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                <title>Headnote for Edgar Allan Poe</title>
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                        <forename>Tonya</forename>
                        <surname>Howe</surname>
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                <funder>The National Endowment for the Humanities</funder>
                <principal ref="editors.xml#JOB">John O'Brien</principal>
                <principal ref="editors.xml#TH">Tonya Howe</principal>
                <principal ref="editors.xml#CR">Christine Ruotolo</principal>
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                <date>2023-01-03</date>
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                    <graphic url="https://lic-assets-staging.s3.amazonaws.com/headnote-poe/poe-photo.png" width="300px" style="float:right" source="https://www.loc.gov/resource/cph.3a52078/" desc="W.S. Hartshorn, daguerrotype portrait of E. A. Poe (1848/1904)" alt="Daguerrotype frontal portrait of Edgar Allan Poe"/>Edgar Allan Poe is an American author (1809-1847) whose life was marked by
                    tragedy and turbulence, but whose work left an even greater mark on literary
                    history. He is considered to be the founder of the detective story and the
                    horror genre; he wrote criticism, poetry, prose, and more, but he is perhaps
                    most well-known for his macabre short stories, several of which are represented
                    in Literature in Context. He is the first American author to earn a living by
                    authorship alone; his work is characterized by Gothic and Romantic themes.</p>

                <p>Poe was born in 1809 in Boston, to parents David and Elizabeth Poe (both actors).
                    Just a few years later, Poe’s father left and his mother died, and the young Poe
                    was taken in by John and Frances Allan of Richmond, Virginia, who became his
                    legal guardians. After attending school in England, he returned to the US in
                    1820; plagued by financial problems that also followed John Allan, Poe began
                    studying at the University of Virginia in 1826, but after running up gambling
                    debts, he was forced to withdraw--after less than a year in residence. He was
                    frequently in conflict with John Allan over financial and career matters, and in
                    1827, Poe left the Allans for Boston, where he began to publish and enlisted in
                    the Army. When his foster mother Frances died in 1829, he returned to Virginia
                    in part to seek a reconciliation with John. He was discharged from the Army and
                    moved in with his aunt, Maria Clemm, in Baltimore, Maryland, where he tried to
                    launch his literary career. </p>

                <p>John Allan secured Poe an appointment to West Point, but the young author, who
                    had different ideas, was court-martialed for disobedience and neglect of orders.
                    Finding himself living once again with Maria Clemm in Baltimore, Poe continued
                    to publish in and work for various magazines. He attempted a death-bed
                    reconciliation with his foster father, to no avail, and by the mid 1830s, Poe’s
                    literary career was beginning to grow—both because of his own literary creations
                    and because of his work as a reviewer; he gained a reputation for vicious,
                    excoriating reviews of other authors, and his professional life was marked by
                    conflict. </p>

                <p>He married his cousin, Virginia Clemm, in 1836, moving to Philadelphia, and then
                    to New York. His <hi rend="italic">Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque</hi> was
                    published in 1839, containing many of the short stories previously appearing in
                    magazines. The 1840s were characterized by periods of intense literary
                    production, drinking, and failed attempts to gain employment, leading to
                    intermittent destitution. Two more collections--<hi rend="italic">Tales by Edgar
                        A. Poe</hi> and <hi rend="italic">The Raven and Other Poems</hi>—were both
                    published in 1845, and Virginia, who had dealt with tuberculosis for some time,
                    died in 1847, in their cottage in Fordham, New York, where they had moved in
                    1846. </p>

                <p>For the last two years of his life, Poe continued to write, give lectures, seek
                    to found his journal, drink, court potential wives, and drink some more. He
                    moved back to Richmond in 1849, but on the third of October, he was found,
                    semi-conscious, in Baltimore and died there soon after. He remains a celebrity
                    claimed by Philadelphians, Virginians, and Marylanders alike, his life and work
                    celebrated by the mysterious “Poe Toaster” annually on his birthday from
                    sometime in the 1930s to the early 2000s. Many new readers of Poe interpret his
                    tales as reflections of his personal biography; however, it would be a mistake
                    to read his works solely through this lens. </p>

                <p>Though Poe achieved literary acclaim during his lifetime, his reputation was
                    largely negative, especially by his Anglo-American readers, who were heavily
                    influenced by the role of biography in literary appreciation. His tales were
                    colored by a misanthropic personal reputation cemented by contemporary critics,
                    and readers felt he—and his works—were not morally fulfilling, as literature
                    ought to be (biographer Kevin Hayes notes that Poe’s verse was more accepted
                    than his tales for this reason). But in Europe, his reputation was quite
                    different--the French poet Charles Baudelaire, who saw Poe as something of a
                    kindred spirit, wrote a significant critical biographical essay in 1852, and
                    many other European authors and artists drew inspiration from him—Mallarme,
                    Manet, Gaugin, the Surrealists Dali and Magritte, and even early filmmakers
                    found in Poe’s tales a rich psychological depth and imaginative intensity to be
                    inspired by. Poe’s imagery and narrative exerted a profound on twentieth-century
                    literature and art, and it continues to be felt today. </p>

                <p>For more information about Poe’s life, see biographies by Jeffrey Meyers and
                    Kevin Hayes. The Poe Encyclopedia is also a useful source for general
                    information. Readers interested in Poe’s own perspective on his work and
                    literature more broadly should examine his criticism, especially “The Philosophy
                    of Composition.” </p>
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