Anna Granville Hatcher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1905 (1905)
Died1978 (aged 7273)
Education
DisciplineLinguistics
Anna Granville Hatcher
Born1905 (1905)
Died1978 (aged 7273)
Academic background
Education
Academic work
DisciplineLinguistics
Sub-disciplineSyntax, word formation, literary criticism
Institutions

Anna Granville Hatcher (1905–1978) was an American linguist. She started her career as a Romance linguist, and later conducted research in medieval literature as well as branching out from Late Latin and Old French to studies on Provençal, Spanish, Italian, English, and German. She was the first woman to hold the position of full professor at Johns Hopkins University.

Born in Baltimore, Maryland, her parents were Anna Denson Hatcher and Eldridge Burwell Hatcher.[1] Hatcher earned a BA from Blue Mountain College in 1925 and an MA from the University of Virginia in 1927. In 1934, she earned a PhD in Romance languages at Johns Hopkins University.[2] She served as an academic dean for four years at Harcum College, before joining the faculty at Johns Hopkins in 1939.

Hatcher's three books focus on issues of linguistics, while her journal articles cover two strands, one in linguistics, and one in medieval literary history, stylistics and criticism.[3] Tributes and retrospectives of her work include Jan Firbas’s 1962 review “Notes on the function of the sentence in the act of communication: marginalia on two important studies in syntax by Anna Granville Hatcher”[4] and Karen Hermann's “A Retrospective Critique of Anna Granville Hatcher's" Reflexive Verbs": Latin, Old French, Modern French (1942).”[5]

Awards and distinctions

Selected works

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI