Adolph B. Benson

Adolph B. Benson, born Adolph Berndt Bengtsson, (November 22, 1881 – November 10, 1962) was an American scholar, educator and literary historian. Adolph Benson's research focused primarily on the study of Swedish-American culture.[1] [2]

Biography

Adolph Benson was born in Skåne, Sweden as the eldest of nine children. He emigrated to the United States during 1892. He graduated from Wesleyan University, Bachelor's degree (1907), Master's degree (1910). In 1914, he became associate professor of German language and literature at Yale University. In 1920, he became extraordinary professor of German and Scandinavian languages and literature.[3] [4] His autobiography Farm, Forge and Philosophy: Chapters of a Swedish Immigrant's Life was published by the Swedish American Historical Society in 1961.[5] The papers of Adolph Burnett Benson are available from Manuscripts and Archives at the Yale University Sterling Memorial Library in New Haven, CT.[6]

Selected bibliography

Original works

  • Sweden and The American Revolution (1926)
  • An American poet-enemy of Gustavus III of Sweden (1928)
  • Houghton's The legend of St. Olaf's kirk (1928)
  • Swedish Rarities in the Yale University Library (1935)
  • Swedes in America, 1638-1938 with Naboth Hedin (1938)[7]
  • The will to succeed : stories of Swedish pioneers (1948)
  • Americans from Sweden with Naboth Hedin and Carl Sandburg (1950)
  • American Scandinavian studies (1952)
  • Farm, Forge and Philosophy: Chapters of a Swedish Immigrant's Life (1961)[8]

Translations

  • Sara Videbeck and the Chapel, by Carl Jonas Love Almqvist; translation from the Swedish. (1919)[9]
  • America of the Fifties: Letters of Fredrika Bremer, by Fredrika Bremer; translation from the Swedish. (1924) [10]
  • Pehr Kalm's journey to North America by Pehr Kalm; translation from the Swedish. (1961)
gollark: All two I'm substantially aware of. Perhaps it's different if you have more governmenty universities with more standardization.
gollark: Universities aren't really a functional competitive market anyway.
gollark: It's not like you can trivially change universities if they annoy you in some way.
gollark: People are stupid because they're doing altruism?
gollark: More information means more accursed discriminationy things.

References

Other sources

  • The Chronicle (American Swedish Historical Foundation, Spring & Summer 1956)
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