Английская Википедия:David Hollinger

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Шаблон:BLP sources Шаблон:Infobox academic David Albert Hollinger (born April 25, 1941 in Chicago, Illinois) is the Preston Hotchkis Professor of History, emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. His specialties are American intellectual history and American ethnoracial history.

In 2022 Hollinger published Christianity’s American Fate: How Religion Became More Conservative and Society More Secular (Princeton University Press). The most well known of his eight previous books are Postethnic America: Beyond Multiculturalism (1995), Science, Jews, and Secular Culture (1996), After Cloven Tongues of Fire: Protestant Liberalism and Modern American History (2013), and Protestants Abroad: How Missionaries Tried to Change the World but Changed America (2017). He has edited or co-edited several other books, including The American Intellectual Tradition (seven editions, 1989 to 2016), co-edited with Charles Capper, Reappraising Oppenheimer (2005) co-edited with Cathryn Carson, and The Humanities and the Dynamics of Inclusion (2006).  One of his articles has become a standard treatment of the process of racialization and ethnoracial mixture, "Amalgamation and Hypodescent: The Question of Ethnoracial Mixture in the History of the United States," American Historical Review, 2003.

His influence in the field of religious history was discussed in 2013 in The New York Times.[1]

Life

Hollinger grew up in the Church of the Brethren, a denomination in which his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather had been ministers, but Hollinger has identified himself as an atheist for most of his adult life. His family memoir, When This Mask of Flesh is Broken: The Story of an American Protestant Family (2017) is an account of the Hollinger family’s history and its role in the Brethren community.

Hollinger earned his Bachelor of Arts degree from La Verne College in 1963, and then his Master of Arts degree in 1965 and Ph.D. in 1970, both from University of California, Berkeley. Before joining the Berkeley faculty in 1992, Hollinger taught at the University at Buffalo and the University of Michigan. He was Harmsworth Professor of American History at Oxford University in 2001-2. He retired at Berkeley in 2013.

Since 1967 he has been married to legal scholar Joan Heifetz Hollinger. He is the father of two children.

Hollinger has been the Ph.D. advisor to people who have become well established as publishing scholars in history, including Jennifer Burns, Nils Gilman, Daniel Immerwahr, Susan Nance and Gene Zubovich.

Hollinger was president of the Organization of American Historians in 2010-11. He is an elected fellow of The American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has been a trustee of the National Humanities Center and of the Institute For Advanced Study. He is an elected member of the American Philosophical Society.

Works

Presentations and Panels

References

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External links

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