Ann Kirschner
Ann Kirschner is an American entrepreneur, and author of the books Sala's Gift: My Mother's Holocaust Story and Lady at the OK Corral: The True Story of Josephine Marcus Earp. A veteran of five start-ups, Kirschner launched the National Football League's NFL.COM and co-founded Columbia University's interactive knowledge network Fathom.com.
Education and early career
Kirschner's eclectic career includes lecturer, author, and media and marketing pioneer in broadcast television, cable, satellite, and interactive media. A Whiting Fellow in the Humanities, she earned a doctorate in English literature from Princeton University, a master's degree from the University of Virginia, and a bachelor of arts degree from the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Kirschner started out delivering lectures on Victorian literature at Princeton University and working as a freelance writer for CBS, the New York Times, and Chronicle of Higher Education. She assisted the director of English programs at Modern Language Association, and Lola Szladits, the director of the Berg Collection at the New York Public Library. Kirschner has conducted research in doctorates in business, funded by grants from Texas Committee for the Humanities, and the Littauer Foundation to study slave labor camps.
Entrepreneurship
Her start-ups include Request Teletext, the first full-channel cable teletext service;[1] PrimeTime 24 - one of the first home satellite broadcast networks; NFL Sunday Ticket and NFL.com - the first sports league on satellite television and the Internet; and Fathom.com, the first interactive knowledge network affiliated to leading universities, libraries, museums, and research institutions. Fathom's consortium includes Columbia University, London School of Economics, New York Public Library, British Library, British Museum, Victoria and Albert Museum, Cambridge University Press, the Science Museum of the University of Chicago, University of Michigan, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and American Film Institute. She introduced new media to the National Football League (NFL) using emerging technologies, such as interactive television and the Internet, and founded NFL.com superbowl.com and Team NFL on America Online.
Kirschner served as president of Comma Communications - a telecommunications and interactive consulting firm. She co-founded Satellite Broadcast Networks and PrimeTime 24, where she was executive vice president of sales and marketing for both companies. Earlier, she was director of new business development for TelePrompTer/Group W Cable, where she won an ACE award in marketing.
Kirschner was scholar-in-residence at Rollins College and James Madison University. She is a current or former board member of Apollo Group, Topps, onhealth.com, Public Agenda, Jewish Women's Archive, MOUSE, Open University of Israel, the Paul and Daisy Soros Foundation, New York Media Association, Theatreworks USA, Footsteps, the Princeton University English Department Advisory Council, and the Leadership Council of the Princeton University Graduate Schools.
Professional recognition
Kirschner has been honored with the Above and Beyond Award (2014) from City and State Magazine, [2] New York Award from New York Magazine (1999), [3] and as a distinguished alumni of SUNY Buffalo.
Kirschner was a Whiting Fellow in 1977. [4]
Publications
Books
Kirschner is the author of Sala's Gift: My Mother's Holocaust Story, the story of her mother's wartime rescue of hundreds of letters sent to her during the five years she spent in Nazi slave Labor camps. The letters include correspondence between Kirschner's mother and Ala Gertner during the Holocaust. The book has also been published in German as Salas Geheiminis, in Polish, as Listy z Pudełka, in Italian, as Il Dono di Sala, in French, as Le Secret de ma mère, in Czech as Salin Dar, and Chinese (Mandarin). The book was adapted to a play entitled Letters to Sala by Arlene Hutton. [5]
Her second book, Lady at the OK Corral: the True Story of Josephine Marcus Earp was published by HarperCollins in March 2013. It is a biography of Josephine Marcus Earp, Wyatt Earp's common law wife of nearly 50-years. According to the author, Marcus sparked the world's most famous gunfight, buried her husband in a Jewish cemetery after he died in 1929, and subsequently shaped the legend of Wyatt Earp and the Wild West. In 2013, Kirschner's book was selected as an Editor's Choice by the New York Times Sunday Book Review[6] and Kirschner was honored as best new Western author by True West Magazine.[7]
Other publications
- The Chronicle of Higher Education:
- The Chronicle of Higher Education: Adventures in the Land of Wikipedia
- The Chronicle of Higher Education: Reading Dickens Four Ways
- The Chronicle of Higher Education: My iPad Day
- The Baltimore Sun: Study Abroad to Get Ahead in the U.S. (Commentary)
References
- ↑ "Communiques". InfoWorld. 1984-10-01. Retrieved 2011-02-16.
- ↑ "Above and Beyond: Honoring Women of Public and Civic Mind". City & State. City & State. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
- ↑ Steele, Michael. "The 1999 New York Awards: Ann Kirschner, Computer Literate". New York Magazine. Retrieved 16 June 2014.
- ↑ "Whiting Foundation Dissertation Fellowships". Mrs. Giles Whiting Foundation. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
- ↑ Letters to Sala. Dramatists Play Service, Inc.
- ↑ The New York Times (June 7, 2013). "Editors' Choice". Retrieved 1 July 2014.
- ↑ Rosebrook, J. Stuart. "The Best of Western Books for 2014". True West. True West Magazine. Retrieved 1 July 2014.
External links
- Lady at the OK Corral website
- Ann Kirschner's website
- Ann Kirschner's LinkedIn profile
- Ann Kirschner on girlgeeks.org
- Ann Kirschner on The Technology Source
- Works by or about Ann Kirschner in libraries (WorldCat catalog)