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Alvin and Frankie Rubinstein travel diaries and correspondence, 1920-2002 ( bulk: 1958-2000).

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Kislak Center for Special Collections - Manuscripts Ms. Coll. 1480
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Format:
Other
Author/Creator:
Rubinstein, Alvin Zachary, 1927-2001, creator.
Contributor:
Rubinstein, Frankie, 1918-2019, creator.
Friends of the Library Endowment Fund.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Political science.
Women travelers.
Voyages and travels.
Europe--Description and travel--20th century.
Europe.
India--Description and travel--20th century.
India.
Yugoslavia.
Russia.
Genre:
Correspondence.
Diaries.
Photographs.
Penn Provenance:
Sold by Matthew Van Saun, 2021.
Physical Description:
3 boxes (1.1 linear feet)
Arrangement:
Organized into 2 series: I. Travel diaries and correspondence and II. Frankie Rubinstein personal papers and photographs.
Place of Publication:
1920-2002 (
Biography/History:
Alvin Zachary Rubinstein (1927-2001) was a political scientist and international relations scholar, who was best known for his studies of the foreign relations of the former Soviet Union and Russia. It is likely that he was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1927 to Russian immigrant parents, Max and Sylvia Rubinstein. He was educated at New York State Maritime Academy and went on to earn his B.B.A. from the City College of New York in 1949; and his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1950 and 1954 respectively. A lifelong career in teaching began in 1956 at Harvard's Russian Research Center and then as a lecturer at City College of New York in 1957. Rubinstein joined Penn's political science department in September of 1957 as a lecturer, which soon led him to becoming an assistant professor in 1959, and associate professor in 1961. Promotion to full professor of political science occurred in 1966, a position he held until his death. At Penn, he served as director of The Anspach Institute for Diplomacy and Foreign Affairs from 1968 to 1970, and as the chair of the Graduate Program in International Relations from 1966 through 1970. Over the course of a very active career, Rubinstein was appointed as Speaker for the U.S. Information Agency (U.S.I.A.) in Hungary, The Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, France, South Korea, Pakistan and India. He was a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, as well as visiting fellow at Clare Hall, Cambridge University (1974-1975), and a Senior Associate at St. Anthony's College, Oxford University (1985). He received awards from the Ford, Rockefeller, Guggenheim, and Earhart foundations, the National Science Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, and the American Philosophical Society. Rubinstein was the author of numerous articles on political science and over 20 books, including Moscow's third world strategy, which was awarded the Marshall Shulman Prize by the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies. Rubinstein died on December 18, 2001 at age 74, following a stroke that occurred at a retirement luncheon being held for him on December 6. He was survived by his wife, Frankie, and sister Sydelle. Frankie Rubinstein was an English teacher, having taught at Philadelphia's Overbrook High School from approximately 1951 to 1955 and at the Philadelphia High School for Girls from about 1958 to 1971. She was also a published author in the area of Shakespeare studies, with articles appearing in Shakespeare quarterly and Renaissance studies, among other journals. She also produced a monograph, A dictionary of Shakespeare's sexual puns and their significance, published in 1984. She was born Frankie Grossman in 1918, probably in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Frankie's parents, who divorced when she was a child, were Harry Grossman and Sadye Bloom. A 1930 census record shows an 11-year-old Frankie Grossman living on North 41st Street in Philadelphia, with her mother, maternal grandmother, Elizabeth Bloom, and step-father, George Kimmelman. Kimmelman was an English teacher at South Philadelphia High School, which may have influenced Frankie's lifelong interest in literature. Frankie was married and amicably divorced from Morton Herskowitz prior to meeting Alvin Rubinstein in 1958. Frankie's journal shows that she and Alvin were married and traveling together by 1960.
Summary:
This collection consists of correspondence, journals, diaries, photographs, newspaper clippings, and ephemera. The bulk of this material documents the extensive travels of Alvin and Frankie Rubinstein to countries in Europe, the Middle East, and the former Soviet Union, from 1960 to 2000. The most prominent voice in the collection is Frankie Rubinstein's, who wrote most of the correspondence. However, her husband Alvin did write some letters and the collection also includes several journals in which he took extensive notes on trips to Yugoslavia and Moscow in the 1960s. Correspondence is mostly addressed to family and friends, with a familiar and candid tone, and frequently provides rich descriptions and observations of their experiences. The range of topics is extensive, including but not limited to, summaries of dinner conversations with dignitaries, descriptions of sights seen, opinions of people met, and personal chit-chat between people who knew each other well. A large portion of the correspondence was addressed to George and Sadie Kimmelman. Because their travels were motivated chiefly by Alvin Rubinstein's research and academic work as a political scientist, the experiences that Frankie commented on provide a complimentary perspective to his work, as well as a valuable point of view of her own. Their correspondence also offers a view into countries that few American citizens traveled to at the time. The Frankie Rubinstein personal papers and photographs series contains personal writings, photographs, and ephemera, most of which was created before her relationship with Alvin Rubinstein. A notable exception are a diary and some notes from 1958 to 1959 that reveal details and impressions of her courtship with Alvin. Researchers interested in political science, travel diaries and accounts, and an American woman's perspective and experiences from this time period should find this collection useful. While this collection does speak to Alvin Rubinstein's research and scholarship, none of the material directly relates to his academic work at Penn.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Friends of the Library Endowment Fund.
OCLC:
1501129869

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