Brian Patrick McGuire
Brian Patrick McGuire (born 2 November 1946, Honolulu, Hawaii) is an American Danish professor emeritus of history, lecturer and author.
Family[]
He is the son of sports journalist and publicity director of the San Francisco 49ers, Dan Francis McGuire (1917–83) and high school teacher Phyllis Evelyn Goemmer (1916-2009), the fourth of nine children. He married Ann Kirstin Pedersen (b. 1947) in 1970 and adopted a son from Korea in 1980.
Education and academic career[]
McGuire obtained a B.A. in history and Latin from the University of California at Berkeley in 1968; he had the highest grade point average in his graduating class. He became a Fulbright Scholar at Balliol College, Oxford University, England, where he was supervised by Sir Richard Southern and was granted a D.Phil. in history in 1971. In 1970, he was a tutor in “The Great Books of Western Civilisation” at Saint John’s College, Annapolis, Maryland.
McGuire emigrated to Denmark in 1971 and worked at first for an electronics firm; from 1971-72 he taught high school. He moved on to the Institute for History at Copenhagen University, where he was a post-doctoral fellow from 1972 to 1974.
McGuire became a Danish citizen in 1976. From 1975 to 1996, he was a Lecturer at the Institute for Greek and Latin at Copenhagen University. In 1996 McGuire moved to Roskilde University, where he was a professor in medieval history.[1] He retired in 2012.
McGuire was elected Corresponding Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America in 2011.[2]
Cistercian Studies[]
McGuire has published widely on the history of the Cistercian Order, focusing on the topics of friendship,[3] storytelling[4] and Cistercian monks in Denmark.[5]
Grassroots activity[]
Together with his wife Ann Pedersen he founded the Jyderup Refugee Friends in 1985 and from 1986-95 was spokesperson for the National Association of Danish Refugee Friends. In 1987 he received the P.H. Prize (in memory of architect and cultural critic Poul Henningsen) and in 1993 the annual prize of the Legal Politics Association (Retspolitisk Forening).
Published works[]
He has authored 17 books and edited 8 others.
- Jean Gerson and the Last Medieval Reformation, 2005.
- A Companion to Jean Gerson (editor) 2006.
- Friendship and Community. The Monastic Experience 350-1250, 2010 (new edition with added chapter on recent research).
- A Companion to Bernard of Clairvaux (editor), 2011.
External links[]
- Brian Patrick McGuire's own homepage
- information on Jean Gerson and the Last Medieval Reformation, Penn State University Press
- information on Friendship and Faith: Cistercian Men, Women, and Their Stories, 1100-1250, ashgate.com
References[]
- ^ McGuire, Patrick (2005). "Roskilde i europæisk middelalderperspektiv". Historisk Årbog for Roskilde Amt.
- ^ Szarmach, Paul E. (2011). "Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America, 2011". Speculum. 86 (3): 837–854. doi:10.1017/S0038713411002259.
- ^ Bestul, Thomas H. (1996). "Review of: Brother and Lover. Aelred of Rievaulx". Speculum. 71 (2): 465–467. doi:10.2307/2865463. JSTOR 2865463.
- ^ McGuire, Brian Patrick (2004). "Cistercian Storytelling – A Living Tradition: Surprises in the World of Research". Cistercian Studies Quarterly. 39 (3): 281–309.
- ^ Berman, Constance Hoffman (1984). "Review of: The Cistercians in Denmark. Their Attitudes, Roles, and Functions in Medieval Society". Speculum. 59 (1): 185–187. doi:10.2307/2854140. JSTOR 2854140.
- 21st-century American historians
- 21st-century American male writers
- Academics from Hawaii
- University of California, Berkeley alumni
- Historians of the Catholic Church
- Alumni of the University of Oxford
- 20th-century Danish historians
- Living people
- 1946 births
- Corresponding Fellows of the Medieval Academy of America
- American male non-fiction writers