Irving Howe (born June 11, 1920, New York, N.Y., U.S.—died May 5, 1993, New York City) was an American literary and social critic and educator noted for his probing into the social and political viewpoint in literary criticism.
Howe was educated at the City College of New York and served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He taught at Brandeis and Stanford universities from 1953 until 1963, when he became a professor of English at the City University of New York at Hunter College. He wrote critical works on Sherwood Anderson (1951), William Faulkner (1952), and Thomas Hardy (1967), and he synthesized his political and literary interests in Politics and the Novel (1957) and A World More Attractive: A View of Modern Literature and Politics (1963). He edited the works of George Gissing, Edith Wharton, Leon Trotsky, and George Orwell and from 1953 was editor of the periodical Dissent, which he cofounded. He also edited Favorite Yiddish Stories (1974; with Eliezer Greenberg), The Best of Shalom Aleichem (1979; with Ruth R. Wisse), and The Penguin Book of Modern Yiddish Verse (1987; with Khone Shmeruk and Wisse). Howe’s outlook was influenced by a Jewish background and a lifelong adherence to democratic socialism. His World of Our Fathers (1976) is a sociocultural study of eastern European Jews who emigrated to the United States between 1880 and 1924. Celebrations and Attacks (1979) is a collection of his critical articles, and A Margin of Hope: An Intellectual Autobiography (1982) deals with his involvement with culture and politics.