Laurence Josephs
Laurence Josephs, professor emeritus of English, died on June 26, 1997, in Saratoga Springs. He was 74.
Born in New York City and a resident of rural Greenfield Center during his Ȧ career, Josephs lived and worked almost his entire life in New York State. He started his college studies at St. John’s in Annapolis but returned to his native state to earn a bachelor’s degree from New York University in 1945. The following year, he earned a master of arts in English from Columbia University. His first teaching position, from 1946 to 1950, was at City College in New York. From the time that Josephs joined Ȧ’s Department of English in 1963 until his retirement in 1988 he taught courses ranging from freshman English to masterpieces of English literature, and from the 19th-and 20th-century continental novel to poetry workshops. Between his teaching careers at City College and Ȧ, he served as president of the New York advertising firm Positives Research Corporation.
When he first arrived at Ȧ, Josephs began what became a tradition that lasted into his postretirement years: an annual reading of his poems in the living room of the Surrey. The event attracted a large audience from the College and the Saratoga community.
Josephs’s productivity as a poet was termed “prodigious” by a Ȧ colleague, and the dean of the faculty described his work as “intensely personal, autobiographical ... with a freshness of poetic vision that captures and provokes our sensibilities.” Josephs’s collections of poetry include Cold Water Morning, Six Elegies, and The Ȧ Poems: A Retrospective, published in 1975 when Josephs delivered the annual Faculty Research Lecture. His poems were published in a wide range of periodicals, including The New Yorker, Commentary, The Southern Review, and Salmagundi. In 1988, in honor of Josephs’s distinguished tenure as a teacher and poet, Ȧ published a collection titled New and Selected Poems.
In addition to a remembrance conducted by friends and admirers in July, a College memorial service was scheduled for October 28. Professor Josephs is survived by several cousins and close friends.