Lee W. Patterson, medievalist and
author of groundbreaking articles and books, died at home on 29 June 2012.
If not the first to bring the insights
of twentieth-century post-structuralism to bear on the literature of the High
Middle Ages, Lee led the way in demonstrating the value of those insights. His
first book, Negotiating the Past
(1987), woke up medieval studies and brought theoretical sophistication to a
field long governed either by dusty philology or sentimental, appreciative
criticism. His 1991 tour de force, Chaucer
and the Subject of History, is widely considered to be among the most important
studies of Chaucer. Over twenty years later, it remains the foundational text
on which any study of Chaucer must begin. Together these two books transformed
the field: Chaucer and the Subject of
History forever changed how scholars and students understand Chaucer, and Negotiating
the Past forever changed how medievalists view themselves.
Lee was an individual of many
paradoxes, certainly one reason he could identify and embrace the tensions at
work in medieval studies. He was
simultaneously a misanthropic hermit and an unflagging activist. He was deeply
learned and widely read—as revealed in the footnotes and bibliographies of his
scholarship—yet he much preferred to discuss the Baltimore Orioles or Cole
Porter lyrics. He was less inclined to
transform his graduate students into Pattersonian reproductions and more
interested in encouraging them to find their own voices, their own slants, and their
own ways not to sacrifice personal lives to the professoriate. Many times his lack of interest in creating a
stable of followers seemed born of an arrogance that believed none could match
his intellect; at other times, it seemed to stem from a wisdom well aware of the
stifling folly of academic impersonation. At the same time that he might return
a dissertation chapter with no comments, he would, as in my case, help a single
mother with two children start over: he made possible our 1900-mile move from
West Texas to New Haven by arranging a teaching job for me and by inviting my
9-year-old daughter, my 10-year-old son, and me to live with his wife—Annabel
Patterson—and him until I could manage on my own. No wonder he confused everyone.
Always an enigma to his doctoral
students, Lee was often the topic of late-night musings when we gathered,
whether around pub tables after class or (many years later) at NCS or K’zoo
dinners. It is certainly a quirky twist that
as Lee’s health declined many of my conversations with him focused on his
students; he was either relating the latest news he’d heard or asking for
updates. He took great pleasure knowing
that his former graduate students had successfully balanced solid academic
careers and satisfying personal lives.
In
those final days, he and I also talked much about death, about its finality,
and about the opportunity to die a good death.
It’s no secret that he had many contentious relationships, and with his
diagnosis in April he set about to put his relationships in order, one by one. I
was lucky to appear early on his list, and he was once again teaching me, this
time about how to die well. His illness,
however, overtook him more quickly than anyone anticipated, and most of those
conversations with others never happened. Instead of having an intimate
exchange with him, colleagues and former students could only send notes. At the end, once he was back home and resting
comfortably, I read those notes to him; within the hour, he took his last
breath.
2 comments:
Candace,
Thanks for writing this, and for all you did around Lee's passing. And thanks too, Jeffrey, for providing space for this tribute.
Ethan
Thank you for this too. I am still stunned that Lee is no longer alive, as he was such a vital person. I particularly appreciate, Candace, your frankness about his complexity. This is something else I am trying to get my head around, even as I deal with the shock of his passing. He was not always an easy man, but when I reflect on what role he played in my life I recognize that it was lasting and positive. He gave me excellent advice on writing, and if it has taken me the better part of a decade to put it into practice that is my own fault. He taught me most of what I know about teaching undergraduates, both by lecture and by seminar. He wrote a job letter for me, and he gave me connections that have led, many years later, to the most generous research leave I could have imagined. I was not one of his doctoral students, but the amount that I learned from Lee even being on his periphery was considerable. I honestly want to cry -- though I think it would be more in keeping with the Lee spirit to buy a big fat cigar and smoke it in his honour.
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