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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Historians/Historical Organizations >> Historians >> Daniel Boorstin (1914-2004) |
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Daniel Boorstin (1914-2004) Daniel
Boorstin attended Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at the age of fifteen and graduated with the highest honors. He received a Rhodes Scholarship to Oxford University in England and graduated with two degrees in law, both of them with honors. He also received a doctorate of law from Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. What most interested Boorstin, though, was history. After returning to the United States, he joined the history department at the University of Chicago in Chicago, Illinois, where he spent the next twenty-five years. In 1969 Boorstin became director of the National Museum of History and Technology (later the National Museum of American History) of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. He became Librarian of Congress in 1975, serving until his retirement in 1987. Boorstin wrote more than twenty books and is one of the few historians to win the Pulitzer Prize, the Parkman Prize, and the Bancroft Prize. He won the Pulitzer Prize for History in 1974 for the third volume of his Americans trilogy, The Americans: The Democratic Experience (1973). In The Americans trilogy
In the 1930s Boorstin briefly became a member of the U.S. Communist Party. He later repudiated that choice and, over the course of his career, became increasingly conservative. Boorstin sharply criticized the liberalism of the 1960s for what he saw as its excesses. But his critique was not limited to political beliefs. The 1960 televised presidential debate between Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy moved him to write a scathing assessment of modern culture. In The Image (1962), perhaps his most influential work, Boorstin contends that modern culture had shrugged off pragmatism and truthfulness for "image," the "non-event," "celebrity" (defined as a person who is known for being well known), and "spin." The "dark arts" of advertising and public relations created a world of illusion, according to Boorstin. Boorstin possessed an extraordinary intellect and curiosity. Having a great affinity for the achievements of "the amateur" in history, he naturally gravitated to writing for a general audience. For Boorstin, experience was the great teacher and transmitter of values, and he had no patience with theorizing or lofty abstractions. For this reason he believed that the book was humanity's greatest single invention. It is from the book's grounding in the reality of experience and everyday life that one might grasp the threads of wisdom. Upon
Boorstin died in Washington, D.C., at the age of eighty-nine on February 28, 2004, survived by his wife, Ruth Frankel Boorstin, and three children. Suggested Reading Daniel J. Boorstin, The Americans: The Democratic Experience (New York: Random House, 1973). Daniel J. Boorstin, The Discoverers: A History of Man's Search to Know His World and Himself (New York: Random House, 1983). Daniel J. Boorstin, The Image; or What Happened to the American Dream (New York: Atheneum, 1962). Jamil S. Zainaldin, Georgia Humanities Council Published 11/11/2005 |
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