Print-Friendly Version


"It takes centuries to create a civilization, and only a generation or a year to destroy it."

WRITER HERO:
ARIEL DURANT

by Jerrilyn Jacobs


At a time in America when being a housewife and mother was the primary occupation approved for women, Ariel Durant showed one way of breaking the mold. Involved in a lifelong loving relationship with her husband, Will, and mother to daughter, Ethel, Ariel Durant first became an assistant and then an equal to her prolific philosopher-writer husband. An active lecturer and believer in the rights of women, Ariel Durant was able to share in her husband’s fame and accomplishments, though with her personality and ambition she probably would have preferred more independent recognition for her talents.

Ariel Durant was born as Chaya Kaufmann in Proskurov, Russia, on May 10, 1898. She was the daughter of Ethel Appel Kaufman and Joseph Kaufman, a clothing store salesman who emigrated to America, bringing his family over in search of a better life in 1901. Her early family life was unsettling: her parents made a meager living selling newspapers, and her mother became active in the anarchist movement, eventually moving away from the family. When Chaya was 14 she transferred from the New York City public schools, where she had gone sporadically, to the anarchist-inspired progressive Ferrer Modern School. Her teacher was Will Durant.

"She thought him somewhat ridiculous, being short and shy. Nevertheless, a bond quickly developed between the 14-year-old (Chaya) Ariel and the 28-year-old teacher. Passion and love quickly followed, and they were married on October 31, 1913, after Chaya rollerskated to the New York City Hall for their civil ceremony."

Will renamed Chaya "Puck" after the mischievous character in Shakespeare's Midsummer’s Night Dream. Later he changed her nickname to "Ariel," the sprite from The Tempest, "because she was strong and brave as a boy, and as swift and mischievous as an elf."


Husband and wife had opposite personalities: he was shy and retiring, she was outgoing and social. He offered her an outlet for her intellectual curiosity and she introduced him to the world of artists, poets, philosophers and entertainers with whom they socialized in New York and Los Angeles. Ariel became a brilliant conversationalist and sharp debater under the tutelage of the man she called her "teacher, lover, mentor and friend." Will especially appreciated Ariel's compulsion to speak her mind, her fun loving appreciation of life, and her championing of women’s rights.

As early as 1912, Will Durant envisioned writing a five-part history of civilization, told through the stories of famous people of the times. This was a very different approach from historical research of the time: it made history very readable to the general public, and the volumes were well received by a nation recovering from world war, though some strict historical academicians were harsh critics. The Story of Civilization tries to show the interrelations between science, politics, economics, art, religion and literature of the past 6,000 years. It became an 11-volume opus published between 1935 and 1975.

Ariel began helping Will with this massive project by classifying and organizing his copious notes. As his literary assistant, she worked by his side in relative anonymity for many years. She began supplementing and complementing his research and soon was a critic and contributor. Ariel began to conduct much of the research herself for volume 4, as Will was now in his seventies. In 1961, when the seventh volume was published, Ariel Durant received joint author credit for that and the remaining four volumes. Her own interests in women, France, and England had an impact on the focus and content of the multivolume series. The Durants were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Literature in 1968 for Rousseau and Revolution, the tenth volume of the series.

After World War II, both Durants became involved in a movement to lessen the racial and religious tensions in the United States. Although Will was the key figure behind the "Declaration of Interdependence," Ariel took an active role. The movement is still active today.

The Durants were elected to the Institute of Arts and Sciences, and Ariel was chosen one of the five women of the year in 1965 by the Los Angeles Times.

In 1977 the Durants published A Dual Autobiography. They both received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Ford that same year. Ariel Durant died at home on October 25, 1981. Her husband, then 95 years old and recovering from surgery in the hospital, died less than two weeks later.

Several days after his death, an editorial cartoon appeared in the Los Angeles Times featuring Ariel on roller skates, welcoming Will to heaven.



Written by Jerrilyn Jacobs


RELATED LINKS

The Authentic Teachings of Will and Ariel Durant

EXTRA INFORMATION

Information for this story came from the following sources:

"Civilization Meets the Durants," by Nancy Yos, Commentary, Oct., 2001, v112 i3, as reproduced in Biography Resource Center, Farmington Hills, Mich.: The Gale Group, 2000

"Contemporary Authors Online," The Gale Group, 2000. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center, Farmington Hills, Mich.: The Gale Group, 2002.

Contemporary Heroes and Heroines, Book IV.

Gale Group 2000, Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: The Gale Group, 2002.

"Ariel Durant." DISCovering U.S. History. Gale Research, 1997. From Eugene Larson, "Ariel Durant." Great Lives from History, Frank N. Magill, ed. American Women Series, Vol. 2. Salem Press, 1995. Reproduced in History Resource Center. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Group.

WillDurant. com http://www.willdurant.com/ariel.htm


 
RECOMMENDED READING

Age of Voltaire

by Will Durant, Ariel Durant

The Reformation

by Will Durant, Ariel Durant


More Featured Writer Heroes

Alexander Pushkin is one of Russia's greatest writers.Alexander Solzhenitsyn was a Russian novelist and dissident who won the Nobel Prize for Literature.Amy Tan is a novelist and advocate of Lyme disease research.Anne Frank :
'When I write, I
can shake off
all my cares.'
Anne Lamott is an acclaimed novelist whose work mirrors life.Ariel Durant was a writer, scholar and philosopher.Bruce Coville first wanted to become a writer when he was in the sixth grade.Carl Sandburg  wrote poems, stories and nonfiction about Americans and American life.
Christine Quintasket was the first published Native American woman author.Daniel Pearl was a Wall Street Journal reporter who reported the news with courage, integrity, and intelligence. Deborah Ellis donates royalties from her books to organizations helping women and children in Afghanistan.Dith Pran let the world know of the genocide in Cambodia through his work as a reporter.
Dr. Seuss was an artist who also wrote charming, absurd rhymes.Elizabeth Jane Cochrane
(Nellie Bly)
 was a journalist who went around the world in 72 days.
Frances Ellen Watkins was a prolific author and poet who devoted her life to speaking out against slavery. Gabriel Garcia Marquez received the Nobel Prize in Literature for his novels and short stories.
H.G. Wells wrote science fiction novels that made people interested in science and space.Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin to expose the injustice and inhumanity of slavery.Helen Adams Keller wrote about her own life and education.Henry David Thoreau was
a naturalist, social philosopher and writer.
Henryk Sienkiewicz was a Polish writer who is revered for his epic novels.J.K. Rowling is the author of the Harry Potter books.J.R.R. Tolkien 
created a complete
fictional world in
The Lord of the Rings.
James Baldwin was
a famed novelist
and essayist.
James Herriot inspired Sarah Cowan to become a veterinarian.James Joyce was an Irish writer famous for his epic, Ulysses.Jane Austen in her short life wrote several classic novels. Joanne Kathleen Rowling is the writer of the Harry Potter books and has inspired children around the world to read.
Jorge Luis Borges : his fiction imagines alternative realities.Josephine Ruffin served as the editor and publisher of the first newspaper published by and for African-American women.Judy Blume : her novels depict life's problems with insight and gentle humor.Jules Verne predicted the future of science.
Ken Saro Wiwa was a Nigerian writer, environmentalist and human rights activist.Langston Hughes was nicknamed the Poet Laureate of Harlem.Laura Ingalls Wilder offered young readers a glimpse of American life in the 1800s.Leo Buscaglia wrote many inspirational books about his work
in counseling.
Louisa May Alcott wrote Little Women, Little Men, Jo's Boys, and many others.Madeleine L'Engle , the award-winning author of A Wrinkle in Time inspired young people with her books.Mark Twain was a prolific author and beloved American humorist.Maya Angelou is a beloved female author and poet.
Michael Crichton is the father of the 'techno thriller.'Naguib Mahfouz was the first Arab to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature.Nawal El Saadawi continued writing while in prison, her words could not be silenced.Nikki Tate writes books for kids who like horses.
O. Henry stories are filled with humor and compassion.Oriana Fallaci was an important Italian journalist.Pearl S. Buck was a Nobel and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer founded the first international, inter-racial adoption agency.Plato 's writings have influenced Western thought for almost 2500 years.
Pramoedya Ananta Toer wrote his Buru trilogy inside the walls of an Indonesian prison.Ray Bradbury reaches out across time and space to touch readers. Robert Penn Warren was the first Poet Laureate of the United States.Sequoyah invented the Cherokee alphabet, which enabled Cherokees to record their history.
Stephen King is one of the best known horror writersStuds Terkel 
The author who captured the stories of everyday people celebrates his 95th birthday.
Terry Goodkind is the author of the Sword of Truth Series.Vaclav Havel despite censorship, wrote plays that helped keep the hope of freedom alive....
  
Willa Cather 
was Pulitzer Prize-winning author and a pioneer in the women's rights movement.
William Shakespeare wrote plays & poetry that continue to have a lasting effect on readers all over the world.  

 

Last changed on:7/7/2002 1:58:42 PM