Bryce Conrad (1951–2017)

IF 0.1 N/A POETRY
Ian D. Copestake
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Abstract

This issue is dedicated to the memory of Bryce Conrad, editor of the William Carlos Williams Review from 2004 to 2010, who died on 14 September 2017 after a long battle with brain cancer. On announcing the news of Bryce’s death to the Board of the journal and to the membership of the Williams Society, a warmth of feeling pervaded the responses both of those who knew him well or had only known him through correspondences. As tends to be the rhythm of friendships in academia they are often fed only by meeting at conferences but can be established in advance by knowing a person through their writing. I certainly had my first impression of Bryce through reading Refiguring America as a postgraduate in Leeds. To then be in contact with him by email confirmed what I felt on finally meeting him in person, namely that he was a warm, genuine, engaged and interested man, who could put you at ease in an instant. It remains the proudest moment of my professional life when, after guest editing the Spring issue of the Review in 2009, we did indeed meet at an MLA conference and he then asked me to take on the editorship of the journal. I can only begin to imagine the struggles Bryce had in keeping the journal going until his illness demanded he step back, and I will always be grateful to him for trusting me with a publication that he had revived in 2004 after its six-year publication hiatus. Indeed, Bryce’s wife, Anastasia Coles, noted that Bryce’s role in getting the Review back on its feet was something he regarded “as a highlight of his career. It gave him a chance to be connected with scholarship when his teaching and administrative duties tended to eat up all his time. He was always distraught though about not being able to give it as much time as he had wanted.” In the celebration of Bryce’s work that follows I was happy to include his 1995 essay on Gertrude Stein both to complement its place in Todd Giles’s heartfelt recollection of his mentor and friend and to offer a sense of Bryce’s own academic starting points and interests. I am also grateful to John Lowney for sharing his memories of Bryce and for reflecting on the work of history and of language that helped bring so many of us closer to both Williams and ultimately to the much missed author of Refiguring America, Bryce Conrad.
布莱斯·康拉德(1951-2017)
布莱斯·康拉德是2004年至2010年《威廉·卡洛斯·威廉姆斯评论》的编辑,他在与脑癌长期斗争后于2017年9月14日去世。在向杂志董事会和威廉姆斯协会成员宣布布莱斯去世的消息时,无论是与他很熟的人,还是只通过通信认识他的人,都充满了温暖的感觉。正如学术界友谊的节奏一样,他们往往只在会议上见面,但可以通过通过写作了解一个人而提前建立起来。当然,我对布莱斯的第一印象是在利兹读研究生时读到的《重塑美国》。然后通过电子邮件与他联系,证实了我最终亲自见到他时的感受,即他是一个温暖、真诚、敬业、感兴趣的人,他能让你瞬间放松下来。这仍然是我职业生涯中最骄傲的时刻,在2009年担任《评论》春季刊的客座编辑之后,我们确实在MLA会议上见过面,然后他邀请我担任该杂志的编辑。我只能开始想象布莱斯在维持这本杂志的过程中所经历的挣扎,直到他的疾病要求他退出。我将永远感激他信任我,让这本杂志在停刊六年后于2004年重新出版。事实上,布莱斯的妻子阿纳斯塔西娅·科尔斯(Anastasia Coles)指出,布莱斯在让《评论》重新站起来的过程中所扮演的角色,是他“职业生涯中的一个亮点”。当他的教学和行政工作占据了他所有的时间时,这给了他一个与学术联系的机会。但他总是因为不能给它足够的时间而心烦意乱。”在接下来的对布莱斯作品的庆祝中,我很高兴地把他1995年关于格特鲁德·斯坦的文章包括在内,既补充了它在托德·贾尔斯对他的导师和朋友的衷心回忆中的地位,也提供了布莱斯自己的学术起点和兴趣。我还要感谢约翰·洛尼分享他对布莱斯的回忆,感谢他对历史和语言作品的反思,正是这些作品让我们更接近威廉姆斯,并最终接近了《重塑美国》的作者布莱斯·康拉德。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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