Vartan Gregorian Professor of English
Fisher-Bennett Hall 313
215-898-5726
Peter Conn is Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania. His publications include The Divided Mind: Ideology and Imagination in America, 1898-1917 (Cambridge University Press, 1983; paperback editions, 1988 and 2008), and Literature in America (Cambridge University Press, 1989), which was a main selection of Associated Book Clubs (UK). Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography (Cambridge, 1996; Paperback 1998), was chosen as a "New York Times Notable Book," was included among the five finalists for the National Book Critics Circle award in biography, and received the Athenaeum Award.
Conn's next book, The American 1930s: A Literary History, will be published by Cambridge in 2008. His books and chapters have been translated into eight languages, including Chinese, Spanish, Romanian, and Korean. He has lectured at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Whitney Museum, and other institutions, on a number of American artists, including Edward Hopper, William Christenberry, Thomas Wilmer Dewing, Maxfield Parrish, Charles Sheeler, and The Eight.
A John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellow, Conn has directed National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) seminars for college and high school teachers, and was the recipient of an NEH Humanities Focus grant. He has received several awards for distinguished teaching, including the Lindback Award, the university's senior teaching prize. His teaching projects have included College 005: The Great Books; English 401: Teaching American Studies, which places undergraduates as teaching assistants in a Philadelphia high school; and English 800, a graduate course that combines the study of literature and composition with teacher training.
Conn has served as literary consultant on numerous television projects, including the Emmy-winning series, "The American Short Story," and adaptations of novels by James Baldwin and Saul Bellow. In 2004, he served as principal literary advisor to "Oprah's Book Club" for The Good Earth. In 2009, The Teaching Company will release Conn's video course on "American Best Sellers."
Since 1993, Conn has served as visiting professor at the University of Nanjing, in the People's Republic of China. At Penn, he is a member of the graduate groups in the history of art and American civilization, an affiliated member of the East Asian Studies Center, and holds a secondary appointment in the Graduate School of Education.
Conn has served as Dean of the College, chair of the graduate groups in American Civilization and English, Faculty Master of Robert Hill College House and Community House and deputy and interim provost. He was the founding Faculty Director of Civic House, the university's center for community service.
Currently, Conn chairs the Major Gifts committee of the Pennsylvania/Delaware chapter of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.
Conn and his wife Terry have four children: Steven, David, Alison, and Jennifer.
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| 1996 | The Penn Mortar Board Alumni Association Award For Outstanding Teacher recipient |
| 1989 | The Ira Abrams Award for Distinguished Teaching recipient |
| 1973 | The Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching recipient |

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Photo caption: Francis Daniel Pastorius, Beehive manuscript, 1696-1865, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania.
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