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The following obituary appeared
in the New York Times on March 1, 2004.
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Associated Press
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| Daniel
J. Boorstin in 1974. |
Daniel Boorstin, 89, Former
Librarian of Congress, Dies
By ROBERT D. McFADDEN
Daniel J. Boorstin, a
Pulitzer Prize-winning author and social historian who
was the librarian of Congress for 12 years, died Saturday
at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C. He was
89 and lived in Washington.
The
cause was pneumonia, his son David said.
Dr.
Boorstin, who was also a lawyer and for 25 years a faculty
member at the University of Chicago, wrote more than
a score of books, including two major trilogies, one
on the American experience and the other on world intellectual
history viewed through prisms of scientific and geographic
discovery, the work of creative artists and the ideas
of prophets and philosophers.
As
the librarian of Congress from 1975 to 1987, Dr. Boorstin
literally brought drafts of fresh air into a stodgy,
forbidding institution whose 550 miles of shelves and
19 reading rooms were all but terra incognita to the
public and even to many scholars. He ordered the majestic
bronze doors of the world's largest library kept open,
installed picnic tables and benches out front, established
a center to encourage reading and arranged midday concerts
and multimedia events for all.
Recalling
his directive to keep the doors open, he remarked, "They
said it would create a draft, and I replied, `Great
- that's just what we need.' "
Dr.
Boorstin, a man of prodigious energy who wrote almost
every day, almost all the time, ran into a slight hitch
at his Senate confirmation hearings. Several senators
demanded that he not write while serving as the Congressional
librarian. He refused to stop writing but promised to
do it on his own time. And he did - on weekends, in
the evenings and on weekdays from 4 a.m. to 9 a.m.
Witty,
informal, a politically conservative thinker who favored
bow ties and unconventional ideas, Dr. Boorstin provided
America four decades ago with a glimpse of its reality-show
and photo-op future, introducing the notion of the "pseudo-event"
to describe occurrences, like news conferences and television
debates, that are staged to get news coverage and shape
public perceptions.
In
his 1962 book, "The Image: Or What Happened to
the American Dream," Dr. Boorstin deplored the
"programming of our experiences," saying "they
have no peaks and valleys, no surprises." He cited
the 1960 Kennedy-Nixon debates, which he said reduced
national issues to trivial theatrics. "I think
you have to be willing to settle for the messiness of
experience," he said.
Dr.
Boorstin developed his social theories in a steady stream
of books that were popular with many readers and critics,
though not always with other historians. His first trilogy
- "The Americans," with the subtitles "The
Colonial Experience" (1958), "The National
Experience" (1965) and "The Democratic Experience"
(1973) - won many awards.
The
first volume won the Bancroft Prize, the second won
the Francis Parkman Prize
and the last, which focused on the entrepreneurs and
inventions of the century after the Civil War, received
the 1973 Pulitzer Prize in history. Dr. Boorstin also
won the National Book Award for Distinguished Contributions
to American Letters in 1989.
The
professor, who received a doctorate in juridical science
at Yale University in 1940, advanced the theories of
Frederick Jackson Turner, who postulated that democracy
followed the frontier. Dr. Boorstin broadened the concept,
contending that the American experience was shaped by
the efforts of a people to tame the continent.
This
struggle, he believed, had led Americans to value practicality
and pragmatism over theory and dogma, action over thought,
and experience over tradition. He maintained that this
outlook made American institutions resilient and versatile.
The
second trilogy - a vast edifice of scholarship and words
devoted to the world's intellectual history but aimed
at general readers - was composed of "The Discoverers"
(1983), which focused on geographic and scientific explorers,
"The Creators," (1992) about artists and their
contributions, and "The Seekers," (1995),
which examined the ideas and lives of religious leaders
and philosophers.
While
the scope of his work was sweeping, his historical focus
was typically down to earth: the lives of people, their
daily concerns, the implements they used, the way they
solved everyday problems. His eye for the telling detail
often led to insights: the invention of the pocket watch
so time could be known anywhere, the likelihood that
Houston could not have become a great city without air-conditioning.
Reviewers praised Dr. Boorstin for a lively, inventive
style, unconventional and bold approaches, intriguing
perceptions and for placing familiar information in
fresh contexts to generate unexpected conclusions. Admirers
also praised him for shaping great stores of evidence
into well-ordered, vigorous narratives and for producing
original and provocative observations.
Detractors
charged that his work was "popular" history,
more superficial than overarching, focusing unduly on
goods, services and processes at the expense of ideas
and ideologies. Some critics viewed him as too conservative,
morally complacent, content with the status quo.
Kenneth
S. Lynn, a professor of history at Harvard and Johns
Hopkins, quoted in "Contemporary Authors,"
accused Dr. Boorstin of philosophical bias and blatant
myth-making, but still hailed the third volume of "The
Americans" as "a path-breaking and important
book" that reflected great zest for research and
contained brilliant analyses delivered with a supple
style.
Dr.
Boorstin's curiosity, mental agility and inclination
not to suffer fools led some associates to call him
arrogant and elitist. In the late 1960's, when antiwar
protests swept the nation, he was a target of student
radicals whom he denounced as "incoherent kooks"
and "barbarians."
Many
black leaders denounced his opposition to affirmative-action
quotas and open admissions as well as his description
of black studies as "racist trash." Dr. Boorstin
responded that he was strongly against racism and believed
in "equal opportunity, mobility and nondiscrimination"
but said he opposed "single-minded solutions."
In
a world of rapid change, Dr. Boorstin championed books
as the key to enduring values. He once described the
book as mankind's "single greatest technical advance"
and noted: "For each of us, reading remains a private,
uniquely qualitative nook of our life. As readers, then,
we are refugees from the flood of contemporaneous mathematicized
homogeneity. With a book, we are at home with ourselves."
Daniel
Joseph Boorstin was born Oct. 1, 1914. in Atlanta, to
Samuel Aaron Boorstin, a lawyer, and the former Dora
Olsan, both children of Russian-Jewish immigrants. His
father took part in the defense of Leo Frank, a Jewish
factory superintendent who was falsely accused of the
rape and murder of a teenage gentile and was lynched
by a mob after the governor commuted his death sentence
to life in prison.
The
case generated surges of anti-Semitism and Ku Klux Klan
activity throughout the South, forcing the exodus from
Georgia of many Jews, including the Boorstins. Mr. Boorstin
grew up and attended schools in Tulsa, Okla., and majored
in English history and literature at Harvard, where
he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and graduated summa
cum laude.
It
appeared that the young man was headed for a career
in the law. As a Rhodes scholar, he graduated from Balliol
College at Oxford with highest honors, passed the British
bar examinations and became one of the few Americans
to become a British barrister-at-law. He then completed
advanced studies as a fellow at the Yale Law School
and taught at Harvard, Radcliffe and Swarthmore. He
was admitted to the Massachusetts bar. His first book,
"The Mysterious Science of the Law," was published
by the Harvard University Press in 1941.
At
Harvard, he was swept up in left-wing radicalism. He
later explained, "Nearly everybody I knew in these
days who was interesting humanly or intellectually was
`leftist' and thought they had a duty to `do' something
about the state of the world."
He
belonged to a Communist Party cell in 1938-39, but resigned
in revulsion over Stalinist repression and the 1939
Soviet-German nonaggression pact. He later described
his membership in the Communist cell as "boringly
instructive."
Dr.
Boorstin joined the University of Chicago faculty in
1944, rising over the years to become the Preston and
Sterling Morton Distinguished Service Professor of American
History.
In
the late 1960's, his outspoken opposition to student
radicalism, militancy and violent protests made him
a lightning rod for protesters. Many boycotted his classes
and circulated leaflets publicizing his friendly testimony
before the House Committee on Un-American Activities
in 1953, when he identified other members of the Communist
cell.
In
1969, Dr. Boorstin left Chicago for Washington, where
he became the director of the Smithsonian Institution's
National Museum of History and Technology until 1973
and then the senior historian there for two years. After
a dozen years as the librarian of Congress, he resigned
in 1987 to continue writing full time and to become
editor-at-large for Doubleday, where he specialized
in acquiring books on history, reference and biography.
A
collection of his essays, "Hidden History,"
was published in 1987. A second volume of essays, "Cleopatra's
Nose: Essays on the Unexpected," appeared in 1994.
Dr. Boorstin in recent years served on the editorial
board of the Modern Library, a Random House imprint
that publishes classics for a less expensive market.
He also was a former president of the American Studies
Association and a trustee of Colonial Williamsburg and
the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
Most
of Dr. Boorstin's major works were published by Random
House, whose senior editor, Robert Loomis, worked on
the manuscripts. But Dr. Boorstin often credited his
wife, the former Ruth Carolyn Frankel, whom he married
in 1941, with crucial editing contributions. "Without
her, I think my works would have been twice as long
and half as readable," he said.
Besides
his wife and son David, of New York City, Dr. Boorstin
is survived by two sons, Paul and Jonathan, both of
Los Angeles, and six grandchildren.
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