Columbia University in the City of New York
Harold B. Segel (1930-2016)
Professor Emeritus of Slavic Languages and of Comparative Literature
Harold B. Segel, professor emeritus of Slavic Languages and of Comparative Literature at Columbia University, joined the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures in 1959. At Columbia, he held appointments in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of the Arts, the School of International and Public Affairs, and the School of General Studies. He was director of graduate studies in the Department of Slavic Languages, 1977-80; member of the Council for Research in the Humanities, Columbia University, 1977-79 (chair 1978-79), member of the Columbia University Senate, 1978-82; and director, Institute on East Central Europe, 1978-88. The recipient of numerous fellowships, grants and awards, he was twice decorated in 1975 by the Polish government for contributions on behalf of Polish culture, first at the Ministry of Culture in Warsaw and again at the Polish Consulate in New York. Segel published extensively in several fields. A scholar of Polish literature and culture, he authored numerous monographs on Polish drama, Romanticism, Renaissance Culture, and the place of the Jews in Polish culture. In the field of Russian letters, he was best known for his volumes on the literature of the eighteenth century, but he published on twentieth-century Russian drama as well. An authority on Eastern Europe more broadly, he authored both The Columbia Guide to and The Columbia Literary History of the Literatures of Eastern Europe Since 1945, as well as a monograph on East European prison literature from 1945-1990. He was also a prolific comparatist, publishing on Austrian and German culture, on Baroque poetry, on turn-of-the-century cabaret in cities across Europe, on puppets, robots, and automatons in avant-garde drama, and on the physical imperatives of modernism.

Harold B. Segel, professor emeritus of Slavic Languages and of Comparative Literature at Columbia University, joined the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures in 1959. At Columbia, he held appointments in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of the Arts, the School of International and Public Affairs, and the School of General Studies. He was director of graduate studies in the Department of Slavic Languages, 1977-80; member of the Council for Research in the Humanities, Columbia University, 1977-79 (chair 1978-79), member of the Columbia University Senate, 1978-82; and director, Institute on East Central Europe, 1978-88. The recipient of numerous fellowships, grants and awards, he was twice decorated in 1975 by the Polish government for contributions on behalf of Polish culture, first at the Ministry of Culture in Warsaw and again at the Polish Consulate in New York. Segel published extensively in several fields. A scholar of Polish literature and culture, he authored numerous monographs on Polish drama, Romanticism, Renaissance Culture, and the place of the Jews in Polish culture. In the field of Russian letters, he was best known for his volumes on the literature of the eighteenth century, but he published on twentieth-century Russian drama as well. An authority on Eastern Europe more broadly, he authored both The Columbia Guide to and The Columbia Literary History of the Literatures of Eastern Europe Since 1945, as well as a monograph on East European prison literature from 1945-1990. He was also a prolific comparatist, publishing on Austrian and German culture, on Baroque poetry, on turn-of-the-century cabaret in cities across Europe, on puppets, robots, and automatons in avant-garde drama, and on the physical imperatives of modernism.

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