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Dean Fansler

American professor at Columbia University and Filipino folklorist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Dean Fansler, also Dean S. Fansler, was an American professor. He was a teacher of English at Columbia University in the early 20th century and brother of Priscilla Hiss (wife of Alger Hiss),[1] who, as a "noted folklorist" helped preserve Filipino folklore culture in the early 20th century, after centuries of Spanish and American domination.[2]

Background

Dean Spruill Fansler was born in 1885. His father was Thomas Lafayette Fansler, mother Willa Roland Spruill, and younger sister Priscilla Hiss, born Priscilla Harriet Fansler.[1][3][4] In 1906, he received a BA from Northwestern University and MA (1907) and doctorate (1913) from Columbia.[5]

Career

In 1908, Fansler started working at the University of the Philippines. From then through 1914, he collected Filipino folklore tales. [6]

By 1914, Fansler appears in the Columbia College catalog as an assistant professor of English.[5] In the early 1920s, Fansler was a professor at Columbia College and receives mention as an acquaintance (probably teacher) in the first autobiography of Mortimer J. Adler.[1]

Franz Boas recommended that Fansler earn his doctorate and inspired him to prepare Philippine material for publication.[7]

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Works

In 1956, the "most widely known collection of Philippine folktales" was Dean Fansler's Filipino Popular Tales.[8]

  • Chaucer and the 'Roman a la Rose' (1914)[3][9]
  • Filipino Popular Tales (1921)[4][10]

See also

References

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