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COLLECTION Identifier: MS Am 3431

Grace Paley papers

Overview

Personal and professional papers of American short story author, poet, teacher, and political activist, Grace Paley.

Dates

  • Creation: circa 1935-2010

Creator

Condition Description

Several items showing signs of mold have been forwarded to conservation staff. Some papers show signs of smoke and water damage; some scrapbooks in very poor shape have been disbound, the pages then foldered and boxed.

Robert Nichols and Grace Paley suffered a house fire circa 1984 which is reflected in the condition of some papers (smoke and water damage).

Conditions Governing Access

Open for research.

This collection is shelved offsite. Retrieval requires advance notice. Readers should check with Houghton Public Services staff to determine retrieval policies and times.

Extent

33 linear feet (36 boxes)

The papers include drafts, manuscripts, and proofs of stories, poems, and articles by Paley; correspondence; notebooks; contracts; audio and video recordings; foreign editions of her books; posters; clippings; an academic hood; awards; drawings, compositions by others about Paley and other topics; and fliers and other ephemera from protests.

Biographical / Historical

Grace Paley (December 11, 1922 – August 22, 2007) was an American short story author, poet, teacher, and political activist.

She was born Grace Goodside in the Bronx to Jewish parents, Isaac Goodside and the former Manya Ridnyik, socialists originally from Ukraine. They had immigrated after a period of exile, Grace's mother to Germany and her father to Siberia, changing their name from Gutseit as they settled in New York. The family spoke Russian and Yiddish at home, and eventually English. Grace had an older brother and sister.

Paley dropped out of high school at 16; she attended Hunter College for a year and studied briefly with W. H. Auden at the New School. She married a film cameraman, Jess Paley, when she was 19. The Paleys had two children, Nora (born 1949) and Danny (born 1951), but later divorced.

Paley's first collection, The Little Disturbances of Man (1959), featured 11 stories of New York life. Though ultimately more widely known for her short fiction, Paley also published several volumes of poetry and a collection of essays in the course of her career. She taught writing at Sarah Lawrence College from 1966 to 1989 and subsequently at City College, Columbia University, and Syracuse University. She served as vice president of the PEN American Center, an organization she had worked to diversify in the 1980s.

Paley was known for pacifism and political activism. The FBI declared her a communist and kept a file on her for 30 years. Beginning in the 1950s, Paley joined friends in protesting nuclear proliferation and American militarization. She also worked with the American Friends Service Committee to establish neighborhood peace groups, helping to found the Greenwich Village Peace Center in 1961; she met her second husband through the anti-Vietnam War peace movement. She was arrested on a number of occasions and came to national prominence in 1969 when she accompanied a peace mission to Hanoi to negotiate the release of prisoners of war.

She married fellow poet and activist Robert Nichols in 1972. The couple published a book together expressing their shared activism through poetry and prose, Here and Somewhere Else, in 2007. Paley was a decades-long resident of New York's Greenwich Village; she began spending summers in Thetford, Vermont, with Nichols in the 1970s, and the couple settled there permanently in the early 1990s. Her Jewish background was a vital part of her identity and work; she found community in her local synagogue in Vermont in her later years, although she had been raised agnostic.

Paley died at the age of 84, having undergone treatment for breast cancer.

Robert Nichols and Grace Paley suffered a house fire circa 1984 which is reflected in the condition of some papers (smoke and water damage).

(Adapted from Wikipedia contributors, "Grace Paley," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Grace_Paley&oldid=1154158338 (accessed June 25, 2023).)

Arrangement

The papers are physically arranged as received though reboxed by the accessioning archivists.

Physical Location

Harvard Depository

Immediate Source of Acquisition

2023M-97. Purchased from Nora Paley c/o Chris Calhoun, 2023 February 15.

Processing Information

The collection was accompanied by a detailed box list which was converted into this finding aid. When accessioning (opening, foldering, and reboxing) the boxes, several box numbers appearing in the list were not found to be physically present. The items listed as within these boxes were included in the finding aid but do not show a location. This finding aid will be updated as these items are located. (Aurora Charlow and Melanie Wisner, 2023)

Title
Paley, Grace. Grace Paley papers, circa 1935-2010 (MS Am 3431): Guide
Status
completed
Author
Houghton Library, Harvard University
Date
2023 March 31
Description rules
dacs
Language of description
eng
EAD ID
hou03539

Repository Details

Part of the Houghton Library Repository

Houghton Library is Harvard College's principal repository for rare books and manuscripts, archives, and more. Houghton Library's collections represent the scope of human experience from ancient Egypt to twenty-first century Cambridge. With strengths primarily in North American and European history, literature, and culture, collections range in media from printed books and handwritten manuscripts to maps, drawings and paintings, prints, posters, photographs, film and audio recordings, and digital media, as well as costumes, theater props, and a wide range of other objects. Houghton Library has historically focused on collecting the written record of European and Eurocentric North American culture, yet it holds a large and diverse number of primary sources valuable for research on the languages, culture and history of indigenous peoples of the Americas, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

Houghton Library’s Reading Room is free and open to all who wish to use the library’s collections.

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