White taught Journalism and American Studies at Wayne State University from 1947 to 1980, and set up and chaired the journalism program at Oakland University. Before retiring in 1981, he also taught in colleges in California, Washington, Texas, Ohio, and Rhode Island. In parallel with his academic career, he held a job as reporter, columnist and editor of more than a dozen daily and weekly newspapers in Chattanooga, Los Angeles and Detroit, covering a wide range of topics including sports and auto racing for the Detroit area newspapers. Each year White edited a special Whitman section of the Long Islander, the newspaper founded by Walt Whitman with whom he shared a newspaperman's concern with the condition of American literature. He was the editor of the Walt Whitman Review for twenty-six years, and co-editor of the Walt Whitman Quarterly Review for six years and its editor emeritus from 1989 until his death in 1995. He was also the bibliographer of The Hemingway Review for seventeen years, from 1970 until the fall of 1988. The lead item in the first issue of Hemingway notes was his supplement to Audre Hanneman's Ernest Hemingway: A Comprehensive Bibliography, to which he contributed a ten-page list of articles published about Hemingway between 1966 and 1970. In addition to writing thousands of academic articles on many American and British authors, including John Donne, Emily Dickinson, Wilfred Owen, A. E. Houseman and W. D. Snodgrass, White published over forty books, including ', which was translated into fourteen languages and made the New York Times best-seller list. In Walt Whitman's Journalism, he was the first to demonstrate the extent and variety of Whitman's accomplishments in journalism. He returned to Hemingway's journalism by publishing ', a collection of stories Hemingway wrote for the Toronto Star between 1920 and 1924. In 1969, White was credited with possessing the world's largest collection of published works by Hemingway. After retiring in 1981, he taught in Israel and in Florida, lived briefly in California, and settled for a while near the University of Virginia, returning to Michigan when his health deteriorated.
Personal life
White married Gertrude Mason in 1952. They lived in England while he completed doctoral study at the University of London and then settled in Franklin, Michigan when he took a position teaching Journalism and American Studies at Wayne State University. They had two sons, Geoffrey and Roger, and three granddaughters.