Home / Full timeline / James Alan McPherson, Jr., Black American author, is awarded a Pulitzer Prize in fiction for his volume of short stories, Elbow Room. The book characterizes “various aspects of the Black experience.”
James Alan McPherson, Jr., Black American author, is awarded a Pulitzer Prize in fiction for his volume of short stories, Elbow Room. The book characterizes “various aspects of the Black experience.”
1978 (Apr 17)
"James Alan McPherson, Jr., African American author, was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in fiction for his volume of short stories, Elbow Room. The book characterized ""various aspects of the black experience."" McPherson, a thirty-four year old native of Savannah, Georgia, received a bachelor's degree from Morris Brown College in 1965, and an LL.B. degree from the Harvard University Law School in 1968. A year later he earned a master's of fine arts degree from the University of Iowa. McPherson taught writing in the college of law at Iowa before joining the faculty at the University of California at Santa Cruz from 1969 until 1970. The new Pulitzer Prize winner had also been a contributing editor of Atlantic Monthly magazine and a contributor to Black Insights, Cutting Edges, and New Black Voices. He also wrote Hue and Cry, a collection of short stories and edited Railroad: Trains and Train People in American Culture in 1969 and 1976, respectively. In 1970, McPherson won the National Institute of Arts and Letters literature prize, and in 1972 and 1973 he was awarded Guggenheim fellowships. At the time of his receipt of the Pulitzer Prize, McPherson was an associate professor of English at the University of Virginia. The Pulitzer Prize, considered by many ""the most prestigious award that can be bestowed in the literary arts and journalism,"" carried a stipend of $1,000 and was administered by the trustees of Columbia University."