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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mark Greif (born 1975[1]) is an author, educator and cultural critic. His most recent book is Against Everything.[2] One of the co-founders of n+1, he is a frequent contributor to the magazine and writes for numerous other publications. Greif currently teaches English at Stanford University.
Greif received a BA in History and Literature from Harvard in 1997, after which he received a Marshall Scholarship, which he used to study British Literature and 19th and 20th century American Literature at Oxford through 1999. He holds a PhD in American studies from Yale.
Greif is associate professor of English at Stanford University.[3]
Winner of the Morris D. Forkosch Prize for the best first book in intellectual history (2015).[4]
In the fall of 2004, along with fellow writers and editors Keith Gessen, Chad Harbach, Benjamin Kunkel, and Marco Roth, Greif launched the literary journal n + 1.[5] Greif has served as both an editor and writer for the journal, contributing essays on a wide variety of topics: politics, sociology, Radiohead.[6] In 2010, he described the journal's mission: “We are creating a long print archive in an era of the short sound bite.”[7]
Greif's criticism is marked by a willingness to address pop culture, conservative books, and leftist academic critical theory, and to link these to literature and larger questions of culture.[8]
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