Meridel Le Sueur
"Her
artistic talents and dedication to cultural documentation
allowed her to create
truly unique statements about life in this state." Mary Bennett, 1996
Meridel
Le Sueur, Wisconson, was born in Murray, Iowa in 1900. She has
spent her life recording Women's lives and documenting the United
States' cultural heritage through her fiction, poetry, history,
journalism, autobiography, and biography. Her experiences and
writings reflect the poor women in this century and the need
for women to be linked to other generations of women. Le Sueur
has written extensively about her grandmother, an Iowa pioneer
and militant temperance worker, and her mother, an active feminist
and a socialist. Rural and ethnic life in the Midwest, the land,
and corn are other common themes. During the McCarthy era in
the 1950s, she was blacklisted, resulting in being unable to
publish her works for nearly 30 years. Since 1970, her works
have found a new audience and new popularity. Le Sueur was inducted
into the Iowa Women's Hall of Fame in 1996.
UPDATE: Le
Sueur died on November 14, 1996 in Hudson, Wisconsin.
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