<P> After the end of his one - year tenure as a Rockefeller Fellow, Fiedler was offered jobs at the University of California, Berkeley, the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the University of Montana . Fiedler decided to return to Missoula . Shortly after his return to Montana, he wrote a controversial article: "Montana; or the End of Jean - Jacques Rousseau ." Also published in the Partisan Review, the essay deals with the development of the frontier . Fiedler's argument includes descriptions of Montanans that were thought to be offensive to the actual residents of his community . </P> <P> Through the late 1940s and early 1950s Fiedler's work appeared in several journals . His literary work appeared in Kenyon Review; he was also named the 1956 Kenyon Fellow in Criticism . Even though the Kenyon Review was a journal often associated with New Criticism, Fiedler questioned the principles of New Criticism in his writing . Fiedler targeted New Criticism in his well - known essay "Archetype and Signature ." </P> <P> After a stint as a Fulbright lecturer in the universities of Rome and Bologna lasting from 1951 to 1953, Fiedler became the Chair of the Department of English in the University of Montana . He held this post from 1954 to 1956, during which time he fought against opposition to hire an African American professor . In 1955, Fiedler's book An End to Innocence was published; it was concerned with the necessity for America as a nation to move from a state of innocence to a state of experience (or adulthood). </P> <P> In 1956, Fiedler's defense of native rights was recognized by the Blackfoot Indian tribe . He was honored with the name "Heavy Runner" and made a chief . From 1956 to 1957, Fiedler was the Christian Gauss Lecturer at Princeton University . During his time at Princeton, Fiedler frequently travelled to New York City and forged connections with the editors of Esquire magazine . </P>

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