WILLIAM P. KELLY
President
The Graduate Center
The City University of New York
William P. Kelly was appointed president of the Graduate Center
of the City University of New York on July 1, 2005. From 1998
through June 2005, he served as the Graduate Center’s
provost and senior vice president, a tenure that was marked
by the recruitment of a remarkable cadre of internationally
renowned scholars to the school’s faculty.
A distinguished American literature scholar and an expert
on the works of James Fenimore Cooper, Dr. Kelly’s books
include Plotting America’s Past: Fenimore Cooper and
the Leatherstocking Tales (Southern Illinois University
Press), and a work in progress, Exhibiting Nature: Scientific
Culture and The American Museum of Natural History. His
numerous articles and reviews have appeared in a broad range
of publications including the New York Times Book Review, The
American Scholar, and the Journal of Western History, and
he is the editor of the Random House edition of The Selected
Works of Washington Irving and the Oxford University Press
edition of The Pathfinder.
Dr. Kelly graduated summa cum laude from Princeton
University in 1971, where he won the David Bowers Prize in
American Studies. He was named Outstanding Graduate Student
in English at Indiana University, where he received his Ph.D.
in 1976. Dr. Kelly also holds a diploma in intellectual history
from Cambridge University and in 1980 received a Fulbright
Fellowship to France, where he subsequently became visiting
professor at the University of Paris. He was also executive
director of the CUNY/Paris Exchange Program and, in 2003, was
named Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Palmes Academiques by
the French Ministry of Education in recognition of his contributions
to Franco-American educational and cultural relations.
On the faculty of CUNY’s Queens College from 1976
to 1998, he was named Queens College’s Golden Key Honor
Society Teacher of the Year in 1994. He was appointed concurrently
to the faculty of the Graduate Center’s Ph.D. Program
in English in 1986 and served as the program’s executive
officer from 1996 to 1998.
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