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Shari Gabrielson Goodmann (December 2, 1944 – May 26, 2015), who published under the name Shari Benstock, was chairperson of the English department and associate dean for faculty affairs at the University of Miami and a feminist literary scholar.[1] She was an expert on literary modernism, and a biographer of Edith Wharton.
Shari Gabrielson Goodmann | |
---|---|
Born | San Diego, California, U.S. | December 2, 1944
Died | May 26, 2015 |
Occupation | English department chairperson and associate dean, faculty affairs, University of Miami, literary critic |
Genre | Feminist literature |
Shari Gabrielson was born in San Diego on December 2, 1944,[2] the daughter of Dana and Myrl (Barth) Gabrielson. She grew up in Iowa and was educated at Luther College, Drake University, and Kent State University.
She edited Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature from 1983 until 1986. With Celeste Schenck, she established "Reading Women Writing" at Cornell University Press, one of the first book series dedicated to women's writing and feminist scholarship.[1] In 1986, she published Women of the Left Bank, which explores the lives and works of some two dozen American, English and French women among the Paris expatriate literari, including Gertrude Stein, Alice B. Toklas, Sylvia Beach, Adrienne Monnier, Djuna Barnes, Natalie Barney, H. D., and Bryher.
In 1986, she left the University of Tulsa for the University of Miami, where she was a faculty member until 2006. She founded the University of Miami's program in Women's and Gender Studies and served as chairperson of the University of Miami's English department and associate dean for faculty affairs for the university's College of Arts and Sciences.[3]
Benstock married Mel Shyvers, with whom she had a son, Eric.[3] She subsequently married Bernard Benstock, a James Joyce scholar, who died in 1994.[4] In 2004, she married Thomas Goodmann, associate professor of English at the University of Miami, who cared for her in the last decade of her life during which she suffered from early onset dementia.[3]
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