Carl Hovde
Carl Hovde CC '50 was Dean of Columbia College and a professor of English, specializing in American literature.
Early life
Hovde was born in Pennsylvania; his father was the president of and a professor of Scandinavian history at the New School. After seeing action in France and Germany during World War II, he graduated from Columbia with a degree in philosophy and earned his doctorate in American lit from Princeton.
Deanship
A longtime teacher of Literature Humanities, Hovde served as dean from 1968 to 1972, a period marked by the aftermath of the 1968 protests and fundamental changes to the Core Curriculum. The protests exposed the university's over-centralization, and the nomination process for Hovde's deanship was changed - rather than being appointed by the University President and approved by the Trustees, he was nominated by a group of faculty members and approved by both the President and Trustees.
Hovde is credited with restoring a measure of peace to campus and remained a "stalwart" of the Core. When he stepped down and returned to teaching in 1972, the Spectator noted that he “sought to quietly guide the college, not to rule it; to use the force of persuasion and reason, not the blunt power of authority.”
Post-Deanship
He received the Great Teacher Award from the Society of Columbia Graduates in 1975. Since his retirement in 1995 he has served as chair of the Friends of the Heyman Center and also is a member of the Society of Senior Scholars. Professor Hovde received the Award for Distinguished Service to the Core Curriculum in 1997-1998.
He died on September 5, 2009, at 84 years old.
External links
- What Columbia College is Known For, an essay by Hovde in Columbia Magazine praising John Erskine and the Core Curriculum
- Spec obituary
- NY Times obituary
Preceded by Henry S. Coleman (Acting) |
Dean of Columbia College 1968-1972 |
Succeeded by Peter Pouncey |