Charles Thomas Swift [38999]
Eugene Dickey [38980]
(1888-1974)
Maibelle Swift [38981]
(1888-1977)

James Lafayette Dickey [38969]
(1923-1997)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Maxine Webster Syerson [38968]

2. Deborah E. Dodson [38986]

James Lafayette Dickey [38969] 20313

  • Born: 2 Feb 1923, Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, United States 20313
  • Marriage (1): Maxine Webster Syerson [38968] on 4 Nov 1948 in Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, United States
  • Marriage (2): Deborah E. Dodson [38986]
  • Died: 19 Jan 1997, Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, United States at age 73 20313
  • Buried: Jan 1997, Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, United States 20313

bullet   Another name for James was Jim Dickey.

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bullet  General Notes:

James Lafayette Dickey (February 2, 1923 \endash January 19, 1997) was an American poet and novelist. He was appointed the eighteenth Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress in 1966.[2] He also received the Order of the South award.
Biography.

Early years:
James Dickey was born to lawyer Eugene Dickey and Maibelle Swift in Atlanta, Georgia, where he attended North Fulton High School in Atlanta's Buckhead neighborhood. In 1942 he enrolled at Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina and played on the football team as a tailback. After one semester, he left school to enlist in the Army Air Corps. Dickey served with the U.S. Army Air Forces as a radar operator in a night fighter squadron during the Second World War, and in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War. Between the wars, he attended Vanderbilt University, graduating with degrees in English and philosophy, as well as minoring in astronomy. He also taught at the University of Florida.

Career:
From 1950 to 1954, Dickey taught at Rice University (then Rice Institute) in Houston. While teaching freshman composition at Rice, Dickey returned for a two-year air force stint in Korea, then went back to teaching.[3] He then worked for several years in advertising, most notably writing copy and helping direct creative work on the Coca-Cola and Lay's Potato Chips campaign. He once said he embarked on his advertising career in order to "make some bucks." Dickey also said "I was selling my soul to the devil all day... and trying to buy it back at night." He was ultimately fired for shirking his work responsibilities.[4] His discontent with his work and his firing are portrayed in his novel Deliverance where the narrator who runs a design agency tells the story of an employee who could only think of producing great art and scorned all those around him in the agency.

He returned to poetry in 1960, and his first book, Into the Stone and Other Poems, was published in 1960; Drowning with Others was published in 1962, which led to a Guggenheim Fellowship (Norton Anthology, The Literature of the American South). Buckdancer's Choice (1965) earned him a National Book Award for Poetry.[5] Among his better-known poems are "The Performance", "Cherrylog Road", "The Firebombing", "May Day Sermon", "Falling", and "For The Last Wolverine."

After being named a poetry consultant for the Library of Congress, he published his first volume of collected poems, Poems 1957-1967 in 1967. This publishing may represent Dickey's best work\emdash he subsequently accepted a position of Professor of English and writer-in-residence at the University of South Carolina at Columbia.

His popularity exploded after the film version of his novel Deliverance was released in 1972. Dickey had a cameo in the film as a sheriff.

The poet was invited to read his poem "The Strength of Fields" at President Jimmy Carter's inauguration in 1977.

Personal life:
In November 1948 he married Maxine Syerson, and three years later they had their first son, Christopher; a second son, Kevin, was born in 1958. Two months after Maxine died in 1976, Dickey married Deborah Dodson. Their daughter, Bronwen, was born in 1981. Christopher is a novelist and journalist, lately providing coverage from the Middle East for Newsweek. In 1998, Christopher wrote a book about his father and Christopher's own sometimes troubled relationship with him, titled Summer of Deliverance. Kevin is a radiologist and lives in New England. Bronwen is currently a writer.

Death:
James Dickey died on January 19, 1997, six days after his last class at the University of South Carolina, where from 1968 he taught as poet-in-residence. Dickey spent his last years in and out of hospitals, afflicted first with jaundice and later fibrosis of the lungs.


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James married Maxine Webster Syerson [38968] [MRIN: 14008], daughter of Jens Peter Valdemar Sejersen [1261] and Maxine K. Webster [38975], on 4 Nov 1948 in Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, United States. (Maxine Webster Syerson [38968] was born on 17 Jul 1926,20313 died on 28 Oct 1976 in Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, United States and was buried in Nov 1976 in Columbia, Richland County, South Carolina, United States.)


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James next married Deborah E. Dodson [38986] [MRIN: 14015].

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