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Irwin Unger

 
American Author: Irwin Unger
 

  • Born: 1927
  • Birthplace: Brooklyn, NY

Irwin Unger is a professor of History at New York University, who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1965 for his economic study of America in the mid-nineteenth century, The Greenback Era. Unger graduated from Columbia University in 1948, and went on for a master's and doctorate from NYU. Primarily interested in radicalism and reform and the economic history of America, he has written a number of other books on American history and has received numerous honors including a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Rockefeller Humanities Fellowship, and the American Council of Learned Societies Senior Fellowship.

Most Famous Works

  • The Greenback Era (1965)
  • The "New Left" and American History: Some Recent Trends in United States Historiography (1967)
  • The Movement: The American New Left, 1959-1973 (1973)
  • The Vulnerable Years: The United States, 1896-1917 (1977)
  • These United States: The Questions of Our Past (1978)
  • Turning Point, 1968 with Debi Unger (1988)
  • The Best of Intentions: The Great Society Programs of Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon (1995)
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(b. 1927)

1964The Greenback Era. Unger's economic study of America from 1865 to 1879 wins the Pulitzer Prize in history. It is praised by critic R. P. Sharkey as "the most thorough, fair-minded, and balanced appraisal of the money question... which has yet been produced." Born in Brooklyn, Unger, a historian, taught at the University of California at Davis and New York University.

 
 

 

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Answers Corporation American Author. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

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