My Columbia: Reminiscences of University Life

My Columbia: Reminiscences of University Life

My Columbia: Reminiscences of University Life

My Columbia: Reminiscences of University Life

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Overview

Durgaing its 250-year history, Columbia University has been home to and has produced a remarkable array of writers, poets, scholars, scientists, and statesmen-many of whom have written eloquently about their experiences at the university. Excerpting memoirs, novels, and poems, My Columbia collects a broad range of these reminiscences into a collective portrait of a university and the city of which it is such a vital part.

Beginning with George Templeton Strong, whose diaries of mid-nineteenth-century New York were a literary sensation when published in the 1950s, and ending in the latter part of the twentieth century, My Columbia recounts the life and work of students, faculty, and university leadership on Columbia's campuses. Here are Michael Pupin, the Serbian immigrant who became a celebrated physicist; Margaret Mead, a transfer to Barnard and later the most influential anthropologist of her day; Thomas Merton, who went from high-living college days to renown as the country's most famous Trappist monk; Zora Neale Hurston, Barnard's first African American student; Jack Kerouac, the Columbia football recruit who turned into the bard of the Beat Generation; Max Frankel, a student journalist who went on to lead the New York Times; Dwight D. Eisenhower, president of the University from 1948 to 1952; and many more.

My Columbia tells of the pleasures and disappointments, the challenges and rewards, the diversions and serious issues facing those who have studied and taught at Columbia. A wealth of personal recollection, it portrays various eras at America's great urban university through the eyes of more than forty writers (and one artist), many of whom, in one sense or another, came of age at Columbia and in New York.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231134866
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 11/03/2004
Series: A Columbia University Publication
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.30(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Ashbel Green is vice president and senior editor at Alfred A. Knopf, where he has worked since 1964. He is a 1950 graduate of Columbia College and also holds an M.A. in Eastern European History from the university. Green has edited books by George Bush, Walter Cronkite, Andrei Sakharov, and Gabriel García Márquez, among many others.

What People are Saying About This

Ric Burns

We have our Columbia, each somehow different and the same, and browsing through this anthology of backward glances--skillfully assembled by Ash Green from the literary insights of an extraordinary roster of fellow Columbians--one is reminded of the greatest joy and strength of this amazing and complex institution--the dazzling talent, exhilirating diversity, and deep humanity of its people.

Ric Burns, ('78 Columbia College, '82 M.A.) documentary filmmaker (New York: A Documentary Film, Ansel Adams, The Civil War, Columbia University: A Celebration)

Rosalind Rosenberg

They descended in droves, aspiring writers drawn to Columbia by its intellectual seriousness and location in New York. Many became novelists; others turned to science, philosophy, or politics; but whatever the course of their later lives, an astonishing number left accounts of their time at the university. From them Ashbel Green has assembled this treasure trove of acerbic, amusing, insightful reminiscences, a collective history of Columbia by the wordsmiths who passed through its gates.

Rosalind Rosenberg, Ann Whitney Olin Professor of History at Barnard College, author of Changing the Subject: How the Women of Columbia Shaped the Way We Think about Sex and Gender

Kenneth T. Jackson

New York has long been the most diverse, exciting, and important city in the world. And generations of Columbians--from Jacques Barzun to Mark Van Doren, Thomas Merton to Jack Kerouac, Margaret Mead to Virginia Gildersleeve, and Paul Aster to Hermann Wouk--have contributed to Gotham's energy and vitality. Ash Green has brought them and many others together in a unique tribute to a great university and a great city.

Kenneth T. Jackson, Jacques Barzun Professor of History, Columbia University, editor of The Encyclopedia of New York City

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