Le Sueur, Meridel (1900–1996)
Creator:
Neala Schleuning
Bibliography
Schleuning, Neala. “America: Song We Sang Without Knowing”: The Life and Ideas of Meridel Le Sueur. Mankato, MN, 1983.
——— . “Meridel Le Sueur: Toward a New Regionalism.” Books at Iowa 33, no. 1 (November 1980): 22–41.
http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/bai/books_iowa33_03.htm
Chronology
1900
Meridel Wharton is born in Murray, Iowa, on February 22.
1917
Meridel’s mother, Marian, marries Arthur Le Sueur. Meridel takes “Le Sueur” as her last name.
1924
Le Sueur joins the Communist Party.
1927
Le Sueur’s first short story, “Persephone,” is published.
1928
Le Sueur’s first daughter, Rachel, is born.
1929
Having studied and worked in Chicago, New York, Hollywood, and San Francisco, Le Sueur joins her family in Minnesota.
1930
Le Sueur’s second daughter, Deborah, is born.
1940
Le Sueur publishes Salute to Spring, a collection of short stories.
1945
Le Sueur publishes North Star Country, a history of the Upper Midwest.
1947
Le Sueur is blacklisted for her political views. She turns to writing children’s literature.
1970s
Members of the women’s movement renew public interest in Le Sueur’s work.
1976
The Twin Cities Women’s Film Collective produces My People Are My Home, a documentary about Le Sueur’s life.
1978
West End Press republishes Le Sueur’s novel The Girl, originally written in the 1930s.
1996
Le Sueur dies in Hudson, Wisconsin, on November 14.
2012
This With My Last Breath, Le Sueur’s final work, is published.
Bibliography
Schleuning, Neala. “America: Song We Sang Without Knowing”: The Life and Ideas of Meridel Le Sueur. Mankato, MN, 1983.
——— . “Meridel Le Sueur: Toward a New Regionalism.” Books at Iowa 33, no. 1 (November 1980): 22–41.
http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/bai/books_iowa33_03.htm