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Rosemary Daniell (born November 29, 1935) is an American second-wave feminist poet and author. She is best known for her controversial poetry collection A Sexual Tour of the Deep South and memoirs Fatal Flowers: On Sin, Sex, and Suicide in the Deep South and Sleeping with Soldiers: In Search of the Macho Man.[1][2]

Rosemary Daniell
BornRosemary Hughes
November 29, 1935
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
OccupationPoet, Author, Teacher
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Period1975-present
GenrePoetry, Non-fiction, Fiction
Notable worksA Sexual Tour of the Deep South, Fatal Flowers, Sleeping with Soldiers
SpouseLaurens Ramos (m.1952; div, 1955) Sidney S. Daniell (m. 1956; div 1968) Jonathan S. Coppelman (m. 1969; div 1976) Timothy Zane Ward (m.1987)
ChildrenLaurens David Ramos (born, 1952; died, 2009),Laura Christine Daniell (born, 1957, died 2022), Darcy Anne Daniell (born, 1959; died, 2020)

Early life and education


Born Rosemary Hughes in Atlanta, Georgia, on November 29, 1935, Daniell is the older of two daughters born to Melissa Ruth Connell and Parker McDonald Hughes. After the family moved to Tucker, Georgia, Daniell dropped out of Tucker High School at age 16 to marry her first husband Laurens Ramos.[1]


Career


Daniell has authored ten books of poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction, has appeared on national television and radio shows, and has lectured at numerous literary venues. Her work has been featured in more than thirty-two literary and small press publications, twenty magazines, and nineteen anthologies, as well as theater and mixed media productions.[1] Daniell's 1969 article The Feminine Frustration was published in the June 1970 issue of Atlanta Magazine, the first trade magazine article to cover second-wave feminism in the Southeast.[2]

In 1975, Daniell's mother committed suicide and her father died of cancer. That same year, she published her first book of poetry, A Sexual Tour of the Deep South, a book that stirred controversy in the Bible Belt and was hailed by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the best works of feminist literature of the era.[1][3] While her poetry collection The Feathered Trees, published the following year, focused mostly on nature, Daniell's subsequent book Fort Bragg & Other Points South (1988) saw her return to writing about women's sexual experiences.[1][4]

While Daniell criticizes the traditional role of the southern woman, her writing does not attack the South, but rather exposes the mythology of the southern woman and provides a reinterpretation of the South. She breaks the silence about women's private lives—anger and sex, and in the process addresses the myth of the South as a region of moral degeneration and libido.[1][4]

Her first memoir, Fatal Flowers: On Sin, Sex, and Suicide in the Deep South (1980), was partially inspired by both her mother's unrealized talents as a writer and her subsequent suicide. Fatal Flowers describes the year Daniell's parents died and her extended period of sexual experimentation following the loss, ending when she founded Zona Rosa and met the man who was to become her fourth husband.[4] Daniell examines the mythology of the southern woman: materialistic, often the wife of a powerful man, always serving as a perfect hostess, and one loyal to her home and land. She argues that these stereotypes both inhibit women's freedom and stunt their personal growth, thus hindering the expression of their creativity.[1]

Daniell's second memoir, Sleeping with Soldiers (1985), draws from her 1979 experience working as one of the first two women on an oil rig off the coast of Savannah. She describes the men she's attracted to as "macho men": physically strong, courageous risk-takers who stay true to their opinions and the Southern ideal of masculinity, or as she said in defense of Southern men on a talk show in Toronto, "who communicate viscerally and emotionally rather than intellectually."[1]

A self-described "high-school dropout,"[5] Daniell has said of her work: "During a bout with postpartum depression, I saw the flyer listing a Modern Poetry class in Emory University's continuing education program, and I knew I––a high school dropout and literary virgin who had never heard of T.S. Eliot or Emily Dickinson––was meant to be there. Before long, because of her poetry, she was invited to join a poetry group made up primarily of Emory professors, and which the well-known poet James Dickey soon joined to lead. When I began reading some new poets–Anne Sexton, Sylvia Plath–I was stunned by both their virtuosity and their accuracy. But when I told Dickey how much I liked these new poets, he was angry, saying, They're just shrill, hysterical females who write about throwing their abortions in the gutter. Then I began to ask, who is Dickey–or any man–to say what is right about women's experiences? From that point forward my writing began to change… I now began to write directly out of my experience as a woman, including my experiences of anger and sexuality. I broke the taboo with which I and all the Southern women I knew had been brought up: never speak directly about anger or sexuality."[4][3] Daniell's contributions to second-wave feminism[2] are profiled in the book Feminists Who Changed America,1963-1975 by Barbara J. Love, editor and forward by Nancy F. Cott. In 1981, Danielll founded a series of creative writing workshops for women in Savannah, Georgia. Two years later, she named the workshops Zona Rosa, Spanish for the "pink zone," which later became an LLC. Daniell's first book about the workshops, The Woman Who Spilled Words All Over Herself: Writing and the Zona Rosa Way, was published by Faber and Faber in 1997; her second book about the writing workshops, Secrets of the Zona Rosa: How Writing (and Sisterhood) Can Change Women's Lives, was published by Henry Holt and Company, 2006.

Daniell was awarded the Governor's Award in the Humanities in 2008 for her contributions to Georgia's literary heritage.[1]


Teaching and Zona Rosa


In the 1970s, Daniell became involved in activities that encouraged the appreciation of writers and writing. During 1971 and 1972, she served as Director of Poetry in the Schools, a joint program of the National Endowment for the Arts and the Georgia State Council for the Arts, a national program that gave students the opportunity to work with published poets. During that time, she initiated and led writing workshops in the Georgia Correctional Institute for Women, Hardwick, Georgia and the Wyoming Women's Center in Lusk, Wyoming, as well as in detention centers, high school for unwed mothers and the state hospital for the mentally disabled in Milledgeville, Georgia.[1]

Daniell's Zona Rosa writing workshops serve thousands of people across America and Europe and have been profiled by People and Southern Living.[1][5] To date, over 350 Zona Rosans and counting have become published authors, and many have won awards for their writing. Award winning author Amanda C. Gable workshopped her award-winning first novel, The Confederate General Rides North, in the Atlanta Zona Rosa group. John Berendt would drop by the Savannah Zona Rosa group for feedback on the latest chapter of what became Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, and Pat Conroy was a frequent visitor, as is New York Times best-selling author Bruce Feiler.


Bibliography



Poetry



Nonfiction



Fiction



Literary and small press – Poetry



Literary and small press – prose



Literary and small press publications  – other



Anthologies



Trade/other publications



Book reviews



Grants and Awards



Mixed media



References


  1. Tso, Yi-Hsuan. "Rosemary Daniell". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Georgia. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  2. Love, Barbara J (October 2006). Feminists Who Changed America, 1963-1975. Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-252-09747-8. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  3. Hinzen, Parul (3 April 2014). "'70s era rabble-rouser Rosemary Daniell nurtures new writer". Atlanta Journal and Constitution. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  4. Crosby, Gayla. "20 Questions answered by Rosemary Daniell". Wow! Women on Writing. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  5. "Rosemary Daniell". Wide Open Writing. Wide Open Writing March 17, 2021. Retrieved 7 April 2021.





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