        <item> Ring Lardner--1.2 </item>
        <item> Robert Frost in His Letters--1.2 </item>
        <item> Ruth Benedict: A Biographical Essay for Television--2.3 </item>
        <item> Sex and the Single Man--1.2 </item>
        <item> Simone Wei--1.3, 2.3 </item>
        <item> Sleepless Nights--2.4-3.4 </item>
        <item> Sue and Arabella--1.3 </item>
        <item> Tennessee Williams World of Women--3.5 </item>
        <item> The Theater of Growtowski--1.2 </item>
        <item> Thomas Mann at 100--1.3 </item>
        <item> Thoughts about Kirsten Thorup's Baby--3.5 </item>
        <item> Timon of Paris--1.2, 3.5 </item>
        <item> [Unpublished review of Henry Adams by R.P. Blackmur]--3.5 </item>
        <item> Wives and Mistresses--1.3 </item>
      </list>
    </odd>
  </archdesc>
</ead>
