Vivian Greene-Gantzberg | |
---|---|
Born | Vivian Yvonne Mitchell Greene-Gantzberg |
Alma mater | University of Illinois |
Occupation(s) | Professor and author |
Vivian Yvonne Mitchell Greene-Gantzberg was an American educator and author with an expertise in 18th and 19th century Danish and German literature.[1]
Greene-Gantzberg was born in Georgia. She graduated from Spelman College in Atlanta in 1970 and received her masters and doctoral degrees in German from the University of Illinois.[2]
She was a faculty member at the University of Michigan from 1976 until 1982, a visiting professor at Harvard University from 1994 until 1995, and an associate professor at the University of Maryland where she taught Germanic languages and literature.[1][2]
Monica Susana Hidalgo mentions in “Literary Impressionism and the Case of Herman Bang”, that Vivian Griffen Greene’s "Herman Bang og det fremmede", describes the parallels between Herman Bang’s “Les quatre Diables” and Edmund de Goncourt’s 1879 “Les Frères Zemganno”.[3]
Greene-Gantzberg published “Ludvig Holberg and German-Speaking Europe,” in Ludvig Holberg: A European Writer, edited by Sven Hakon Rossel (1994).[4]
Greene-Gantzberg died of brain cancer in 1998.[2]