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Calvin
Coolridge Hernton was born on April 28, 1932 in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
After graduating from Howard High School in Chattanooga in 1950,
he attended Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama, graduating
with a B.A. in sociology in 1954. He then undertook graduate studies
in sociology at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee and received
an M.A. degree in 1956. During the following nine years, he worked
as a social worker with children in metropolitan New York City.
During these years, he continued to hone his skills in writing
poetry, skills he had developed at Fisk University. Styling himself
a “Bohemian” and
wanting to hit the literary jackpot, Calvin frequently gave readings
in Manhattan’s lower east side. As a founder and editor of
the literary magazine Umbra he published works by black writers Langston
Hughes, Ismael Reed, and Alice Walker as well as many up-and-coming
young writers. In 1965 he published with Doubleday and Grove Press
(paperback edition) his landmark study Sex and Racism in America,
which was provocative and timely. Therein he argued that “the
connection between skin color and sexuality is ‘so immaculate
and yet so perverse, so ethereal and yet so concrete, that all race
relations tend to be, however subtly, sexual relations.’” (The
New York Times, n.d.) It was during these years that Calvin joined
the black literary inner-circle—less because of his artistic
skill and more because he was bone tolerant and able to get along
with all people.
Hernton spent the years 1965-1969 in London, England as a fellow
at the Institute of Phenomenological Studies where he studied with
the psychiatrist R.D. Laing (b. 1927). As part of his work at the
Institute he co-authored, along with Laing and Dr. Joseph H. Berke,
The Phenomenology of Psychoavtivates.
Returning to the United States, Hernton spent the years 1969
and 1970 as a writer-in-residence at Central State University in
Wilberforce,
Ohio. In 1970, he moved to Oberlin College, where he first served
as a writer-in-residence and then, in 1972, as an associate professor
in the newly established Black Studies program. He was eventually
promoted to the rank of full professor in 1979. He was not prone
to involve himself in campus politics or committee work, and was
basically a shy person.
During his teaching career, Professor Hernton was noted for his
conservative pedagogical teaching methods (as opposed to his black
colleagues
in his department) and for his successful mentoring of students
like Avery Brooks ’70 and Bruce Wiegl ’73. Students taken
under the wing often developed a life-long relationship with him.
This was the case with Avery Brooks, with whom Hernton collaborated
on the ABC (American Broadcasting Company) series “A Man Called
Hawk.” According to one observer, teaching for Calvin was “very
draining and demanding.”
From his New York years when he first emerged as a leading voice
in the black arts movement, Hernton was a prolific writer. Among
his works are: The Coming of Chronos to the House of Nightsong
(poetry, Interim Books: New York, 1964); Sex and Racism in America
(Doubleday: Garden City, N.Y., 1965); White Papers for White Americans (Greenwood
Press: Westport, Conn., 1982); Medicine Man (poetry, Reed, Cannon & Johnson:
New York, 1976); The Sexual Mountain and Black Women Writers (Anchor
Press: New York, 1987); The Cannabis Experience (with Joseph Berke,
P. Owen: London, 1974); works on Langston Hughes, James Baldwin,
and Chester Himes; Scarcrow (a novel, Doubleday: Garden City, N.Y.,
1974); many short stories; and a dramatic work. He published widely
in journals and magazines including Dissent, Negro Digest, Evergreen
Review, Scottish International, and The Carleton Miscellany. In
his New York Times obituary Margalit Fox wrote, “Uniting
his diverse output was a propulsive desire to question—and
at times to subvert—received wisdom about how social institutions
function.”
Calvin C. Hernton, who for many years battled his own demons,
counted among his town friends Glenn and Sandy Hodge, Gigi, his
barber,
and Vern Carroll. In 1998 he married a second time to Mary O’Callaghan
(b. ?), who Calvin came to know in London. He died in Oberlin, Ohio,
on September 30, 2001, survived by Mary and a son, Antone (b. ?),
from his previous marriage.
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