Nathaniel Tarn (June 30, 1928 – June 2024) was a French-American poet, essayist, anthropologist, and translator. He was born Edward Michael Mendelson in Paris to a French-Romanian mother and a British-Lithuanian father.[1] He lived in Paris, France, until the age of seven, then in Belgium until the age of 11; when World War II began, the family moved to England.[2][3] He emigrated to the United States in 1970 and taught at several American universities, primarily Rutgers, where he was a professor from 1972 until 1985.[1] He has lived outside Santa Fe, New Mexico, since his retirement from Rutgers.[4]
Tarn published his first volume of poetry Old Savage/Young City with Jonathan Cape in 1964 and a translation of Pablo Neruda's The Heights of Macchu Picchu in 1966 (broadcast by the BBC Third Programme in 1966), and began building a new poetry program at Cape. He left anthropology in 1967. From 1967 to 1969, he joined Cape as General Editor of the international series Cape Editions and as a Founding Director of the Cape-Goliard Press, specializing in contemporary American Poetry with emphasis on Charles Olson, Robert Duncan, Louis Zukofsky and their peers and successors. In 1970, with a principal interest in the American literary scene, he immigrated to the United States as Visiting Professor of Romance Languages, Princeton University, and eventually became a citizen. Later he moved to Rutgers. Later, he taught English and American Literature, Epic Poetry, Folklore and other subjects at the Universities of Pennsylvania, Colorado, and New Mexico.
As poet, literary and cultural critic (Views from the Weaving Mountain, University of New Mexico Press, 1991, and The Embattled Lyric, Stanford University Press, 2007), translator (he was the first to render Victor Segalen's "Stèles" into English, continued work on Neruda, Latin American and French poets) and editor (with many magazines), Tarn published some thirty books and booklets in his various disciplines. His work has been translated into ten foreign languages. In 1985, he took early retirement as Professor Emeritus of Poetry, Comparative Literature & Anthropology from Rutgers University and lived near Santa Fe, New Mexico. His interests ranged from bird watching, gardening, classical music, opera and ballet, and much varied collecting, to aviation and world history.[2] Among many recognitions, Tarn received the Guinness prize for his first book, a Pennsylvania State literary prize for teaching poetry in the schools and was a finalist in the Phi Beta Kappa poetry awards for Selected Poems 1950–2000. His work was variously supported by the Fulbright Program, the Wenner Gren Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the American Philosophical Society, and a number of other Foundations. Tarn's literary and anthropological papers are held by Stanford University Libraries.
The Mothers of Matagalpa. London: Oasis Press, 1989.
Drafts For: The Army Has Announced That From Now On Body Bags Will Be Known As "Human Remains Pouches" . Parkdale, Oregon: Trout Creek Press, 1992.
Flying the Body. Los Angeles: Arundel Press, 1993
A Multitude of One: The Poems of Natasha Tarn (N.T. Editor). New York: Grenfell Press, 1994.
I Think This May Be Eden, a CD with music by Billy Panda. Nashville: Small Press Distributors, 1997.
The Architextures: 1988–1994. Tucson: Chax Press, 2000.
Three Letters from the City: the St. Petersburg Poems. Santa Fe: The Weaselsleeves Press and St. Petersburg: Borey Art Center, 2001.
Selected Poems: 1950-2000. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 2002.
Recollections of Being. Cambridge and Sydney: Salt Publishing, 2004.
Avia: A Poem of International Air Combat, 1939–1945. Exeter: Shearsman Books, 2008.
Ins and Outs of the Forest Rivers. New York: New Directions, 2008.
Gondwana and Other Poems. New York: New Directions, 2017.
Translations
Stelae, by Victor Segalen, Santa Barbara: Unicorn Press, 1969.[8]
The Heights of Macchu Picchu, by Pablo Neruda. London: Cape, 1966 (broadcast by the BBC Third Programme 1966).
Con Cuba. London: Cape Goliard Press, 1969.
Selected Poems: A Bilingual Edition, by Pablo Neruda. London: Cape, 1970.
Pablo Neruda: Selected Poems. London: Penguin Books, 1975 .
Criticism and anthropology
Los Escandalos de Maximón. Guatemala: Tipographia Nacional, 1965 (as E. M. M.).[9]
Sangha and State in Burma: A Study of Monastic Sectarianism and Leadership. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1975 (as E. M. M.).[9]
Views from the Weaving Mountain: Selected Essays in Poetics & Anthropology. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1991.
Scandals in the House of Birds: Priests & Shamans in Santiago Atitlán, Guatemala. New York: Marsilio Publishers, 1997.
The Embattled Lyric; Essays & Conversations in Poetics & Anthropology, with a biographical & bibliographical essay by, and a conversation with, Shamoon Zamir. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007.
Critical studies
Roberto Sanesi in Le Belle Contradizzioni, Milan: Munt Press, 1973
"Nathaniel Tarn Symposium" in Boundary 2 (Binghamton, NY.), Fall 1975
"The House of Leaves" by A. Dean Friedland, in Credences 4 (Kent, Ohio), 1977
Ted Enslin and Rochelle Ratner, in American Book Review 2 (New York), 5, 1980
Translating Neruda by John Felstiner, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1980
"America as Desired: Nathaniel Tarn's Poetry of the Outsider as Insider" by Daria Nekrasova, in American Poetry I (Albuquerque), 4, 1984
"II Mito come Metalinguaggio nella Poesia de Nathaniel Tarn" by Fedora Giordano, in Letteratura d'America (Rome), 5(22), 1984.
George Economou, in Sulfur (Ypsilanti, MI.), 14, 1985.
Gene Frumkin, in Artspace (Albuquerque), 10(l), 1985.
Lee Bartlett, Nathaniel Tarn: A Descriptive Bibliography, Jefferson, NC & London, 1987
Lee Bartlett, in Talking Poetry, Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1987
"The Sun Is But a Morning Star" by Lee Bartlett, in Studies in West Coast Poetry and Poetics (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1989).
"An Aviary of Tarns" by Eliot Weinberger, in Written Reaction, New York: Marsilio Publishing, 1996
Shamoon Zamir: "Bringing the World to Little England: Cape Editions, Cape Goliard and Poetry in the Sixties. An Interview with Nathaniel Tarn. With an afterword by Tom Raworth," in E.S. Shaffer, ed., Comparative Criticism, 19: "Literary Devolution." Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 263–286, 1997.
Shamoon Zamir: "On Anthropology & Poetry: an Interview with Nathaniel Tarn," Boxkite, no. 1, Sydney, Australia, 1998.
Shamoon Zamir: "Scandals in the House of Anthropology: notes towards a reading of Nathaniel Tarn" in Cross Cultural Poetics, no.5, (Minneapolis), 1999, pp. 99–122.
Brenda Hillman: Review of "Selected Poems" in Jacket, 28, (internet) Sydney, Australia, 1999.
Joseph Donahue: Review of "The Architextures" First Intensity, 16, 2001 (Lawrence, Kansas).
Peter O'Leary: Review of "Selected Poems: 1950–2000" in XCP Cross Cultural Poetics,. 12, 2003 (Minneapolis).
Martin Anderson: Review of "Recollections of Being" in Jacket, 36, (internet) Sydney, Australia, 2008.
Daniel Bouchard: Conversation with NT, in Zoland Poetry, 3, 2009, Hanover, New Hampshire: Steerforth Press, 2009.
Isobel Armstrong: Review of "Avia" in Tears in the Fence, 50, Blandford Forum, Dorset, UK, 2009.
Joseph Donahue: review of "Ins & Outs of the Forest Rivers" in "A Nathaniel Tarn Tribute": Jacket, 39 (internet) Sydney, Australia, 2010.
Richard Deming: Essay on "The Embattled Lyric" & "Selected Poems" in "A Nathaniel Tarn Tribute": Jacket, 39 (internet) Sydney, Australia, 2010.
Lisa Raphals: Reading NT's "House of Leaves" in "A Nathaniel Tarn Tribute": Jacket, 39 (internet) Sydney, Australia, 2010.
Toby Olson, Peter Quartermain, John Olson, Richard Deming, David Need, Norman Finkelstein, Peter O'Leary: "For N.T.'s 80th Birthday": Golden Handcuffs Review", 11, 2009 (Seattle).
La Légende de Saint-Germain-des-Prés
Photo book by Serge Jacques with sparse texts by Michel Tavriger printed in both French and English, Paris, 1950[10]
^ ab"Tarn, Nathaniel". Social Networks and Archival Context Cooperative Program. Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of Virginia. Retrieved June 21, 2017.