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Cynthia Stokes Brown (March 20, 1938 – October 15, 2017) was an American educator and historian.
She earned her BA atDuke University in history (summa cum laude) and her M.A.T. and Ph.D. fromJohns Hopkins University in the history of education with fellowships from the American Association of University Women and the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. After teaching tenth-grade world history for two years and living innortheast Brazil for two years with thePeace Corps, Brown directed the single-subject credential program atDominican University of California atSan Rafael from 1982 to 1992. She taught full-time in both the history and education departments until 2001, when she retired from full-time teaching to writeBig History: From the Big Bang to the Present. Using the termBig History, coined byDavid Christian atMacquarie University inSydney, Australia, Brown told the whole story from theBig Bang to the present in simple, non-academic language to convey our common humanity and our connection to every other part of the natural world. Teaching part-time after 2001, Brown pioneered the teaching ofBig History atDominican University of California, where it is now a required course for every incoming freshman. She served as a founding board member of the International Big History Association (IBHA). Brown died of pancreatic cancer on October 15, 2017, at her home Berkeley, California, surrounded by family.
Brown was anAmerican Book Award recipient in 1987 forReady From Within: Septima Clark and the Civil Rights Movement.[1][2]