Difference between revisions of "Mark Van Doren"

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'''Mark Van Doren''' [[PhD]] '[[1920|20]] was a literary scholar and pioneer of the early [[Core Curriculum]]. He began his work developing the Core by teaching [[John Erskine]]'s [[General Honors]] course with [[Mortimer Adler]]. He would later develop the [[Humanities A]] course, the predecessor to [[Lit Hum]], and taught it for 17 years. In the course of his tenure as a Columbia faculty member, Van Doren taught and inspired many future writers, including poets  [[Louis Simpson]], [[Richard Howard]], [[John Hollander]], [[John Berryman]], [[Thomas Merton]], and [[Allen Ginsberg]]. He did not give up teaching fully until [[1959]], following the [[Quiz Show]] scandal involving his son [[Charles Van Doren]].
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'''Mark Van Doren''' [[PhD]] '[[1920|20]] was a poet and literary scholar and pioneer of the early [[Core Curriculum]]. He began his work developing the Core by teaching [[John Erskine]]'s [[General Honors]] course with [[Mortimer Adler]]. He would later develop the [[Humanities A]] course, the predecessor to [[Lit Hum]], and taught it for 17 years. In the course of his tenure as a Columbia faculty member, Van Doren taught and inspired many future writers, including poets  [[Louis Simpson]], [[Richard Howard]], [[John Hollander]], [[John Berryman]], [[Thomas Merton]], and [[Allen Ginsberg]]. He did not give up teaching fully until [[1959]], following the [[Quiz Show]] scandal involving his son [[Charles Van Doren]].
  
 
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==External links==

Revision as of 17:14, 15 July 2007

See also Wikipedia's article about "Mark Van Doren".

Mark Van Doren PhD '20 was a poet and literary scholar and pioneer of the early Core Curriculum. He began his work developing the Core by teaching John Erskine's General Honors course with Mortimer Adler. He would later develop the Humanities A course, the predecessor to Lit Hum, and taught it for 17 years. In the course of his tenure as a Columbia faculty member, Van Doren taught and inspired many future writers, including poets Louis Simpson, Richard Howard, John Hollander, John Berryman, Thomas Merton, and Allen Ginsberg. He did not give up teaching fully until 1959, following the Quiz Show scandal involving his son Charles Van Doren.

External links