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Helen Z. Papanikolas (1917–2004)

Teoksen The Peoples of Utah tekijä

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Associated Works

Utah's History (1978) — Avustaja — 27 kappaletta
Worth Their Salt: Notable but Often Unnoted Women of Utah (1996) — Avustaja — 20 kappaletta
Utah History Encyclopedia (1994) — Avustaja — 17 kappaletta
A World We Thought We Knew: New Readings in Utah History (1995) — Avustaja — 12 kappaletta
Women in Utah History: Paradigm or Paradox (2005) — Avustaja — 8 kappaletta
Utah's Lawless Fringe: Stories of True Crime (2001) — Avustaja — 6 kappaletta
Utah Historical Quarterly Vol. 52, No. 1, Winter 1984 (1984) — Avustaja — 3 kappaletta
Utah Historical Quarterly, Vol. 49, No. 4 (Fall 1981) (1981) — Avustaja — 3 kappaletta

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Yleistieto

Virallinen nimi
Papanikolas, Helen Zeese
Muut nimet
Zeese, Helen
Syntymäaika
1917-06-29
Kuolinaika
2004
Sukupuoli
female
Kansalaisuus
USA
Syntymäpaikka
Cameron, Utah, USA
Kuolinpaikka
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Asuinpaikat
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Cameron, Utah, USA
Koulutus
University of Utah (BA|1939)
East High School, Salt Lake City, Utah
Ammatit
historian
ethnic historian
folklorist
novelist
short story writer
autobiographer
Suhteet
Papanikolas, Nick E. (husband)
Papanikolas, Zeese (son)
Organisaatiot
Utah State Historical Society (Fellow)
Peoples of Utah Institute (founder)
Utah Humanities Council
Palkinnot ja kunnianosoitukset
Fellow of the Utah State Historical Society
Governor's Award in the Humanities (Utah Endowment for the Humanities|1990)
Brotherhood Award, Utah Chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews
Distinguished Alumnus Award (University of Utah)
Doctorate of Humane Letters (University of Utah)
Doctorate of Letters (Southern Utah University) (näytä kaikki 7)
Honorary Associate in Arts (College of Eastern Utah)
Lyhyt elämäkerta
Helen Z. Papanikolas was born Helen Zeese in the mining community of Cameron, Utah, to a Greek immigrant family. When she was a teenager, her parents George and Emily Zeese -- originally Zisimopoulos -- moved the family to Salt Lake City, where they opened a chain of grocery stores. She attended East High School and then enrolled in the University of Utah. She served as editor of Pen, the campus literary magazine, and graduated with a B.A. in 1939. She married Nick E. Papanikolas, with whom she had two children.

In 1950, she wrote an article about Greek communities for the Utah Historical Quarterly. Her subsequent article The Greeks of Carbon County broadened the scope of published Utah history, which previously had focused on settlement by members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons), and contributed to a fuller understanding of Utah’s cultural and ethnic heritage. She continued to publish works on ethnic history in the Utah Historical Quarterly and Western Humanities Review for 50 years. She wrote seven books, including . An Amulet of Greek Earth: Generations of Immigrant Folk Culture (2002) and The Peoples of Utah (1976), and novels and collections of short stories such The Time of the Little Black Bird (1999). She was instrumental in organizing and contributing to an ethnic archive at the Marriott Library, University of Utah. She presented papers at national and international conferences and served as a consultant for television documentaries and other projects.

Her efforts led to the establishment of the Hellenic Cultural Museum in Salt Lake City.

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