Louise Cowan | |
Birth Name: | Mary Louise Shillingburg |
Birth Date: | 22 December 1916 |
Death Place: | Dallas, Texas, U.S. |
Spouse: | Donald Cowan |
Awards: | Frankel Prize (1991) |
Mary Louise Cowan (Shillingburg; December 22, 1916 – November 16, 2015) was an American critic and teacher, and wife of the physicist and University of Dallas president Donald Cowan. She taught at Texas Christian University and Thomas More College of Liberal Arts. Cowan lived in Dallas, where she taught at both at the University of Dallas and the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture. As "one of the most famous faculty members"[1] at UD, she was a prominent figure in Dallas society, a mentor and friend to many Dallas dignitaries, and one of the city's leading intellectuals.
A doctoral student of Donald Davidson at Vanderbilt University, she became a friend to members of the Southern Agrarians, and was considered to be the critical heir to their legacy.[2]
She and her husband, Donald Cowan, worked for twenty years to establish the core curriculum at UD. They sought to counter relativism and mediocrity by establishing "anti-egalitarian" models based on the classics of Western civilization. They replaced composition courses and textbooks with ancient classics after arriving in 1959. In the 1960s, Louise Cowan conceptualized and established a graduate program in politics and literature; she recruited the conservative Willmoore Kendall, who had previously aroused controversy for his teaching at Yale University. Although successful and popular for decades, conflicts with the Board of Managers led to a protracted leave of absence for both, beginning in 1977. The Cowans resigned in the summer of 1980 in protest over new and "utilitarian" administrative policies, but returned to campus in 1994.[3]
Cowan was influential in fostering the liberal arts and helping shape core curricula for several liberal arts universities.[4] UD's curriculum in "literary tradtion" was her single-handed design. Comic theory was one of her lifelong interests.[5] In studies of the American South, she was an influential critic of Faulkner, the Fugitive Group, and other Southern writers.[6]
In “A Nation at Risk,” Cowan's 1983 report for the Commission on Excellence in Education, she appraised in withering terms what she believed to be the deficiencies of public education. She compared the “mediocre educational performance” in the United States to an “an act of war” on America's well-being as a society.
In 1991, she was a recipient of the Frankel Prize.[7] [8] As he held the commendatory comments about Cowan, President George Bush said "She ranks among the great builders of education in Texas." Sewanee University awarded her an honorary doctorate in 2014.[9]
She died November 16, 2015, at the age of 98.[10]