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John Erskine (educator)

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John Erskine (October 5 1879 - June 2 1951) was a U.S. educator and author, born in New York City. He graduated from Columbia University (A.M., 1901; Ph. D., 1903).

Professor Erskine was employed at Columbia and Amherst. He instituted Columbia College's General Honors Course, a two-year undergraduate seminar that would later help inspire "Masterworks of Western Literature," now known commonly as "Literature Humanities," the second component of Columbia College's Core Curriculum.

Erskine Place, a street in the New York City borough of The Bronx, was named after John Erskine.

Erskine was also the author of numerous publications, including:

  • The Elizabethan Lyric (1903)
  • Selections from the Faerie Queene (1905)
  • Actœon and Other Poems (1907)
  • Leading American novelists (1910)
  • Written English, with Helen Erskine (1910; revised edition, 1913)
  • Selections from the Idylls of the King (1912)
  • The Kinds of Poetry (1913)
  • Poems of Wordsworth, Shelley, and Keats, with W. P. Trent (1914)
  • The Moral Obligation of the Intelligent, and Other Poems (1915)
  • The Shadowed Hour (1917)
  • Democracy and Ideals (1920)
  • The Little Disciple (1923)
  • Private Life of Helen of Troy (1925)
  • Sonata (1925)
  • Galahad (1926)
  • Adam And Eve (1927)
  • American Character (1927)
  • Prohibition And Christianity, And Other Paradoxes (1927)
  • The Delight Of Great Books (1928)
  • Penelope's Man (1928)
  • Sincerity (1929)
  • Uncle Sam In The Eyes Of His Family (1930)
  • Cinderella's Daughter, And Other Sequels And Consequences (1930)
  • The Brief Hour Of Francois Villon (1937)
  • The Start Of The Road (1938)