Cedric H. Whitman

American classical philologist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican classical philologist
PlacesUnited States of America
wasScholar Classical scholar Professor Educator Philologist Poet
Work fieldAcademia Literature Social science
Gender
Male
Birth1 December 1916, Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Death5 June 1979Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA (aged 62 years)
Star signSagittarius
Education
Harvard University
The details

Biography

Cedric Hubbell Whitman (December 1, 1916 – June 5, 1979) was an American poet and academician from Providence, Rhode Island. He received his PhD from Harvard University in 1947 and joined the faculty that year. In 1966, he became the first Jones Professor of Classic Literature. In 1974, Whitman became the Eliot Professor of Greek Literature, a position he would serve until his death in 1979.

Whitman is known for his research into Greek playwrights, Sophocles and Homer, and wrote Sophocles: A Study in Heroic Humanism in 1951 which won him the Award of Merit of the American Philological Association the following year. His 1958 book, Homer and the Heroic Tradition, won him the Christian Gauss Prize.

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