Robert Kaske
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Robert Kaske

Kaske in c. 1974[note 1]
Born
Robert Earl Kaske
June 1, 1921
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.
DiedAugust 8, 1989 (aged 68)
Ithaca, New York, U.S.
Years active1950–1989TitleProfessorSpouses
Mildred Reinerman
(m. 1944, divorced)
Carol Vonckx
(m. 1958)
Children2Academic backgroundAlma mater
ThesisThe nature and use of figurative expression in Piers Plowman, text B (1950)Academic workDisciplineMedieval literatureInstitutionsCornell University (from 1964)Notable worksMedieval Christian Literary Imagery: A Guide to Interpretation (1988)Military careerService/branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1942–1946RankFirst lieutenantUnit819th Tank Destroyer BattalionBattles/warsWorld War IISignature

Robert Earl Kaske (June 1, 1921 – August 8, 1989) was an American professor of medieval literature. He spent most of his career at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where he was the Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities, and where he founded one of the preeminent medieval studies graduate programs in North America. His published output included lengthy interpretations of Beowulf, and of poems and passages by Dante and Chaucer, and frequently constituted leading studies. Kaske particularly enjoyed solving cruxes, with articles on problematic passages in works such as Pearl, Piers Plowman, the Divine Comedy, The Husband's Message, The Descent into Hell, and Beowulf.
Born in Cincinnati and a straight-A student in high school, Kaske studied liberal arts at Xavier University and joined a variety of student literary organizations there. He was a four-year member of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, and was commissioned a second lieutenant before his 1942 graduation; much of the next four years was spent with the Army in the South Pacific during World War II. While there he read a story about a dusk-to-dawn conversation between two professors and, entranced by the prospect of such intellectual discussions, decided on an academic career. Kaske enrolled in the English literature program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) on the back of the G.I. Bill, received his master's in 1947, and his PhD in 1950.
From 1950 to 1963 Kaske held posts at Washington University in St. Louis, Pennsylvania State University, UNC, and the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, rising from lecturer to full professor along the way; he termed his departure from UNC as the time he "published himself out of paradise".[3] A visiting professorship at Cornell in 1963 became permanent in 1964, and Kaske remained at the university for the rest of his life.
A popular and "Falstaffian" professor,[4] Kaske, along with the medieval studies program he founded, was credited by colleagues with producing the backbone of the discipline's next scholastic generation. His editorial imprint was visible in the works of many, including former students and those who submitted papers to the journal Traditio, which he edited. Over the course of his career he collected what one former student termed "most of the awards and honors possible for a medieval scholar",[5] including fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Council of Learned Societies, and two Guggenheim Fellowships.
Early life and education
Robert Kaske, who went by Bob, was born on June 1, 1921 in Cincinnati, Ohio.[6] His parents were Herman C. Kaske, a postal clerk with the United States Postal Service,[7][8] and Ann Rose Kaske (née Laake).[9] Robert Kaske attended St. Martin's, a Catholic elementary school,[10] and later the boys prep school Elder High School, where he received straight As across four years of English, Latin, and religion, and missed only a single day of school.[11] While there he worked on the school newspaper and the yearbook, won the school's Latin contest, and played baseball;[11] he graduated from the modern English course in 1938.[12] In a yearbook filled with humorous projected jobs for the graduates, such as "dog-catcher" and "pretzel-twister", Kaske was an exception: "Robert Kaske, Editor."[13]
After graduating from high school, Kaske matriculated at Xavier University,[14] where he studied the liberal arts.[15] Kaske was a four-year member of the Heidelberg Club, which described itself as intended "to further interest in the language, culture, history and transitions of the Germanic peoples".[16][17] In his sophomore year Kaske began a three-year stint with the Xavier University News, writing the column "Quid Ergo?"[17][18] Taken from Seneca, the Latin name of the column meant "So what?";[19] Kaske described his topics as "touching on literature, politics, philosophy, economics, history, school affairs, slapstick, slapstick and slapstick", and involving "a schoolboy telling the world what is wrong with it".[20]

Kaske, standing, discussing his paper which won a prize
That year he also joined The Athenaeum and the Mermaid Tavern,[21] an undergraduate literary paper and literary club, respectively.[22][23] He became editor in chief of the former his senior year,[24][note 2] and "Host" of the latter.[15][26][27] Kaske still spoke fondly of the Mermaid Tavern, where students presented their literary works and discussed those of the masters, in his later years.[17][28] As a junior, a year in which he was inducted into the Jesuit academic honorary fraternity Alpha Sigma Nu,[29] he joined the Masque Society, a theatrical group;[30] he played Peter Dolan in a school production of Father Malachy's Miracle that year,[31][32][33][34] and as a senior appeared in another play, Whispering in the Dark.[35][36] Between his junior and senior years, Kaske spent much of the summer writing radio scripts.[37] Also as a senior Kaske cofounded the Philosophy Club, a society for students interested in philosophical research,[38][39] and joined The Traditionists, a literary club which that year devoted their meetings to reading Dante's Inferno.[17][40][note 3] He placed sixth or seventh in an intercollegiate writing contest the same year.[42][43] Kaske graduated magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts on June 3, 1942.[6][44]