American academic
Lillian Feder (July 10, 1923 – January 12, 2007) was an American academic. She was Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Queens College and an emerita professor of the Graduate Center, CUNY , in comparative literature.[ 1]
Feder was born in New York City and earned her PhD from the University of Minnesota .[ 2] She published journal articles on solipsism in modern man[ 3] and on selfhood in literature.[ 4]
She died on Jan. 12, 2007, in hospice in Stuart, Florida ; she had lived in nearby Jensen Beach for five years.[ 5]
Crowell's Handbook of Classical Literature (New York: Crowell, 1964)[ 6]
Madness in Literature , 1980 (Princeton UP, 1983[ 7] )[ 8]
Ancient Myth in Modern Poetry (Princeton UP)
Naipaul's Truth: The Making of a Writer
^ "Faculty" . Graduate Center, CUNY . Retrieved November 29, 2020 .
^ Joseph P. Strelka (1980). Literary Criticism and Myth . Pennsylvania State University. p. 277. ISBN 9780271002255 . OCLC 243918991 .
^ Hart, Henry (2013). "For the Confederate and Union Dead Reflections on Civil War Poetry" . The Sewanee Review . 121 (2): 205–24. doi :10.1353/sew.2013.0039 . JSTOR 43662667 . S2CID 159867964 .
^ Feder, Lillian (1960). "Allen Tate's Use of Classical Literature" . The Centennial Review of Arts & Science . 4 (1): 89–114. JSTOR 23737614 .
^ "Lillian Feder: Jensen Beach, Florida" . Legacy.com . Retrieved November 29, 2020 .
^ Zinnes, Harriet (1966). "Reviewed Work(s): Crowell's Handbook of Classical Literature: A Modern Guide to the Drama, Poetry and Prose of Greece and Rome, with Biographies of Their Authors by Lillian Feder" . Books Abroad . 40 (1): 97. doi :10.2307/40120441 . JSTOR 40120441 .
^ "Madness in Literature : Lillian Feder" . Princeton University Press. Retrieved November 29, 2020 .
^ Gilbert, Sandra M. (1982). "Reviewed Work(s): Madness in Literature by Lillian Feder" . The Journal of English and Germanic Philology . 81 (2): 244–46. JSTOR 27708992 .
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