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American historian (born 1945) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
David Nasaw (born July 18, 1945) is an American author, biographer and historian who specializes in the cultural, social and business history of early 20th Century America.[2] Nasaw is on the faculty of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, where he is the Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. Professor of History.[3]
David Nasaw | |
---|---|
Born | David George Nasaw July 18, 1945 Cortland, New York, U.S.[1] |
Education | Bucknell University (B.A) Columbia University (Ph.D) |
Occupation | Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. Professor of History |
Employer | CUNY Graduate Center |
Known for | Historian, author |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
In addition to writing numerous scholarly and popular books, he has written for publications such as the Columbia Journalism Review, American Historical Review, American Heritage, Dissent, The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Slate, The London Review of Books, and Condé Nast Traveler.
Nasaw has appeared in several documentaries, including The American Experience, 1996, and two episodes of the History Channel's April 2006 miniseries 10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed America: "The Homestead Strike" and "The Assassination of President McKinley".[1] He is cited extensively in the US and British media as an expert on the history of popular entertainment and the news media, and as a critic of American philanthropy.
David George Nasaw was born on July 18, 1945, in Cortland, New York, the oldest son of lawyer Joshua Nasaw (1909–1970) and Beatrice Kaplan (1917–2010), an elementary school teacher.[4] Nasaw is the older brother of Jonathan Lewis Nasaw (b. August 26, 1947),[5] the prolific author of at least nine thrillers;[6][7][8] and Elizabeth Perl Nasaw (May 29, 1956 – February 28, 2004),[9] who as "Elizabeth Was" (later "Liz Was" and finally "Lyx Ish") was a poet and publisher of avant-garde magazines,[4][10] and the cofounder of Xexoxial Editions and Dreamtime Village in West Lima, Wisconsin.[11][12]
Nasaw grew up in Roslyn, New York, and, after a year studying in Denmark as an exchange student,[13] graduated from Roslyn High School in 1963.[14] Nasaw graduated from Bucknell University with a Bachelor of Arts in 1967, before enrolling in Columbia University, where he was awarded a Ph.D. in 1972[1] for his dissertation "Jean-Paul Sartre: Apprenticeship in History (1925–45)".[15][16]
While studying at Columbia University, for more than two years from 1970 Nasaw was one of two full-time teachers in the Elizabeth Cleaners Street School,[17][18] a short-lived experimental alternative free high school founded in New York City. The experience gave rise to the book "Starting Your Own High School," written by the students and edited by Nasaw.[19]
Nasaw began teaching history at the College of Staten Island in 1978.[20] During the 1987–1988 academic year, he was as a Fulbright Professor of American Studies at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.[21][22] Nasaw has been on the doctoral faculty of the City University of New York's Graduate Center since 1990,[20] where he also served as chairman. He was director of the CUNY Graduate Center's Center for the Humanities, and the chairman of the advisory board of the Leon Levy Center for Biography at the university.[23][24]
Nasaw is a founder of the Radical History Review.
Since June 10, 1978, Nasaw has been married to Dinitia Smith,[25][26] a novelist, Emmy award-winning filmmaker,[27] and journalist, who worked as a correspondent for The New York Times for 12 years.[28][29] They are the parents of twin sons: Peter Caleb Nasaw and journalist Daniel Allen Nasaw, born in 1980.[1][30]
Although he has published three biographies, Nasaw describes himself as an academic historian, rather than a biographer.[31] A historian, he says, "sweeps away the fables, the myths, the stories" and places scholarly subjects "in time and over time", while for biographers, the organization of the work is laid out in advance. "Writing history is not an art but a craft," Nasaw has said.[32] "It requires interpretation and fifty sources and integrating and assembling this material into a story told by an individual voice."
In this Nasaw's highly cited history, Nasaw "unearthed the long-forgotten story of the Newsboy Strike."[37] The book inspired the Disney film Newsies and the subsequent Broadway musical.[38]
Going Out "unearths fascinating details about everything from the early history of the movies to pre-World War I dance crazes," wrote critic Jackson Lears in the New York Times.[39] Nasaw "raises fundamental questions about the web of connections joining commercial play, public space and cultural cohesion," he wrote.
Nasaw's 2000 biography of the American newspaper baron was praised as "an absorbing and ingeniously organized biography... of the most powerful publisher America has ever known",[40] and for "immediacy that almost makes the reader forget that the author himself was not there as the story unfolded".[41] In 2001, The Chief won the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize and the Bancroft Prize for American history. It was nominated for a National Book Critics Circle Award.
Nasaw's 2006 biography of the American steel mogul, was a finalist for the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for biography.[33] A reviewer praised Nasaw for "bringing to life the fascinating world of business moguls, statesmen, journalists and intellectuals in which Carnegie moved."[42] Praising Nasaw's "keen all-rounder's eye", Christopher Hitchens wrote: "The great strength of this immense biography is the way in which David Nasaw causes these tributaries — capitalism, radicalism, and educational aspiration — to converge like the three rivers (the Allegheny, the Ohio, and the Monongahela) whose confluence makes the site of Pittsburgh possible."[43] The book was among The New York Times' 100 Notable Books of the Year, and among the Favorite Books of 2006 by the Los Angeles Times, which praised it as "a fresh and thorough assessment."
Following the success of Nasaw's 2000 biography of William Randolph Hearst, Senator Ted Kennedy approached Nasaw to write a biography of his father, Kennedy patriarch Joseph P. Kennedy. Nasaw told the family that as an academic historian, he had no interest in writing an "authorized biography".[44] "I told him I would undertake this project if I had guarantees to see all the documents at the Kennedy Library and elsewhere, and if I were free to write whatever I wanted, with no censorship or interference of any kind," Nasaw said. Senator Kennedy said he had read and admired Nasaw's book on Hearst and believed the historian would make a "fair evaluation of his life and contributions." The Kennedy family agreed to sit for interviews and to make Joseph Kennedy's private papers available. After publication, the book was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for Biography in 2013.
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