Difference between revisions of "Lionel Trilling"
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*[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Spring2006/podhoretz.html Columbia Magazine article on the Trilling-Podhoretz correspondence] | *[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/alumni/Magazine/Spring2006/podhoretz.html Columbia Magazine article on the Trilling-Podhoretz correspondence] | ||
− | [[Category:Former English professors|Trilling, Lionel]] | + | [[Category:Former professors|Trilling, Lionel]] |
+ | [[Category:English professors|Trilling, Lionel]] | ||
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Trilling, Lionel]] | [[Category:Columbia College alumni|Trilling, Lionel]] | ||
[[Category:GSAS alumni|Trilling, Lionel]] | [[Category:GSAS alumni|Trilling, Lionel]] | ||
[[Category:Van Doren Award recipients|Trilling]] | [[Category:Van Doren Award recipients|Trilling]] |
Revision as of 04:18, 30 November 2007
Lionel Trilling CC '25 MA '36 PhD '38 was a famous literary critic and a University Professor at Columbia. While a student here, Trilling won a Kellett Fellowship to study at the University of Cambridge.
Among other achievements, Trilling was instrumental in the development of the Core. With Jacques Barzun, he co-taught a precursor to Core classes known as the Colloquium on Important Books, and was later a frequent instructor in the proto-Lit Hum class known as Humanities A.
Trilling was also a mentor to a young Norman Podhoretz.
Older alumni, many of whom came to Columbia to "take Trilling," look back on his presence fondly.
Trilling was a recipient of the Mark Van Doren Award. The Lionel Trilling Book Award and the Lionel Trilling Seminars were both established in his memory in 1976, the year following his death.