Professor Andrew Delbanco at the American Studies Program @Columbia University
Professor Andrew Delbanco, winner of the 2006 Great Teacher Award
from the Society of Columbia Graduates, is the author of Melville: His
World and Work (2005), which won the Lionel Trilling Award and was a
finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award in biography. The Death of
Satan (1995), Required Reading: Why Our American Classics Matter Now
(1997), and The Real American Dream (1999) were named notable books by
the editors of The New York Times Book Review. The Puritan Ordeal (1989)
won the Lionel Trilling Award. Among his edited books are Writing New
England (2001), The Portable Abraham Lincoln (1992), volume two of The
Sermons of Ralph Waldo Emerson (with Teresa Toulouse), and, with Alan
Heimert, The Puritans in America (1985).
Andrew Delbanco's essays appear regularly in The New
York Review of Books, The New Republic, Raritan, and other journals, on
topics ranging from American literary and religious history to
contemporary issues in higher education. In 2001, he was elected a
Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and named by Time
Magazine as "America's Best Social Critic." In 2003, he was named New
York State Scholar of the Year by the New York Council for the
Humanities.
Professor Delbanco has received fellowships from the
Guggenheim Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, and
the National Endowment for the Humanities, and was a member of the
inaugural class of fellows at the New York Public Library Center for
Scholars and Writers. He is a trustee of the National Humanities Center
and the Library of America, and has served as Vice President of PEN
American Center. Since 1995 he has held the Julian Clarence Levi
Professor Chair in the Humanities at Columbia University.
His most recent book, Melville: His World and Work,
was published in the United States (2005) by Alfred A. Knopf. It
appeared in Britain under the Picador imprint, and has been translated
into German and Spanish.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/amstudies/faculty/intermediate.html
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