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Carolyn Gold Heilbrun

Carolyn Heilbrun (née Gold; January 13, 1926 – October 9, 2003) was an American academic at Columbia University, the first woman to receive tenure in the English department, and a prolific feminist author of academic studies. In addition, beginning in the 1960s, she published numerous popular mystery novels with a woman protagonist, under the pen name of Amanda Cross.[1] These have been translated into numerous languages and in total sold nearly one million copies worldwide.

Carolyn Heilbrun
BornCarolyn Gold
(1926-01-13)January 13, 1926
East Orange, New Jersey, U.S.
DiedOctober 9, 2003(2003-10-09) (aged 77)
New York City, U.S.
Pen nameAmanda Cross
OccupationWriter, professor
Alma materWellesley College (BA)
Columbia University (MA, PhD)
SpouseJames Heilbrun
Children3

Early life and education edit

Heilbrun was born in East Orange, New Jersey, to Archibald Gold and Estelle (Roemer) Gold. The family moved to Manhattan's Upper West Side when she was a child. She graduated from Wellesley College in 1947 with a major in English. Afterward, she studied English literature at Columbia University, receiving her M.A. in 1951 and Ph.D. in 1959.[1][2] Among her most important mentors were Columbia professors Jacques Barzun and Lionel Trilling, while Clifton Fadiman was an important inspiration: She wrote about these three in her final non-fiction work, When Men Were the Only Models We Had: My Teachers Barzun, Fadiman, Trilling (2002).[citation needed]

Career edit

Heilbrun taught English at Columbia for more than three decades, from 1960 to 1992.[2] She was the first woman to receive tenure in the English Department and held an endowed position.[3] Her academic specialty was British modern literature, with a particular interest in the Bloomsbury Group.[1] Her academic books include the feminist study Writing a Woman's Life (1988). In 1983, she co-founded and became co-editor of the Columbia University Press's Gender and Culture Series with literary scholar Nancy K. Miller.[4] From 1985 until her retirement in 1992, she was Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities at Columbia.[1][2]

Kate Fansler mystery novels edit

Heilbrun was the author of 15 Kate Fansler mysteries, published under the pen name of Amanda Cross. Her protagonist Kate Fansler, like Heilbrun, was an English professor. In 1965, the first novel in the series was shortlisted for the Edgar Award in the category of Best First novel.[5]

Heilbrun kept her second career as a mystery novelist secret in order to protect her academic career, until a fan discovered the true identity of "Amanda Cross" through copyright records. Through her novels, all set in academia, Heilbrun explored issues in feminism, academic politics, women's friendships, and other social and political themes. Death in a Tenured Position (1981, set at Harvard University) was particularly harsh in its criticism of the academic establishment's treatment of women. Heilbrun, according to Kimberly Maslin, "reconceptualizes the role of the detective and the nature of crime and its resolution."[6] Her books were translated into "Japanese, German, French, Swedish, Finnish, Spanish and Italian, selling in total nearly a million copies worldwide."[3]

Personal life edit

She married James Heilbrun, whom she met in college. He was an economist, and they had three children.[7]

Later life and death edit

Heilbrun enjoyed solitude when working and, despite being a wife and mother of three, often spent time alone at various retreats over the years, including her luxury Manhattan apartment and a country home in upstate New York. She also had a Summer house in Alford, Massachusetts.[8] At the age of 68, she purchased a new home to use by herself, as she wanted a private place. She held strong opinions on nearly every aspect of women's lives and also believed that ending one's own life was a basic human right. In keeping with her views on aging in The Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty, she quit wearing high heels, hose, and form-fitting clothing in her early 60s. She adopted blouses and slacks as her daily attire. Heilbrun's son recalled, "My mother was a generous hostess when she was young, but lost interest in dinner parties as she got older. She preferred to order groceries from the local supermarket and have them sent to her apartment as she was too busy to waste time squeezing oranges at Fairway."[9]

In the book The Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty, Heilbrun expressed her desire to take her own life on her 70th birthday because "there is no joy in life past that point, only to experience the miserable endgame." She turned 70 in January 1996 and did not follow up on her idea at the time. She lived another seven years.

One fall morning in 2003, she went for a walk around New York City with her longtime friend Mary Ann Caws and told the latter: "I feel sad." When Caws prompted her why, Heilbrun responded, "The universe."[9] Afterward, she went home to her apartment. The next morning she was found dead, having taken sleeping pills and placed a plastic bag over her head. She left a suicide note, which read: "The journey is over. Love to all." She was 77 years old. According to her son, she had been in good health with no known physical or mental ailments, and she felt her life was "completed".[9]

Awards and honors edit

Heilbrun received the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1966 and 1970, a Bunting Institute Fellowship in 1976, and a Rockefeller Fellowship in 1976. She was a National Endowment for the Humanities Senior Research Fellow in 1983. Heilbrun served as a member of the executive council of the Modern Language Association from 1976 to 1979, and was the president in 1984.[10]

Controversies edit

Heilbrun was the subject of a 1992 New York Times Magazine profile by Anne Matthews wherein she accused the Columbia English Department of discriminating against women.[11] Former Dean of Columbia College Carl Hovde admitted that there was widespread past discrimination against women at Columbia "and all other universities," but dismissed Matthews's accusations of current discriminations in an angry letter to the editor as "rubbish."[12] Nonetheless, Heilbrun was very specific in her memories of being a celebrated female professor at Columbia. "When I spoke up for women's issues, I was made to feel unwelcome in my own department, kept off crucial committees, ridiculed, ignored," Heilbrun told the New York Times. "Ironically, my name in the catalogue gave Columbia a reputation for encouraging feminist studies in modernism. Nothing could be further from the truth."[11]

Bibliography edit

Academic publications edit

Heilbrun, as a scholar wrote or edited 14 nonfiction books, including the feminist study Writing a Woman's Life (1988). These books include:

  • The Garnett Family, Macmillan, 1961. A study of the Garnetts, a British family whose many members were devoted to the study and writing of books.
  • Christopher Isherwood, Columbia University Press, 1970. Brief analysis of Isherwood's works, which she divides into "novels" and "documentaries."
  • Toward a Recognition of Androgyny, Alfred A. Knopf, 1973. Reviewing the book for the New York Times Joyce Carol Oates wrote that "to Carolyn Heilbrun (a professor of English at Columbia) the very salvation of our species depends upon our 'recognition of androgyny’ as a conscious ideal."[13]
  • Lady Ottoline's Album, editor. Alfred A. Knopf, 1976. Photographs, taken primarily by Morrell, of her contemporaries in Great Britain.
  • Reinventing Womanhood, Norton, 1979. An investigation of women's identity and autonomy in the world. The author of a review of this work published in the Kirkus Reviews wrote that Heilbrun "moving with conviction from autobiography to literary analysis, Oedipal theory, and studies of family patterns among "achieving" females, ...tries to suggest ways in which women can claim supposedly male attitudes and roles as their birthright."[14]
  • The Representation of Women in Fiction, co-editor. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1983
  • Writing a Woman's Life, Ballantine, 1988
  • Hamlet's Mother and Other Women, Columbia University Press, 1990. A collection of essays exploring feminism in literary studies.
  • Education of a Woman: The Life of Gloria Steinem, The Dial Press, 1995. Biography.
  • The Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty, Ballantine Books, 1998. Collected essays reflecting on the challenges and rewards of aging.
  • When Men Were the Only Models We Had: My Teachers Barzun, Fadiman, Trilling, University of Pennsylvania Press,2002. A memoir recounting Heilbrun's relationships with her mentors Jacques Barzun, Clifton Fadiman, and Lionel Trilling.

Kate Fansler Mysteries edit

  • In The Last Analysis (1964)
  • The James Joyce Murder (1967)
  • Poetic Justice (1970)
  • The Theban Mysteries (1971)
  • The Question of Max (1976)
  • Death in a Tenured Position (1981, Nero Award winner)
  • Sweet Death, Kind Death (1984)
  • No Word From Winifred (1986)
  • A Trap for Fools (1989)
  • The Players Come Again (1990)
  • An Imperfect Spy (1995)
  • The Collected Stories (1997) most are for Kate Fansler
  • The Puzzled Heart (1998)
  • Honest Doubt (2000)
  • The Edge of Doom (2002)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d McFadden, Robert D. "Carolyn Heilbrun, Pioneering Feminist Scholar, Dies at 77", The New York Times, October 11, 2003. Accessed December 18, 2007.
  2. ^ a b c "Carolyn Heilbrun". C250 Celebrates: Columbians Ahead of Their Time. Columbia University. Retrieved June 18, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Anne Matthews, "Rage in a Tenured Position" 2021-04-27 at the Wayback Machine, New York Times Magazine, 8 November 1992
  4. ^ "Gender and Culture Series". Columbia University Press. Retrieved June 18, 2012.
  5. ^ . Edgar Award Winners and Nominees. Mystery Writers of America. Archived from the original on December 23, 2019. Retrieved January 1, 2019.
  6. ^ Maslin, Kimberly (2016). "Writing a Woman Detective, Reinventing a Genre: Carolyn G. Heilbrun as Amanda Cross". Clues: A Journal of Detection. 34 (2): 63.
  7. ^ Vergel, Gina (April 16, 2008). "Economics Professor Remembered as a Gentleman and Scholar". Fordham University. from the original on 2020-08-13. Retrieved June 17, 2012.
  8. ^ . townofalford.org. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  9. ^ a b c Grigoriadis, Vanessa (November 30, 2003). "A Death of One's Own". New York Magazine.
  10. ^ Klingenstein, Suzanne. "Carolyn G. Heilbrun". Jewish Women's Archive Encyclopedia. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  11. ^ a b Matthews, Anne (8 November 1992). "Rage in a Tenured Position". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  12. ^ "RAGE IN A TENURED POSITION". The New York Times. 6 December 1992. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  13. ^ Oates, Joyce Carol (April 15, 1973). "An Imperative to Escape the Prison of Gender". The New York Times Book Review: 7, 10–11.
  14. ^ "Reinventing Womenhood". Kirkus Reviews. April 23, 1979. Retrieved 21 January 2019.

External links edit

Papers edit

Articles edit

  • , Barnard College] (video)
  • Suzanne Klingenstein, "Carolyn G. Heilbrun", Jewish Women's Archive
  • "Carolyn G. Heilbrun", Random House
  • "Carolyn G. Heilbrun", W. W. Norton
  • Anne Matthews, "Rage in a Tenured Position" 2021-04-27 at the Wayback Machine, New York Times Magazine, 8 November 1992
  • – Writing a Feminist's Life: The Legacy of Carolyn G. Heilbrun (2006)

carolyn, gold, heilbrun, amanda, cross, redirects, here, confused, with, amanda, cross, rower, carolyn, heilbrun, née, gold, january, 1926, october, 2003, american, academic, columbia, university, first, woman, receive, tenure, english, department, prolific, f. Amanda Cross redirects here Not to be confused with Amanda Cross rower Carolyn Heilbrun nee Gold January 13 1926 October 9 2003 was an American academic at Columbia University the first woman to receive tenure in the English department and a prolific feminist author of academic studies In addition beginning in the 1960s she published numerous popular mystery novels with a woman protagonist under the pen name of Amanda Cross 1 These have been translated into numerous languages and in total sold nearly one million copies worldwide Carolyn HeilbrunBornCarolyn Gold 1926 01 13 January 13 1926East Orange New Jersey U S DiedOctober 9 2003 2003 10 09 aged 77 New York City U S Pen nameAmanda CrossOccupationWriter professorAlma materWellesley College BA Columbia University MA PhD SpouseJames HeilbrunChildren3 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Kate Fansler mystery novels 3 Personal life 4 Later life and death 5 Awards and honors 6 Controversies 7 Bibliography 7 1 Academic publications 7 2 Kate Fansler Mysteries 8 References 9 External links 9 1 Papers 9 2 ArticlesEarly life and education editHeilbrun was born in East Orange New Jersey to Archibald Gold and Estelle Roemer Gold The family moved to Manhattan s Upper West Side when she was a child She graduated from Wellesley College in 1947 with a major in English Afterward she studied English literature at Columbia University receiving her M A in 1951 and Ph D in 1959 1 2 Among her most important mentors were Columbia professors Jacques Barzun and Lionel Trilling while Clifton Fadiman was an important inspiration She wrote about these three in her final non fiction work When Men Were the Only Models We Had My Teachers Barzun Fadiman Trilling 2002 citation needed Career editHeilbrun taught English at Columbia for more than three decades from 1960 to 1992 2 She was the first woman to receive tenure in the English Department and held an endowed position 3 Her academic specialty was British modern literature with a particular interest in the Bloomsbury Group 1 Her academic books include the feminist study Writing a Woman s Life 1988 In 1983 she co founded and became co editor of the Columbia University Press s Gender and Culture Series with literary scholar Nancy K Miller 4 From 1985 until her retirement in 1992 she was Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities at Columbia 1 2 Kate Fansler mystery novels edit Heilbrun was the author of 15 Kate Fansler mysteries published under the pen name of Amanda Cross Her protagonist Kate Fansler like Heilbrun was an English professor In 1965 the first novel in the series was shortlisted for the Edgar Award in the category of Best First novel 5 Heilbrun kept her second career as a mystery novelist secret in order to protect her academic career until a fan discovered the true identity of Amanda Cross through copyright records Through her novels all set in academia Heilbrun explored issues in feminism academic politics women s friendships and other social and political themes Death in a Tenured Position 1981 set at Harvard University was particularly harsh in its criticism of the academic establishment s treatment of women Heilbrun according to Kimberly Maslin reconceptualizes the role of the detective and the nature of crime and its resolution 6 Her books were translated into Japanese German French Swedish Finnish Spanish and Italian selling in total nearly a million copies worldwide 3 Personal life editShe married James Heilbrun whom she met in college He was an economist and they had three children 7 Later life and death editHeilbrun enjoyed solitude when working and despite being a wife and mother of three often spent time alone at various retreats over the years including her luxury Manhattan apartment and a country home in upstate New York She also had a Summer house in Alford Massachusetts 8 At the age of 68 she purchased a new home to use by herself as she wanted a private place She held strong opinions on nearly every aspect of women s lives and also believed that ending one s own life was a basic human right In keeping with her views on aging in The Last Gift of Time Life Beyond Sixty she quit wearing high heels hose and form fitting clothing in her early 60s She adopted blouses and slacks as her daily attire Heilbrun s son recalled My mother was a generous hostess when she was young but lost interest in dinner parties as she got older She preferred to order groceries from the local supermarket and have them sent to her apartment as she was too busy to waste time squeezing oranges at Fairway 9 In the book The Last Gift of Time Life Beyond Sixty Heilbrun expressed her desire to take her own life on her 70th birthday because there is no joy in life past that point only to experience the miserable endgame She turned 70 in January 1996 and did not follow up on her idea at the time She lived another seven years One fall morning in 2003 she went for a walk around New York City with her longtime friend Mary Ann Caws and told the latter I feel sad When Caws prompted her why Heilbrun responded The universe 9 Afterward she went home to her apartment The next morning she was found dead having taken sleeping pills and placed a plastic bag over her head She left a suicide note which read The journey is over Love to all She was 77 years old According to her son she had been in good health with no known physical or mental ailments and she felt her life was completed 9 Awards and honors editHeilbrun received the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1966 and 1970 a Bunting Institute Fellowship in 1976 and a Rockefeller Fellowship in 1976 She was a National Endowment for the Humanities Senior Research Fellow in 1983 Heilbrun served as a member of the executive council of the Modern Language Association from 1976 to 1979 and was the president in 1984 10 Controversies editHeilbrun was the subject of a 1992 New York Times Magazine profile by Anne Matthews wherein she accused the Columbia English Department of discriminating against women 11 Former Dean of Columbia College Carl Hovde admitted that there was widespread past discrimination against women at Columbia and all other universities but dismissed Matthews s accusations of current discriminations in an angry letter to the editor as rubbish 12 Nonetheless Heilbrun was very specific in her memories of being a celebrated female professor at Columbia When I spoke up for women s issues I was made to feel unwelcome in my own department kept off crucial committees ridiculed ignored Heilbrun told the New York Times Ironically my name in the catalogue gave Columbia a reputation for encouraging feminist studies in modernism Nothing could be further from the truth 11 Bibliography editAcademic publications edit Heilbrun as a scholar wrote or edited 14 nonfiction books including the feminist study Writing a Woman s Life 1988 These books include The Garnett Family Macmillan 1961 A study of the Garnetts a British family whose many members were devoted to the study and writing of books Christopher Isherwood Columbia University Press 1970 Brief analysis of Isherwood s works which she divides into novels and documentaries Toward a Recognition of Androgyny Alfred A Knopf 1973 Reviewing the book for the New York Times Joyce Carol Oates wrote that to Carolyn Heilbrun a professor of English at Columbia the very salvation of our species depends upon our recognition of androgyny as a conscious ideal 13 Lady Ottoline s Album editor Alfred A Knopf 1976 Photographs taken primarily by Morrell of her contemporaries in Great Britain Reinventing Womanhood Norton 1979 An investigation of women s identity and autonomy in the world The author of a review of this work published in the Kirkus Reviews wrote that Heilbrun moving with conviction from autobiography to literary analysis Oedipal theory and studies of family patterns among achieving females tries to suggest ways in which women can claim supposedly male attitudes and roles as their birthright 14 The Representation of Women in Fiction co editor Johns Hopkins University Press 1983 Writing a Woman s Life Ballantine 1988 Hamlet s Mother and Other Women Columbia University Press 1990 A collection of essays exploring feminism in literary studies Education of a Woman The Life of Gloria Steinem The Dial Press 1995 Biography The Last Gift of Time Life Beyond Sixty Ballantine Books 1998 Collected essays reflecting on the challenges and rewards of aging When Men Were the Only Models We Had My Teachers Barzun Fadiman Trilling University of Pennsylvania Press 2002 A memoir recounting Heilbrun s relationships with her mentors Jacques Barzun Clifton Fadiman and Lionel Trilling Kate Fansler Mysteries edit In The Last Analysis 1964 The James Joyce Murder 1967 Poetic Justice 1970 The Theban Mysteries 1971 The Question of Max 1976 Death in a Tenured Position 1981 Nero Award winner Sweet Death Kind Death 1984 No Word From Winifred 1986 A Trap for Fools 1989 The Players Come Again 1990 An Imperfect Spy 1995 The Collected Stories 1997 most are for Kate Fansler The Puzzled Heart 1998 Honest Doubt 2000 The Edge of Doom 2002 References edit a b c d McFadden Robert D Carolyn Heilbrun Pioneering Feminist Scholar Dies at 77 The New York Times October 11 2003 Accessed December 18 2007 a b c Carolyn Heilbrun C250 Celebrates Columbians Ahead of Their Time Columbia University Retrieved June 18 2012 a b Anne Matthews Rage in a Tenured Position Archived 2021 04 27 at the Wayback Machine New York Times Magazine 8 November 1992 Gender and Culture Series Columbia University Press Retrieved June 18 2012 Edgars Database Edgar Award Winners and Nominees Mystery Writers of America Archived from the original on December 23 2019 Retrieved January 1 2019 Maslin Kimberly 2016 Writing a Woman Detective Reinventing a Genre Carolyn G Heilbrun as Amanda Cross Clues A Journal of Detection 34 2 63 Vergel Gina April 16 2008 Economics Professor Remembered as a Gentleman and Scholar Fordham University Archived from the original on 2020 08 13 Retrieved June 17 2012 History Town of Alford townofalford org Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 13 September 2018 a b c Grigoriadis Vanessa November 30 2003 A Death of One s Own New York Magazine Klingenstein Suzanne Carolyn G Heilbrun Jewish Women s Archive Encyclopedia Jewish Women s Archive Retrieved 2 January 2019 a b Matthews Anne 8 November 1992 Rage in a Tenured Position The New York Times Retrieved 13 September 2018 RAGE IN A TENURED POSITION The New York Times 6 December 1992 Retrieved 13 September 2018 Oates Joyce Carol April 15 1973 An Imperative to Escape the Prison of Gender The New York Times Book Review 7 10 11 Reinventing Womenhood Kirkus Reviews April 23 1979 Retrieved 21 January 2019 External links editPapers edit Carolyn G Heilbrun papers at the Sophia Smith Collection Smith College Special Collections Carolyn G Heilbrun papers at the Mortimer Rare Book Collection Smith College Special Collections Articles edit Carolyn G Heilbrun Barnard College video Suzanne Klingenstein Carolyn G Heilbrun Jewish Women s Archive Carolyn G Heilbrun Random House Carolyn G Heilbrun W W Norton Anne Matthews Rage in a Tenured Position Archived 2021 04 27 at the Wayback Machine New York Times Magazine 8 November 1992 Scholar and Feminist Online SFO Writing a Feminist s Life The Legacy of Carolyn G Heilbrun 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carolyn Gold Heilbrun amp oldid 1220997480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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