Stephen Richards Graubard (December 5, 1924 – May 27, 2021) was an American historian and author. He was an editor at Daedalus from 1961 until 1999. He was a professor at Harvard University and then emeritus professor at Brown University. [1][2]
Books
edit- Kissinger: Portrait of a Mind (W. W. Norton, 1973)[3][4][5]
- The Artificial Intelligence Debate: False Starts, Real Foundations (MIT Press, 1988)[6]
- Books, Bricks & Bytes: Libraries In The Twenty-First Century[7]
- Minnesota, Real & Imagined: Essays on the State and Its Culture (2000)
- The Presidents: The Transformation Of The American Presidency From Theodore Roosevelt To George W. Bush (Penguin, 2004);[8] published in the US as Command of Office: How War, Secrecy, and Deception Transformed the Presidency From Theodore Roosevelt to George W. Bush (2004)[9]
References
edit- ^ Genzlinger, Neil (24 June 2021). "Stephen Graubard, 96, Journal Editor and Provocative Historian, Dies". The New York Times.
- ^ "Stephen Richards Graubard". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. 31 May 2023.
- ^ Fitzgerald, Frances (15 July 1973). "Kissinger". The New York Times.
- ^ Chepaitis, Joseph B (May 1975). "'Kissinger: Portrait of a Mind', by Stephen R. Graubard (Book Review)". Essays in Arts and Sciences. 4: 81. ProQuest 1311240681.
- ^ Graebner, Norman A. (June 1974). "Kissinger: Portrait of a Mind, Stephen R. Graubard". Political Science Quarterly. 89 (2): 409–410. doi:10.2307/2149272. JSTOR 2149272.
- ^ Woolgar, Steve (March 1990). "The Artificial Intelligence Debate: False Starts, Real Foundations . Stephen R. Graubard". Isis. 81 (1): 144–145. doi:10.1086/355312.
- ^ Hassard Wilkins, Janie L. (1998). "Books, bricks & bytes: Libraries in the Twenty-First Century". Journal of the American Society for Information Science. 49 (14): 1336–1338. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(1998)49:14<1336::AID-ASI16>3.0.CO;2-T.
- ^ Cribb, Tim (5 February 2006). "The Presidents: The Transformation of the American Presidency from Theodore Roosevelt to George W. Bush". South China Morning Post.
- ^ Mann, James (27 February 2005). "'Command of Office': The Imperial Presidency". New York Times.