Mark Greif

Mark Greif is the co-editor, co-founder, and contributor to the magazine n+1, as well as a frequent contributor to American Prospect and occasional contributor to the London Review of Books.

Contents

Background and education

Greif attended the Commonwealth School in Boston. In 1992, he attended a Telluride Association Summer Program. He 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.

The New School

Greif is currently an assistant professor of literary studies at Eugene Lang College, New School University, in New York City.[1]

n+1

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[2]. Greif has served as both an editor and writer for the journal, contributing essays on a wide variety of topics: politics, sociology, Radiohead.[3] In 2010, he described the journal's mission: “We are creating a long print archive in an era of the short sound bite.”[4]

Criticism

Greif's criticism is marked by a willingness to address pop culture, conservative books, leftist academic critical theory, and link these to literature and larger questions of culture. He contributed a chapter to the book Radiohead and Philosophy: Fitter Happier More Deductive (Chicago: Open Court, 2009).

References

  1. ^ http://www.newschool.edu/lang/faculty.aspx?id=19330
  2. ^ Susan Hodara, "Intellectual Entrepreneurs: A highbrow journal rises in an era of sound bites," Harvard Magazine, January-February, 2010.
  3. ^ n + 1 Archive Mark Greif
  4. ^ Susan Hodara, Harvard Magazine, January-February, 2010.

Works by Greif

Articles in n+1

Reviews

Web

External links