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Daniel Albright
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{{short description|American literary critic and academic}} {{Infobox academic | name = Daniel Albright | image = | caption = Daniel Albright | birth_date ={{Birth date|1945|10|29}} | birth_place = [[Chicago]], Illinois, US | death_date = {{Death date and age|2015|01|03|1945|10|29}} | death_place = [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]], US | occupation = [[literary criticism|Literary critic]], musicologist, poet, professor | education = [[Rice University]] (B.A.)<br>[[Yale University]] (PhD) | genre = | notableworks = | spouse= | website = [http://panaesthetics.org] | influences = [[Richard Ellmann]] (early career) | influenced = }} '''Daniel Albright''' (October 29, 1945 β January 3, 2015) was the Ernest Bernbaum Professor of Literature at [[Harvard]] and the editor of ''Modernism and Music: An Anthology of Sources''. He was born and grew up in [[Chicago, Illinois]] and completed his undergraduate studies on a full scholarship at [[Rice University|Rice]] in 1967. He received his MPhil in 1969 and PhD in 1970, both from [[Yale]]. Albright is also the author of the book ''Quantum Poetics'' which was published by ''Cambridge University Press'' in 1997. He held an [[NEH]] fellowship from 1973 to 1974, was a [[Guggenheim Fellow]] from 1976 to 1977, and more recently, he was a 2012 [[Berlin Prize]] Fellow at the [[American Academy in Berlin]]. Albright began his undergraduate career as a mathematics major, but changed to English literature. Although trained at [[Yale]] as a literary critic, after the publication of his book ''Representation and the Imagination: Beckett, Kafka, Nabokov, and Schoenberg'', he was invited by the [[University of Rochester]] to come teach there as a kind of liaison between the department of English and the [[Eastman School of Music]]. At Rochester, he studied musicology, which forever changed his career. Much of his subsequent work has been on literature and music, culminating with his 2014 book, ''Panaesthetics'' which addresses many arts and examines to what extent the arts are many or are one. ''Putting Modernism Together'' was released posthumously, by Johns Hopkins University Press, and ''Music's Monism'' in fall 2021 from the University of Chicago Press. He was hired in 2003 in the Harvard departments of English, but later joined the Comparative Literature department and soon began offering courses in the Music department as well.
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