Diana Trilling papers, 1921-1996

Diana Trilling papers, 1921-1996

Summary Information

Abstract

The Diana Trilling Papers document the life of literary and cultural critic, Diana Trilling. This collection contains her writings, extensive correspondence with other New York intellectuals, and subject files for her research as well as for the Lionel Trilling Estate.

At a Glance

Call No.:
MS# 1421
Bib ID:
6259383 View CLIO record
Creator(s):
Trilling, Diana
Repository:
Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Physical Description:
29.75 linear feet (57 document boxes 2 oversized boxes)
Language(s):
English .
Access:
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

This collection has no restrictions.

Description

Summary

This collection holds the papers of author, literary critic, and cultural commentator, Diana Trilling. Along with her husband, Lionel, Diana Trilling was a force on the New York intellectual scene from the 1930s until the 1970s. The records that comprise this collection document her professional life as well as her marriage with Lionel Trilling and the ways in which she balanced the two.

The bulk of the records are Diana Trilling's writings in the form of manuscripts, articles both published and unpublished, drafts and research notes. Correspondence with Lionel Trilling and other family members, publishing houses, and colleagues are also well represented. Other records include personal documents, photographs, subject files used for research and maintaining the Lionel Trilling Estate, and audio visual material.

Much of the records contained here provide insight or overlap with those within the Lionel Trilling Papers (MS#1256). These papers were donated soon after his death in 1976; however Diana Trilling continued to conduct his literary affairs on his behalf until her death in 1996.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged in six series.

Using the Collection

Restrictions on Access

You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.

This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.

This collection has no restrictions.

Terms Governing Use and Reproduction

Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. The RBML maintains ownership of the physical material only. Copyright remains with the creator and his/her heirs. The responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.

Preferred Citation

Identification of specific item; Date (if known); Diana Trilling papers, Box and Folder; Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.

Related Material

Lionel Trilling Papers, 1899-1987, MS#1256

The American Committee for Cultural Freedom Records, Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, Tamiment 023

Accruals

Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Source of acquisition--Estate of Diana trilling. Method of acquisition--Purchase, etc; Date of acquisition--1998.

Source of acquisition--James Trilling. Method of acquisition--Purchase; Date of acquisition--2002.

Source of acquisition--Theodore Solotaroff. Method of acquisition--Donation; Date of acquisition--2006.

About the Finding Aid / Processing Information

Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library

Processing Information

Papers processed Lea Osborne 7/2007.

Revision Description

2009-03-05 File created

2009-04-16 xml document instance created by Lea Osborne

2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.

Biographical / Historical

Writer Diana Trilling spent much of her life carving a niche out for herself that would separate her from her husband, critic and author, Lionel Trilling. Although she was fiercely devoted to their marriage, she maintained her own identity and had a successful career as a literary critic, an author, and a cultural commentator. She was not afraid to shy away from controversy especially if, in her view, her political opinions were being distorted or misunderstood by others. (The name Trilling, when used alone, refers to Diana Trilling. Lionel Trilling will always be referred to by his full name.).

Diana Rubin was born in New York City on July 21, 1905. Her parents, Joseph Rubin and Sadie Helene Rubin (neé Forbert), were immigrants from Poland. Joseph Rubin was a successful businessman while his wife did occasional work in interior design. Diana Rubin lived first in Westchester and then Brooklyn where she attended Erasmus Hall High School. She entered Radcliffe College in 1921 as an Art History major with a minor in Music. Rubin had wanted to be a singer, but had suffered from an affliction of the thyroid, effectively ending any chances she may have head to pursue a professional career.

After graduating cum laude in 1925, she moved back to New York to look for a job in some artistic environment, preferably a museum. What she found was a young graduate student at Columbia named Lionel Trilling. After dating for a couple of years, they married on October 25, 1929. Lionel Trilling continued to pursue his doctorate in English Literature while Diana Trilling spent her time volunteering in Harlem. She was active with other politically-minded individuals who were trying to save the Scottsboro Boys, the nine black boys charged with raping two white women in Scottsboro, Alabama. Diana Trilling tried to work with her Harlem neighbors and raise money to pay lawyer fees, a situation made more difficult due to racial and economic factors that distanced residents from each other.

In 1941, Lionel Trilling was asked by editors at The Nation to suggest a fiction critic for them. Diana Trilling offered her services and the weekly column "Fiction in Review" was created. The column ran until 1949. At this point, Trilling had begun contributing pieces on literary, social, and political themes for some of the following publications: The New York Times Book Review, Partisan Review, Commentary, Harpers, The Atlantic, The Saturday Review, Redbook, McCall's, Esquire, Mademoiselle, Vogue, The Nation, and The New Leader. Later on while being interviewed, she always made the point that she never discriminated against a particular journal or magazine. In other words, it was a privilege to know that one's articles were wanted in intellectual journals as well as mainstream magazines. In addition to these pieces, Trilling edited the Portable D.H. Lawrence for Viking Press in 1947. She was an active writer throughout her life and yet, found time to raise a family. James Lionel Trilling was born in 1949.

In the 1940s and 1950s, both Diana and Lionel Trilling began to distance themselves politically from other New York intellectuals. Once staunch supporters of Communism, they were unhappy with whom their fellow communists supported during World War II and the actions conducted in Europe under the umbrella of Communism. The Trillings joined the American Committee for Cultural Freedom. The American branch of this organization was in essence an Anti-Communist set of intellectuals and public personas that strove to condemn censorship of art and defend civil liberties. The group was comprised of individuals who represented various fields such as literature, dance, art, as well as political and labor activists. Notable members included Sidney Hook, James T. Farrell, Peter Viereck, W.H. Auden, George Balanchine, Saul Bellow, Elia Kazan, Robert Motherwell, Jackson Pollock, A. Philip Randolph, John Steinbeck and Robert Penn Warren. Diana Trilling served as Chairman of the Board from 1953 to 1957 and as a board member from 1957 until she resigned three years later. Trilling felt that she had moved away politically from some of the leadership and wanted to distance herself from their cause.

During this time, Lionel Trilling taught English at Columbia University. He was an extremely popular public figure who was always receiving invitations to give lectures, be a visiting scholar, or to read and offer criticism to literary pieces. Although he may have been more well-known of the two, Diana Trilling continued to publish articles and books. In 1958 she edited a selection of letters of D.H. Lawrence. This was followed by a collection of essays in 1964 published under the title Claremont Essays. The Trillings lived on Claremont Avenue and Diana Trilling felt that her address, and her neighborhood, had such an impact on the way she viewed the world.

Lionel Trilling was diagnosed with a rapid moving cancer in spring of 1975. His health quickly declined and he passed away in November of that same year. Despite this personal tragedy, Diana Trilling continued to write. Two years after his death, she published a retrospective of her time at Radcliffe College and the impression that coeducation made on the students of the mid-1970s called We Must March My Darlings. That same year Trilling began editing a twelve-volume uniform edition of her husband's works. This project lasted until 1979. In between, she pulled together some of her more popular book reviews and published Reviewing the Forties. Other publications include a nonfiction analysis of a 1981 Westchester murder trial entitled Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor, and a 1993 memoir of her marriage, The Beginning of the Journey: The Marriage of Diana and Lionel Trilling.

Throughout her career, Diana Trilling was active in intellectual and social organizations. Among them were the Radcliffe Club, the Cosmopolitan Club, which she joined in 1968, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, which she was elected to in 1976. She was also an honorary member of the Radcliffe Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. Trilling also successfully received a joint grant from the Rockefeller Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and two Guggenheim Fellowships, one in 1950 and one in 1991.

Diana Trilling remained a public figure even when she was not at the peak of her career. Her fiery public outbursts, like the Lillian Hellmann controversy, and her outspoken nature, made her a controversial figure. Even when her eyesight was failing and she was diminishing her creative output, Trilling continued to praise the political and cultural time of the 1930s and criticize the social movements of the 1960s. Like her husband, she was often considered elitist and woefully ignorant of the ways in which the United States in general, and New York in particular, had moved on since the 1930s.

Despite the criticisms, Diana Trilling remained determined to defend her views and those of her husband. She continued to give interviews and mentor younger writers until her death from cancer in 1996. She is survived by her son James Trilling, an art historian.

Subject Headings

The subject headings listed below are found in this collection. Links below allow searches for other collections at Columbia University, through CLIO, the catalog for Columbia University Libraries, and through ArchiveGRID, a catalog that allows users to search the holdings of multiple research libraries and archives.

All links open new windows.

Name
Barzun, Jacques, 1907-2012
Trilling, Diana
Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975
Subject
Anti-communist movements -- New York (State) -- New York
Criticism -- United States
Literary quarrels
Women authors, American
Women critics -- United States

Series I: Personal Documents, 1921-1970

This small series is composed of personal documents from Diana Trilling's early life. Academic records from her time at Radcliffe College, such as report cards, printed material and an autograph book, legal records concerning family members, yearbooks from Camp Lenore, course schedules from a vocal music institute, and a diary are found here. There is also a representative sample of appointment books and a family financial ledger.


Box 1 Folder 1

General, undated, 1921-1930, undated, 1921-1930


Box 1 Folder 2

Address Book, undated


Appointment Books


Box 1 Folder 3

undated, 1927-1931


Box 1 Folder 4

1960-1963


Box 1 Folder 5

1972-1977


Box 1 Folder 6

1980


Box 1 Folder 7

Barnard Certificate of Honor, 1989 April 5


Box 60 Folder 1

Biographical Statement (two drafts), [1982]


Box 1 Folder 8

Diary, 1922


Box 2 Folder 1

LenorLog, 1922-1924 (Camp Lenore), 1922-1924


Box 2 Folder 2

Lowell Institute, 1922 March-April


Box 2 Folder 3

Radcliffe College, 1923-1925, 1959, 1970, 1923-1925, 1959, 1970


Box 2 Folder 4

Rubin, Cecelia, 1973 February 9


Box 2 Folder 5

Rubin, Joseph--Trust Fund, 1934-1940


Box 2 Folder 6

Rubin, Joseph--Will, 1934 June 13


Box 2 Folder 7

Trilling, Diana--Will, 1949-1951


Box 2 Folder 8

Trilling, James--Wedding, undated


Box 2 Folder 9

Trilling, Lionel--Trust Fund, 1949 April 22


Box 2 Folder 10

Trilling, Lionel--Will, 1931-1951


Box 2 Folder 11

War Rations, 1943

Series II: Correspondence, 1927-1996

Series II holds Diana Trilling's correspondence. Letters within this series are between other family members, members of the literary community like other authors and publishing houses, fans of her work, friends of both Diana and Lionel Trilling, and invitations to lecture, write or review a literary text. In most cases, the carbon copy of Diana Trilling's initial letter or response to a letter has survived as well as any accompanying documents. The original order of the series consisted of two subseries: one arranged alphabetically and one chronologically. This has been maintained.


Subseries II.1: Alphabetical, 1939-1996

Letters found in Subseries 1 tend to be from Diana Trilling's friends and other family members and are often quite extensive. The Trillings had many friends in common so individuals such as Jacques Barzun, James and Elsa Grossman, Alan Ginsburg and Christopher Zinn have letters in this subseries. Correspondence with Nicolas Nabokov in regards to the American Committee for Cultural Freedom and Diana Trilling's subsequent resignation from the board are also held here. Of interest are letters between Diana Trilling and Lillian Hellman during the time that the two women were publicly fighting over politics and the "correct" history of the intellectual movement of New York within the 1930s and 1940s. Please note that although there are a few letters between Diana and Lionel Trilling, most are located in the Lionel Trilling Papers.


Box 2 Folder 12

Anderson, Quentin and Thelma, 1958-1979


Box 3 Folder 1

A through Barzun, 1939-1979


Box 3 Folder 2

Beichman, Arnold, 1952-1979


Box 3 Folder 3

Bell through C, 1939-1979


Box 3 Folder 4

D through F, 1939-1979


Box 3 Folder 5

Grossman, James and Ella, 1963-1975


Box 4 Folder 1

G through H, 1939-1979


Box 4 Folder 2

Hays, Elinor, 1964-1965


Box 4 Folder 3

I through L, 1939-1979


Box 4 Folder 4

M, 1939-1979


Box 4 Folder 5

N through Q, 1939-1979


Box 4 Folder 6

R, 1939-1979


Box 5 Folder 1

S, 1939-1979


Box 5 Folder 2

T through W, 1939-1979


Box 5 Folder 3

A through B, 1980-1985


Box 5 Folder 4 to 5

B, 1980-1985, (2 Folders)


Box 5 Folder 6

C through D, 1980-1985


Box 6 Folder 1

E through G, 1980-1985


Box 6 Folder 2

H, 1980-1985 (includes Hellman letters), 1980-1985


Box 6 Folder 3

I through L, 1980-1985


Box 6 Folder 4

M, 1980-1985


Box 6 Folder 5

M through R, 1980-1985


Box 7 Folder 1 to 2

S, 1980-1985, (2 Folders)


Box 7 Folder 3

Trilling, James, 1984-1985


Box 7 Folder 4

T through Z, 1980-1985


Box 7 Folder 5

A, 1986-1996


Box 7 Folder 6

B, 1986-1996, (2 Folders)


Box 8 Folder 1

B, 1986-1996


Box 8 Folder 2

C through D, 1986-1996


Box 8 Folder 3

E through G, 1986-1996


Box 8 Folder 4

H through J, 1986-1996


Box 8 Folder 5

K through L, 1986-1996


Box 8 Folder 6

M, 1986-1996, (2 Folders)


Box 9 Folder 1

M, 1986-1996


Box 9 Folder 2

N through Q, 1986-1996


Box 9 Folder 3

R, 1986-1996


Box 9 Folder 4 to 5

S, 1986-1996, (2 Folders)


Box 9 Folder 6

T through V, 1986-1996


Box 10 Folder 1

W through Z, 1986-1996


Subseries II.2: Chronological, 1927-1996

Correspondence contained in Subseries 2 covers a variety of topics. Letters are from personal friends (and may be addressed to both Diana and Lionel Trilling), potential publishers and magazine editors who are inviting Diana Trilling to submit a piece or coordinating the publishing of one her books, other authors inquiring about the craft of writing, fans, individuals who criticize Trilling's many writings and, in particular, the type of political and culturally-biased perspective she employs, and distant relatives. There quite a number of condolence letters from Lionel Trilling's colleagues at Columbia University and other academic institutions, his many personal friends, and admirers , who knew him only through his body of work. This correspondence illuminates the kind of impact Lionel Trilling had, not only on the intellectual world, but on the world at large


Box 10 Folder 2

1927-1943


Box 10 Folder 3

1944-1945


Box 10 Folder 4

1946-1947


Box 10 Folder 5

1948-1949


Box 11 Folder 1

1950-1951


Box 11 Folder 2

1952-1955


Box 11 Folder 3

1956-1957 May


Box 11 Folder 4

1957 June-1958, 1957


Box 11 Folder 5

1959 January-May


Box 12 Folder 1

1959 June-1960, 1959


Box 12 Folder 2

1961-1962 April


Box 12 Folder 3

1962 May-1963 May


Box 12 Folder 4

1963 June-1964 April


Box 12 Folder 5

1964 May-December


Box 13 Folder 1

1965 January-June


Box 13 Folder 2

1965 July-1966 February


Box 13 Folder 3

1966 March-1967 February


Box 13 Folder 4

1967 March-December


Box 13 Folder 5

1968 January-July


Box 14 Folder 1

1968 August-December


Box 14 Folder 2

1969


Box 14 Folder 3

1970


Box 14 Folder 4

1971


Box 14 Folder 5

1972


Box 15 Folder 1

1973


Box 15 Folder 2

1974


Box 15 Folder 3

1975 January-October


Box 15 Folder 4

1975 November-December


1975--Condolences


Box 15 Folder 5

A through H


Box 16 Folder 1

I through R


Box 16 Folder 2

S through Y


Box 16 Folder 3

1976 January-March


Box 16 Folder 4

1976 April-August


Box 16 Folder 5

1976 September-December


Box 17 Folder 1

1977 January-April


Box 17 Folder 2

1977 May-September


Box 17 Folder 3

1977 October-1978 January


Box 17 Folder 4

1978 February-July


Box 17 Folder 5

1978 August-1979 January


Box 18 Folder 1

1979 February-September


Box 18 Folder 2

1979 October-December


Box 18 Folder 3 to 4

1995-1996


Box 18 Folder 5 to 6

Accession 2002, 1928-1991, 2002, 1928-1991

Series III: Writings, 1929-1996

Series III is one of the largest series is in the collection and is composed of Diana Trilling's diverse array of writings. Like her husband, Lionel Trilling, Diana Trilling was a prolific writer whose work was published in a variety of journals and magazines. She first submitted pieces for publication in the 1920s and was asked to contribute work up until her death. Within this series are manuscripts with multiple drafts, articles and essays, book reviews, and lectures. This series has been further arranged into two subseries.


Subseries III.1: Manuscripts and Drafts, 1964-1995

The first subseries holds manuscripts and drafts for Diana Trilling's major books:Claremont Essays, The Beginning of the Journey and Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor.There are also chapters of her childhood memoirs and material concerning her marriage to Lionel Trilling that is separate from the texts used inThe Beginning of the Journey.These drafts exist in multiple forms. Many of them went through several versions before the final one. In most cases, they are heavily annotated by Diana Trilling. In addition to the manuscripts themselves, there is often accompanying material for the individual titles consisting of correspondence with publishers, printed material for publicity purposes, and some reviews of the individual manuscripts.


The Beginning of the Journey


Box 19 Folder 1 to 2

Correspondence, 1993-1995, (2 Folders)


Box 19 Folder 3

Draft--General, 1993


Box 19 Folder 4

Draft--Chapter Three, 1993


Box 19 Folder 5

Final Draft I, 1993


Box 19 Folder 6

Final Draft II, 1993


Box 20 Folder 1

Final Draft III, 1993


Box 20 Folder 2 to 3

Notes, 1993, (2 Folders)


Box 20 Folder 4

The Paris Review, 1993


Box 20 Folder 5

Review, 1993-1995


Childhood Memoir


Box 20 Folder 6

Chapter One, 1983


Box 20 Folder 7

Chapter Two, 1983


Box 20 Folder 8

Chapter Three, 1983


Box 21 Folder 1

Chapter Six, 1983


Box 21 Folder 2

Chapter--Excerpts, 1983


Box 21 Folder 3

Chapter--Father, 1983


Box 21 Folder 4

Chapter--High School, 1983


Box 21 Folder 5

Chapter--Kindergarten, 1983


Box 21 Folder 6

Chapter--Radcliffe College, 1983


Box 21 Folder 7

Chapter--War in Europe, 1983


Box 21 Folder 8

Final Draft I, 1983


Box 22 Folder 1

Final Draft II, 1983


Box 22 Folder 2

Final Draft III, 1983


Claremont Essays


Box 22 Folder 3 to 4

Draft, 1964, (2 Folders)


Box 22 Folder 5

Reviews, 1964-1965


Memoirs of a Marriage


Box 22 Folder 6

Draft, 1990s


Box 60 Folder 2

Final Draft, 1990s


Box 60 Folder 3

Interview Transcript, 1990s


Box 22 Folder 7

Notes, 1990s


Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor


Box 23 Folder 1

General, undated, 1981, undated, 1981


Box 23 Folder 2

Clippings, 1980-1981


Box 23 Folder 3

Contract, 1981


Correspondence


Box 23 Folder 4

Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., 1980-1981


Box 23 Folder 5

Legal Matters, 1981-1982


Box 23 Folder 6 to 8

Public, 1981-1984, (3 Folders)


Drafts


Box 23 Folder 9

Discards, 1981, (2 Folders)


Box 24 Folder 1 to 2

Discards, 1981


Box 24 Folder 3 to 6

Manuscript, 1981, (4 Folders)


Box 25 Folder 1

New York Times Magazine , 1981


Box 25 Folder 2 to 5

Edited Galleys, 1981, (5 Folders)


Box 26 Folder 1

Edited Galleys, 1981


Box 26 Folder 2

Hamish Hamilton Limited, 1981-1982


Box 26 Folder 3

Interviews, 1981


Box 26 Folder 4

Insurance, 1981 August 24


Box 26 Folder 5 to 7

Notes--Courtroom, 1980, (3 Folders)


Box 27 Folder 1 to 4

Notes--Courtroom, 1980, (3 Folders)


Box 27 Folder 5

Notes--Non-Courtroom, 1979-1980


Box 28 Folder 1 to 2

Notes--Non-Courtroom, 1979-1980, (2 Folders)


Box 28 Folder 3

Penguin Books, 1981-1982


Box 28 Folder 4

Publicity--Post-Publication, 1981-1988


Box 28 Folder 5

Publicity--Pre-Publication, 1980-1981


Reviews


Box 28 Folder 6

America, 1981-1982


Box 28 Folder 7

Australia, 1982 June-July


Box 28 Folder 8

England, 1982 May-July


Box 28 Folder 9

Serialization, 1981-1982


Box 29 Folder 1

Shana Alexander, 1983 March


Box 29 Folder 2

Stranger in Two Worlds, 1986


Box 29 Folder 3

Transcriptions, 1980-1981


Box 29 Folder 4

Reviewing the Forties , 1978-1979


We Must March My Darlings


Box 29 Folder 5

"Daughters of the Middle Class," 1977 April 26 (lecture), 1977 April 26


Box 29 Folder 6

Draft I, 1976


Box 29 Folder 7

Draft II, 1976


Box 29 Folder 8

Draft III, 1976 (with research material), 1976


Box 29 Folder 9 to 11

Final Draft, 1977, (3 Folders)


Box 30 Folder 1 to 2

Final Draft, 1977


Box 30 Folder 3

"A Return to the Past," 1971-1972 (chapter), 1971-1972


Box 30 Folder 4

Reviews, 1977


Subseries III.2: Articles and Essays, 1929-1996

Subseries 2 is comprised of Diana Trilling's shorter writings in the form of articles and essays. The majority of the pieces were published, although there are some early works that were rejected. Many of the texts have accompanying documentation in the form of correspondence concerning the publication and editing of the text, research notes, and reviews after publication. In addition to the traditional articles and essays, lectures, speeches, book reviews and drafts are found in this subseries. Of particular interest are the columns Diana Trilling wrote for The Nation called "Fiction in Review" and her essays on Marilyn Monroe and the cultural impact of the film,Easy Rider.Also included in this subseries are two plays,Snitkenwritten with Bettina Sinclair andThe Young Wives' Taleboth of which are from the 1930s.


Box 30 Folder 5

Address to the Annual Conference of the Child Study Association, 1958 March 24


Box 30 Folder 6

"Aldous Huxley," 1974 (review), 1974


Box 30 Folder 7

"America and The Quiet American 1956 May 15 (review), 1956 May 15


Box 30 Folder 8

"America through Dark Spectacles," 1953 July (review), 1953 July


Box 30 Folder 9

"The American Female,", undated


Box 30 Folder 10

"And Life Comes Knocking at the Window,", undated


Box 30 Folder 11

Award Presentation in Honor of Lionel Trilling, 1976 December 6


Box 30 Folder 12

"The Baby-Nurses,", 1952 April


Box 30 Folder 13

"A Bang and a Whimper,", undated


Box 30 Folder 14

"Beppo,", 1939 January-February


Box 30 Folder 15

"The Bird with the Broken Wing,", undated


Box 30 Folder 16

"The Birthday Party,", undated


Box 31 Folder 1

Carnegie Corporation "American Shelf List,", 1956


Box 31 Folder 2

"Celebrating with Dr. Leary,", 1967


Box 31 Folder 3

"The Challenger,", undated


Box 31 Folder 4

Columbia Uprising of 1968, 1968 (notes), 1968, 1968


Box 31 Folder 5

Commentary Symposium, undated, 1967-1975, undated, 1967-1975


Box 31 Folder 6

"The Concerto,", 1968


Box 31 Folder 7

"The Conscience of the Intellectual,", 1960 May-June


Box 31 Folder 8

"Couples," 1968 April (review), 1968 April


Box 31 Folder 9

"Cultural Exchange,", 1958 June


Box 31 Folder 10

"The Cultural Mode in Political Criticism,", 1968


Box 31 Folder 11

"Culture and Anarchy,", undated


Box 31 Folder 12

"Culture, Biology and Our Sexual Roles,", 1970 June


Box 31 Folder 13

"The Culture of the Colleges: Oxford and Columbia,", 1965


Box 31 Folder 14

Diana Trilling: Biographical Sketch, 1976


Box 31 Folder 15

"Dorothy Thompson," 1973 March (review), 1973 March


Box 31 Folder 16

"Easy Rider and Its Critics,", 1970 April


Box 31 Folder 17

"The Education of a Woman,", 1950


Box 31 Folder 18

"Eight to Nine,", 1936 May-June


Box 31 Folder 19

"Etching,", undated


Box 31 Folder 20

"Feminism and Women's Liberation,", 1974 May


Box 31 Folder 21

"Footnote to My Life as a Critic"--Correspondence, 1991-1996


Box 31 Folder 22

"Footnote to My Life as a Critic"--Drafts, 1995-1996


Box 32 Folder 1

"Frieda Lawrence," 1973 May (review), 1973 May


Box 32 Folder 2

"The Girls of Camp Lenore"--Correspondence, 1995-1996


Box 32 Folder 3

"The Girls of Camp Lenore"--Draft, [1995]


"Goronwy-and Others"


Box 32 Folder 4

Correspondence, 1994-1996


Box 32 Folder 5

Drafts, 1995


Box 32 Folder 6

Notes, undated, 1976, 1994, undated, 1976, 1994


Box 32 Folder 7

Germany, 1967


Box 32 Folder 8

"H.G. Wells and Rebecca West," 1974 (review), 1974


Box 32 Folder 9

"History of Five Decades," [1976] (notes)


Box 32 Folder 10

"The Image of Women in Contemporary Literature,", 1964


Box 32 Folder 11

"The Incas and Their Civilization,", undated


Box 32 Folder 12

"The Influence of Contemporary Literary Culture on the Gifted College Woman,", 1964 May


Box 32 Folder 13

Jimmy Carter, 1976


Box 32 Folder 14

Junior Bazaar--"About Books,", 1946-1947


Box 32 Folder 15

"A Journal of the Plague Years," 1973 June (review), 1973 June


Box 32 Folder 16

"Lawrence and the Movements of Modern Culture,", 1973


Box 32 Folder 17

"Leaving England," 1960s (notes), 1960s


Box 32 Folder 18

"Letter from Abroad,", 1966-1967


Letters to the Editor


Box 32 Folder 19

General, 1986-1990


Box 32 Folder 20

Commentary, 1968 June


Box 32 Folder 21

New York Review of Books, 1967, 1988, 1967, 1988


Box 32 Folder 22

The New York Times, 1977, 1984-1986, 1977, 1984-1986


Box 32 Folder 23

The New York Times Book Review , 1974-1986


Box 32 Folder 24

Partisan Review, 1955, 1965-1967, 1955, 1965-1967


Box 32 Folder 25

The Twentieth Century , 1953 August 12


Box 32 Folder 26

"The Liberal as Intellectual," undated (notes), undated


Box 32 Folder 27

"Life in the 1930s,", 1960


Box 32 Folder 28

"The Life of the Amazon,", 1942


Box 32 Folder 29

"Lost and Found,", undated


Box 32 Folder 30

"The Man with a Drum,", undated


"Marilyn Monroe: The Meaning of Her Life and Death"


Box 32 Folder 31

Correspondence, 1982


Box 33 Folder 1

Review, 1986


Box 33 Folder 2

Translation , 1991 July


Box 33 Folder 3

"The Marriage of Elsie and John," undated (written under pseudonym of Margaret Sayles), undated


Box 33 Folder 4

"Meeting with Mailer,", undated


Box 33 Folder 5

"Memo of a Visit," undated (notes), undated


Box 33 Folder 6

"Miss Villette's in the Springtime,", 1963 June


Box 33 Folder 7

"The Namesake,", 1930s


Box 33 Folder 8

NMC Theatre Commentary, 1949 November 20


The Nation--"Fiction in Review"


Box 33 Folder 9

1942 June 27-1944 January 22


Box 33 Folder 10

1944 January 29-1946 January 5


Box 33 Folder 11

1946 January 26-1947 September 20


Box 34 Folder 1

1947 October 11-1949 June 25


Box 34 Folder 2

Notebooks, 1943-1949


Box 34 Folder 3

Notes, undated, 1969


Box 34 Folder 4

"Notes on the Trial of the Century,", 1995


Box 34 Folder 5

"The Nurse,", undated


Box 34 Folder 6

"Of Husbands and Wives,", 1945 October 13


Box 34 Folder 7

"On the First Anniversary of President Kennedy's Death," 1964 Summer, 1964


Box 34 Folder 8

"On the Steps of Low Library,", 1968-1969


Box 34 Folder 9

O'Neill, Son and Artist, 1973 November (review), 1973 November


Box 34 Folder 10

"Onty Emma,", 1936 May


Box 34 Folder 11

"The Other Night at Columbia,", 1958


Box 34 Folder 12

"Out of Phase in Palermo,", undated


Box 34 Folder 13

Poems--General, undated


Box 34 Folder 14

Poems--Children, 1939


Box 35 Folder 1

The Portable D.H. Lawrence, 1946 (notes), 1946


Box 35 Folder 2

"Portrait of a Marriage," 1974 (review), 1974


Box 35 Folder 3

"The Prodigious Trio,", undated


Box 35 Folder 4

"The Psychology of Plenty,", 1945


Box 35 Folder 5

Puccini, 1970


Box 35 Folder 6

Reader's Reports , 1943 August 25


Box 35 Folder 7

"Reading by Ear"--Correspondence, 1994-1995


Box 35 Folder 8

Remarks at Aspen Institute Conference, 1975


Box 35 Folder 9

Reminiscence of Raymond Weaver, undated


Box 35 Folder 10

Response to Soviet Policies, 1959 January-February


Box 35 Folder 11

Reviews--General, 1942-1974


Box 35 Folder 12

Reviews--New York Times, undated, 1948-1983


Box 35 Folder 13

Reviewing the Forties, 1978 Fall, 1978


Box 35 Folder 14

"The Riddle of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?", 1963 Sping


Box 35 Folder 15

"The River Bank,", undated


Box 35 Folder 16

"The Rope Dancers" and "Time Remembered,", undated


Box 35 Folder 17

"The Sale of a Work of Art,", 1942 May


Box 35 Folder 18

Selected Letters of D.H. Lawrence , 1957-1960


Box 36 Folder 1

"The Self as Subject," 1983 February 23 (lecture), 1983 February 23


Box 36 Folder 2

"Self-Mythologizing and Lillian Hellman,", 1962


Box 36 Folder 3

Snitken 1930 (play co-written with Bettina Sinclair), 1930


Box 36 Folder 4

Speaking of Literature and Society, 1980 February (editor's foreword), 1980 February


Speeches


Box 36 Folder 5

Overseas Press Club, 1956


Box 36 Folder 6

Pasternak, 1958


Box 36 Folder 7

School for Ethical Culture, 1958 September


Box 36 Folder 8

Women's Faculty Club, 1969 May 7


Box 36 Folder 9

Statement Read to Board of Directors, American Committee for Cultural Freedom, 1961 January 10


Box 36 Folder 10

Toodles Stories, 1939


Box 36 Folder 11

"Thursday the Beats, Tuesday the Analysts,", 1975 April


Box 36 Folder 12

"A Train of Powder," undated (review), undated


Box 36 Folder 13

"The Uncomplaining Ackerley,", 1969 August


Box 36 Folder 14

Untitled Short Story, 1929 Summer (set in Florence), 1929 Summer


Box 36 Folder 15

"Virginia Woolf's Special Realm," undated (review), undated


Box 36 Folder 16

Visit to Camelot, undated


Box 36 Folder 17

"What Is Happening to Love?, 1959 Summer


Box 36 Folder 18

The Widowed,", undated


Box 36 Folder 19

"The Wisdom of Dr. Benjamin Spock,", 1970


Box 36 Folder 20

"Women and Their Minds,", 1959 July


Box 36 Folder 21

"Women's Lib,", 1971 April


Box 36 Folder 22

The Young Wives' Tale, 1930s (play), 1930s

Series IV: Subject Files, 1924-1996

Within Series IV are topical records used by Diana Trilling. Some of the files are research background for articles, legal and financial information concerning the Lionel Trilling Estate, Correspondence and accompanying documentation for the various publishing houses that Diana and Lionel Trilling worked with over the course of their careers, articles and clippings. The series is arranged into two subseries: Diana Trilling and Lionel Trilling.


Subseries IV.1: Diana Trilling, 1924-1996

The first subseries contains records documenting Diana Trilling's professional career as a critic and writer as well as her role as caretaker of her husbands literary estate. Records address Trilling's political activities, such as the American Committee for Cultural Freedom files and other professional and intellectual organizations which sought her support, public responses to her essays and lectures, and documents related to the creation and management of the Lionel Trilling Seminars. Clippings of articles about the Trillings and of potential essay topics and writings dedicated to Diana Trilling by other authors, notably Quentin Anderson and Lionel Trilling, are also held in this subseries. There is a substantial amount of material stemming from a series of oral histories conducted by Trilling on behalf of the Columbia University Oral History Department. Individuals interviewed consist primarily of Lionel Trilling's friends and intellectual colleagues from the 1930s through the 1950s. In addition to being the interviewer, Diana Trilling herself is the interviewee in several oral histories in this subseries, the most substantial being one conducted by Christopher Zinn. Please note that the dates of the Zinn interviews are not in chronological order. Trilling re-recorded many of the tapes due to poor transmission or personal reasons.


Box 36 Folder 23

American Committee for Cultural Freedom (ACCF)--General, 1954-1969, 1983-1985, 1954-1969, 1983-1985


Box 36 Folder 24

American Committee for Cultural Freedom (ACCF)--Address, 1961 April 6


Box 37 Folder 1

The American Intellectual Elite, 1970, 1995, 1970, 1995


Box 37 Folder 2

American Professors for Peace in the Middle East, 1980-1981


Box 37 Folder 3

The American Scholar, 1974-1979


Box 37 Folder 4

Archive, 1983-1987


Articles


Box 37 Folder 5

"Clarence O. Baring and the Attempted Murder of Mrs. Baring,", 1924


Box 37 Folder 6

"Diana Trilling Readies for the Next Political Battle,", 1995 September


Box 37 Folder 7

Trilling, Diana, 1979-1986


Box 37 Folder 8

Baruch, Elaine, 1978-1979


Box 37 Folder 9

Bibliography of Lionel Trilling's Text, 1986


Box 37 Folder 10

Brandeis Arts Commission, 1981-1983


Box 37 Folder 11

"The Changing Myth of the Jew,", 1978


Box 37 Folder 12

Civilization--Correspondence, 1994-1995


Box 37 Folder 13

Civilization--"Fame and Celebrity,", 1996


Box 37 Folder 14

Clippings of Politics and Culture , 1925-1986


Box 37 Folder 15

Columbia College Today--Letters to the Editor, 1993-1994


Box 38 Folder 1

Columbia University Uprising, 1968


Box 38 Folder 2

Conant, Oliver, 1984


Box 38 Folder 3

Contracts and Copyright, 1962-1989


Box 38 Folder 4

Crank Letters, 1980-1995


Box 38 Folder 5

"Daughters of the Middle Class,", 1977


Box 38 Folder 6

D.H. Lawrence--Criticism, 1970-1983


Box 38 Folder 7

D.H. Lawrence--Reviews, 1947, 1958, 1947, 1958


Diana Trilling Interviews


Box 38 Folder 8

General, 1964-1967


Box 38 Folder 9

Alpern, Sarah, 1983 June 21


Box 38 Folder 10

Baruch, Elaine, 1979 August


Box 38 Folder 11

Kaufman, Alan, undated


Box 38 Folder 12

Radcliffe Tapes, undated


Zinn, Christopher


Box 38 Folder 13

Tape I, 1982 September


Box 38 Folder 14

Tape II, 1982 September


Box 38 Folder 15

Tape III, 1982 September


Box 39 Folder 1

Tape IV, 1982 October


Box 39 Folder 2

Tape V, 1982 October


Box 39 Folder 3

Tape VI, 1982 October


Box 39 Folder 4

Tape VII, 1982 October


Box 39 Folder 5

Tape VIII, 1982 November


Box 39 Folder 6

Tape IX, 1982 November


Box 39 Folder 7

Tape X, 1982 November


Box 39 Folder 8

Tape XI, 1983 August


Box 39 Folder 9

Tape XII, 1983 January


Box 39 Folder 10

Tape XIII, 1983 January


Box 40 Folder 1

Tape XIV, 1983 February


Box 40 Folder 2

Tape XV, 1983 February


Box 40 Folder 3

Tape XVI, 1983 February


Box 40 Folder 4

Tape XVII, 1983 September


Box 40 Folder 5

Tape XVIII, 1983 March


Box 40 Folder 6

Tape XIX, 1983 March


Box 40 Folder 7

Tape XX, 1983 March


Box 40 Folder 8

Tape XXI, 1983 April


Box 40 Folder 9

Tape XXII, 1983 April


Box 40 Folder 10

Tape XXIII, 1983 April


Box 40 Folder 11

Tape XXV, 1983 May


Box 41 Folder 1

Tape XXVI, 1983 May


Box 41 Folder 2

Tape XVII, 1983 May


Box 41 Folder 3

Tape XVIII, 1983 June


Box 41 Folder 4

Tape XXIX, 1983 June


Box 41 Folder 5

Tape XXX, 1983 June


Box 41 Folder 6

Tape XXXI, 1983 June


Box 41 Folder 7

Tape XXXII, 1983 July


Box 41 Folder 8

Tape XXXIII, 1983 July


Box 41 Folder 9

Tape XXXIV, 1983 July


Box 41 Folder 10

Tape XXXV, 1983 August


Box 41 Folder 11

Tape XXXVI, 1984 January


Box 41 Folder 12

Dwight Macdonald Interview, 1983


Box 41 Folder 13

Easy Rider and Its Critics, 1969-1970


Box 42 Folder 1

Ethergain, Edward, 1982-1992


Box 42 Folder 2

Eleanor and Hillary, 1996 January


Box 42 Folder 3

Genealogy, 1996


Box 42 Folder 4

Ginsberg, Allen--"Smoking Typewriters,", 1975-1978


Box 42 Folder 5

Graham, Philip L., 1953-1956, 1977, 1953-1956, 1977


Box 42 Folder 6

Guggenheim Application, 1990-1993


Harcourt Brace Jovanovich


Box 42 Folder 7

Contracts, 1982-1995


Correspondence


Box 42 Folder 8

1968-1977 September


Box 42 Folder 9

1977 October-1980, 1977


Box 42 Folder 10

1981-1992


Box 43 Folder 1

1993-1996


Box 60 Folder 4 to 6

General, 1968-1993, (2 Folders)


Box 60 Folder 7

Harris Case, 1980-1982


Box 60 Folder 8

Lionel Trilling Editions, 1976-1981


Box 43 Folder 2

Jovanovich, Peter, 1989-1991


Box 43 Folder 3

Legal Issues, 1965-1985


Hellman, Lillian


Box 43 Folder 4

Controversy, 1976-1977


Box 43 Folder 5

Death, 1984


Box 43 Folder 6

McCarthy Suit, 1980


Box 43 Folder 7

History of Five Decades, 1968-1976


Box 43 Folder 8

Honorary Party for The Nation, 1944 June


Box 43 Folder 9

Hyde, Jim, 1995-1996


Box 43 Folder 10

"Imagining Our Time: The Vocation of Diana Trilling,", 1993


Box 43 Folder 11

Irving Howe Interview Correspondence, 1994


Box 43 Folder 12

Israel Visit, 1974-1977


Box 43 Folder 13

The Jewish Braille Institute of America, 1981-1983


Box 43 Folder 14

Kazin, Alfred--Lionel Trilling's Death, 1978, 1990, 1978, 1990


Box 43 Folder 15

Klingenstein, Susanne, 1992 March-April


Box 43 Folder 16

Legal Issues, 1993-1995


Box 43 Folder 17

"The Liberated Heroine," 1977-1978 (lecture), 1977-1978


Box 44 Folder 1

"Lionel Trilling, A Jew at Columbia,", 1979 March-April


Box 44 Folder 2

Lionel Trilling--As Subject, 1978-1985


Box 44 Folder 3

"Lionel Trilling and Allen Ginsberg,", 1986 July 4


Box 44 Folder 4

Lionel Trilling Award, 1994


Box 44 Folder 5

Lionel Trilling Bibliography, 1991-1992


Lionel Trilling Estate


Box 44 Folder 6

Boyers, Robert, 1977-1978


Box 44 Folder 7

Chace, William, 1976-1979


Box 44 Folder 8

Christiansen Controversy, 1977-1979


Box 44 Folder 9

Des Pres, Terrence, 1976-1977


Box 44 Folder 10

French, Philip, 1977-1980


Box 44 Folder 11

Grumet, Elinor, 1976-1979


Box 44 Folder 12

Herman, George, 1979 February


Box 44 Folder 13

Krupnick, Mark, 1976-1986


Box 44 Folder 14

Kubal, David, 1978-1979


Box 44 Folder 15

Lopate, Phillip, 1981


Box 44 Folder 16

Meyers, Jeffrey, 1981


Box 44 Folder 17

Platt, Michael, 1977-1979


Box 44 Folder 18

Salmet, Tom, 1977-1994


Box 45 Folder 1

Sennett, Richard, undated


Box 45 Folder 2

Shoben, Edward, 1980


Box 45 Folder 3

Solotaroff, Theodore, 1976-1977


Box 45 Folder 4

Wald, Alan, 1946-1981


Box 45 Folder 5

Wellek, René, 1977-1979


Box 45 Folder 6

Lionel Trilling Reader , 1986-1996


Box 45 Folder 7

Lionel Trilling Seminars, 1995-1996


Box 45 Folder 8

Little, Brown and Company, 1974-1976 (Lillian Hellman controversy), 1974-1976


Box 45 Folder 9

Lopate, Phillip, 1994


Box 45 Folder 10

Mailer, Norman, 1971


Box 45 Folder 11

"Making Double Judgments: The Criticism of Diana Trilling,", 1995


Box 45 Folder 12

Marshall, Margaret, 1935-1945


Box 45 Folder 13

Memoir Excerpt, 1993


Box 45 Folder 14

McMurty, Larry, 1993-1994


Box 45 Folder 15

National Endowment for the Humanities Grant, 1976-1980


Box 45 Folder 16

New York Herald-Tribune" Response Letters, 1958 May-June


Box 45 Folder 17

Op-Ed Magazine Proposal, 1995 January


Oral History


Box 46 Folder 1

General, 1982-1987


Box 46 Folder 2

Bentley, Eric, 1976 March 31


Box 46 Folder 3

Bentley, Eric, 1979 April 9


Box 46 Folder 4

Donadio, Stephen, 1976 February 7


Box 46 Folder 5

Fadiman, Clifton, 1976 April 21


Box 46 Folder 6

Fadiman, Clifton, 1976 June 7


Box 46 Folder 7

Feiffer, Jules, 1976 July 20


Box 47 Folder 1

Ferber, Herbert, 1979 March 20


Box 47 Folder 2

Fuchs, David, 1979 January 8


Box 47 Folder 3

Goldwater, Walter--draft, 1979 January 4


Box 47 Folder 4 to 5

Goldwater, Walter--final, 1979 January 4-15


Box 47 Folder 6

Grossman, James and Elsa, 1976 January 24


Box 47 Folder 7

Grossman, James and Elsa, 1976 March 13


Harrington, Michael


Box 47 Folder 8

Draft, 1976 March 20


Box 48 Folder 1

Final, 1976 March 20


Box 48 Folder 2

"The Young Michael Harrington," 1976, 1990-1994, 1976, 1990-1994


Box 48 Folder 3

Hays, Judge Paul R. and Elinor--draft, 1976 January 31


Box 48 Folder 4

Hays, Judge Paul R. and Elinor--final, 1976 January 31


Box 48 Folder 5

Hollander, John, 1976 January 27


Box 48 Folder 6

Hovde, Carl, 1976 March 17


Box 48 Folder 7

Howe, Irving, 1978 December 19


Box 48 Folder 8

Hunt, John, 1976 July 12


Kristol, Bea, 1976 February 27 (Gertrude Himmelfarb), 1976 February 27

Item removed from box 48 and destroyed, in accordance with the interviewee's wishes. kws 2021-04-06


Box 49 Folder 1

Kunitz, Stanley, 1979 January 23


Box 49 Folder 2

Lipman, Sam, 1979 September 14


Box 49 Folder 3

Macdonald, Dwight--draft, 1979 March 28


Box 49 Folder 4

Macdonald, Dwight--final, 1979 March 28


Box 49 Folder 5

Marcus, Steven, 1976 January 19


Box 49 Folder 6

Marcus, Steven, 1976 August 2-4


Box 49 Folder 7

Morrow, Felix, 1979 October 18


Box 50 Folder 1

Novack, George, 1978 May 11


Box 50 Folder 2

Phillips, William, 1976 March 28


Box 50 Folder 3

Rosenthal, Michael, 1976 January 13


Box 50 Folder 4

Rovere, Richard, 1978 December 7


Box 50 Folder 5

Schulman, Bob, 1976 February 29


Box 50 Folder 6

Shaw, Peter, 1979 April 6


Box 50 Folder 7

Stern, Fritz, 1976 February 10


Box 50 Folder 8

Thomson, Virgil, 1977 May 6


Box 51 Folder 1

Thompson, Jack and Susan, 1976 February 1


Box 51 Folder 2

Trilling, Diana, 1976 January-March


Box 51 Folder 3

Trilling, Diana, 1979 January 9


Box 51 Folder 4

Warshaw, Paul, 1978 January 10


Box 51 Folder 5

White, Bede, 1976 April 14


Box 51 Folder 6

Other Authors, undated, 1929-1931, 1945, 1972, undated, 1929-1931, 1945, 1972


Box 51 Folder 7

Park, Catherine, 1995-1996


Box 51 Folder 8

Partial Bibliography, 1994-1996


Box 51 Folder 9

Performing Arts Book, 1992


Permissions


Box 51 Folder 10

1964-1979


Box 52 Folder 1

1981-1990


Box 52 Folder 2

1991-1996


Box 52 Folder 3

Podhoretz, Norman, 1980


Box 52 Folder 4

Professional Accolades, 1980-1994


Publishers


Box 52 Folder 5

General, 1972-1974


Box 52 Folder 6

A through C, 1957-1996


Box 52 Folder 7

D through H, 1957-1996


Box 52 Folder 8

N through O, 1957-1996


Box 53 Folder 1

P through S, 1957-1996


Box 53 Folder 2

U through V, 1957-1996


Box 53 Folder 3

V through W, 1957-1996


Box 53 Folder 4

Permissions, 1952-1976


Box 53 Folder 5

Publisher's Requests, 1991


Box 53 Folder 6

Quentin Anderson Interview, 1984 February


Box 53 Folder 7

Reading at Lionel Trilling Seminar, 1985


Box 53 Folder 8

Rebecca West Biography, 1994-1995


Box 53 Folder 9

Recommendation Letters, 1978-1993


Box 53 Folder 10

Rutgers University Press, 1993-1994


Box 53 Folder 11

Said, Edward, 1986


Box 53 Folder 12

Scottsboro Case, 1993


Box 53 Folder 13

Sidney Hook Biography, 1993


Box 53 Folder 14

Solotaroff, Theodore, 1961, 1976, 1961, 1976


Box 53 Folder 15

Sontag, Susan on Communism, 1982


Box 54 Folder 1

Trilling, Lionel--Funeral, 1975


Box 54 Folder 2

Videl, Gore, 1995


Box 54 Folder 3

Viking Press, 1970-1980


Box 54 Folder 4

White House Dinner, 1962 April 29


Subseries IV.2: Lionel Trilling, 1960-1996

This small subseries is composed of records concerning the life of Lionel Trilling, in particular his published pieces and his archive. In regards to his personal papers, there is correspondence concerning the donation of the papers and requests for permission to access them. Files in regards to Lionel Trilling's writings such as copyright renewals, correspondence and contracts with publishing houses, permission to reuse his material, and general information about the Uniform Edition are found in this subseries as well. In addition to these records, this subseries holds material about the impact of Lionel Trilling on Columbia University and the greater academic community. In particular, there is material relating to the Lionel Trilling Award, the Lionel Trilling Seminars, and copies of scholarly work on Lionel Trilling. Included are Lionel Trilling's F.B.I. and government files.


Box 54 Folder 5

Bibliography, 1985


Box 54 Folder 6

Copyright Renewals, 1977-1993


Box 54 Folder 7

Government Files, 1960-1964


Box 54 Folder 8

Lionel Trilling Award, 1976-1992


Lionel Trilling Papers


Box 54 Folder 9

Donations, 1978-1995


Box 54 Folder 10

Permissions, 1979-1995


Box 54 Folder 11

Requests for Letters, 1976-1982


Lionel Trilling Seminars


Box 54 Folder 12

1976-1978


Box 55 Folder 1

1979-1987


Box 55 Folder 2

1988-1995


Box 55 Folder 3

New York Psychoanalytic Institute, 1978 September-November


Permissions


General


Box 55 Folder 4

1979-1986


Box 55 Folder 5

1987-1989


Box 55 Folder 6

1990-1993


Box 56 Folder 1

1994-1996


Box 56 Folder 2

Chelsea House, 1984-1989


Box 56 Folder 3

Rushdie, Salman, 1989


Box 56 Folder 4

Scholarly Work on Lionel Trilling, 1980-1982


Uniform Edition


Box 56 Folder 5

Autobiographical Lecture, undated, 1970-1978, undated, 1970-1978


Correspondence


Box 56 Folder 6

1976-1978 May


Box 56 Folder 7

1978 June-1979


Box 56 Folder 8

1980-1986


Box 56 Folder 9

Printed Material, 1979


Box 56 Folder 10

Reception, 1980-1981


Box 56 Folder 11

Reviews, 1978-1981

Series V: Photographs, 1920s-1990s

Series V contains photographs of the Trilling family and friends. Included are photographs of Lionel Trilling's father and grandfather, David Trilling and Israel Cohen, respectively. There are also photographs of James Trilling and group photographs of the entire family. Portraits of Diana Trilling and publicity photographs for her book Mrs. Harris: The Death of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor are also in this series. Diana Trilling's time at Radcliffe College and Camp Lenore during the 1920s is well represented. While the individuals in many of these earlier pictures are not identified, the atmosphere of the time period and the impact these two places had on Diana Trilling is clear in the composition of the pictures.


Box 57 Folder 1

Bettina and David Sinclair, 1930s


Box 57 Folder 2

Camp Lenore, 1922-1924


Box 57 Folder 3

Diana Trilling--Portraits, 1982, 1990s, 1982, 1990s


Box 57 Folder 4

Diana Trilling--Publicity Photographs, undated, 1981, undated, 1981


Family Photographs


Box 57 Folder 5

General, undated, 1933, 1960-1968, undated, 1933, 1960-1968


Box 57 Folder 6

James Trilling, undated, 1949, 1964-1969, 1980s, undated, 1949, 1964-1969, 1980s


Box 57 Folder 7

Lionel Trilling, undated, 1965, undated, 1965


Box 57 Folder 8

Friends, undated, 1928, undated, 1928


Box 57 Folder 9

Radcliffe College, 1920s


Box 57 Folder 10

Unknown Individuals, undated


Box 57 Folder 14 to L to 1

Oversized Unknown Individuals, undated

Series VI: Audio Visual Material, 1956-1981

This series holds several interviews. Included are two reel to reels, one of which has Diana Trilling discussing her edited book Reviewing the Forties and the other is an interview of Vladimir Nabokov conducted by Lionel Trilling for the Canadian Broadcasting Company. Also in this series is a film clip from the NBC series "Elder Wise Men." In the clip, Lionel Trilling interviews Ernest Jones about Freud.


Box 57 Folder 11

Audio Cassette--Diana Trilling Speaking with Patricia McCann on WOR Radio, 1981 November 12


Box 58

Film--Ernest Jones Interview by Lionel Trilling for NBC Show "Elder Wise Men,", 1956 September 23


Box 59

Reel to Reel--Diana Trilling Interview of Reviewing the Forties, 1978 October 2


Box 59

Reel to Reel--Vladimir Nabokov Interview by Lionel Trilling for the Canadian Public Broadcasting Company, 1960