Donald Rodney Justice (August 12, 1925 – August 6, 2004) was an American poet and teacher of creative writing who won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1980.
Justice died August 6, 2004, at an Iowa City, Iowa nursing home. He had been in a nursing home after suffering a stroke several weeks before his death. He was 78 years old. His family said the immediate cause of death was pneumonia, but that he also had Parkinson's disease.[1]
Legacy
"In most ways, Justice was no different from any number of solid, quiet older writers devoted to traditional short poems. But he was different in one important sense: sometimes his poems weren't just good; they were great. They were great in the way that Elizabeth Bishop's poems were great, or Thom Gunn's or Philip Larkin's. They were great in the way that tells us what poetry used to be, and is, and will be."
In his obituary for The Independent, Andrew Rosenheim wrote that Justice "was a legendary teacher, and despite his own Formalist reputation influenced a wide range of younger writers — his students included Mark Jarman, Rita Dove, James Tate, C. Dale Young, Ellen Bryant Voigt, Will Schmitz, Mark Strand, William Stafford, Larry Levis, and the novelist John Irving."[5] His student and later colleague Marvin Bell said, "As a teacher, Don chose always to be on the side of the poem, defending it from half-baked attacks by students anxious to defend their own turf. While he had firm preferences in private, as a teacher Don defended all turfs. He had little use for poetic theory..."[6]
Justice's former student, the poet and critic Tad Richards, noted that, "Donald Justice is likely to be remembered as a poet who gave his age a quiet but compelling insight into loss and distance, and who set a standard for craftsmanship, attention to detail, and subtleties of rhythm."[7]
Justice's work was the subject of the 1998 volume Certain Solitudes: On The Poetry of Donald Justice, a collection of essays edited by Dana Gioia and William Logan.[8]
Published work
Poetry collections
The Old Bachelor and Other Poems (Pandanus Press, Miami, FL), 1951.
The Summer Anniversaries (Wesleyan University Press, Middletown, CT), 1960; revised edition (University Press of New England, Hanover, NH), 1981.
A Local Storm (Stone Wall Press, Iowa City, IA, 1963).
Night Light (Wesleyan University Press, Middletown, CT, 1967); revised edition (University Press of New England, Hanover, NH, 1981).
Sixteen Poems (Stone Wall Press, Iowa City, IA, 1970).
From a Notebook (Seamark Press, Iowa City, IA, 1971).
Compendium: A Collection of Thoughts on Prosody. ed. David Koehn & Alan Soldofsky (Omnidawn, 2017). ISBN978-1-63243-032-8[9]
Edited volumes
Justice edited posthumous selections of unpublished poetry for four poets: Weldon Kees, Henri Coulette, Raeburn Miller, and Joe Bolton.
Aspel, Alexander (1965). Aspel, Alexander; Justice, Donald (eds.). Contemporary French Poetry: Fourteen Witnesses after Man's Fate. University of Michigan Press.
Kees, Weldon; Wojahn, David (2003). Justice, Donald (ed.). The Collected Poems of Weldon Kees (Third ed.). Bison Books. ISBN978-0-8032-7809-7. The first edition of this collection was published in 1960.
Miller, Raeburn; Justice, Donald (1994). Justice, Donald; Mackin, Cooper R.; Olson, Richard D. (eds.). The Comma after Love: Selected Poems of Raeburn Miller. University of Akron Press. ISBN978-1-884836-03-9.
^Gioia, Dana; Logan, William, eds. (1998). Certain Solitudes: On The Poetry of Donald Justice. University of Arkansas Press. ISBN978-1-55728-475-4. OCLC875545534.