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         Olsen Tillie:     more books (95)
  1. ' Tell Me a Riddle': Tillie Olsen (Women Writers : Texts and Contexts)
  2. Silences by Tillie Olsen, 2003-04-01
  3. Mother to Daughter, Daughter to Mother: A Daybook and Reader
  4. Mothers & Daughters: An Exploration in Photographs by Tillie Olsen, Julie Olsen Edwards, et all 1989-05-01
  5. The Critical Response to Tillie Olsen: (Critical Responses in Arts and Letters)
  6. Silences by Tillie Olsen, 2003-04-01
  7. Tillie Olsen: One Woman, Many Riddles by Panthea Reid, 2009-11-19
  8. Yonnondio: From the Thirties by Tillie Olsen, 2004-10-01
  9. Better Red: The Writing and Resistance of Tillie Olsen and Meridel Le Sueur by Constance Coiner, 1995-03-30
  10. Studies in Short Fiction Series: Tillie Olsen (Twayne's Studies in Short Fiction) by Joanne S. Frye, 1995-08-25
  11. Tillie Olsen (Boise State University Western Writers Series ; No. 65) by Abigail A. Martin, 1984-06
  12. Women's Ethical Coming-of-Age: Adolescent Female Characters in the Prose Fiction of Tillie Olsen by Agnes Toloczko Cardoni, Tillie Olsen, 1997-12-18
  13. Three Radical Women Writers: Class and Gender in Meridel Le Sueur, Tillie Olsen, and Josephine Herbst (Gender and Genre in Literature) by Nora Ruth Roberts, 1996-03-01
  14. At work, the art of California labor. Foreword by Gray Brechin, afterword by Tillie Olsen. by Mark Dean, ed Johnson, 2003

1. Tillie Olsen - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Tillie Lerner Olsen (January 14, 1912 – January 1, 2007) 1 was an American writer, associated with the political turmoil of 1930s and the first generation
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tillie_Olsen
Tillie Olsen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Tille Olsen Born January 14
Died January 1 (aged 94)
Tillie Lerner Olsen January 14 January 1 was an American writer, associated with the political turmoil of 1930s and the first generation of American feminists
Contents
edit Biography
Olsen was born to Russian Jewish immigrants in north Omaha, Nebraska , where she attended Lake School through the eighth grade. She dropped out of Omaha Central High School to enter the work force. Over the years Olsen worked in Omaha as a waitress , domestic worker, and meat trimmer. She was also a union organizer and political activist in the Socialist community. In the 1930s she was briefly a member of the American Communist party . She was briefly jailed in 1934 while organizing a packing house workers' union, an experience she wrote about in The Nation and The Partisan Review . She later moved to Berkeley, California.
edit Writing
She attempted to introduce the challenges of her own life and contemporary political circumstances into a novel which she began in the 1930s, when she was only 19. Although only an excerpt of the first chapter was published in The Partisan Review in 1934, it led to a contract for her with

2. Tillie Olsen
Tillie Olsen was born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1912. The daughter of Russian immigrants, she was raised in a working class, socialist environment.
http://www.reaaward.org/html/tillie_olsen.html
www.ReaAward.org References The Nebraska Center for Writers's analysis of Tillie Olsen's work Tillie Olsen's ... at The Nebraska Center for Writers Tillie Olsen was born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1912. The daughter of Russian immigrants, she was raised in a working class, socialist environment. Growing up during the Depression she did not go to college, but early on got caught up in the struggle for survival at whatever jobs she could find. Her novel about the Depression, Yonnondio was begun when she was 19. A portion of the manuscript appeared in 1934 in the second issue of The Partisan Review. In her biography for the magazine, she listed her occupations as tie presser, hack writer, model, housemaid, ice cream packer and book clerk. The novel was never finished and thought irretrievably lost. However, remnants were found among some old papers, pieced together and published in book form in 1973. She is the author of the short story collection, Tell Me A Riddle [1962], the novel Yonnondio: From the Thirties [1994], a book of essays, Silences [1978]. She is the editor of Mothers and Daughter: That special quality [] and Mother to Daughter, Daughter to Mother, A Daybook and Reader []. The conflict between the demands of daily existence and the fulfillment of human potential is a theme that permeates Tillie Olsen's work. For twenty years, she was "silenced" as a writer while working to earn a living and single-handedly raising four daughters. "These are not natural silences, that necessary time for renewal," she said. "They are the unnatural thwarting of what struggles to come into being but cannot."

3. A Tribute To Tillie Olsen
Tillie Olsen is internationally known and honored for her powerful, brilliantly crafted, poetic writing depicting the lives of workingclass people,
http://www.tillieolsen.net/
Home Page Tillie's Life Links Contact Us
Tillie Olsen Memorial
January 14, 1912 - January 1, 2007
An Invitation From Her Family to Celebrate Her Life and Work
Tillie's Hands, August 2006, Photo by Jesse Olsen Tillie Lerner Olsen, internationally honored writer , human rights and anti-war activist, a formative voice of the women's movement, and a cherished friend, deeply loved Mother, Grandmother and Great-Grandmother , died January 1, 2007, two weeks shy of her ninety-fifth birthday. Please join family, friends and readers for a Memorial Celebration of Tillie Olsens Life:
Saturday, February 17, 2007
First Congregational Church of Oakland
1:00 Celebration followed by reception
2501 Harrison Street (corner of 25th and Harrison), Oakland, California

The church is eight blocks from the 19th Street BART Station.
Parking on site.
Please share this information with others you kow who cared about and were affected by Tillies writing, teaching, speaking and friendship. Those who wish to make contributions in Tillie's name may do so to the: Tillie Olsen Memorial Fund for Human Rights, Public Libraries and Working Class Literature

4. Tillie Olsen --  Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Britannica online encyclopedia article on Tillie Olsen American author known for her powerful fiction about the inner lives of the working poor, women,
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9098541/Tillie-Olsen
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Tillie Olsen
Page 1 of 1 born Jan. 14, 1913?, Omaha, Neb., U.S.
died Jan. 1, 2007, Oakland, Calif. Tillie Lerner American author known for her powerful fiction about the inner lives of the working poor, women, and minorities. Olsen, Tillie... (75 of 296 words) To read the full article, activate your FREE Trial Commonly Asked Questions About Tillie Olsen Close Enable free complete viewings of Britannica premium articles when linked from your website or blog-post. Now readers of your website, blog-post, or any other web content can enjoy full access to this article on Tillie Olsen , or any Britannica premium article for free, even those readers without a premium membership. Just copy the HTML code fragment provided below to create the link and then paste it within your web content. For more details about this feature, visit our Webmaster and Blogger Tools page Copy and paste this code into your page var dc_UnitID = 14; var dc_PublisherID = 15588; var dc_AdLinkColor = '009900'; var dc_adprod='ADL'; var dc_open_new_win = 'yes'; var dc_isBoldActive= 'no';

5. Tillie Olsen
Tillie Olsen. Tillie Olsen AKA Tillie Lerner. Born 14Jan-1913 Birthplace Omaha, NE Husband Jack Olsen (m. 1944, three daughters) Daughter Julie
http://www.nndb.com/people/559/000115214/
This is a beta version of NNDB Search: All Names Living people Dead people Band Names Book Titles Movie Titles Full Text for Tillie Olsen AKA Tillie Lerner Born: 14-Jan
Birthplace: Omaha, NE
Died: 1-Jan
Location of death: Oakland, CA
Cause of death: unspecified
Gender: Female
Race or Ethnicity: White
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Author Nationality: United States
Executive summary: Tell Me a Riddle [1] Kaiser Hospital, Oakland, CA. Father: Samuel Lerner
Mother: Ida Daughter: Karla (gave birth at age 19) Husband: Jack Olsen (m. 1944, three daughters) Daughter: Julie Daughter: Kathie Daughter: Laurie O. Henry Award 1961 for "Tell Me a Riddle" Risk Factors: Stuttering Author of books: Tell Me A Riddle: A Collection , short stories) Yonnondio: From the Thirties Silences , essays) Do you know something we don't? Submit a correction or make a comment about this profile

6. WBAI, New York - 99.5 FM Pacifica Radio - Remembering Tillie Olsen
Tillie Olsen was a great among women writers, a teacher, feminist, a wife, a homemaker, a mother of four. She was also a depression era high school dropout
http://wbai.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=9698&Itemid=2

7. Tillie Olsen Biography And Summary
Tillie Olsen biography with 245 pages of profile on Tillie Olsen sourced from encyclopedias, critical essays, summaries, and research journals.
http://www.bookrags.com/Tillie_Olsen
Literature Guides Criticism/Essays Biographies Research Anything: All BookRags Literature Guides Essays Criticism Biographies Encyclopedias History Encyclopedias Films Periodic Table ... Amazon.com Tillie Olsen Summary
Tillie Olsen
About 245 pages (73,345 words) in 27 products
"Tillie Olsen" Search Results
Contents: Biographies Works by Author Summaries Criticism Biography
Name: Tillie Olsen Birth Date: January 14, 1913 Place of Birth: Omaha, Nebraska, United States of America Nationality: American Gender: Female Occupations: writer, educator
summary from source:
Biography
of Tillie Olsen
1,719 words, approx. 6 pages
Tillie Olsen (born 1913) is widely regarded as one of the most important women writers in America. Although her reputation was built on a relatively small body of work, she is recognized for her skill as a storyteller and her determination to give... summary from source:
Biography
of Tillie Olsen
5,213 words, approx. 17 pages
Tillie Olsen is a feminist and working-class author who began writing in the 1930s. Robert Coles commented in The Nation, "Everything Tillie Olsen has written has become almost immediately a classic." Though she is most famous for her shortstory... summary from source:
Biography
of Tillie Olsen 5,013 words, approx. 17 pages

8. Tillie Olsen - Trailer - Showtimes - Cast - Movies - New York Times
A biography and related information about Tillie Olsen.
http://movies.nytimes.com/person/313643/Tillie-Olsen
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  • 9. Tillie Olsen
    Tillie Olsen (b. 1913) was born in Omaha, Nebraska, the daughter of political refugees from the Russian Czarist repression after the revolution of 1905.
    http://www.edwardsly.com/olsen.htm
    Tillie Olsen
    Tillie Olsen (b. 1913) was born in Omaha, Nebraska, the daughter of political refugees from the Russian Czarist repression after the revolution of 1905. At the age of sixteen Olsen dropped out of high school to help support her family during the Depression. At age nineteen she began her first novel, Yonnondio. Four chapters of this book about a poverty-stricken working class family were completed in the next four years, during which time she married, gave birth to her first child, and was left with the baby by her husband because, as she later wrote in her autobiographical story "I Stand Here Ironing" he "could no longer endure sharing want" with them. In 1934 a section of the first chapter of her novel was published in The Partisan Review, but she abandoned the unfinished book in 1937. The year before she had married Jack Olsen, with whom she had three more children; raising the children and working for political causes took up all her time. In the 1940s she was a factory worker; in the 1950s, a secretary and not until 1953, when her youngest daughter started school, could she begin writing again. That year Olsen enrolled in a class in fiction writing at San Francisco State College. She was awarded a Stanford University creative writing fellowship for 1955 and 1956. During the 1950s she wrote the four stories collected in Tell Me a Riddle, which established her reputation when the book was published as a paperback in 1961.

    10. NCW--Tillie Olsen
    Writers OnLine, tillie olsen is the highly praised author of Tell Me a Riddle, Silences, and Yonnondio. She is a Nebraska native (born in 1912 or 1913) who
    http://mockingbird.creighton.edu/ncw/olsen.htm
    Nebraska Center for Writers
    T ILLIE O LSEN
    Bibliography
    Selection
    Commentary
    Buy a Book ...
    Writers On-Line TILLIE OLSEN is the highly praised author of Tell Me a Riddle Silences , and Yonnondio . She is a Nebraska native (born in 1912 or 1913) who began writing in the 1930s. The necessity of raising and supporting four children through "everyday jobs" silenced her for twenty years. Public libraries were her college. Among the colleges where she has taught or been writer-in-residence are Amherst College, Stanford University, MIT, and Kenyon College. She is the recipient of five honorary degrees, National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, the O Henry Award for best short story, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Her Afterword to Rebecca Harding Davis's Life in the Iron Mills is a moving account of her commitment to labor issues and feminist values. Regarded as one of the earliest spokesperson's for the women's movement, she has said, "Be critical. Women have the right to say: This is surface, this falsifies reality, this degrades." She was raised in the Russian Jewish and Socialist community in Omaha and now lives in Berkeley.
    Return
    to
    The Rock
    Nebraska Center for Writers

    11. Tillie Olsen's Life--by Constance Coiner
    www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/olsen/life.htm Similar pages GradeSaver ClassicNote Biography of tillie olsenBiography of tillie olsen written by Harvard students.
    http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/m_r/olsen/life.htm
    Tillie Olsen's Life Constance Coiner T When Olsen was 11 or 12, Ida Lerner wrote the following letter to her English instructor: 2512 Caldwell Street
    Omaha, Nebraska
    December 10, 1924
    Dear Teacher: I am glad to study with ardor but the children wont let me, they go to bed late so it makes me tired, and I cant do my lessons. It is after ten o'clock my head dont work it likes to have rest. But I am in a sad mood I am sitting in the warm house and feel painfull that winter claps in to my heart. I see the old destroyed houses of the people from the old country. I hear the wind blow through them with the disgusting cry why the poor creatures ignore him, dont protest against him, that souless wind dont no, that they are helpless have no material to repair the houses and no clothes to cover up their bodies, and so the sharp wind echo cry falls on the window, and the windows original sing with silver-ball tears seeing all the poor shivering creatures dressed in rags with frozen fingers and feverish hungry eyes. It is told of the olden days, the people of that time were building a tower, when they were on the point of success for some reason they stopped to understand each other and on account of misunderstanding, their hopes and very lives were buried under the tower they had built. So as a human being who carries responsibility for action I think as a duty to the community we shall try to understand each other. This English class helps us to understand each other, not to feel helpless between our neighbors, serves to get more respect from the people around us. We are human beings trying to understand, we learn about the world, people and our surroundings. This class teaches us to understand each other and brings better order in the every day life of the community.

    12. In Praise Of Tillie Olsen
    Celebrating the eloquence of the feminist, activist and writer in whose work memory, history, poetry and prophecy converge.
    http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070122/tillie_olson
    GA_googleAddAttr("blog_issue", "20070122"); GA_googleAddAttr("origin", "web"); GA_googleAddAttr("author", "john_leona"); GA_googleAddAttr("privilege", "free"); GA_googleAddAttr("role", "none"); GA_googleAddSlot("ca-pub-7565666144516430", "Article_Top_728x90"); GA_googleAddSlot("ca-pub-7565666144516430", "Article_Middle_336x280"); GA_googleAddSlot("ca-pub-7565666144516430", "Article_ATF_300x250"); GA_googleAddSlot("ca-pub-7565666144516430", "Article_Bottom_468x60"); GA_googleAddSlot("ca-pub-7565666144516430", "Article_Right_160x600"); GA_googleAddSlot("ca-pub-7565666144516430", "Article_Right_173x173"); Home Issues January 22, 2007 (web) In Praise of Tillie Olsen posted January 5, 2007 (web only)
    Tillie Olsen: 1912-2007
    John Leonard PRINT ARTICLE EMAIL ARTICLE Web Letters (0) ... SUBSCRIBE NOW SHARE ARTICLE It's been more than forty-five years since Tillie Olsen appeared, in trousers, in the radio studio at KPFA in Berkeley, California, to record two stories from her Tell Me a Riddle collection: "I Stand Here Ironing" and "Hey Sailor, What Ship?" A third, "O Yes," needed at least a gospel chorus, not in our budget. And I couldn't imagine how to do the fourth, the title novella, without a Greek theater and a Bach Mass and a Russian Revolution:

    13. Tillie Lerner Olsen (b. 1912)
    Literature of Resistance The Intersection of Feminism and the Political Left in tillie olsen and Meridel LeSueur. In Politics of Literature Toward the
    http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/olsen.html
    Tillie Lerner Olsen (b. 1912)
    Contributing Editor: Deborah S. Rosenfelt
    Classroom Issues and Strategies
    Olsen's work is relatively easy to teach since it addresses themes of concern to contemporary students and since its experiments with language remain within the bounds of realism. Tell Me a Riddle is among the most difficult of Olsen's works and some students have trouble for two reasons: They are unfamiliar with the social and political history em- bedded in the novella and they are confused by the allusive, stream-of-consciousness techniques Olsen employs for the revelation of that history's centrality in the consciousness of the protagonist. Since the knee-jerk negative reaction to "communists" is often a problem, I make sure I discuss thoroughly the historical soil out of which Tell Me a Riddle grows. Sometimes I show the film Seeing Reds . I always read students a useful passage from A Long View from the Left: Memoirs of an American Revolutionary (Delta, 1972, p. 8) by Al Richmond. Showing the film version of Tell Me a Riddle can be a good strategy for provoking discussion. The film itself is one of the rare representations of older people's lives and one of the few in which an older woman figures as the protagonist. Reading passages from Olsen's

    14. SULAIR: AmLitStudies: Tillie Olsen Papers
    The tillie olsen Papers are arranged in eleven (11) series, including literary manuscripts, notebooks, journals, and personal writings, correspondence with
    http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/hasrg/ablit/amerlit/olsen.html
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    15. Tillie Olsen, Feminist Writer, Dies At 94 - New York Times
    tillie olsen’s short stories, books and essays lent a heartfelt voice to the struggles of women and workingclass people.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/03/books/03olsen.html
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    Tillie Olsen, Feminist Writer, Dies at 94

    By JULIE BOSMAN Published: January 3, 2007 Tillie Olsen, whose short stories, books and essays lent a heartfelt voice to the struggles of women and working-class people, died on Monday in Oakland, Calif. She was 94. Skip to next paragraph Enlarge This Image Eric Risberg/Associated Press, 2001 Tillie Olsen
    Forum: Book News and Reviews
    Ms. Olsen died after being in declining health for years, her daughter Laurie Olsen said. Melvyn Douglas and Lila Kedrova Tillie Lerner was born on Jan. 14, 1912, on a tenant farm in Nebraska. She was the second of six children born to Samuel and Ida Lerner, Jewish immigrants from Russia, socialists whose political and social beliefs heavily influenced Ms. Olsen. Her father, a paperhanger and painter by trade, was the state secretary of the Nebraska Socialist Party. After completing 11th grade, Ms. Olsen dropped out of high school. She immediately took on working-class jobs, including stints as a waitress, a hotel maid, a packinghouse worker, a secretary and a factory worker.

    16. Tillie Olsen, Remembered. - By Jess Row - Slate Magazine
    I stand here ironing, and what you asked me moves tormented back and forth with the iron. Thus begins the story collection Tell Me a Riddle, tillie
    http://www.slate.com/id/2157161
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    17. Speaking Freely: An Evening With Remarkable Women -- Tillie Olsen
    To get to tillie olsen s East Bay home, you walk to her front door beneath a canopy of deep blue morning glories. It seems fitting that the Nebraskaborn
    http://www.kqed.org/w/baywindow/speakingfreely/local/tillie_olsen.html
    select a topic local focus
    "Little children love learning to talk. They love language; they love rhymes. To express oneself, to communicate, is a human need and capacity. I was lucky enough to fall in love with what was in books, thanks to a public library. In my novel Yonnondio , I wrote a scene where a mother is trying to get her kids to the library. 'That's what books are - the inside of people's heads you'd never get to know - getting to places you'd never get to really see." To get to Tillie Olsen's East Bay home, you walk to her front door beneath a canopy of deep blue morning glories. It seems fitting that the Nebraska-born author should live surrounded by the quiet of a lush garden after nearly a century of fighting the good fight for such causes as women's right, civil rights and the rights of the working class. What makes her fiction compelling is the plain and powerful fact that it's charged with her politics without proselytizing or compromising her narrative art. For example, in the much anthologized story "I Stand Here Ironing," the reader listens in on the thoughts of a woman set in place at her routine ironing duty. How rare it must have been to read fiction in the early 1950s - when the story was written - about the true grit and tedium of this type of woman's work. It was, in fact, a revolutionary mode of writing. In the following passage from her book of non-fiction, Silences, Ms. Olsen complements her fictional work by scrutinizing what was then an entrenched imbalance of male to female writers, and not insignificantly, the smaller oeuvres that women have been able to produce.

    18. Tillie Olsen Quotations
    tillie olsen Quotations part of a collection of quotes from notable women.
    http://womenshistory.about.com/library/qu/blquolse.htm
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    Women's History
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  • Tillie Olsen Women's Voices: Quotations by Women
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    assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis Be critical. Women have the right to say: This is surface, this falsifies reality, this degrades. She would never exchange her solitude for anything. Never again to be forced to move to the rhythms of others. More Quotations - Indexed by Name All A B C ... Z Explore Women's History: Jone Johnson Lewis 1997-2004. This is an informal collection if you need citations for the original source, I don't have those available unless they're listed with the quotes.
    • To cite this page, use a format something like this, substituting this page's title and URL:

    19. Obituary: Tillie Olsen | Obituaries | Guardian Unlimited
    tillie olsen was 93 at the time of her death, not 94 as we said in the article below. She would have attained that age on January 14.
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,,1982177,00.html
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    Feminist author famous for helping aspiring women writers to find a voice
    Mark Krupnick
    Thursday January 4, 2007

    20. Dedicated To The Cause - Documentary Celebrates Activist Tillie Olsen
    Dedicated to the cause documentary celebrates activist tillie olsen.
    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/01/10/DDNRUB8KG.DTL

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