Peter-Elbow-Obituary

Peter Elbow

Seattle, Washington

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Seattle, Washington

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Peter Elbow Seattle, WA - PETER ELBOW, Emeritus Professor of English at UMass Amherst and author of Writing Without Teachers, died unexpectedly on February 6, 2025 at age 89 in Seattle. He is survived by his wife Cami, children Abby and Ben, and grandchildren Izzy and Hettie. Complete obituary...

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Peter was a friend for many years, a kind, reflective, compassionate wanderer and seeker. A lover of music, he never stopped trying to actively engage with it with his viola. He continued his mediations on writing long after retiring from academia. In recent years he shared the latest developments in his "Believing Game," with insights into sociology and politics as well as writing.

I did not know Peter Elbow personally, though I did attend a writing workshop he led for teachers of writing at Bard College in the 1980s. The purpose of that weekend was to give writing teachers time to write. So Peter Elbow. Beyond that, Peter was so influential in the way I taught writing and for my own writing process. I was just thinking about him this morning and that's when I learned he had died. What a gift he was to so many of us, grinding it out in the composition classroom, as I...

I am so sorry to hear about Peter's passing. I loved listening to him at professional conferences and reading his writings. I was thrilled that he wrote, "Illiteracy at Oxford and Harvard: Reflections on the Inability to Write," for the book, “Teaching College English and English Education: Reflective Stories,” published by NCTE. In his list of "Scholarly Articles," he wrote the title of the book was “Reflective Stories.” As a co-editor of the book, I wanted the title to be “Reflective...

Rarely can you say that someone changed your life in an incredibly positive way, but that is what I can say about Peter Elbow. I am so grateful to have known Peter, to have studied with him, to have worked with him and to have called him a friend. He was a rare human being, and we were all the richer to have had him in our lives.

I knew and studied with Peter as a grad student at UMass in the early 90s. Quite simply, he changed my life. Only dimly aware of his work when I arrived in Amherst, he turned out to be the teacher I most needed. I needed a new way to write, to teach writing, a new and more humane way to approach my work. I ended up teaching lit and writing for 40 years. And his work, his presence, and his astonishingly sensitive ear as he listened to writers-all this guided me.

I am very sorry to hear this sad news and my heart goes out to Prof. Elbow's family. He continues to be a major influence in my teaching and writing life. He will be remembered continuously and fondly.

Many years ago, when I was an instructor in the UMass Writing Program, I had the great good fortune to have Peter assigned as the mentor to our group. Not only was he a very nice person, he also gave us many thought-provoking ideas about teaching and writing every week. His books on writing are absolute gems.

So sad to read this, Peter and Cami were wonderful neighbors on Pokeberry Ridge. Always a ready smile and pleasant comment.