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At the Southwestern Writers Collection
April 1 through July 31, 2004
Texas Literary Outlaws Together Again in New Book
& Exhibit
At the height of the Sixties, a group of rowdy Texas writers
came together, raising hell and creating memorable literature
as they found their voices in opposition to Texas' conservative
traditions. Making use of untapped literary archives, Southwestern
Writers Collection assistant curator Steven L. Davis weaves a
fascinating portrait of these "literary outlaws" who
came of age during a period of rapid social change.
Billy Lee Brammer, Gary Cartwright, Peter Gent, Dan Jenkins,
Larry L. King, and Bud Shrake are Texas Literary Outlaws:
Six Writers in the Sixties and Beyond. Davis' book is due
this May from Texas Christian University Press, and the accompanying
exhibit he curated from the Southwestern Writers Collection's
major archives of Brammer, Cartwright, King, and Shrake opens
at the SWWC in Texas State's Alkek Library the beginning of April.
A discussion and book signing with Davis will also be held
at the Southwestern Writers Collection on June 3 from 4 to 6
pm.
The Texas Literary Outlaws crashed headfirst into the Sixties,
and their legendary excesses have often overshadowed their literary
production. Davis never shies away from criticism in this no-holds-barred
account, yet he also shows how their rambunctious personas have
deflected a true understanding of their deeper aims.
Despite their popular image, the six were deadly serious as
they turned their gaze on their home state, and they chronicled
Texas culture with daring, wit, and sophistication. Taken as
a whole, their work establishes an authentic Texas vision, one
far removed from the fanciful notions of earlier times. Texas
Literary Outlaws adds a welcome chapter to Texas' social
history, providing an illuminating portrait of the state's evolution
during the second half of the twentieth century.
Brammer, Cartwright, Gent, Jenkins, King, and Shrake were
less interested in Texas' mythic past than in the world they
knew firsthand-a place of fast-growing cities and hard-edged
political battles. Choices were clear during the years of social
upheaval: Generations of Jim Crow laws were coming under
attack; a plutocratic state government was challenged by liberal
activists; an undeclared war in Vietnam seemed to defy America's
basic principles; discredited "objective" reporting
was replaced by a "New Journalism;" and notions of
"normalcy" were upended by drugs that provided new
ways of perceiving the world.
These writers were all intimately connected to defining Texas
elements of the time: the Kennedy assassination, the rapid population
shift from rural to urban environments; Lyndon Johnson's rise
to national prominence; the Civil Rights movement; Tom Landry
and the Dallas Cowboys; Willie Nelson, Jerry Jeff Walker; the
birth of a Texas film industry; Texas Monthly magazine;
the flowering of "Texas Chic;" and Ann Richards' election
as governor.
With an eye for vibrant detail and a broad historical perspective,
Texas Literary Outlaws moves easily between H.L. Hunt's
Dallas mansion and the West Texas oil patch, from the New York
literary salon of Elaine's to the Armadillo World Headquarters
in Austin, from Dennis Hopper on a film set in Mexico to Jerry
Jeff Walker crashing a party at Princeton University. Davis'
intimate and compelling social history knits the improbable connections
together, creating a new understanding of the relationship between
Texas and its cultural arts.
Advance commentary on Texas Literary Outlaws: Six Writers
in the Sixties and Beyond includes praise from Jim Lehrer.
"Here now is a celebration of six good and talented men
of Texas who wrote/write stories, both real and imagined, about
as well as it can be done. Steve Davis presents them to us whole.
Not everything in each picture of the six is-well, perfect. Thank
God. Their individual stories, in some cases, are even better
than they could have made up. This is a delightful, instructive
book. Read it for the what-ifs as well as the whats."
Steven L. Davis is the assistant curator of the Southwestern
Writers Collection and he has worked at the Collection since
1994. He received his master's degree in Southwestern Studies
from Texas State University-San Marcos in 1995. He has appeared
often in Southwestern American Literature and Texas
Books in Review.
The Southwestern Writers Collection at Texas State houses
the literary papers of Billy Lee Brammer, Gary Cartwright, Larry
L. King, and Bud Shrake, among many others.
Original manuscripts, letters, photographs, and memorabilia
from these "outlaw" archives are featured in TEXAS
LITERARY OUTLAWS at the Southwestern Writers Collection April
1 through July 31, 2004 on the 7th floor of the Alkek
Library, Texas State University-San Marcos. Open Mon-Fri 8-5
(Tues until 9 pm); Sat 9-5; Sun 2-6; closed breaks and holidays.
512-245-2313. Admission is FREE. www.swwc.txstate.edu.
THE SOUTHWESTERN WRITERS COLLECTION, in the Albert B. Alkek
Library at Texas State University-San Marcos, was founded in
1986 and has since become a distinguished and steadily growing
archive charged with preserving, exhibiting, and providing access
to the papers and artifacts of principal writers, filmmakers,
songwriters and musicians of the Southwest. Its resources attest
to the tremendous diversity of creative expression among southwestern
artists and contribute to a rich research environment within
which students and others may discover how the unique conditions
and character of the region have shaped its people and their
cultural arts. Curator, Connie Todd. Assistant Curator, Steve
Davis. www.swwc.txstate.edu
TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITY-SAN MARCOS, established 1899,
is a member of the Texas State University System.
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