Eugene Paul Nassar

Eugene Paul Nassar (born 20 June 1935), Professor of English Emeritus of Utica College, Utica, New York, is the author of several books of literary criticism in the close analysis tradition of his teachers, John Crowe Ransom at Kenyon College, Christopher Ricks at Oxford University, Arthur Mizener of Cornell University, and his critical model and mentor, Cleanth Brooks. He has long studies of the figural images in Wallace Stevens,[1] the lyric passages in The Cantos of Ezra Pound,[2] and of Hart Crane’s The Bridge, along with numerous essays in criticism of poems, drama and fiction. He has also an anthology of the illustrations to Dante’sInferno,”[3] various essays in sociological criticism, essays and reviews in many journals, and he has edited several books. He has held the Rhodes Scholarship and a Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities. A memoir of growing up in a Lebanese Christian family in the Italian-American neighborhood of East Utica, NY, is entitled Wind of the Land.[4] Dr. Nassar is the founder and former Director of the Ethnic Heritage Studies Center at Utica College. His Papers, which include many items—such as notices and reviews of his work—not available elsewhere, are housed in the Archives of Utica College.

Books

As author
As editor

Articles

Articles appeared in: College English, Renascence (2), Paideuma, Mosaic, American Oxonian, Melus, Syracuse Scholar (2), New York Folklore, Bulletin of Research in the Humanities, Dictionary of American Immigration History, Virginia Quarterly Review, Dante Studies(3).Dante Encyclopedia, Ambassador. Mohawk Valley History (7), Utica Observer-Dispatch (42).

Reviews appeared in: Essays in Criticism (2), Wallace Stevens Journal, Modern Age (5), Sewanee Review, Italian America.

References

  1. Lentricchia, F.: "Wallace Stevens : An Anatomy of Figuration", p.201. Poetry Magazine, December, 1966.
  2. Ellmann, R.: "The Cantos of Ezra Pound", p. 25. New York Times Book Review, April 14, 1976.
  3. Himmel-Farb, H.: "Art et Litterature", p. 25. Gazette des Beaux-Arts, July / August, 1995.
  4. Majaj, L.: "Arab-American Literature: Origins and Developments". American Studies Journal, Winter 2008.

See also

External links

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