Ann douglas tiktok

Ann Douglas (historian)

American historian

Ann Douglas is an American literary historian who specializes in intellectual history. She is the Parr Professor Emerita of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University.[1]

Biography

Douglas attended Milton Academy,[2] received her B.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University and B.Phil. from the University of Oxford. She taught at Princeton University from 1970 to 1974 and was the first woman to teach in Princeton's English department and the first woman to be offered assistant professorship at Harvard.[3][4] She then joined Columbia's faculty.[1][5] Her research interests include 20th-century American intellectual and cultural history.[6] She is regarded as one of America's foremost cultural historians.[2]

Douglas received two fellowships from the National Humanities Center in 1978 and 1979 after publishing The Feminization of American Culture (1977), controversial for its criticism of what she saw as the age's feminine sensibilitie

BiographyAnne Douglas is an artist and independent researcher focusing on the changing nature of contemporary art in public life, increasingly concerned with environmental issues. From 2000 to her retirement in 2017, she led a doctoral/postdoctoral programme of research at Gray's School of Art entitled, "On the Edge" , exploring different ways in which artists internationally contribute critically to the human and more-than-human, by working across disciplines and within organisations.

As a mid -career artist, she undertook one of the first PhDs through the practice of art (Sunderland University 1992). Prior to that she was artist-in-residence (1984) and Rome scholar in sculpture (1976-8), both at The British School, Rome.
Research InterestsAlongside research into art in public life, she is curious about the meaning and practice of formal research to the development of art in society , including visual art and experimental music. She has led projects and published on improvisation, notions of experimentation across art and science, artistic leader

Anne Douglas Sedgwick

British writer (1873–1935)

Anne Douglas Sedgwick

Anne Douglas Sedgwick circa 1921

Born(1873-03-28)28 March 1873
Englewood, New Jersey, United States
Died19 July 1935(1935-07-19) (aged 62)
Hampstead, England
OccupationNovelist

Anne Douglas Sedgwick (28 March 1873 – 19 July 1935) was an American-born British writer.

Biography

The daughter of George Stanley Sedgwick, a businessman and Mary (Douglas) Sedgwick, she was born in Englewood, New Jersey but at age nine, her family moved to London. Although she made return visits to the United States, she lived in England for the remainder of her life.

In 1908, she married the British essayist and journalist, Basil de Sélincourt. During World War I, she and her husband were volunteer workers in hospitals and orphanages in France.

Her novels explored the contrast in values between Americans and Europeans. Her best-selling novel Tante was made into a 1919 film, The Impossible Woman, and The Little French Girl into a 1925 film of the same name. In 1931, she was e

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