Awards & Winners

Douglass Parker

Date of Birth 27-May-1927
Place of Birth La Porte
(LaPorte County, Indiana, United States of America)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as Douglass Stott Parker, Douglass Stott Parker, Sr.
Profession Translator, Teacher
Douglass Stott Parker, Sr. was an American classicist, academic, and translator. Born in LaPorte, Indiana, the son of Cyril Rodney Parker and Isobel Parker, Douglass received an undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan and a doctorate from Princeton University. He was also a Fellow at the Center for Hellenic Studies in 1961-1962, its inaugural year, and a Guggenheim Scholar. His translation of The Congresswomen was among the Finalists for The National Book Award in the category of Translation in 1968. Parker is known for his work in Greek and Roman comedy, particularly his translations of Aristophanes’ plays Lysistrata, The Wasps and The Congresswomen. He is also known for his translations of Terence’s The Eunuch, and Plautus' The Brothers Menaechmus, as well as other classical and literary works. His translations of plays have been republished multiple times, and have been performed around the world. Lysistrata has had over two hundred productions. Parker was Professor of Classics at the University of Texas at Austin for forty years, recruited there in 1967 by William Arrowsmith. Earlier he had been a professor at Yale and at the University of California, Riverside. He taught classes in Greek and Latin languages and literature, as well as a discipline of his own creation, parageography—the study of imaginary worlds. His courses crossed traditional disciplinary boundaries and were popular; he was known at the University of Texas for his breadth of knowledge and teaching, and won graduate and undergraduate teaching awards. In 2011 the Journal Didaskalia dedicated its new endeavors to "Douglass Parker, who embodied the interplay between scholarship and practice, between an acute understanding of the ancient world and a keen sense of modern audience." Didaskalia subsequently published a pair of wide-ranging interviews from 1981 and 1982.

Awards by Douglass Parker

Check all the awards nominated and won by Douglass Parker.

1968


Nominations 1968 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
National Book Award for Translation The Congresswomen