In Memoriam: Clifford O. Davidson: 1932–2024

IF 0.1 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER COMPARATIVE DRAMA Pub Date : 2024-09-06 DOI:10.1353/cdr.2024.a936316
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In retirement, Davidson remained close to the many institutions at the University that he played a leadership role in founding and nurturing, including this journal, still housed within the Department of English. Moreover, he left a global network of scholars who form, in part, his generous legacy of editorial and field leadership.</p> <p>Born October 29, 1932, Clifford Davidson attended one-room rural elementary schools near Faribault, Minnesota and later Brainerd (Minnesota) High School. He received his bachelor’s degree from St. Cloud State University and pursued graduate studies at the University of Minnesota, with interruptions during which he taught at the secondary <strong>[End Page 280]</strong> level and served in the U.S. Army, the latter as a post newspaper editor at the Granite City (Illinois) Engineer Depot. He moved to Michigan in 1959 to complete his graduate studies at Wayne State University, from which he received his Ph.D. and where he also was employed as an Instructor in English.</p> <p>Davidson received an appointment as Assistant Professor of English at Western Michigan University in 1965, and two years later helped to establish this journal, which he served as a co-editor for 32 years. As an active participant in the development of the Medieval Institute at the University, he saw it grow into an internationally recognized unit which would in time sponsor the largest annual medieval conference in the world. In 1976 he founded the Early Drama, Art, and Music research project and book series within the Medieval Institute and served as its director for a quarter of a century. He also assisted his wife, the musicologist and gifted soprano Audrey Ekdahl Davidson, as dramatic director of numerous medieval music-dramas presented by the Society for Old Music (now Early Music Michigan), of which she was the founder and director.</p> <p>His research, conducted in American and European libraries and archives, led to voluminous publications and an international reputation with his articles and reviews published on four continents. He was the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of more than forty books and monographs, among them such titles as <em>From Creation to Doom: The York Cycle of Mystery Plays</em> (AMS, 1984), <em>History, Religion, and Violence</em> (Ashgate, 2002), <em>Illustrations of the Stage and Acting in England to 1580</em> (Medieval Institute Publications, 1991), <em>Deliver Us from Evil</em> (AMS, 2004) and a complete edition of <em>The York Corpus Christi Plays</em> (Medieval Institute Publications, 2011), the latter prepared as a contribution to a project supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 1985, Western Michigan University bestowed its highest academic honor on Davidson, naming him a Distinguished Faculty Scholar.</p> <p>While Davidson was a prolific writer and thinker, he was also a tireless recruiter. Whether suggesting article topics or book chapters or even ideas for monographs, he was continually working to invite more scholars into the conversation. For its first 33 volumes, <em>Comparative Drama</em> was the primary recipient of this energy. For the two decades following retirement, <strong>[End Page 281]</strong> his enthusiasm for recruiting new voices did not wane. For example, he was active as a board member and networker for Early Music Michigan, wrote book reviews for this journal, and solicited scholarly contributions to the “Medieval Studies” section of Oxford Bibliographies Online. He remained an avid reader of <em>Comparative Drama</em> to the very end, often discussing articles with colleagues new and old. In addition to his scholarly leadership, he championed live performances of medieval material, not only through Early Music Michigan, but also the Mostly Medieval Theatre Festival, established in 2017 in coordination with the Congress on Medieval Studies, as well as WMU’s Irving S. 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  • In MemoriamClifford O. Davidson: 1932–2024

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In Memoriam

Clifford O. Davidson

(1932–2024)

When Clifford Davidson retired from Western Michigan University in 2003, the Medieval Institute, where he held a joint appointment with English for nearly 40 years, printed a short volume of essays in his honor. If you read the introduction penned by Barbara Palmer, you learn about a person who was a prolific scholar, a persuasive editor, an intellectual trailblazer, and an energetic cheerleader. In retirement, Davidson remained close to the many institutions at the University that he played a leadership role in founding and nurturing, including this journal, still housed within the Department of English. Moreover, he left a global network of scholars who form, in part, his generous legacy of editorial and field leadership.

Born October 29, 1932, Clifford Davidson attended one-room rural elementary schools near Faribault, Minnesota and later Brainerd (Minnesota) High School. He received his bachelor’s degree from St. Cloud State University and pursued graduate studies at the University of Minnesota, with interruptions during which he taught at the secondary [End Page 280] level and served in the U.S. Army, the latter as a post newspaper editor at the Granite City (Illinois) Engineer Depot. He moved to Michigan in 1959 to complete his graduate studies at Wayne State University, from which he received his Ph.D. and where he also was employed as an Instructor in English.

Davidson received an appointment as Assistant Professor of English at Western Michigan University in 1965, and two years later helped to establish this journal, which he served as a co-editor for 32 years. As an active participant in the development of the Medieval Institute at the University, he saw it grow into an internationally recognized unit which would in time sponsor the largest annual medieval conference in the world. In 1976 he founded the Early Drama, Art, and Music research project and book series within the Medieval Institute and served as its director for a quarter of a century. He also assisted his wife, the musicologist and gifted soprano Audrey Ekdahl Davidson, as dramatic director of numerous medieval music-dramas presented by the Society for Old Music (now Early Music Michigan), of which she was the founder and director.

His research, conducted in American and European libraries and archives, led to voluminous publications and an international reputation with his articles and reviews published on four continents. He was the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of more than forty books and monographs, among them such titles as From Creation to Doom: The York Cycle of Mystery Plays (AMS, 1984), History, Religion, and Violence (Ashgate, 2002), Illustrations of the Stage and Acting in England to 1580 (Medieval Institute Publications, 1991), Deliver Us from Evil (AMS, 2004) and a complete edition of The York Corpus Christi Plays (Medieval Institute Publications, 2011), the latter prepared as a contribution to a project supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 1985, Western Michigan University bestowed its highest academic honor on Davidson, naming him a Distinguished Faculty Scholar.

While Davidson was a prolific writer and thinker, he was also a tireless recruiter. Whether suggesting article topics or book chapters or even ideas for monographs, he was continually working to invite more scholars into the conversation. For its first 33 volumes, Comparative Drama was the primary recipient of this energy. For the two decades following retirement, [End Page 281] his enthusiasm for recruiting new voices did not wane. For example, he was active as a board member and networker for Early Music Michigan, wrote book reviews for this journal, and solicited scholarly contributions to the “Medieval Studies” section of Oxford Bibliographies Online. He remained an avid reader of Comparative Drama to the very end, often discussing articles with colleagues new and old. In addition to his scholarly leadership, he championed live performances of medieval material, not only through Early Music Michigan, but also the Mostly Medieval Theatre Festival, established in 2017 in coordination with the Congress on Medieval Studies, as well as WMU’s Irving S. Gilmore School of Music, where he and his wife endowed a scholarship...

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悼念克利福德-戴维森:1932-2024
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: In MemoriamClifford O. Davidson: 1932-2024 点击查看大图 查看完整分辨率 In Memoriam Clifford O. Davidson (1932-2024) 2003 年,当克利福德-戴维森从西密歇根大学退休时,他与英语系共同任职近 40 年的中世纪研究所印制了一册短文纪念他。如果您阅读了芭芭拉-帕尔默(Barbara Palmer)撰写的序言,就会了解到戴维森是一位多产的学者、有说服力的编辑、知识界的开拓者和精力充沛的啦啦队长。退休后,戴维森仍与大学里许多由他领导创建和培育的机构保持着密切联系,其中就包括这份仍设在英语系的期刊。此外,他还留下了一个全球性的学者网络,这些学者在一定程度上构成了他慷慨的编辑和领域领导遗产。克利福德-戴维森出生于 1932 年 10 月 29 日,曾在明尼苏达州法里博特附近一间教室的乡村小学就读,后来就读于布瑞内德(明尼苏达州)高中。他获得了圣克劳德州立大学的学士学位,并在明尼苏达大学攻读研究生,期间他曾在中学任教 [End Page 280] 并在美国陆军服役,后在花岗岩城(伊利诺伊州)工兵营担任邮报编辑。1959 年,他移居密歇根州,在韦恩州立大学完成研究生学业,并获得博士学位,同时还受聘担任英语讲师。1965 年,戴维森被任命为西密歇根大学英语系助理教授,两年后,他帮助创办了本刊,并担任联合编辑长达 32 年之久。作为该大学中世纪研究所发展的积极参与者,他见证了该研究所成长为一个国际公认的机构,并在一段时间内赞助了世界上最大的中世纪年度会议。1976 年,他在中世纪研究所内创立了早期戏剧、艺术和音乐研究项目和丛书,并担任该项目主任长达四分之一个世纪。他还协助他的妻子、音乐学家、天才女高音奥黛丽-埃克达尔-戴维森(Audrey Ekdahl Davidson)担任由古老音乐协会(现密歇根早期音乐协会)推出的众多中世纪音乐戏剧的戏剧导演,她是该协会的创始人和总监。他在美国和欧洲的图书馆和档案馆进行研究,出版了大量著作,并在四大洲发表文章和评论,享有国际声誉。他是四十多部书籍和专著的作者、合著者、编辑或合编者,其中包括《从创世到末日》:约克系列神秘剧》(AMS,1984 年)、《历史、宗教与暴力》(Ashgate,2002 年)、《1580 年前英格兰的舞台与表演图解》(中世纪学院出版社,1991 年)、《拯救我们脱离邪恶》(AMS,2004 年)以及《约克基督圣体剧》全集(中世纪学院出版社,2011 年),后者是作为对国家人文基金会支持项目的贡献而编写的。1985 年,西密歇根大学授予戴维森最高学术荣誉--"杰出教师学者 "称号。戴维森是一位多产的作家和思想家,同时也是一位不知疲倦的招聘者。无论是建议文章主题还是书籍章节,甚至是专著的构思,他都在不断努力邀请更多的学者参与对话。在《比较戏剧》最初的 33 卷中,他是这些精力的主要接受者。退休后的二十年间,[尾页 281]他招募新学者的热情丝毫未减。例如,他积极担任《密歇根早期音乐》(Early Music Michigan)的董事会成员和网络联系人,为该杂志撰写书评,并为牛津书目在线的 "中世纪研究 "栏目征集学术论文。他一直是《比较戏剧》的忠实读者,经常与新老同事讨论文章。除了在学术上的领导作用,他还支持中世纪材料的现场表演,不仅通过密歇根早期音乐,还通过与中世纪研究大会合作于2017年成立的 "最中世纪戏剧节",以及WMU的欧文-S-吉尔摩音乐学院,他和妻子在该学院捐赠了一项奖学金......
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来源期刊
COMPARATIVE DRAMA
COMPARATIVE DRAMA Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Comparative Drama (ISSN 0010-4078) is a scholarly journal devoted to studies international in spirit and interdisciplinary in scope; it is published quarterly (Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter) at Western Michigan University
期刊最新文献
In Memoriam: Clifford O. Davidson: 1932–2024 "Simply Sitting in a Chair": Questioning Representational Practice and Dramatic Convention in Marguerite Duras's L'Amante anglaise and The Viaducts of Seine-et-Oise Rewriting Idolatry: Doctor Faustus and Romeo and Juliet Measuring Protagonism in Early Modern European Theatre: A Distant Reading of the Character of Sophonisba Theater, War, and Revolution in Eighteenth-Century France and Its Empire by Logan J. Connors (review)
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