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Norma Evenson

American historian (1928-2021) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Norma Doris Evenson (September 3, 1928 – June 7, 2021) was an American historian of architecture and urban planning. A 1975 Guggenheim Fellow, she won the 1979 Alice Davis Hitchcock Book Award for her book Paris: A Century of Change, 1878-1978 (1979), and she wrote Chandigarh (1966), Le Corbusier: The Machine and the Grand Design (1969), Two Brazilian Capitals (1973), and The Indian Metropolis: A View Toward the West (1989). She was also a professor at University of California, Berkeley for thirty years.

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Norma Doris Evenson was born on September 3, 1928, in Minneapolis.[1] She obtained her BA from George Washington University in 1950 and her MFA from the Catholic University of America on 1951.[2] After a few years as an art teacher and consultant in Montgomery County, Maryland, as well as a year of study at the American University (1957-1958), she went to Yale University, where she got her MA in 1960 and her PhD in 1963.[2] She also worked as a research assistant at the Yale University Art Gallery while doing graduate studies at Yale.[1]

In 1963, Evenson became an assistant professor of architectural history at the University of California, Berkeley,[2] where she was part of the UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design.[3] Kathleen James-Chakraborty said that Evenson was hired in part due to student demand for diversity at UC Berkeley.[4] She was promoted to associate professor in 1969 and full professor in 1972.[2] She retired from UC Berkeley in 1993.[5]

Evenson wrote on urban history, including urban planning in India and Brazil.[3] In 1975,[6] she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to study the era following Haussmann's renovation of Paris.[2] She won the Alice Davis Hitchcock Book Award for her 1979 book Paris: A Century of Change, 1878-1978.[7] She was appointed Fellow of the Society of Architectural Historians in 2009.[8] Other books she wrote include Chandigarh (1966), Le Corbusier: The Machine and the Grand Design (1969), Two Brazilian Capitals (1973), and The Indian Metropolis: A View Toward the West (1989).[3] She also received grants from the American Philosophical Society and Social Science Research Council.[1]

Evenson's personal library of architectural history materials was destroyed in the Oakland firestorm of 1991.[9]

Evenson died on June 7, 2021, in the Washington metropolitan area; she was 92.[3]

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