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American historian (born 1942) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz (born January 31, 1942)[1][2] is an American historian and the Sydenham Clark Parsons Professor of American Studies and History, emerita, at Smith College.
Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz | |
---|---|
Born | Shreveport, Louisiana, U.S. | January 31, 1942
Education | C. E. Byrd High School Wellesley College (BA) Harvard University (PhD) |
Occupation | Historian |
Spouse |
Dan Horowitz (m. 1963) |
Children | 2 |
Horowitz was born on January 31, 1942, in Shreveport, Louisiana, to Rabbi David Lefkowitz, Jr. and Leona Atlas Lefkowitz.[2] Rabbi David (1911–1999) served as rabbi at Temple B'nai Zion in Shreveport and Leona (1917–2014) was a tutor in math, informal college counselor, civic worker, community board member, and housewife.[2] David Lefkowitz is her paternal grandfather. Horowitz was educated in Shreveport, and graduated from C. E. Byrd High School in 1959.
She earned a B.A. from Wellesley College in 1963 and earned a Ph.D. in American studies from Harvard University in 1969.[2]
Horowitz taught at MIT, Union College, Scripps College, the University of Southern California, Carleton College, and University of Michigan.[3] Her last position was at Smith College, where she is currently Sydenham Clark Parsons Professor of History, emerita.[2]
A cultural historian of the United States, Horowitz's research ranges over a number of areas, including cultural philanthropy, women, higher education, landscape studies, sexuality, sexual representation, censorship, understandings of mental health and illness, intimate life, tourism, and biography.
Culture and the City (1974) examined the cultural institutions of Chicago in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. A series of articles on zoological gardens looked at the changing conceptions of wild animals in relation to humans as expressed in the manner in which the zoo animals were exhibited. Alma Mater (1984) probed the ways in which founders of the Seven Sister Colleges expressed their hopes and fears about women offered the liberal arts in the colleges' buildings and landscapes; the book explored, as well, the lives of female collegians and their female professors as lived within college gates. Campus Life (1987) looked at the history of undergraduate cultures from the 18th century to the present, with attention to college men (and later, women), outsiders, and rebels. The Power and Passion of M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr College and feminist, 1857–1935, appeared in 1984. The designated literary executor of John Brinckerhoff Jackson, she wrote the introductions and edited, Landscape in Sight: J. B. Jackson's America (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997). Rereading Sex (2002), explored sexual representations and the campaign to censor them that led to the landmark Comstock Law of 1873 that barred obscene materials, contraceptive information and devices, and abortion advertisements from the US mails. The Flash Press (2008), co-authored with Patricia Cline Cohen and Timothy Gilfoyle, inquired into the sporting weeklies of New York City in the 1840s. Wild Unrest (2010) focused on Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the understanding of mental health and illness in the 19th century, and the writing of "The Yellow Wall-Paper". A Taste for Provence (2016) tells the story of the re-invention of Provence for American travelers from a place of Roman ruins to a new Eden of earthly delights. Traces of J. B. Jackson: The Man Who Taught Us to See Everyday America (2020) offers the biography in the form of essays on the important writer on the landscape.
Horowitz married fellow historian Dan Horowitz in 1963; they have two adult children.[2][3]
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