Daniel Mendelsohn

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Daniel Mendelsohn
Daniel Mendelsohn 2018.jpg
Mendelsohn in 2018
BornDaniel Adam Mendelsohn
1960 (age 6364)
Long Island, New York, U.S.
OccupationAuthor, essayist, critic, columnist, translator
LanguageEnglish, Greek, French
Education University of Virginia (BA)
Princeton University (MA, PhD)
GenreCriticism, non-fiction, memoir
Subject Holocaust, Judaism, classics, Cavafy, literature, film, theater, television
Notable works The Lost (2006)
An Odyssey (2017)
Website
danielmendelsohn.com

Daniel Adam Mendelsohn (born 1960) is an American author, essayist, critic, columnist, and translator. He is currently the Charles Ranlett Flint Professor of Humanities at Bard College, the Editor at Large of the New York Review of Books, and the Director of the Robert B. Silvers Foundation, a charitable organization dedicated to supporting writers of nonfiction.

Contents

Early life and education

Mendelsohn was born to a Jewish family [1] in New York City and raised on Long Island in the town of Old Bethpage, New York. He attended the University of Virginia from 1978 to 1982 as an Echols Scholar, [2] graduating with a B.A. summa cum laude in Classics. From 1982 to 1985, he resided in New York City, working as an assistant to an opera impresario, Joseph A. Scuro. [3] The following year he began graduate studies at Princeton University, receiving his M.A. in 1989 and his Ph.D. in 1994. His dissertation, later published as a scholarly monograph by Oxford University Press, was on Euripidean tragedy.

Mendelsohn is one of five siblings. His brothers include film director Eric Mendelsohn and Matt Mendelsohn, a photographer; his sister, Jennifer Mendelsohn, also a journalist, is the founder of "#ResistanceGenealogy". [4] [5] He is the nephew of the psychologist Allan Rechtschaffen. He is gay. [6]

Career

While still a graduate student, Mendelsohn began contributing reviews, op-eds, and essays to such publications as QW, Out, The New York Times , The Nation , and The Village Voice ; after completing his Ph.D., he moved to New York City and began writing full-time. Since then his review-essays on books, films, theater and television have appeared frequently in numerous major publications, most often in The New Yorker and The New York Review of Books . Others include Town & Country (magazine) , The New York Times Magazine , Travel + Leisure , Newsweek , Esquire , The Paris Review , The New Republic , and Harper's magazine, where Mendelsohn was a culture columnist. Between 2000 and 2002 he was the weekly book critic for New York Magazine ; his reviews have also appeared frequently in The New York Times Book Review , where he was also a columnist for the "Bookends" page.

Mendelsohn is the author of ten books, including New York Times bestseller and international bestseller The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million and An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic (2017), a Kirkus Best Memoir of the Year and winner of France's Prix Méditerrannée. He is currently at work on a new translation of Homer's The Odyssey to be published by the University of Chicago Press in fall 2024, [7] His most recent book, Three Rings: A Tale of Exile, Narrative, and Fate, published in 2020, was a Kirkus Best Book of 2020 and won the Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger (Best Foreign Book Prize) in France. In 2022 he was awarded the Premio Malaparte, Italy's highest honor for foreign writers, and was named a Chevalier de Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the Government of France.

The New York Review of Books

Mendelsohn began contributing to the New York Review of Books early in 2000, and soon became a frequent contributor, publishing articles on a wide range of subjects including Greek drama and poetry, American and British theater, literature, television, and film. [8] Over time he became a close personal friend of the founding editor Robert B. Silvers and Silvers' partner, Grace, Countess of Dudley. [9]

During a period of editorial reorganization in the year and a half following Silvers' death, Mendelsohn was named the first Editor-at-Large of the Review, a position created for him by the publisher, Rea Hederman, to go alongside the editorship, which is currently split between co-editors Emily Greenhouse and Gabriel Winslow-Yost. [10] [11]

In February, 2019, Hederman also announced that Mendelsohn had been named Director of the Robert B. Silvers Foundation, as per a stipulation in Silvers' will. The Foundation is dedicated to supporting writers of nonfiction of the kind Silvers fostered at the Review: long-form criticism and journalism and writing on arts and culture. [10]

Academic career and positions

Mendelsohn's academic speciality was Greek (especially Euripidean) tragedy; he has also published scholarly articles about Roman poetry [12] and Greek religion. [13] During the 1990s, he taught intermittently as a lecturer in the Classics department at Princeton University. [14] In the fall of 2006, he was named to the Charles Ranlett Flint Chair in Humanities at Bard College, where he currently teaches one course each semester on literary subjects. [15] His academic residencies have included the Richard Holbrooke Distinguished Visitor at the American Academy in Berlin, Germany (2008); [16] Critic-in-Residence at the American Academy in Rome (2010), [17] and Visiting writer at the Ca' Foscari University of Venice (2014). In March, 2019 he was in residence at the University of Virginia, where he gave the Page-Barbour Lectures. [18]

Major works

Awards and honors

Mendelsohn has been the recipient of numerous prizes and honors both in the United States and abroad. Apart from awards for individual books, these include the American Academy of Arts and Letters Harold D. Vursell Memorial Prize for Prose Style (2014); the American Philological Association President's Award for service to the Classics (2014); the George Jean Nathan Prize for Drama Criticism (2002); and the National Book Critics Circle Award Citation for Excellence in Book Reviewing (2000)

Bibliography

Books

Essays, reviews and reporting

See also lists of Mendelsohn's articles at New York Magazine, New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, The New York Times Book Review, The Paris Review, Town & Country Magazine, Harper's, Travel + Leisure.

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References

  1. "Interview with Daniel Mendelsohn, Author of the Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million".
  2. "Echols Scholars Program Alumni Class of the 1980's | Undergraduate, U.Va". college.as.virginia.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  3. Astri von Arbin Ahlander (2011-06-27). "The Days of Yore". The Days of Yore. 2011-06-27. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  4. "Resistance Genealogy // we got the records, we have the receipts". www.resistancegenealogy.com. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  5. Scott Foundas (2010-01-21). "3 Backyards: Secrets and Insides - Page 2 - Film+TV - Los Angeles". LA Weekly. Retrieved 2010-12-07. Mendelsohn was born in 1964 in Old Bethpage, Long Island, the fourth of five children of a scientist father (who designed target-recognition technology for F14 aircraft at Grumman Aerospace) and teacher mother. His siblings include a photographer, a physicist, journalist Jennifer Mendelsohn and critic and author Daniel Mendelsohn, whose best-selling, Holocaust-themed memoir, The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million, is currently being developed as a film by Jean-Luc Godard.
  6. Kohler, Ioanna (Jul 1, 2014). "The Discovery of Oneself: An Interview with Daniel Mendelsohn" . Retrieved Aug 21, 2020.
  7. "World Languages & Literatures". www.bu.edu. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
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  9. McGrath, Charles (2012-03-16). "Robert Silvers's Long Reign at The New York Review of Books". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-03-03. Daniel Mendelsohn, a classics scholar with wide interests...is personally close to Mr. Silvers
  10. 1 2 "The New York Review of Books announces new editorial lineup and the creation of the Robert B. Silvers Foundation". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  11. Williams, John (2019-02-25). "New York Review Names 2 Top Editors 5 Months After Ian Buruma's Departure". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  12. Mendelsohn, Daniel (1990). "Empty Nest, Abandoned Cave: Maternal Anxiety in "Achilleid" 1". Classical Antiquity. 9 (2): 295–308. doi:10.2307/25010932. JSTOR   25010932.
  13. Mendelsohn, Daniel (1991). "Συγκεραυνόω: Dithyrambic Language and Dionysiac Cult". The Classical Journal. 87 (2): 105–124. JSTOR   3297967.
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  33. Online version is titled "How gay was Sappho?".
  34. Online version is titled "A father's final odyssey".