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UCLA historian Alexander Saxton Dies at 93

Written By Unknown on Saturday 8 September 2012 | 22:32


When Alexander Saxton left Harvard in 1939, his academic advisor invites you to consult a psychiatrist. His parents were shocked. But Saxton desire to establish the conditions of his life would take him away from the ivy-covered halls are suffocating.

To appease his parents, he finished his university studies at the University of Chicago. Then the son of two professional has become a factory worker and union, worked on the railroad roundhouses, steel, shipbuilding and construction. He joined the Communist Party and wrote well-regarded 1940 the proletarian literature.

In 1950, his literary aspirations were annulled by Saxton McCarthyism and he changed course again, he earned a Ph.D. in History from the University of California at Berkeley and became a full professor at UCLA, shaken on Ethnic Studies and gained importance as the author of "The Indispensable Enemy," considered a classic in the study of race in America.

He continued to write well about retirement, the publication of two important books on their 70 and 80 years, including "The Rise and Fall of the White Republic" (1990), a historical study of white racism.

In declining health made it impossible Saxton write, walk and live independently, scholar and activist in a decision to end life altering: August 20, died of a self-inflicted wound of firearm home in Lone Pine, Calif., said his daughter, Catherine Steele. I 'was 93.

Steele said he regretted the decision of his father, but understand his reasons. "He spent his life in a way that supports their belief that as human beings we make decisions, choices and we are responsible for the consequences," he said.

At UCLA, where he taught from 1968-1990 Saxton, options include conducting heated battles for racial and ethnic diversity in the faculty and helped to create the nation's first Asian American studies program. He also contributed to provocative scholarship, one of the most cited journal in 1975 that his "blackface minstrelsy and the ideology of Jackson," which connects the minstrel shows of 1800, with the last racist ideology.

"Very few historians of this generation have combined a deep embrace of American literature, history, popular culture and politics," Gary B. Nash, a friend and professor emeritus of history, said the unusual trajectory of Saxton.

Born July 16, 1919, in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, Saxton grew up in New York, the second of two children of Eugene Saxton, editor in chief of Harper & Brothers, and his wife, Martha, a professor of literature at the private school. They grew up in what historian Robert W. Rydell is described in a biographical essay as a house "of the middle class, a little" Bohemian ", where authors known as Aldous Huxley and Thornton Wilder were frequent guests.

As a child during the Depression, never hungry, but Saxton has seen many who did. Seeing the suffering sparked the desire to "know what life was like in the other America - the real America, as I thought, the U.S. industry - and write about their lives," he said in an essay published in Amerasia Journal in 2000.

When he came to Chicago in 1940 to work six days a week at 25 cents an hour repairing locomotives. During World War II he served in the Merchant Navy ammunition carried across the Pacific and North Atlantic.

He married Gertrude Wright, a classmate at the University of Chicago in 1941. After the war, he moved her and her two daughters in Northern California, where he worked as a carpenter building during their participation in leftist causes and writing novels, including the semi- autobiographical "Grand Crossing" (1943) and "The Great Midland" (1948).

His wife died about 10 years ago, and her daughter Christine died in 1990. In addition to Steele, a grandson survive him and a granddaughter.

In 1951, Saxton was called before the House Committee on Un-American Activities, which has cost him to teach and write scripts. His third novel, "Bright Web in the Darkness" was published in 1958, but had no money. In 1959 he left the Communist Party, but he was nasty about it.

After obtaining his doctorate in 1967 he directed his thesis on "The Indispensable Enemy," a historical examination of ancient Chinese Century 19 in California, which showed how racism is essential for industrialization of the United States

In his later years Saxton participated regularly in Manzanar Pilgrimage, an annual ritual at the Manzanar National Historic Site near Lone Pine to commemorate the World War II internment of Japanese Americans.

"He was just an academic," said Chairman of the Manzanar Committee Bruce Embrey. "There was a tension between politics for him the real world and write about it. Was committed for life."

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