Glicksberg, Charles Irving, 1901-....

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Charles I. Glicksberg, writer and professor, was born in Warsaw, Poland, December 13, 1900, to Isidore and Lillian (Lifschitz) Glicksberg, and died in February 14, 1998, in New York. After moving to the United States, he became a naturalized citizen. He married Dorothy, and had two children, Stephanie and Paul. Glicksberg attended the College of the City of New York (B.S. 1923), Columbia University (M.A. 1924), and the University of Pennsylvania (Ph. D. 1932). He was a Fulbright scholar at Bar-Ilan University in Israel (1958-59). From early childhood, Charles had a fondness for books, but he "felt destined to become a doctor" and enrolled in pre-med courses. In his senior year, a prize was offered for the best essay on literary criticism. "I was declared the winner, received an honorarium with the princely sum of $25.00. This changed the whole course of my life. I gave up the study of medicine and instead enrolled in graduate school at Columbia University's English Department." Glicksberg graduated from Columbia in 1924 having majored in English, and a year later received his M.A. He continued his post-graduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania. His dissertation, Walt Whitman and the Civil War, was an "important contribution to Whitman scholarship". It contained newly discovered articles that Charles Glicksberg had found which were signed by Velsor Brush, Walt Whitman's grandfather. Charles Glicksberg was Acting Chairman at the Southside High School in Newark, New Jersey, between 1936-46. He taught English at South Philadelphia High School. Between 1946-50 he was Assistant Professor of English at Brooklyn College, then Associate Professor (1950-1959), Professor (1958-1971), and Professor Emeritus (1971) at Brooklyn College. He was also Professor of Literature at the New School for Social Research (1947-1964), and Professor of Comparative Literature at the City University of New York (1962-1971). Glicksberg found teaching a wonderful expereince. He said: "I shall never forget the intense excitement that filled me meeting with my first writing class. I walked in, saw a conglomeration of faces--young, middle-aged, and even some elderly. As my lecture proceeded, the students raised questions about literature. I felt the room charged with electricity. The students were highly sensitive, articulate and responded most intelligently to my lecture. Would their manuscripts be as perceptive as their remarks in class? I discovered a number of talented writers. I held conferences with my students. We discussed the contents of their work ... giving suggestions as to how they could improve their writing skills. I made many friends among my students." Professor Glicksberg contributed articles to leading journals in the United States, Canada, England, and Australia. He wrote on various topics-existentialism, perspectivism, communism, semantics, religion, education, American literature, God and the sexual revolution, philosophy, the relationship between the individual and state, the politics of drug consumption, psychoanalysis, modern drama, nihilism, and educational subjects such as the teaching of English composition, comparative literature, poetry and linguistics. Professor Glicksberg was involved with the Vermont Fictions Writer'sConference (1954-56). He was on the Special Committee for the Saturday Review of Literature to nominate best poetry books each year (1958). Professor Glicksberg was Lecturer for the American Jewish Congress, and Lecturer at Hillel (at Brooklyn College, 1946-1957). He had membership affiliations with the Modern Language Association, American Association of University Professors, National Council of Teachers of English, American Humanist Association, and American Jewish Congress. Charles Glicksberg received many awards during his lifetime. He received an award for the best essay from the Arizona Quarterly in 1955, and was named "the best writer of articles that ever appeared in Arizona Quarterly". In 1958, Glicksberg received a Fulbright Scholarship to Bar-Ilan University in Israel, where he was Lecturer from 1958-1959. He also received honors as Professor at Brooklyn College and The New School. In 1964, Glicksberg resigned from the New School for Social Research in order to spend more time writing. He continued to write more extensively, and covered an ever great array of topics than he had before. To quote Charels Glicksberg, "my accomplishments far outweigh the small hopes I had for myself when I was first interested many years ago in joining the ranks of the brotherhood of writers". Towards the end of his life, Charles Glicksberg was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease, which made some of his handwritten notes more difficult to read. After a long and prolific career, he died on Febrary 14, 1998.

From the description of The Papers of Charles I. Glicksberg ; 1923-1998 1930-1979. (Brooklyn College). WorldCat record id: 423033657

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Antioch Review mss., 1940-2007 Lilly Library (Indiana University, Bloomington)
creatorOf Glicksberg, Charles Irving, 1901-. Shelley's prose works. Columbia University in the City of New York, Columbia University Libraries
referencedIn The Nation, records, 1879-1974 (inclusive), 1920-1955 (bulk). Houghton Library
referencedIn Fantasy Magazine papers, 1929-1979 Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
creatorOf Glicksberg, Charles Irving, 1901-. Letters, 1937-1949, to Lewis Mumford. University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt Library
creatorOf Brown University. Library (Providence, Rhode Island). Selected correspondence, 1913-1993, "Gibson" to "Hodgson". Brown University Archives, John Hay Library
creatorOf Glicksberg, Charles Irving, 1901-. The Papers of Charles I. Glicksberg ; 1923-1998 1930-1979. Brooklyn College
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith American Jewish Congress. corporateBody
associatedWith Antioch review. corporateBody
associatedWith B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations. corporateBody
associatedWith Brooklyn College. Faculty. corporateBody
associatedWith Brown University. Library (Providence, Rhode Island). corporateBody
associatedWith Fantasy Magazine. corporateBody
associatedWith Fantasy Magazine. corporateBody
correspondedWith Nation (New York, N.Y. : 1865). corporateBody
associatedWith Whitman, Walt. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
United States
Subject
Educators
Jewish educators
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Birth 1901

Death 1998

English

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