Murray Krieger papers, 1944-2001

Collection context

Summary

Creators:
Krieger, Murray
Abstract:
This collection comprises book manuscripts, articles, seminars, lectures, correspondence and other writings documenting the professional life of literary theorist Murray Krieger. The bulk and strength of the collection consists of drafts of Krieger's numerous publications (particularly thirteen monographs), student papers written for Allen Tate, and his correspondence with noted scholars, ranging from New Critics such as John Crowe Ransom to a veritable "who's who" of literary theory and criticism during the latter half of the 20th century. Correspondents include authors such as Vance Bourjaily, playwrights such as Barry Stavis, and debates with James T. Farrell. In addition to his writings and literary correspondence, items such as audio recordings, administrative files, financial records, and other materials provide documentation of Krieger's professional and university-related activities, including his founding of the School of Criticism and Theory at the University of California, Irvine (1975) and of the UC Humanities Research Institute (1987), also based at UCI.
Extent:
48.85 Linear Feet (87 document boxes, 4 records cartons, 1 half document box, 9 oversize folders, 17 audiocassettes, and 1 VHS tape) and 21.5 unprocessed linear feet
Language:
English .
Preferred citation:

Murray Krieger papers. MS-C002. Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California. Date accessed.

For the benefit of current and future researchers, please cite any additional information about sources consulted in this collection, including permanent URLs, item or folder descriptions, and box/folder locations.

Background

Scope and content:

This collection comprises book manuscripts, articles, seminars, lectures, correspondence and other writings documenting the professional life of literary theorist Murray Krieger. The bulk and strength of the collection consists of drafts of Krieger's numerous publications (particularly thirteen monographs), student papers written for Allen Tate, and his correspondence with noted scholars, ranging from New Critics such as John Crowe Ransom to a veritable "who's who" of literary theory and criticism during the latter half of the 20th century. Correspondents include authors such as Vance Bourjaily, playwrights such as Barry Stavis, and debates with James T. Farrell. In addition to his writings and literary correspondence, items such as audio recordings, administrative files, financial records, and other materials provide documentation of Krieger's professional and university-related activities, including his founding of the School of Criticism and Theory at the University of California, Irvine (1975) and of the UC Humanities Research Institute (1987), also based at UCI.

Significantly, the collection includes little documentation concerning Krieger's career prior to his appointment at UC Irvine in 1967, though items such as appointment letters and job offers do exist in Series 6. A few of his books, including The New Apologists for Poetry (1956 ), The Tragic Vision (1964), and A Window to Criticism (1964), all published prior to his appointment at UC Irvine, are either altogether absent or sparsely represented here.

Biographical / historical:

Murray Krieger was born in Newark, New Jersey on November 23, 1923 and died in Laguna Beach, California on August 5, 2000. His older brother was Leonard Krieger, who became one of the leading intellectual historians in the United States. Krieger attended local high schools, and his undergraduate work at Rutgers University was interrupted by service in the armed forces in World War II, including a stint in India.

After graduating with an A.M. degree from the University of Chicago in 1948, Krieger taught for one year at Kenyon College's School of English, famous for its School of Criticism and for publishing the primary organ of New Criticism, the Kenyon Review, edited by John Crowe Ransom. Krieger also studied there under Allen Tate and René Wellek in the Summer School of Criticism. He returned to graduate work at Ohio State University, where he received his Ph.D. in 1952.

From 1954 to 1958 he was a professor of English at the University of Minnesota, where he rose to the rank of Associate Professor. He was a Professor at the University of Illinois in Urbana from 1958-1963. In 1963 he was appointed to the M.F. Carpenter Chair in Literary Criticism at the University of Iowa in Iowa City--the first such position in the United States. He, along with others, had started a post-war struggle against institutional resistance to theory and criticism that was intended to create a place in departments of literature for literary criticism that is well grounded in theory. Krieger thereby played a leading role in establishing literary criticism and theory as a legitimate discipline within literature programs. He also actively participated actively in the dissemination of theory in the United States and abroad.

Murray Krieger joined the faculty at the University of California at Irvine (UCI) in December 1966. His goal was to create a program that would enable graduate students in English and Comparative Literature to have a Ph.D. concentration or emphasis in Critical Theory. In 1977 this was expanded and made available throughout the School of Humanities. At about the same time a Focused Research Program in Contemporary Critical Theory was created for faculty who specialized in this area. The faculty group did not adhere to any particular school of Critical Theory, but rather reflected a diverse espousal of various areas: the current Anglo-American school of criticism, poststructuralist or deconstructionist thought, politically influenced theory, psychoanalytically-based theory, and reader-reception theory. Krieger was instrumental in the creation of UCI's Critical Theory Program, for which he served as founding director. This program was the precursor to the Critical Theory Institute and the Critical Theory Emphasis within the School of Humanities. The Institute has sponsored colloquia and seminars by noted theorists such as Jacques Derrida, Fredric Jameson, Paul de Man, Edward Said, and Judith Butler.

In 1974 Krieger attained the rank of University Professor, a position that carries with it the right to teach and lecture at all campuses in the University of California system. He was the first humanist to attain this rank, as well as the first University Professor from the Irvine campus (and the only one, as of 2001).

Together with Hazard Adams, Krieger founded the School of Criticism and Theory at UCI in 1975, supported in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities, as a summer school for junior faculty and advanced graduate students. Krieger and Adams were initially the co-directors; Krieger served as sole director from 1978-1981. The school was shaped by a board of senior fellows, including such notable figures as M.H. Abrams, Northrop Frye, René Girard, Geoffrey Hartman, and Edward Said. The roster of teaching faculty for 1978 included, in addition to Krieger, Geoffrey Hartman, Wolfgang Iser, Fredric Jameson, Louis Marin, and Hayden White, each representing divergent theoretical stances in both their courses and the weekly colloquia in which they all participated, with Krieger acting as a commentator. The School brought nationwide recognition to UC Irvine and demonstrated the ascendance of theory. The School moved in 1981 to Northwestern University, with Krieger continuing as director for that year. It later moved to Dartmouth College and, as of 2000, resides at Cornell University. Over a thousand junior faculty and students have attended the School, and some eventually became the leading critics of their generation.

UC administrators were considering the establishment in the early 1980s of a Humanities Research Institute (HRI) that would serve all the campuses but be housed at a particular institution. Murray Krieger's stature, persuasive powers, and dynamism played a large part in the selection of the Irvine campus as the home of the HRI. Krieger, though an active scholar at the time, was appointed its first administrator and established its focus on collaborative, interdisciplinary research in many areas.

In the late 1970s Murray Krieger was instrumental in aiding the UC Irvine Library in the acquisition of the René Wellek Collection of the History of Criticism, housed in the Department of Special Collections and Archives. This collection includes all the books on which Wellek based his magisterial History of Modern Criticism 1750-1950. In 1981 the Critical Theory Program inaugurated an annual lecture series called "The Wellek Library Lectures," in which a leading theorist presents his or her latest views. Krieger was the Wellek lecturer in 1988. In 1987, with the cooperation and assent of Library administrators, he proposed the idea of establishing the Critical Theory Archive to collect manuscripts from leading theorists. In the ensuing years the Archive has acquired the personal papers of Jacques Derrida, Paul de Man, Stanley Fish, Ihab Hassan, Wolfgang Iser, Murray Krieger, J. Hillis Miller, René Wellek, and others.

Krieger was also the driving force for the appointment at Irvine in 1987 of such luminaries in literary studies and theory as J. Hillis Miller, Jacques Derrida, Wolfgang Iser, and Jean-François Lyotard. In a long, productive, and illustrious career, Murray Krieger played all the roles of an academic leader and public intellectual by corresponding with many academics, writers, and critics, here and abroad; by service in professional organizations; and through lectures at numerous Universities. But it is through his books and the students he taught that he has made his most significant contribution to the prominence of literary or critical theory in academia.

Throughout his career Murray Krieger confronted current issues in critical theory and his travels through the terrain of theory have been a reflection of the dominant trends. Influenced formally into aesthetics by his philosophy teacher and collaborator Eliseo Vivas, Krieger's first work was a book he edited with Vivas on the problems of aesthetics. He retained a concept of the aesthetic throughout his career and developed and refined it as a close reader of Immanuel Kant and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Like his teacher René Wellek, he was in favor of aesthetic evaluation. One of his last theoretical writings, entitled "My Travels with the Aesthetic," is a detailed intellectual autobiography.

The post-war critical theory scene was still dominated by New Criticism and Existentialism when Krieger--who was personally acquainted and studied with New Criticism figures such as John Crowe Ransom, Cleanth Brooks, Allen Tate, and others--assessed this school with his first book, The New Apologists for Poetry (1956). His second book, The Tragic Vision (1960), is a clear manifestation of his existentialist tendencies, one that is nevertheless tied to his organicist aesthetic. Later, at a time when Northrop Frye dominated the field of criticism, Murray Krieger addressed Frye's views in A Window to Criticism (1966) and in his introductory essay to a symposium he organized at the English Institute entitled Northrop Frye in Modern Criticism (1966). Without a doubt, Krieger was the earliest and strongest defender of literary theory as a discipline in America. As John Sutherland said in the Times Literary Supplement in 1987: "And for the past twenty years it [UC Irvine] has had in its English department Murray Krieger--a scholar who was hyper-theoretical before it was fashionable to be even mildly theoretical."

On the other hand, he was also a critic of the excesses of theory, and saw early on the failure of theory to define its limits; he never believed that theory was a self-sufficient discipline. Literary or critical theory, in his view, was in no way privileged, but was part of the language of theory or theoretical discourse. Theory, for him, attempts to provide a rational structure for critical practice, for acts of criticism, and thus is ontologically committed to a world of texts, to poems. There is no criticism or theory without literature. Krieger defended the work of fiction, the poem, the book, against structuralist, poststructuralist, and deconstructive attacks originating from predominantly Continental sources. According to him, a reconstituted poetics can arise out of a deconstruction of metaphysics. Poetry as a self-conscious fiction is a special form of language, one which demonstrates a verbal presence in its affirmation of its illusory nature. As Krieger said: "Illusion, after all, is what my poetics is about." A poem may be about absence, but it is itself a presence whose self-consciousness renders it immune to metaphysical attacks. Works of fiction are closed and they ought to be valued for being closed. In all this theorizing, Murray Krieger never neglected the poem, the work of fiction, or the arts (including opera). He wrote perceptively and extensively on literary works of every period and genre since the Renaissance, but especially on Shakespeare's sonnets and the Renaissance lyrics.

Missing Title
Date Event
1923
Murray Krieger born in Newark, N.J. (November 27).
1940-1942
Student at Rutgers University.
1942-1946
Served in the United States Army.
1948
Measure for Measure
1948-1949
Instructor, Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio.
1949-1951
Received University Fellowships at Ohio State University.
1951-1952
Instructor , Ohio State University.
1952
Ph.D. degree from Ohio State University. Dissertation: "Toward a Contemporary Apology for Poetry."
1952-1955
Assistant Professor, University of Minnesota.
1953
The Problems of Aesthetics: A Book of Readings
1955-1958
Associate Professor, University of Minnesota.
1956
Received a Guggenheim Fellowship.
1956
The New Apologists for Poetry
1958-1963
Professor of English, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
1960
The Tragic Vision
1961
Received another Guggenheim Fellowship.
1961
Participated in the Conference on the Study of Twentieth-Century Literature at Michigan State University.
1961-1962
Associate Member, University of Illinois Institute for Advanced Study.
1963
Participated in the 9th FILLM Congress in New York City. Read the paper "Critical Historicism: The Poetic Context and the Existential Context."
1963
Participated in conference sponsored by the National Council of Teachers of English, the Modern Language Association, and the College English Association. Read the paper "The Discipline of Literary Criticism."
1963-1966
M.F. Carpenter Professor of Literary Criticism, University of Iowa.
1964
A Window to Criticism: Shakespeare's Sonnets and Modern Poetics
1964
Participated in Conference on Rhetoric and Poetic at the University of Iowa. Read the paper "Contextualism and the Relegation of Rhetoric."
1965
Gave English Institute paper "Northrop Frye and Contemporary Criticism: Ariel and the Spirit of Gravity."
1965
and the Still Movement of Poetry; or, Laokoön
1966
Visiting Professor, University of California, Berkeley.
1966
Regents' Lecturer, University of California, Davis.
1966
Received a Postdoctoral fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies.
1966
Northrop Frye in Modern Criticism
1967
The Play and Place of Criticism
1967
Read the paper "Jacopo Mazzoni, Repository of Divine Critical Traditions or Source of a New One?" at the 1st Comparative Literature Conference at University of Southern California.
1967-1974
Professor of English, University of California, Irvine.
1971
Received a National Endowment for the Humanities Research Grant.
1971
The Classic Vision
1972
Received the UCI Alumni Foundation Distinguished Faculty Research Award.
1973
Participated in the Clark Library (UCLA) Seminar on Literature and History. Read the paper "Fiction and Historical Reality: The Hourglass and the Sands of Time."
1974
Appointed University Professor, University of California (UCI and UCLA).
1974
Participated in the Cornell-Aspen Colloquium on Choice and Decision, Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies. Read several papers, including "Humanist Misgivings about the Theory of Rational Choice."
1975-1977
Co-director of the School of Criticism and Theory at the University of California, Irvine.
1976
Theory of Criticism
1977
Directions for Criticism: Structuralism and Its Alternatives
1978
Received a Rockefeller Humanities Research Fellowship.
1978
Boundary 2
1978
Read the paper "Truth and Troth, Fact and Faith: Accuracy to the World and Fidelity to Vision" at the 1st Honors Convocation at UC Irvine.
1978
Read the paper "The Tragic Vision Revisited" at MLA session.
1979
Poetic Presence and Illusion
1979
Delivered the John C. Hodges Memorial Lectures at the University of Tennessee.
1979
Read the paper "The Arts and the Idea of Progress" at the American Academy Arts and Sciences meeting in Palo Alto, California on "Transformations of Idea of Progress."
1979
Spoke at the ADE Chairpersons Seminar, San Luis Obispo, California, on "The Recent Revolution in Theory and the Survival of the Literary Disciplines."
1979
Visiting Professor, University of California, Santa Barbara.
1980
Participated in the Colloquium in Critical Theory, University of Michigan. Read the paper "An Apology for Poetics."
1980-1981
Director of the School of Criticism and Theory at Northwestern University.
1981
Arts on the Level
1981
Honorary Senior Fellow, School of Criticism and Theory.
1981
Read the paper "A Waking Dream: The Symbolic Alternative to Allegory" at the conference "A Controversy of Critics" at Northwestern University, which marked the transfer of the School of Criticism and Theory from UC Irvine to Northwestern. Paul de Man responded with "Murray Krieger: A Commentary."
1981
Delivered "The Word as a Human Genesis" as the Phi Beta Kappa Lecture at UC Irvine.
1981
MLA Convention , Division of Literary Criticism symposium The Question of Presence: The Criticism of Murray Krieger. Mark Rose and Vincent Leitch read papers to which Krieger responded with "Both Sides Now."
1982
Elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
1982
Visiting appointment (Gastprofessor, Literaturwissenschaft) at the University of Konstanz, in West Germany. At "Murray Krieger at Konstanz," a colloquy chaired by Wolfgang Iser, read the paper "An Apology for Poetics."
1982-1983
Elected Chair of the English Institute.
1983
Delivered "Words about Words about Words," the Distinguished Faculty Lecture at UC Irvine.
1983
New Orleans Review
1984
Plenary speaker at the Congress of FILLM in Budapest. Read the paper "Literary Invention and the Impulse to Theoretical Change: 'Whether Revolution Be the Same'."
1986
Awarded the Humboldt Prize (Forschungspreis der A. von Humboldt Stiftung) by the Federal Republic of Germany .
1986
Murray Krieger and Contemporary Critical Theory
1986
Sonetten
1986
Began donating his papers to the Critical Theory Archive at UC Irvine.
1987
The Aims of Representation
1987
Philosophy and Literature
1987
Lecturer, School of Criticism and Theory at Dartmouth College.
1987-1989
Founding Director of the University of California Humanities Research Institute, UC Irvine.
1988
Words about Words about Words
1988
Delivered the Wellek Library Lectures at UC Irvine.
1989
A Reopening of Closure
1990
Recipient of UCI Medal.
1991
Lecturer, "The Ideological Imperative," at Institute of American Studies, Academica Sinica, Taiwan.
1992
Ekphrasis
1993
Received the Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. Award for Distinguished University Service from UC Irvine.
1993
The Ideological Imperative
1994
The Institution of Theory
1994
Appointed University Research Professor, UC Irvine.
1995
President's Lecture at University of Montana, Missoula.
2000
Dedication of Murray Krieger Hall at UC Irvine.
2000
Murray Krieger died in Newport Beach, California (August 5).
Acquisition information:
Gift of Murray Krieger, 1986-2000.
Processing information:

Processed by Eddie Yeghiayan, 1996-2000. Preliminary processing began in 1986.

Arrangement:

This collection is arranged in seven series:

  • Series 1. Writings, 1946-circa 2000. 24.55 linear feet
  • Series 2. Professional correspondence, 1948-1996. 7.85 linear feet
  • Series 3. School of Criticism and Theory, 1974-1992. 6.1 linear feet
  • Series 4. University of California, Irvine, critical theory programs, 1974-1992. 2.4 linear feet
  • Series 5. University of California Humanities Research Institute, 1986-1992. 0.75 linear feet
  • Series 6. Topical files, 1956-1998. 3.25 linear feet
  • Series 7. Annotated volumes, 1854-2000, bulk: 1940-2000. 4 linear feet

The collection also contains two unprocessed additions:

  • Accession accn2002-006. Unprocessed addition, 2002. 21 linear feet
  • Accession accn2007-008. Unprocessed addition, 2007. 0.5 linear feet

Rules or conventions:
Describing Archives: A Content Standard

Indexed terms

Subjects:
Aesthetics -- History -- Sources.
Criticism -- History -- Sources
Literature -- Philosophy
Poetry -- History and criticism
English literature -- History and criticism
Critical theory -- Archives.
American literature -- History and criticism.
Literary critics.
Theorists.
Photographic prints
Video recordings
Names:
University of California, Irvine -- Faculty -- Archives
Krieger, Murray -- Archives
Indexes:

Index to significant correspondents in Subseries 2.1.

The following is a listing of significant individuals who are correspondents or topics of correspondence for materials included in Subseries 2.1, Correspondence with Individuals. Researchers should refer to the box and folder numbers in that subseries content listing to locate items.

Aaron, Daniel
Abrams, M. H.
Adams, David
Adams, Hazard
Adams, Ruth
Adler, Sidney
Allen, James L.
Allen, Michael
Altenbernd, Lynn
Alter, Robert
Altmann, Ruth
Anagnostopoulos, Georgios
Anchor, Robert
Andersen, Sally S.
Angle, Roger
ApRoberts, Ruth
Apter, Emily
Arafeh, Hala Adib
Armstrong, Paul B.
Arnold, Aerol
Arogyasami, M.
Arvin, Newton
Ayala, Francisco
Babb, Howard
Bahti, Timothy
Bailes, Kendall E.
Bailey, Herbert S.
Bailey, Richard W.
Baisden, Richard N.
Baker, John Ross
Balitas, Vincent D.
Band, Arnold J.
Barat, Jean-Claude
Barber, C. L.
Barbour, John D.
Barnes, Jim and Carolyn
Barnes, Werner
Barnouw, Jeffrey
Barricelli, Jean-Pierre
Barth, John
Basa, Saurendranath
Basak, Oya
Bashford, Bruce
Basu, Saurendranath
Battenhouse, Roy W.
Battersby, James Lyons
Bauwens, K.
Bazargan, Susan
Beach, Joseph Warren
Behler, Ernst
Bela, RamĂłn
Bell, John M.
Benamou, Michel
Bellis, George
Bender, John
Benford, Gregory
Bennett, Benjamin
Bennett, Diane
Bennett, James R.
Berg, Jeff
Berg, Rick
Berger, Harry, Jr.
Berman, Ralph
Berns, Gabriel
Bernstein, Cynthia
Bernstein, Julius C.
Berry, Eleanor
Bertocci, Angelo
Bewell, Alan J.
Binni, Francesco
Birnbaum, Henrik
Birnbaum, Marianna D.
Bishop, Dean
Bjork, Gary
Black, Max
Bloomfield, Morton
Blotner, Joseph
Bodgan, Deanne
Bogash, Gertrude P.
Boklund, Karin M.
Bollas, Christopher
Bollier, E. P.
Booth, Stephen
Bourjaily, Vance
Bowden, Darsie
Bradley, Douglas
Bradt, E. L.
Bredella, Lothar
Bretzius, Stephen
Breytenback
Brisman, Leslie
Brogan, Terry V. F.
Brokaw, R. Miriam
Brombert, Victor
Brooke-Rose, Christine
Brooks, Cleanth
Brooks, Linda
Brooks, Peter
Brose, Margaret
Brown, Homer
Brown, Marshall
Brown, Stephen Neal
Brown, Terry
Bruccoli, Matthew J.
Bucco, Martin
Buckman, Jacqueline
Buckwalter, Michael
Burckhardt, Sigurd
Burke, John G.
Burks, Arthur W.
Burns, E. Bradford
Burrell, Paul
Burwick, Frederick
Bush, Ronald
Butterfield, Adele
Cabral, Edward
Cadava, Eduardo
Calder, Daniel G.
Calderwood, James
Calhoon, Kenneth C.
Campbell, Elizabeth
Canfield, J. Douglas
Carnochan, Bliss
Carothers, Yvonne
Carroll, David
Carroll, Suzanne
Carter, Margaret L.
Catano, James V.
Chadha, Vijay
Chandra, Ch. Harish
Chatman, Seymour
Chatterjee, Kalyan
Chen, Lianhong
Chino, Tomoko
Chiampi, James
Clark, Jeanne Ormond
Clark, Marianne
Clark, Michael
Clecak, Peter
Cohen, Ralph
Cohen, Ted
Cohn, Ruby
Collins, Arthur
Collins, Donald E.
Conarroe, Joel
Congdon, Richard T.
Corrigan, Robert W.
Colie, Rosalie
Coutinho, Afranio
Craige, Betty Jean
Crowley, John W.
Culhane, James J., Jr.
Cuningham, Charles E.
Cunningham, Karen
Curtler, Hugh Mercer
Cutter, Margot
Dai, Liu-Ling
Danelski, David
Daube, David
Davidhazi, Peter
Davidson, David
Davidson, Douglas
Davidson, Edward
Davidson, Michael
Davis, Deanie
Davis, Olga E.
Davis, Paul
Davis, Walter
De Lauretis, Teresa
De Man, Paul
Dembo, Lawrence
Deming, Robert H.
Derrida, Jacques
Desenberg, Bud
De Wit, George E.
Dhanapal, T.
Dick, Bernard F.
Diggins, Jack
Dixon, Terrell F.
Doeren, Suzanne Clark
Donato, Eugenio
Donoghue, Denis
Doreski, William
Dougherty, Adelyn
Douglass, Paul
Downing, Crystal Nelson
Dryden, Edgar A.
Durovicova, Natasa
Dussinger, John A.
Duvoisin, Jacques
Dwivendi, Jayant Kumar
Easton, David
Edinger, Bill
Eisner, Greta
Elam, Keir
Elden, Linda
Emmanuel, Lenny
Elliott, Robert C.
Ellis, John
Ellmann, Richard
Engelberg, Edward
Epstein, Renée
Eulert, Don
Fagles, Robert
Falk, Eugene H.
Feito, Patricia
Felman, Shoshana
Ferris, Ruth Ann Dianne
Fiedler, Leslie A.
Field, Michael
Fietz, Lothar
Fillinger, Tina
Finer, Lois
Fink, Steven
Fischer, Michael
Fish, Stanley
Fisher, John
Fitch, Raymond E.
Fluck, Winfried
Fly, Richard
Flynn, Elizabeth A.
Folkenflik, Robert
Fontanella, Lee
Fontenot, Charles J.
Ford, Jana
Foster, Richard
Foust, Ronald
Frangueza, Pascual
Frank, Joseph
Frank, Mike
Frank, Richard I.
Fredeman, William E.
Freedman, Ralph
Friedman, Albert
Frost, Everett C.
Frost, William
Frye, Northrop
Fuchs, Jacob
Fullerton, Susan
Fynsk, Christopher I.
Gaillard, Dawson
Gallagher, Philip J.
Gans, Eric L.
Ganz, Earl
Garber, Marjorie
Gardner, David P.
Garrison, Clayton
Garvin, Paul
Gearhart, Suzanne
Gelley, Alexander
Georgianna, Linda
Georgopoulos, N.
Germano, Angelo
Germano, William P.
Gerber, John C.
Gill, Thomas E.
Gilleran, Peter
Gilliam, Harriet
Gillies, Steven
Giorgi, Elsie A.
Girard, René
Givler, Peter J.
Glassman, Peter
Glendenning, John
Globus, Gordon G.
Gneiting, Teona Tone
Goldberg, Homer
Golding, Sanford
Goldstein, Jane
Gollin, Richard M.
Gombrich, E. H.
Goodhart, Sandor
Goodman, Heidi
Gordon, Paul
Gottesman, Ronald
Gottwald, Norman
Grab, Frederic
Grabes, Herbert
Grabo, Norman S.
Graff, Gerald
Graham, Joseph F.
Green, John
Greenblatt, Stephen
Greenfield, Stan
Greenstein, Michael
Griffith, Clark
Grimes, William F.
Grofman, Bernard
Gross, Harvey
Grossman, Henry
Grunbaum, Adolf
Gugelberger, Georg M.
Guibbory, Achsah
Guillén, Claudio
Gumpel, Liselotte
Gundel, Ted
Gunderson, Keith
Haffenden, John
Hall, Oakley
Halperin, John
Hans, James S.
Hansen-Ohi, Dee
Hardison, O. B.
Harpham, Geoffrey
Harrari, Josué
Harris, Wendell V.
Hart, Hymen H.
Hartman, Carl
Hartman, Geoffrey
Hartman, Martha
Hassan, Ihab
Hause, Jefferey
Haverkamp, Anselm
Hayden, Mary H.
Hazlett, Anna Marie
Hedley, Jane
Heilman, Robert
Heiney, Donald
Henricksen, Bruce
Henrikson, Henry W.
Henry, Gary R.
Herby, Valdo
Hernadi, Paul
Hertz, Neil
Heskett, David
Higgins, Dick
Higonnet, Margaret
Hindus, Milton
Hirsch, Marianne
Hoff, Mark Daniel
Hoffman, Arthur W.
Hoffman, Frederick J.
Holaday, Allan
Holdheim, W. Wolfgang
Hollander, John
Holloway, Julia Bolton
Holstun, James
Hongo, Garrett
Honig, Edwin
Hopkins, Mary Frances
Houghton, Edward
Hrushovski, Benjamin
Huffman, James R.
Hunter, J. Paul
Hutchings, Patrick
Huttenback, Robert A.
Inbar, Eva Maria
Indra, C.T.
Irwin, W.R
Iser, Wolfgang
Jackson, Elizabeth
Jackson, R. de J.
Jacobs, Diane
Jacobson, David
Jaggi, Satya Dev
James, Stuart
Jameson, Fredric
Jauss, Hans Robert
Javitch, Daniel
Jay, Paul
Jensen, Paul J.
Johnson, G. Joyce
Johnson, Lyndon B.
Johnson, Ronald
Johnson, Walter T.
Johnston, Kenneth R.
Jorgensen, Paul A.
Joseph, Teri Brint
Jupp, William B.
Justice, Donald
Justus, James H.
Kalim, M. Siddiq
Kannan, Lakshmi
Kao, Shushi
Kaplan, Ann
Kaplan, Charley
Kaplan, Louis D.
Kar, Prafulla C.
Karcher, Stephen
Karnani, Chetan
Kartiganer, Donald M.
Katz, Barry M.
Katz, Eleanor F.
Keitel, Evelyne
Kelekyan, Dirane
Kelly, Andy
Kemeny, Zoltan
Kendzora, Kathryn
Kenner, Hugh
Kermode, Frank
Kessler, Jascha
Kiely, Robert
King, Edward
King, Ivan
Kodoláni, Gyula
Koffler, Judith
Kolodny, Annette
Konigsberg, Ira
Korg, Jacob
Kovac, Anton
Karmer, Dale
Kramer, Victor A.
Krash, Otto
Kravetz, Nathan
Krieger, Arthur H.
Krieger, Elliot
Krieger, Leonard
Krueger, Paul P.
Kucich, John
Kuist, James M.
Kurzweil, Edith
Laborde, Alice
Lanham, Richard
Laughton, Harry
Lautermilch, Steve
Lavallée, Marcel
Lave, Charles
Lawson, Tom O.
Lazarus, David
Lee, Debbie
Lee, Myung Sup
Lee, Peter H.
Lehan, Richard
Lehnert, Herbert
Leininger, Philip
Leitch, Vincent
Lemon, Lee T.
Lentricchia, Frank
Lenz, GĂĽnter H.
Leonard, George
Leppert, Richard D.
Lerner, Laurence
Leveque, Paul
Levin, Samuel R.
Levine, George
Levine, I.W.
Levine, Philip
Levitt, Harold P.
Lewis, R. W. B.
Lifson, Martha R.
Lilly, Jeffrey
Lillyman, William
Lindblad, Ishrat
Lindberg, Kathryne
Lindsay, Cecile
Lippman, Carlee
Longo, Lucas
Lumiansky, R. M.
Lundquist, John
Lyon, James K.
Lyotard, Jean-François
MacCannell, Juliet
MacCary, W. Thomas
Mack, James
Macksey, Richard
MacCannell, Juliet
MacCary W. Thomas
Magnus, Bernd
Mah, Nadine
Mailloux, Steven
Maini, Darshan Singh
Makaryk, Irene
Mandel, Oscar
Mandell, Arnold J.
Maradudin, Alexei A.
Marcus, Ruth Barcan
Marshall, Don
Martin, Harold
Mboya, Mzobanzi
McAllister, Robin
McCabe, Bernard
McCormack, Peggy
McCulloch, Samuel C.
McDonald, Christie
McDonald, David
McDonald, Walter R.
McGann, Jerome
McGregor, James
McGuinness, Arthur E.
McIntosh, Simeon
McKinney, J. Gage
McMichael, James
McNamara, Kevin
Mehlman, Jeffrey S.
Melden, Abe
Menton, Seymour
Metcalf, Gene
Metteer, Christine
Metzger, Lore
Meyers, Jeffrey
Miles, Josephine
Mileur, Jean-Pierre
Miller, David L.
Miller, J. Hillis
Miller, Peter D.
Miller, Thomas C.
Miner, Earl
Misra, Sadanada
Mitchell, Holly
Mitchell, Juliet
Modiano, Raimonda
Moldave, Kivie
Moldave, Rose
Monk, Samuel Holt
Montgomery, Robert
Mor, Samuel
Moriarty, Marilyn
Morris, Wesley
Nagarajan, M. S.
Nagavajara, Chetana
Nakov, Julian E.
Nath, Anjan K.
Neary, John M.
Nemoianu, Virgil
Neuhäuser, Rudolf
New, Melvyn
Newman, Jane
Newsom, Robert
Nichols, Stephen, Jr.
Niculescu, Luminitsa
Niebylski, Diana C.
Nimis, Steve
Nist, John
Nix, Patricia Ann
Norris, Christopher
Norris, Margot
Nosanow, Lewis
Novak, Maximillian E.
O'Connor, William Van
Okwu, Edward
Orel, Harold
Ormond, Jeanne
Otten, Kurt
Owen, Jean
Pape, Walter
Parente, Donald
Parham, Jack
Park, Betty
Park, Yhnhui
Parker, Hershel
Parsons, Terence
Patke, Rajeev S.
Paulson, Ronald H.
Paulson, Suzanne
Pearce, Roy Harvey
Peic, Branko
Peltason, Jack W.
Peltason, Timothy
Penney, Andrée
Percival, Milton O.
Percy, Walker
Perloff, Marjorie
Perry, John Oliver
Peterson, Rita W.
Pfau, Thomas
Pickering, John M.
Pinchuk, Ellen
Polloczek, Dieter
Polzin, Robert M.
Porte, Joel
Pounds, Wayne
Preger, Robert
Preminger, Alex
Prinz, Jessica
Privateer, Paul
Quinones, Ricardo J,
Raaberg, Gwen
Rabbel, Burton
Rabkin, Eric S.
Rackin, Phyllis
Radzin, Hilda
Raina, M.
Rainwater, Catherine
Rajnath
Randel, Fred V.
Ransom, John Crowe
Rapp
Rauth, Eric
Rawal, Suresh S.
Ray, Gordon N.
Reagor, Simone
Reiman, Donald H.
Reish, Joe
Reiss, Timothy J.
Renoir, Alain
Renza, Louis A.
Reuben, Michael
Richardson, Bruce
Richardson, Kim
Richter, David H.
Riddel, Joseph N.
Riffaterre, Michael
Riordan, Mary Marguerite
Riquelme, John Paul
Ristic, Katherine
Robertson, David
Robbins, Lenny
Robinson, Forrest
Robison, Madia
Rodgers, R. D.
Rodriguez-Luis, Julio
Rogers, Cynthia
Roper, Alan
Rose, Mark
Rosenberg, Marvin
Rosenberg, Shawn
Rosenblum, Ellen
Rosenmeyer, Thomas
Rosenthal, Mack L.
Rosmarin, Adena
Rosovsky, Henry
Rothenberg, Molly
Rousseau, George S.
Rowe, John Carlos
Rowland, F. Sherwood
Rudnick, Hans J.
Rugh, Thomas F.
Ruppert, Jeanne
Russell, Roger
Sabol, Burt
Sadlek, Gregory M.
Said, Edward
Saine, Thomas P.
Samuelson, David A.
San Juan, Epifanio
Sandefur, Seanna
Saner, Reg
Sartiliot, Claudette
Saxena, Pramod Kumar
Scarry, Elaine
Schaefer, William D.
Schell, Edgar
Schellinger, Paul E.
Schenkman, Alfred
Scherman, Timothy H.
Schlaeger, Jurgen
Schlaff, John
Schneidau, Herbert
Schneiderman, Howard A.
Scholes, Robert
Schutt, Margot
Schwab, Gabriele
Scott, Nathan
Searle, Leroy
Seidel, Michael A.
Seiden, Melvin
Seidlin, Oskar
Seltzer, Leon
Seturaman, V. S.
Sheats, Paul D.
Sheinbaum, Stanley K.
Shepard, Lester A.
Shepherdson, Charles
Sherwood, Arthur
Shideler, Ross
Shipley, Joseph
Shute, Michael
Siebers, Tobin
Siegelman, Ellen and Philip
Sigg, Eric
Sim, Blanche Kung
Simon, Richard K.
Simpson, Claude and Ibby
Singh, Gurbhagat
Skarstrom, Alarik
Slaughter, Mary Anne
Slusser, George
Smith, Albert
Smith, Barbara Herrnstein
Smith, Catherine Morris
Smith, Francis D.
Smith, Henry Nash
Smith, Jeffrey G.
Smith, John H.
Smith, Mack L., Jr.
Smith, Tori
Somerfield, Shawn
Sosnoser, Jim
Sowarka, Bernhard
Spanish, Margaret T.
Spanos, William V.
Spears, Monroe K.
Spector, Robert D.
Spengemann, William C.
Springer, Mary Doyle
Spurlin, William J.
Stade, George
Stamon, Peggy Burckhardt
Stanford, Donald E.
Stavis, Barrie
Stecher, L. Joseph
Stewart, Stanley
Stofan, James E.
Stojilkovic, Olga
Stone, George W., Jr.
St. Pierre, Paul
Strozier, Robert
Stutz, Patricia A.
Subbarao, C.
Sukla, A. C.
Swarup, A.
Swiggart, Paul
Sypherd, Paul S.
Tate, Allen
Taylor, Diana
Thomas, Brook
Thomason, David
Thompson, Ewa Majewska
Thompson, Richard
Thorpe, James
Tian, Hui-gang
Toliver, Hal
Tolman, Jon H.
Tompkins, Jane
Torrance, Robert M.
Torres, Estela
Trahern, Joseph B., Jr.
Traynor, Liz
Tuck, Edward
Unger, Leonard
Ungvari, Tamas
Van Hoven, Barbara
Vendler, Helen
Vickery, John B.
Vivas, Eliseo
Vogler, Thomas A.
Voloshin, Beverly
Waggoner, Hyatt
Waitzkin, Howard
Walton, Cragi
Warkentin, Ruth Ann
Washburn, Sherwood
Wasserstrom, Bill
Watkins, Eric
Watt, W. C.
Weber, Brom
Weber, Eugene
Weimann, Robert
Weinblatt, Alan
Weinbrot, Howard
Weingartner, Rudolph
Weinsheimer, Joel
Weinstein, Arnold L.
Weitzman, Arthur J.
Weld, John
Wellek, René
Weller, Barry
Welsh, Alexander
Welsh, Andrew
Wentworth, Richard L.
Wesling, Donald
Whipple, J. Hal
White, Hayden
Wiesenfarth, Joseph
Wilde, Sarah
Will, Frederic
Williams, Katherine
Wilson, Jack H.
Wimsatt, W. K.
Withers, Kenney
Wixson, Suzanne Chamier
Wolfson, Martin
Woodmansee, Martha
Wright, Andrew
Wright, Celeste
Wortz, Linda
Wu, Ningkun
Yeghiayan, Eddie
Yeh, Max Weh
Zavarzadeh, Mas'ud
Zhang, Quan
Zhao, Yifan
Zhuwarara, Rino
Zimmerman, Ray Bourgeois
Zsuffa, Joseph

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