Degrees:
Ph.D., Yale Univ.
M.A., Indiana Univ.
B.A., New York Univ.
Paul Lauter is Allan K. and Gwendolyn Miles Smith Professor of Literature at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut. He has served as President of the American Studies Association (of the United States), and he is General Editor of the groundbreaking Heath Anthology of American Literature, now in its sixth edition.
In the 1960s, Lauter served as Peace Education Secretary and Director of Peace Studies for the American Friends Service Committee, and executive director of the U.S. Servicemen's Fund. During 1964 and 1965 he worked in freedom schools in Mississippi, then in Roosevelt University's Upward Bound program, and in 1967 he became director of the first community school project in the nation, at Adams-Morgan in Washington, D.C. He was also active in the faculty and staff union at the State University of New York, serving as statewide vice-president for academics, as chapter president, and as grievance officer, among other positions. He was also one of the founders of The Feminist Press and its treasurer and an editor for fourteen years.
Lauter has served as director of American Studies, as English department chair, and has for many years been the director of the graduate program in American Studies.
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American Modernism
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Fiction and Film
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Ante-bellum Literature and Culture
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Canon Theory
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Contemporary Ethnic Literatures
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Literature of Social Protest
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Current projects: book titled "Literary Losers" (on Paine, Sigourney, London, A. Lowell, and others)
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Book on the continuing social and cultural impact of the Sixties
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"Immigration Shock" and its effect on American culture and literature
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- Lauter, Paul. From Walden Pond to Jurassic Park, Duke, 2001.
- Lauter, Paul, and Ann Fitzgerald, editors. Literature, Class, and Culture. Longmans, 2001.
- Lauter, Paul. Canons and Contexts. Oxford, 1991.
- Lauter, Paul, general editor, The Heath Anthology of American Literature. D.C. Heath, 1990, 1994; Houghton Mifflin, 1998, 2002, 2006.
With an editorial board of mainly Asian scholars, he has also organized a new anthology of American literature for students in Asia that will be published by Cambridge University Press. He has spoken or consulted on American studies and American literature, multiculturalism and ethnic studies, literary canons and anthologies in some 25 countries and in most of the States.
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- American Studies Association’s Bode-Pearson prize for lifetime achievement in American Studies, 2006.
- Jay Hubbell Award for lifetime achievement in American Literary Study, American Literature Section, Modern Language Association, 2001.
- Award for Distinguished Contributions to Ethnic Studies, MELUS (Multi-Ethnic Literatures of the United States), 1990.
- Fulbright Senior Specialist award for teaching in Graz, Austria, 2004
- Fulbright award for teaching in Yasnaya Polyana, Russia, 2003
- National Endowment for the Humanities, research fellowships, 1975, 1979-80, 1987-88.
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