Gerald Jay Goldberg papers, 1955-1990

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Gerald Jay Goldberg papers, 1955-1990

Gerald Jay Goldberg (b.1929) was a professor of English at UCLA (1964-), and author of , which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize (1970), (1962), (1965), (1968), (1972), and (1982). The collection consists of manuscripts, page proofs, galley proofs, books, journals, reel-to-reel tapes, cassette tapes, notes, lecture announcements, class materials, correspondence, and photographs relating to Goldberg's career. The lynching of Orin Newfield The modern critical spectrum The fate of innocence The national standard A hundred twenty-six days of continuous sunshine Heart payments

30 boxes (15 linear ft.); 3 oversize boxes

eng,

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SNAC Resource ID: 6650259

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University of California, Los Angeles. Dept. of English

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6jx6v2m (corporateBody)

Goldberg, Gerald Jay.

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Biography Goldberg was born December 30, 1929 in New York City; BS, Purdue University, 1952; MA, New York University, 1955; Ph.D, University of Minnesota, 1958; assistant professor of English, Dartmouth College (1958-64); assistant professor, 1964-68, associate professor, 1969-73, and in 1974 professor of English at UCLA; The lynching of Orin Newfield was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1970; other books include: The modern critical spectru...