Yale in popular culture

Yale University, one of the oldest universities in the United States, has been the subject of numerous aspects of popular culture.

Literature

The narrator of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick, Ishmael, thus explains his education: "A whale-ship was my Yale College and my Harvard."[1] Melville's famous invocation may have been autobiographical,[2] and has been co-opted by other authors to describe unorthodox places of higher learning.[3]

Television

Cinema

Other

Former Yale president Kingman Brewster was forthright and supercilious in his explanation of O'Hara's disappointments in New Haven: he said Yale didn't give him an LL. D. degree "because he asked for it."
In a newspaper column, O'Hara attempted to make light of the matter, writing: "If Yale had given me a degree, I could have joined the Yale Club, where the food is pretty good, the library is ample and restful, the location convenient, and I could go there when I felt like it without sponging off friends. They also have a nice-looking necktie."

In the 2010 video game Red Dead Redemption Dr. Harold Macdougal assists John Marston in tracking down Dutch Vanderline

References

  1. The text of Moby Dick is published online by Project Gutenberg https://www.gutenberg.org/etext/15
  2. Cohen, Hennig; Melville, Herman (1991). Selected poems of Herman Melville. New York: Fordham University Press. ISBN 0-8232-1336-6.
  3. "William Cullen Bryant and Yale". JSTOR: The New England Quarterly: Vol. 3, No. 4 (October , 1930), pp. 706-716. Retrieved 2007-08-15. Cullen Bryant's Harvard College and his Yale, then, were not Melville's whale-ship but Lawyer Howe's office and the 'cool, comfortable lounging-places' of the hamlet of Worthington.
  4. University of Georgia: "The Rise of Intercollegiate Football and Its Portrayal in American Popular Literature." Retrieved April 9, 2007.
  5. The text of Frank Merriwell at Yale is published online by Project Gutenberg https://www.gutenberg.org/files/11115/11115-h/11115-h.htm
  6. PJ Farmer, Red Orc's Rage. NY, Tor,1991,p.282.ISBN 0-312-85036-0.
  7. Forbes Fictional Fifteen: "C. Montgomery Burns." Retrieved April 9, 2007.
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