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Robert Hodges

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert R. Hodges is a professor emeritus of English and Comparative Literature at California State University, Fullerton.[1]

Hodges earned a master's degree from the University of Missouri in 1954, with a thesis on Narrative technique in the novels of Willa Cather.[2] He became an authority on the life and oeuvre of Joseph Conrad, the subject of his 1960 doctoral dissertation at Stanford University,[3] which he later published as a book.[4] He observed for instance in "Deep Fellowship" (Journal of Homosexuality, 1979) the multifarious homoerotic elements in Conrad's work, and seeking thus to challenge the entrenched and enforced view of Conrad as a "heterosexual man's writer", an "established man's man of letters", "a literary heterosexual role model" and a "guardian of society's male mystique".[5]

He was an activist in the gay rights movement of the 1970s and 1980s,[1] and was editor-in-chief of the Newsletter of the Western Gay Academic Union.[6]

“Hodges, who died in 2020 at the age 91, left an endowment of $400,000 to Cal State Fullerton’s Department of English. The endowment was established in his name, Robert Hodges, professor emeritus of English, for the purpose to support fellowships for undergraduates and graduate students pursuing academic degrees in English or comparative literature.”[7]

Additional sources

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  • Hodges, Robert R. "Deep Fellowship: Homosexuality and Male Bonding in the Life and Fiction of Joseph Conrad." Journal of Homosexuality, 1979: 379–393.
  • —. The dual heritage of Joseph Conrad. The Hague: Mouton, 1967.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Guide to the Robert R. Hodges Papers. Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
  2. ^ Hodges, Robert R. (1967), "Narrative technique in the novels of Willa Cather", WorldCat catalog entry, ISBN 9783112158418, OCLC 25326352
  3. ^ "Joseph Conrad's dual heritage", WorldCat catalog entry, OCLC 25298295
  4. ^ a b Reviews of The dual heritage of Joseph Conrad:
  5. ^ Hodges 1979
  6. ^ Hodges, Robert R. (1967), "Newsletter of the Western Gay Academic Union", WorldCat catalog entry, ISBN 9783112158418, OCLC 62461880
  7. ^ "Robert R. Hodges Fellowship Endowment Established". CSUFvNews. June 3, 2020.