Scott Sandage

Scott A. Sandage is a cultural historian at Carnegie Mellon University.[1] He is best known as the author of Born Losers: A History of Failure in America, which was selected as an "Editor's Choice" book by Atlantic Monthly, and was awarded the 34th Annual Thomas J. Wilson Prize, for the best "first book" accepted by Harvard University Press. He was recently named as one of America's Top Young Historians by the History News Network.[2]

Sandage was born in 1964 in Mason City, Iowa. He graduated from the University of Iowa (B.A., 1985) and from Rutgers University (M.A., 1992; Ph.D., 1995) in New Brunswick, New Jersey [3]

He has been a consultant to the Smithsonian Institution, the National Archives, the National Park Service, an off-Broadway play, and film and radio documentaries. He is on the board of directors for the Abraham Lincoln Institute and he's an expert on the Lincoln Memorial.[3]

His commentaries have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Industry Standard, Fast Company magazine, and other periodicals. He contributed an essay on "loserdom" to the 2004 Whitney Biennial exhibition catalog.[3]

In 2010, his work-in-progress book project was entitled Half-Breed Creek: A Tall Tale of Race on the Frontier, 1804–1941 which is a study of mixed race identity in Nebraska.[4][5]

Selected works

Books

Articles

References

  1. Scott Sandage homepage". Carnegie Mellon University, Department of History. Retrieved on July 29, 2009.
  2. "Author and Cultural Historian Scott Sandage to Deliver 17th Annual Levine Lecture". Rider University, September May 2009. Accessed July 29, 2009.
  3. 1 2 3 "Born Losers book website". Scott Sandage. Retrieved 2010-12-04.
  4. Lecture at the University of Michigan, Native American Studies, October 29, 2004: "HALF-BREED CREEK: A TALL TALE OF RACE IN AMERICA, 1760-1941". "In this talk, Professor Sandage (Carnegie Mellon University), gave an overview of a new book project, a study of mixed-race identity, tracing the racial shape-shifting of Nebraska folk hero of French-Omaha parents, whose disputed land claims on the 'Half-Breed Tract' resulted in an 1890's court battle that weighed cultural against biological ideas of race."
  5. Fitzgerald, Michael R., "Professor receives grant to research book", The Tartan, Carnegie Mellon University, January 22, 2007.
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