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Christian Gauss

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Name
  
Christian Gauss

Education
  
University of Michigan

Died
  
1951, Pennsylvania, United States

Books
  
The papers of Christian Gauss

Randall Fuller on winning the 2011 Christian Gauss Award from Phi Beta Kappa


Christian Gauss (1878 – 1951) was a literary critic and professor of literature.

Contents

Biography

Gauss was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan. His father had fled Wurttemberg when Prussia began to dominate it in the 1860s. The son graduated from the University of Michigan at 20, worked as a newspaper correspondent in Paris, taught at Michigan and Lehigh University in the United States, and in 1905 became a first preceptor at Princeton University, where he remained until his retirement in 1946.

At Princeton, Gauss became a full professor two years after his arrival; he was chairman of the department of modern languages; and he served as dean. After retiring from Princeton, he was president of Phi Beta Kappa.

Though he was not a prolific author or a public figure, Gauss left a mark on literary scholarship: Princeton University's semiannual series of Christian Gauss Seminars in Criticism (founded in 1949 by R.P. Blackmur), and Phi Beta Kappa's annual Christian Gauss Award (est. 1950) for a book of literary criticism are named in his honor. Gauss influenced and corresponded frequently with F. Scott Fitzgerald and Edmund Wilson.

References

Christian Gauss Wikipedia