Welcome to the community hub built on top of the Fielding Dawson Wikipedia article.
Here, you can discuss, collect, and organize anything related to Fielding Dawson. The
purpose of the hub is to connect people, foster deeper knowledge, and help improve
the root Wikipedia article.
Fielding Dawson (August 2, 1930 – January 5, 2002, aged 71) was a Beat-era author of short stories and novels, and a student at Black Mountain College. He was also a painter and collagist whose works were seen in several books of poetry and many literary magazines.
Key Information
Fielding Dawson
Fielding Dawson at Black Mountain College
Born
Guy Fielding Lewis Dawson
August 2, 1930
New York City, U.S.
Died
January 5, 2002 (aged 71)
New York City, U.S.
Occupation
Writer, novelist, short story author, poet, painter, collagist, educator
Nationality
American
Alma mater
Black Mountain College (1949–1952)
Period
1955–2002
Genre
Stream of consciousness, memoir, fiction
Literary movement
Beat Generation, Black Mountain poets
Notable works
An Emotional Memoir of Franz Kline (1967) *Krazy Kat/The Unveiling & Other Stories (1969) *The Black Mountain Book (1970)
Born in New York City, Dawson was known for his stream-of-consciousness style. Much of his work was lax in punctuation to emphasize the immediacy of thought. Additionally, dialogue would often be used to break this up. His lack of deference toward tradition in writing, other than that of the necessity to evoke humanity, often painfully raw, is what puts him in the category of many of his better-known contemporaries, such as Jack Kerouac or Allen Ginsberg.
Dawson was still writing up until his unexpected death in January 2002. He had become a teacher, first in prisons like Sing Sing, at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at the Naropa Institute in Boulder, where he taught regularly, and continuing on to work with at-risk students at Upward Bound High School in Hartwick, New York.
He was recently called "The Best St. Louis Writer You've Never Read" by David Clewell, a professor of history at Webster University.