Pauline Maier passed away Monday.  Her academic title was William Kenan Jr. Professor of History at the  Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It’s a distinguished position,  but hardly does justice to the person who filled it.
I didn’t know Professor Maier was ill. Frankly,  it’s hard to imagine her in a non-effervescent condition. Every other  observation I’ve encountered since Monday affirms the testimony of my own experience: Maier was irrepressibly charming,  ceaselessly brilliant, and blessed with a thunderous, seminar-shaking laugh.
Professor Maier published important books at a stately pace. There were four major monographs, one per decade. The first two changed our understanding of pre-Revolutionary politics;  the third upended standard interpretations of the Declaration of Independence;  the fourth provided the first full account of how the U.S. Constitution was ratified. Each was definitive, the sort of  book that every early American historian needs to read at some point.  Each was also a marvel of original documentary research and nonfiction  storytelling. 
Pauline Maier, the world-renowned scholar and  teacher, also happened to be kind. She didn’t dispense saccharine praise  to the minor figures who clamored for her attention. Instead, she  offered genuine respect for their ideas and lots of  tough, useful criticism. As a graduate student with no prior  acquaintance, I invited her to comment on a conference panel. She agreed  and, when the time came, cheerily directed me to think about many  rudimentary things about which I should have already been  thinking. A few years later, when I asked her to read part of my book  manuscript—a punishingly dry and tedious tome—she agreed again, and then  administered the thorough, friendly thrashing it needed. 
These were the kind of things she did for people  and partly explains why she published four landmark books instead of  eight. Maier treated her fellow historians with the same honest  consideration that she tendered her historical subjects,  remaining ever open to the possibility that the lowly might possess  more insight than their better appointed counterparts (as well as the  possibility that they might be out of their senses). Ratification’s acknowledgements leave no doubt how much she  appreciated the assistance that others offered in turn. She thanked them  not merely in lists of names, or even sentences, but whole paragraphs.  Word count be damned. 
Maier was more irreverent in her work than big-name  professors typically are. She had little use for unsubstantiated  assumptions or pious orthodoxies. She had a keen eye for the workings of  power and a still keener appreciation for the anxieties  of those who confronted it. But Maier never succumbed to the vain  illusion that doing history is the same thing as doing politics. 
Professor Maier loved good argument but always  approached the past with the kind of wonder and excitement that those  burdened by mountains of historiography often find difficult to muster.  Of course she knew the relevant scholarship inside  and out. Maier just didn’t have much use for the things that we  habitually say about those who lived before us. She wanted to know what  they said themselves.
Scholars as celebrated as Pauline Maier are  vulnerable to severe cases of self-absorption. That was not a malady  from which she suffered. In addition to the innumerable kindnesses she  extended to other historians, she was perpetually delighted  by her children, grandchildren, and Rhode Island garden. And she loved  her husband Charlie. 


 
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