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Lois Elinoff Rubin

Lois Elinoff Rubin received a Doctor of Arts degree from Carnegie-Mellon University. Thereafter, she worked for thirty-one years at Penn State as professor of English, teaching women’s and multi-cultural literature. During that time, she published a dozen articles on composition and literature and edited the collection “Connections and Collisions: Identities in Contemporary Jewish-American Women’s Writing.” She is now preparing for publication the manuscript “Writing the Life Cycle: The Poetry of Maxine Kumin, Linda Pastan, and Alicia Ostriker.”

Articles by this author

Maxine Kumin

Maxine Kumin is most widely known as a nature poet for her well-crafted descriptions of life on her New Hampshire farm. Yet increasingly her social conscience prompted her also to write “poetry of witness,” protesting torture and other injustices. Her strong Jewish consciousness showed itself in poems about her Jewish ancestors and historic injustices to Jews and in use of sacred Jewish texts to form an environmental message.

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How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Lois Elinoff Rubin." (Viewed on December 25, 2024) <https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/author/rubin-lois>.