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  1. Quentin Anderson (July 21, 1912 – February 18, 2003) was an American literary critic and cultural historian at Columbia University. His research focused on 19th-century American authors, especially Henry James , Ralph Waldo Emerson , and Walt Whitman , and their attempts to define American identity as both connected to and differentiated from ...

  2. Sep 18, 2018 · Quinton, the adopted son of Reynolds and Loni Anderson, was not mentioned in Reynolds' will, but he was provided for in a trust. Reynolds died in 2018 at age 82, leaving behind a net worth of $5 million.

  3. Feb 24, 2003 · Feb. 24, 2003. Quentin Anderson, a literary critic, cultural historian and Columbia professor emeritus of American literature, died Tuesday at his home in Morningside Heights. He was 90. He wrote ...

  4. Quentin Anderson’s “essay in American literary and cultural history,” a superb and outrageous book, sees our current counter-cultural rabblement as having started from Emerson. Emerson, as Anderson knows, directed his ethics of release to the sons and daughters of Boston Unitarianism, a rather different set than the Woodstock Nation.

  5. Feb 25, 2003 · Quentin Anderson, 90, a literary critic and cultural historian who taught at Columbia University from 1939 until 1981, died Feb. 18 in his New York City home of unspecified causes.

  6. In Praise of Quentin Anderson. Writing of Hawthorne, Cooper, Melville and Twain, Quentin Anderson posed the following question in his book The Imperial Self: an Essay in American Literary and Cultural History: “Their struggles do indeed attest to the difficulty of growing up in this country—but what nation had ever gone so far toward dissolving social ties as this one?”

  7. Jan 1, 1971 · Quentin Anderson. Brief content visible, double tap to read full content. Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Discover more of the author’s ...

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