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Mitzi Myers

Mitzi Myers
Born(1939-10-09)October 9, 1939
DiedNovember 5, 2001(2001-11-05) (aged 62)
Anaheim Hills, California, U.S.
OccupationLiterary scholar
Spouse
Dennis Allen Hengeveld
(m. 1967; died 1983)
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship (1990)
Academic background
Alma mater
ThesisAspects of William Godwin's reputation in the 1790's (1969)
Doctoral advisorCarroll Camden
Academic work
Discipline
  • Children's literature
  • women authors
Institutions

Mitzi Ouida Myers[1] (October 9, 1939 – November 5, 2001) was an American literary scholar. A 1990 Guggenheim Fellow, she specialized in children's literature and Georgian era women authors. She worked as a professor and lecturer at University of California, Santa Barbara and California State University, before settling at University of California, Los Angeles.

Biography

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Early life and academic career

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Myers was born on October 9, 1939, in Sulphur Springs, Texas.[2] As a young child, she was "a lover of reading and of books".[3] She obtained her BA (1961) and MA (1962) at East Texas State College and worked as a teaching assistant at Rice University, before obtaining her PhD there in 1969.[4][3] Her doctoral dissertation Aspects of William Godwin's reputation in the 1790's was supervised by Carroll Camden.[5]

Originally an assistant professor at University of California, Santa Barbara from 1966 to 1973, Myers later started working at California State University in 1974.[4] She worked as a lecturer at the Cal Poly branches in San Bernardino (1974-1977), Fullerton (1976-1977), Pomona (1978-1980; 1982-1988), and Long Beach (1982-1983).[4] In 1980, she began working as a lecturer at University of California, Los Angeles,[4] remaining with the college for the next two decades.[6] She taught courses focused on the history of children's literature and young adult literature, as well as writing courses.[2][3] Her work at UCLA also included basic writing undergraduate curriculum development and contribution to the Children's Book Collection.[6] She also taught at Chapman University and Scripps College.[3] She was a 1986-1987 National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow.[3]

Scholarly career

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Having become interested in the field while at Rice, Myers specialized in children's literature as a scholar.[6] Her status as a children's literature expert was widely recognized throughout the world,[2][6] and Naomi Wood said that Myers was "unquestionably the founding mother of eighteenth-century children's literature criticism".[7] Her contributions to children's literature studies included extending the start of children's literature beyond the 1865 publication of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland; encouraging the study of book copy defacements as "the hidden history of childhood"; editing The Norton Anthology of Children's Literature: The Traditions in English; and making contributions to the Cambridge Companion to Children's Literature and Encyclopedia Americana.[6][2]

Myers also studied Georgian era women authors like Maria Edgeworth, Hannah More, and Mary Wollstonecraft, and considered Edgeworth her favorite.[6][8] She won the 1988 Children's Literature Association Best Critical Essay Award for her 1986 essay "Impeccable Governesses, Rational Dames, and Moral Mothers: Mary Wollstonecraft and the Female Tradition in Georgian Children's Books".[3] In 1990, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship[9] to research Edgeworth's work.[4]

Personal life

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On March 14, 1967, Myers married Dennis Allen Hengeveld, a contemporary from Rice who later became an English professor at Cal State Fullerton.[10][6] They were married until his death on May 10, 1983.[10] She also had a brother, whom she survived, as well as a sister who outlived her.[8]

Myers reportedly "delighted in silver jewelry, fast driving, and an absolute accuracy of annotation".[8] She reportedly called herself the "grand old queen of the footnote".[2]

Death and legacy

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On August 13, 2000, Myers' house in Fullerton, California, was damaged in a fire.[3] Her four Edgeworth manuscripts in progress at the time – two academic books and two novel annotated versions – were lost in the fire, as was the majority of her personal library of 35,000 volumes, reportedly including rare books and "nearly all of them annotated".[6] She went on medical leave after suffering third-degree burns and pneumonia from the fire, where she had tried to rescue her books,[a][6] and she temporarily moved to Anaheim Hills, where she died on November 5, 2001, due to complications from the pneumonia, aged 62.[2]

The Lion and the Unicorn called Myers "one of her generation's most far-ranging and rigorous scholars" in an obituary for her.[8] She had a festschrift, Culturing the Child, 1690-1914, released in 2005 and edited by Donelle Ruwe.[11][7]

Notes

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  1. ^ Her sister Patsy told the Los Angeles Times that the books "were like children to her".[6]

References

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  1. ^ Ruwe, Donelle (2005). Culturing the Child, 1690-1914: Essays in Memory of Mitzi Myers. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC. p. 228. ISBN 0-8108-5182-2.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Honan, William H. (November 17, 2001). "Mitzi Myers, 62, Writer, Editor And Scholar of Children's Books". New York Times. p. A13. ProQuest 431917141.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Adams, Gillian (2002). "Mitzi Myers, 9 October 1939-5 November 2001". Children's Literature Association Quarterly. 27 (2): 88–91. doi:10.1353/chq.0.1524. ISSN 1553-1201.
  4. ^ a b c d e Reports of the President and the Treasurer. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. 1989. p. 88.
  5. ^ Myers, Mitzi (1969). Aspects of William Godwin's reputation in the 1790's (PhD thesis). Rice University. OCLC 27745390.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j McLellan, Dennis (November 13, 2001). "Obituaries; Mitzi Myers, 62; Literary Scholar". Los Angeles Times. p. B11. ProQuest 421672636.
  7. ^ a b Wood, Naomi (2006). "Honoring Our Mothers: The Legacy and Life of Mitzi Myers". Children's Literature. 34 (1): 218–221. doi:10.1353/chl.2006.0021. ISSN 1543-3374.
  8. ^ a b c d Goodenough, Elizabeth; Immel, Andrea; Knoepflmacher, U. C (2002). "In Memoriam Mitzi Myers (1939-2001)". The Lion and the Unicorn. 26 (1): vi–viii. doi:10.1353/uni.2002.0003. ISSN 1080-6563.
  9. ^ "Mitzi Myers". Guggenheim Fellowships. Archived from the original on February 20, 2025. Retrieved July 9, 2025.
  10. ^ a b "D.A. Hengeveld". The Hopkins County Echo. May 13, 1983. p. 4 – via The Portal to Texas History.
  11. ^ Reynolds, Kimberley (2006). "Review of Culturing the Child, 1690-1914: Essays in Memory of Mitzi Myers". Victorian Studies. 48 (3): 564–566. ISSN 0042-5222. JSTOR 3829834.