Yale Bulletin and Calendar

December 7, 2001Volume 30, Number 13



Naomi Schor



Naomi Schor, noted French literature
scholar and critic, dies suddenly

Naomi Schor, a noted scholar of French literature and critical theory who was also one of the pioneer feminist theorists of her generation, died suddenly Dec. 2 at the age of 58.

At the time of her death, Schor was the Benjamin F. Barge Professor of French at Yale, where she had earned her doctorate in 1969. Schor had held distinguished professorships at Brown, Duke and Harvard universities before joining the Yale faculty in 1999.

Schor was one of the leading interpreters of the writings of the French theorists and philosophers Luce Irigaray, Jacques Lacan and Jacques Derrida, and was a major figure in the field of 19th-century French studies.

Her 1987 book "Reading in Detail: Aesthetics and the Feminine" brought attention to the gendering of detail, long associated with the ornamental, the effeminate, the decadent and the mundane. Her analysis draws on varied texts, artworks and topics, ranging from Renaissance painting to Greta Garbo, Kafka, Freud, Lukacs, Salvador Dali, Eisenstein and Duane Hanson. The book remains a highly influential work to scholars across disciplinary lines, from those in French studies to art historians and visual artists.

Born in New York City on Oct. 10, 1943, Schor was the daughter of the renowned painter, goldsmith and artist of Judaica, Ilya Schor, and the artist Resia Schor. Both parents were Polish refugees from Hitler's Europe, who, after a perilous escape from Paris in June 1940, made their way to the United States, arriving in New York in December 1941.

Brought up in a home filled with art, music and literature, Schor was educated at the Lycée Francais of New York and received her bachelor's degree from Barnard College in 1963. A consummate Francophile throughout her life, she spent many years in Paris.

Schor's other books include "Zola's Crowds" (1978), "Breaking the Chain: Women, Theory, and French Realist Fiction" (1985),"George Sand and Idealism" (1993) and "Bad Objects: Essays Popular and Unpopular" (1995). At the time of her death, she was working on a major book on the subject of universalism.

She had recently organized "Man and Beast," a symposium for scholars from many disciplines to explore the similarities and differences between humans and other members of the animal kingdom. The now-cancelled symposium was to have taken place at the Whitney Humanities Center Dec. 8 and 9.

Schor served on the editorial board and the executive committee of the Modern Language Association of America. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1997.

She is survived by her husband, Howard Bloch, the Augustus R. Street Professor of French at Yale, who she had known for many years as a friend and colleague before they were married in 1999. She is also survived by her mother, Resia Schor, and a sister, the artist and writer Mira Schor.


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Historians both oppress and liberate the past, says Gaddis

Naomi Schor, noted French literature scholar and critic, dies suddenly

Medical students provide first line of care at clinic

Two researchers honored with election to Institute of Medicine

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Yale Books in Brief

Campus Notes



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