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==Fiction writing==
==Fiction writing==


He began his writing career in ''[[Astounding Science Fiction]]'' in 1946. From 1946 through 1962 he produced a spate of science fiction stories, mostly published there. One of the earliest, published May 1946, was ''The Nightmare'', later the lead story in ''A Treasury of Science Fiction'', edited by [[Groff Conklin]]; it argued for a national policy of decentralizing industry to evade nuclear attacks by terrorists.
He began his writing career in ''[[Astounding Science Fiction]]'' in 1946. From 1946 through 1962 he produced a spate of science fiction stories, mostly published there. One of the earliest, published May 1946, was ''The Nightmare'', later the lead story in ''A Treasury of Science Fiction'', edited by [[Groff Conklin]]; it argued for a national policy of decentralizing industry to evade nuclear attacks by terrorists. He also issued the fanzine "Blitherings" in the 1940s.


He attended [[6th World Science Fiction Convention|Torcon I, the 6th]] [[World Science Fiction Convention]] in 1948, and appeared at the 2010 [[SFContario]] [[science fiction convention]].<ref>[http://www.sfcontario.ca/program/program-descriptions.php "Chandler Davis in Fannish Conversation". ''SFContario 2010 Panel Descriptions'']</ref>
He attended [[6th World Science Fiction Convention|Torcon I, the 6th]] [[World Science Fiction Convention]] in 1948, and appeared at the 2010 [[SFContario]] [[science fiction convention]].<ref>[http://www.sfcontario.ca/program/program-descriptions.php "Chandler Davis in Fannish Conversation". ''SFContario 2010 Panel Descriptions'']</ref>

Revision as of 00:57, 14 May 2011

Chandler Davis

Horace Chandler Davis (born August 12, 1926 [1]) is an American-Canadian mathematician, writer, and educator.

He was born in Ithaca, New York, to parents Horace B. Davis and Marian R. Davis. In 1948 he married Natalie Zemon Davis; they have three children. His father was a member of the CPUSA.

He moved to Canada in the early 1960s and began teaching at the University of Toronto. He has lived in Canada longer than he lived in the US.

Mathematics

In 1950 he received a doctorate in mathematics from Harvard University.

His principal research investigations involve linear algebra and operator theory in Hilbert space. Furthermore he has made contributions to numerical analysis, geometry, and algebraic logic. He is one of the eponyms of the Davis–Kahan theorem. In total Chandler Davis has written around eighty research papers in mathematics.

He is currently one of the co-Editors-in-Chief of the Mathematical Intelligencer.

Fiction writing

He began his writing career in Astounding Science Fiction in 1946. From 1946 through 1962 he produced a spate of science fiction stories, mostly published there. One of the earliest, published May 1946, was The Nightmare, later the lead story in A Treasury of Science Fiction, edited by Groff Conklin; it argued for a national policy of decentralizing industry to evade nuclear attacks by terrorists. He also issued the fanzine "Blitherings" in the 1940s.

He attended Torcon I, the 6th World Science Fiction Convention in 1948, and appeared at the 2010 SFContario science fiction convention.[2]

Politics

Davis came from a radical family and has identified himself as a socialist and former member of the Communist Party of America.[3]

Davis—along with two other professors, Mark Nickerson and Clement Markert—refused to cooperate with the House Unamerican Activities Committee and was subsequently dismissed from the University of Michigan. Davis was then sentenced to a six-month prison term where he was able to do some research. A paper from this era has the following acknowledgement:

"Research supported in part by the Federal Prison System. Opinions expressed in this paper are the author's and are not necessarily those of the Bureau of Prisons."[4]

The Federal government released Davis from prison in 1960.[5] After his release, Davis moved to Canada, where he currently resides.

In 1991, the University of Michigan Senate initiated the annual Davis, Markert, Nickerson Lecture on Academic and Intellectual Freedom. Recent speakers have included: Cass Sunstein (2008), Nadine Strossen (2007), Bill Keller (2006), Floyd Abrams (2005), and Noam Chomsky (2004).

Notes

  1. ^ Tuck, Donald H. (1974). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy. Chicago: Advent. p. 129. ISBN 0-911682-20-1.
  2. ^ "Chandler Davis in Fannish Conversation". SFContario 2010 Panel Descriptions
  3. ^ Share1163 Hedges, Chris. "The Origin of America’s Intellectual Vacuum" Truth-Out.org November 15, 2010“It wasn’t a cinch I would be in the Communist Party, but in fact I was, starting in 1943 and then resigning soon after on instructions from the party because I was in the military service. This was part of the coexistence of the Communist Party with Roosevelt and the military. It would not disrupt things during the war. When I got out of the Navy I rejoined the Communist Party, but that lapsed in June of 1953. I never got back in touch with them. At the time I was subpoenaed I was technically an ex-Communist, but I did not feel I had left the movement and in some sense I never did.”
  4. ^ Page 181 in Davis, Chandler (1963). "An extremum problem for plane convex curves". In Victor L. Klee (ed.). Convexity. Proceedings of Symposia in Pure Mathematics. Vol. VII. Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society. pp. 181–185. MR154189. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |1= and |2= (help); Unknown parameter |catalog= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |note= ignored (help). Excerpt in Google Books.
  5. ^ “Shooting Rats in a Barrel”: Did the Red-hunt Win?

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