David King Dunaway

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OccupationUniversity professor, Author
Genre
David King Dunaway
OccupationUniversity professor, Author
EducationUniversity of California, Berkeley
Genre
Subject
Years activesince 1981
Website
www.davidkdunaway.com

David King Dunaway is an American historian. He is a professor of English at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico; he was previously on the faculty of San Francisco State University in San Francisco. He was also the first consultant to the UNESCO Program on Intangible Cultural Heritage.

David Dunaway's first book, How Can I Keep From Singing, the biography of folk musician and social activist Pete Seeger, was based on his doctoral dissertation at the University of California, Berkeley, and first released in 1981. Since then, it has been translated into Japanese and Spanish and been through six editions. Working with Seeger, Dunaway completed a revised, updated version of the biography in 2008 from Villard Books/Ballantine.

Dunaway is also the editor of Oral History: An Interdisciplinary Anthology (with Willa Baum; second edition, Rowman & Littlefield, 1996), and the author of Huxley in Hollywood (Harper Collins, 1990), Writing the Southwest (with Sarah Spurgeon; revised edition, University of New Mexico Press, 2003), Aldous Huxley Recollected (AltaMira/Rowman & Littlefield, 1998), Across the Tracks: A Route 66 Story (in press), Oral History on Route 66: A Manual (National Park Service, 2005), Singing Out: An Oral History of America's Folk Music Revivals (with Molly Beer; Oxford, 2010), A Pete Seeger Discography (Scarecrow Press/Rowman, 2011), and A Route 66 Companion (University of Texas Press, 2012), and Researching Route 66: A Bibliographical Guide (with Stephen Mandrgoc) (National Park Service, 2023). His most recent work is A Four- Eyed World: How Glasses Changed The Way We See (Bloomsburg, 2026).

Radio series

Dunaway has been active in radio since 1972, when he produced "Midnight Country" for KPFA-FM in Berkeley. Four of his radio documentary series were developed in conjunction with his writing – "Writing the Southwest" (1995) developed with funding from the NEH and the Humanities Endowments in Arizona, Colorado, and New Mexico; "Aldous Huxley's Brave New Worlds" (1998) funded by the California and New Mexico Endowments for the Humanities and Public Radio International; and "Across the Tracks: A Route 66 Story" (2001) which received awards from the International Radio Festival, the Associated Press, and a Silver Reel. In 2008-9, his documentary on Pete Seeger aired on more than 300 stations and won Best of Show: Audio from the Broadcast Education Association. He is a DJ for KUNM-FM in Albuquerque, NM.

In 2008, Dunaway's biography of Pete Seeger (originally published in 1981) was re-released along with a three part audio/radio series covering Seeger's life and music. According to reviewer Michael Huntsberger, the series also included "recordings of Charles Seeger (Pete's father), Leadbelly, and Woody Guthrie, and interviews with Pete Seeger's contemporaries," including a selection of Seeger's music.[1]

Magazine and journal articles

Bibliography

References

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