The Worlds of Lincoln Kirstein - Martin Duberman - Books - Northwestern University Press - 9780810125186 - March 1, 2009
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The Worlds of Lincoln Kirstein

Martin Duberman

The Worlds of Lincoln Kirstein

Finalist for 2008 Pulitzer Prize

Lincoln Kirstein was a tireless champion of the arts in America. Working behind the scenes to provide artists with money, space, audiences, and, at times, emotional support, he helped found such landmark cultural institutions as the New York City Ballet, the School of American Ballet, New York?s Lincoln Center and Stratford's American Shakespeare Festival.   Duberman's biography sheds light on this lamentably neglected cultural figure. Though best known as a benefactor of the arts, Kirstein was also an adept critic, poet and novelist who published some fifteen books in his lifetime. From his undergraduate years at Harvard, where he established the influential literary magazine Hound and Horn, as well as the Harvard Society for Contemporary Art (precursor to the Modern Museum of Art), to his complex and historically significant relationship with George Balanchine, Kirstein's contributions were indespensible to the development of the arts in America.   Authoritative and elegant, Duberman's biography utilizes previously unavailable documents, including Kirstein's diaries, to reveal the keen eye, incessant self-doubt, and enormous ambition that drove Kirstein's relentless advocacy. The Worlds of Lincoln Kirstein brings attention to an important, but until-now unappreciated figure whose individual contribution to the arts was one of the greatest of the twentieth century.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released March 1, 2009
ISBN13 9780810125186
Publishers Northwestern University Press
Pages 723
Dimensions 150 × 230 × 40 mm   ·   1.06 kg
Language English  

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