Boria Sax

Boria Sax
Education State University of New York, Buffalo
Occupation Author
Parent(s) Saville Sax

Boria Sax (born 1949) is an American author and lecturer and a teacher at Mercy College.

Boria Sax is probably best known for his writing on human-animal relations, where he has developed a style that combines scholarship with narrative and lyricism. He views the representation of animals in human culture as a means to explore human identity, as well as an enduring source of myths and legends. The publications of Boria Sax include books of scholarship, poetry, reference, translation, memoirs, and other genres. Two of the scholarly books have been named to list of “outstanding academic titles of the year” compiled by the journal Choice: Animals in the Third Reich: Pets, Scapegoats, and the Holocaust (Continuum, 2000) and The Mythical Zoo: An Encyclopedia of Animals in Myth, Legend, and Literature (ABC-CLIO, 2002). His books have been translated into French, Japanese, Korean, Turkish, and Czech.

Biography

Boria Sax was born in 1949 to Saville Sax.[1] He received his doctorate in Intellectual History and German from State University of New York, Buffalo. He has worked as a consultant on human rights for Amnesty International, Helsinki Watch, and Human Rights Internet. He is also the founder of the non-profit organization “Nature in Legend and Story,” dedicated to “promote understanding of traditional bonds between human beings and the natural world.”[2]

Publications

Scholarship and translations

Memoir

Study guides

Chapbooks and poetry

Articles

References

  1. "Boria Sax". NOVA. Retrieved 2008-07-19.
  2. "Boria Sax". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2008-07-19. He has also been an invited speaker at institutions including the Smithsonian, Yale University, Duke University, the Staten Island Zoo, the Whitechapel Gallery, the Rockwell Museum, and the U.S. Helsinki Commission. He teaches at several institutions including Mercy College, the University Without Walls, University of Illinois at Springfield, and Sing Sing Prison. Widely recognized as an authority on distance learning, he won the Sloan Consortium award for "Online Learning Effectiveness" in 2002 and the Humane Society of the United States' award for the "Distinguished New Course" of 2007. Among his current projects are a memoir about growing up in the shadow of atomic espionage, the libretto of an opera by Jay Vosk, and a history of the ravens in the Tower of London.
  3. Published in Japanese translation by Seidosha Press in Tokyo, Japan, 2002; published in Czech translation by Dorkoran Press in Prague in late 2003.
  4. Published in Turkish translation by Kitapyayinevi in Istanbul, in French by Delachaux et Niestlé [part of La Martiniere Group] in Paris and in Korean by Karam Publishing Co in Seoul.

External links

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