Gary Saul Morson

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Gary Saul Morson
Born19 April 1948
NationalityAmerican
Alma materB.S., Ph.D., Yale University
Known forTeaching the largest Slavic language class offered in the USA
Scientific career
FieldsLiterary criticism
InstitutionsNorthwestern University

Gary Saul Morson (born April 19, 1948

Slavist. He is particularly known for his scholarly work on the great Russian novelists Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky, and the literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin. Morson is Lawrence B. Dumas Professor of the Arts and Humanities at Northwestern University. Prior to this he was chair of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of Pennsylvania
for many years.

Academic career

Gary Saul Morson was born in New York City and attended the Bronx High School of Science. After the high school, Gary Morson was accepted to Yale University. Initially, Morson was interested in physics. However, he ended up graduating with a degree in Russian. "What I liked about physics is that it asked the ultimate questions. I loved how when you look at the world, all this amazing complexity had these very simple rules behind it. Now I believe the opposite — the argument of my favorite writer, Tolstoy, is that the world doesn't fit any system, because human psychology is so infinitely complex," Morson says. Morson spent a year at

Oxford on a Henry Fellowship. At Oxford, he became friends with Bill Clinton. “A great deal of my pitiful income from those years went to Clinton’s campaign for attorney general of Arkansas
,” Morson says. After studying at Oxford, Morson completed his Ph.D. degree at Yale University.

In 1974 he started teaching at the

Morton Schapiro, President of Northwestern University, he teaches a course called “Economics and the Humanities: Understanding Choice in the Past, Present and Future.”[when?
]

Morson is the editor of a scholarly book series titled Studies in Russian Literature and Theory (SRLT) published by Northwestern University Press, which is described as "reflecting trends within the field of Slavic studies over the years . . . providing perspectives on Russian literature from all periods and genres, as well as its place in the broader culture."[3]

Personal life

Gary Saul Morson lives in Evanston, Illinois with his wife Katharine Porter, MD, a psychiatrist (daughter of artist Fairfield Porter and poet Anne Channing Porter) whom he married in 2003. He was previously married to Jane Ackerman Morson with whom he has two children, Emily and Alexander.

Selected works

His critique of literalist translation methods appeared in Commentary in 2010.[4]

Under the name Alicia Chudo

See also

References

  1. ), copyright page.
  2. ^ Blackwell, Elizabeth. "Russian Lit-Live". Northwestern Magazine Summer 2011. Northwestern University.
  3. ^ Morson, Gary Saul. "Studies in Russian Literature and Theory". nupress.northwestern.edu. Northwestern University. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  4. ^ Gary Saul Morson. "The Pevearsion of Russian Literature". Commentary, July 1, 2010.

External links