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Erskine Preston Caldwell (December 17, 1903 – April 11, 1987) was an American author.〔Obituary ''New York Times'', April 13, 1987.〕〔Obituary ''Variety'', April 15, 1987.〕 His writings about poverty, racism and social problems in his native South in novels such as ''Tobacco Road'' and ''God's Little Acre'' won him critical acclaim, but also made him controversial among Southerners of the time who felt he was deprecating the people of the region. ==Early years== Caldwell was born on December 17, 1903, in the small community White Oak in Coweta County, Georgia. He was the only child of Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church minister Ira Sylvester Caldwell and his schoolteacher wife Caroline Preston (née Bell) Caldwell. Rev. Caldwell's ministry necessitated moving the family throughout the South, including the states of Florida, Virginia, Tennessee, South Carolina and North Carolina. When he was 15 years old, his family settled in Wrens, Georgia.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?path=/Literature/Fiction/Authors&id=h-497 )〕 His mother Carrie was from Virginia. Her ancestry included English nobility which held large land grants in eastern Virginia. Both her English ancestors and Scots-Irish ancestors fought in the American Revolution. Ira Caldwell's ancestors were Scots-Irish and had also been in the country since before the revolution and had fought in it.〔The People's Writer: Erskine Caldwell and the South By Wayne Mixon pages 5–6〕 Caldwell attended but did not graduate from Erskine College, a Presbyterian affiliated school nearby in South Carolina. His political sympathies lay with the working classes and he used his experiences with farmers and common workers to write stories portraying their lives and struggles. Later in life he presented public seminars on the typical conditions of tenant-sharecroppers in the South.〔 His first and second published works were ''The Bastard'' (1929) and ''Poor Fool'' (1930) but the works for which he is most famous are his novels ''Tobacco Road'' (1932) and ''God's Little Acre'' (1933). Maxim Lieber was his literary agent during (parts of) the 1930s and 40s. His first book was banned and copies were seized by authorities. With the publication of ''God's Little Acre'', the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice instigated legal action against him in New York. Caldwell was arrested when he attended a book-signing there but was exonerated in trial. Through the 1930s Caldwell and his first wife Helen managed a bookstore in Maine. Following their divorce Caldwell married photographer Margaret Bourke-White, collaborating with her on three photo-documentaries: ''You Have Seen Their Faces'' (1937), ''North of the Danube'' (1939), and ''Say, Is This The USA'' (1941) during their three years together from 1939–42. Disillusionment with the anti-revisionist socialist government had led him to compose an eleven-page short story, "Message for Genevieve". published in 1933. In this story, a woman journalist is executed by a firing squad after being tried in a secret court on charges of espionage. During World War II, Caldwell obtained papers from the USSR that allowed him to travel to Ukraine and work as a foreign correspondent documenting the war effort there. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Erskine Caldwell」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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