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American educator and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edith Philips (November 3, 1892 – July 19, 1983) was an American writer and academic of French literature. Her research focused on eighteenth-century French literature and French emigration to the United States. She was a Guggenheim Fellow (1928) and a professor of French at Goucher College and Swarthmore College. In 1932, she published The Good Quaker in French Legend. She served as the acting dean of women at Swarthmore and was later appointed the Susan W. Lippincott Professor of French in 1941. Philips was the founding chair of the Department of Modern Languages at Swarthmore, serving in this position from 1949 to 1960.
Edith Philips | |
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Born | Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. | November 3, 1892
Died | July 19, 1983 90) | (aged
Awards | Guggenheim Fellowship (1928) |
Academic background | |
Alma mater |
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Thesis | Les réfugiés bonapartistes en Amérique (1815–1830) (1923) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | |
Main interests |
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Notable works | The Good Quaker in French Legend |
Edith Philips was born November 3, 1892, in Boston, Massachusetts[1] to Mary Durham of Yorklyn and Jesse E. Philips of East Nantmeal Township.[2] Her mother was a school teacher who helped assist her husband's operations.[3] Her father served as an instructor of mathematics and was the assistant headmaster for two years at the Rutgers Preparatory School before opening the Philips Tutoring School in West Chester, Pennsylvania, in 1927.[4]
Philips earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1913 from Goucher College. She earned a Doctor of Philosophy from University of Paris in 1923.[5] She completed her dissertation entitled Les réfugiés bonapartistes en Amérique (1815-1830).[6]
Philips joined the Goucher College faculty as an assistant professor of French in 1923.[5] She conducted research in France the summer of 1927.[4] Philips was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1928 to study "the Quaker as a type in French literature, chiefly in the eighteenth century."[5] For her fellowship, she studied in Paris and Russia. In 1930, Philips, then an assistant professor of Romance languages at Goucher, was conducting an "exhaustive study" on French emigration to the United States where she uncovered much on the life of Louis Girardin, the first head of the Maryland Academy of Science and friend of Thomas Jefferson.[7]
Philips started at Swarthmore College in 1930 as an associate professor of French.[8][9] She became a full professor in 1934. Philips served as the acting dean of women from 1938 to 1939. She was appointed Susan W. Lippincott Professor of French in 1941. Philips was the founding chair of the Swarthmore Department of Modern languages from December 1949 until 1960. She retired in 1961. Philips was subsequently recognized as a professor emerita at Swarthmore.[9]
Philips' sister Amy was a director of the Newington Hospital for Crippled Children in Newington, Connecticut. Her brother J. Evan Philips was a private school teacher in St. Louis, Missouri.[3] She died after a surgery at Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Chester, Pennsylvania, on July 19, 1983.[9]
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