Elliott Van Kirk Dobbie

Elliott Van Kirk Dobbie (9 May 1907 – 23 March 1970) was an American scholar of Anglo-Saxon literature who taught English at Columbia University.[1]

Early life

Dobbie was born in Brooklyn, New York City, in 1907.[1]

Education and academic career

Dobbie studied at Columbia University, being awarded a bachelor's in 1927 and a first class master's in American Literature in 1929.[2]:5–7 He began teaching English in Long Island in the same year,[2]:5 but later returned to teach at Columbia in 1934.[1] In 1937, he received his PhD from Columbia, and was promoted to the role of Instructor.[2]:5 He later became Assistant Professor in 1942, Associate Professor in 1945, and Professor in 1951.[1]

While studying and teaching, Dobbie began assisting George Philip Krapp on a six volume edition entitled the Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records, considered the standard of Anglo-Saxon poetry. The first three editions were mainly edited by Krapp (The Junius Manuscript in 1931, The Vercelli Book in 1932, and The Paris Psalter and Meters of Boethius also in 1932), but he soon passed away. This left Dobbie working on the final three editions, finishing Krapp's work on The Exeter Book in 1936,[2]:5 and editing alone The Ango-Saxon Minor Poems in 1942, and Beowulf and Judith in 1953.[1] He also wrote articles for the first edition of the Columbia Encyclopedia, including those on Shakespeare and Chaucer.[2]:6

Dobbie also served a long history with the journal American Speech, first working as assistant editor from 1939 until 1940. He was then promoted to associate editor for a year, before becoming managing editor from 1942 until 1947. During this period, he often argued with other editors over manuscript editing styles, but the journal ran smoothly enough. He was then associate editor for another three years, and a member of the editorial board from 1952 until 1965.[2]:6

As a philologist, he had (at least) a basic knowledge of various languages:[2]:6–7

Dobbie served on the Executive Committee of the Linguistic Circle of New York for several years, becoming Vice President from 1955 until 1957,[2]:8 then President from 1958 until 1960.[1] He was granted a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1948.[1]

He twice served as chairman of the executive committee for Columbia's Italian department, for a year in 1957 and again from 1960 until 1963. In 1966 he served as acting chairman for the English department.[1]

Personal life

In 1937, Dobbie married Mary Lorraine Kout, an associate in Columbia's English department. She edited the second edition of the Columbia Encyclopedia.[2]:5–6 They had at least one child, a son named William.[1]

He died at his home on 23 March 1970 after suffering from a brief illness.[1]

Selected bibliography

Edited works

Title Time of first publication First edition publisher/publication Unique identifier Notes
The Junius Manuscript 1931 Columbia University Press OCLC 353894 Part of Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records; with George Philip Krapp
The Vercelli Book 1932 Columbia University Press OCLC 471779707 Part of Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records; with George Philip Krapp
The Paris Psalter and Meters of Boethius 1932 Columbia University Press OCLC 1032033198 Part of Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records; with George Philip Krapp
The Exeter Book 1936 Columbia University Press OCLC 559086101 Part of Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records; with George Philip Krapp (deceased)
The Anglo-Saxon Minor Poems 1942 Columbia University Press OCLC 137293763 Part of Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records
Beowulf and Judith 1953 Columbia University Press OCLC 221021233 Part of Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records

Books

Title Time of first publication First edition publisher/publication Unique identifier Notes
The Manuscripts of Cædmon’s Hymn and Bede’s Death Song 1937 Columbia University Press OCLC 1100456573 Part of Columbia University Studies in English and Comparative Literature series

Articles

Title Time of publication Journal Volume (Issue) Page range Unique identifier Notes
"Pacific Place Names and the History of Discovery" Dec 1961 American Speech 36 (4) 258–265 JSTOR 453798
"Review: Dialect Components in Modern Standard English" Oct 1964 American Speech 39 (3) 216–217 JSTOR 453632
gollark: Your lack of further complaint has been interpreted as a definite opt-in!
gollark: <@!330678593904443393> I'll take your complaints as consent to harvest your data utterly for neural network training.
gollark: The closer you pass by a piece, the more distance quota it takes.
gollark: Anyway, each piece can move some total distance in a line each turn defined by what piece it is, and if there is a piece which can block it near the path it'd take, it uses more of that distance quota to move on that path.
gollark: No, it's still turnbased.

References

  1. "Dr. Elliott Van Kirk Dobbie Dies; Assembled Anglo‐Saxon Poetry". The New York Times. 26 March 1970. Archived from the original on 18 June 2020. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  2. Cassidy, F. G. (1971). "Elliott Van Kirk Dobbie: 9 May 1907-23 March 1970". American Speech. 46 (1/2). ISSN 0003-1283. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
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