Description

Book Synopsis
Judith Friedlander reconstructs the history of the New School in the context of ongoing debates over academic freedom, intellectual dissidents, and democratic education. She tells a dramatic story of academic, political, and financial struggle through brief sketches of New School administrators, faculty members, trustees, and students.

Trade Review
In this fascinating and compellingly readable narrative, Judith Friedlander tells the multilayered story of an institution founded in moral passion and dedicated to the nurture of intellectual life in its most humane and democratic forms. Full of vivid personalities and international drama, A Light in Dark Times is an engrossing history of an exceptional university, an inspiring account of free thought rescued from the twentieth century’s most repressive regimes—and a book that speaks eloquently to our own turbulent times. -- Eva Hoffman, author of Exit Into History: A Journey Through the New Eastern Europe and Appassionata
Friedlander's book expertly reveals how the New School emerged and gracefully interlaces the institutional story with the lives of the individuals who fostered the school’s development. The work raises questions about the defense of academic freedom; the complexities of rescuing refugees from political and religious persecution; and the tensions of an institution that, on the one hand, adhered to principles of free intellectual exchanges and, on the other, relied on its faculty to recruit colleagues who promoted discordant issues and methods. -- Alice Kessler-Harris, R. Gordon Hoxie Professor Emerita of American History, Columbia University
Judith Friedlander’s A Light in Dark Times is a major, well-researched work which explores the emergence, evolution, and contribution of the New School as a catalyst of ideas. The book highlights the university’s role in educating generations of students, as well as serving as a home for noted scholars and intellectuals. Friedlander’s work does justice to the New School’s legacy and reminds us that throughout history ideas and ideals matter and that democracy and excellence are not mutually exclusive. This is a must-read. -- Vartan Gregorian, former president, Carnegie Corporation of New York
The New School bloomed over the course of the twentieth century into a resonant, influential cultural institution for both the city and the country, gathering for its faculty distinguished scholars, writers, and artists from all over the world. Judith Friedlander has written a compelling account of its origins, its struggles, its triumphs, and particularly the vital role it played in attracting German émigré professors seeking to escape the Nazis. A rich and textured history. -- Michael Rosenthal, author of Nicholas Miraculous: The Amazing Career of the Redoubtable Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler
Judith Friedlander’s history of the New School is at once deeply researched and a delight to read. She traces the New School’s growth and captures the intellectual, scholarly, and political motivations of the individuals who shaped it: the founders, John Dewey and Charles Beard, who saw higher education as linked to public life; its longtime president Alvin Johnson, who rescued scholars from Europe in the Nazi era; and Jonathan Fanton, who brought Eastern European scholars to the New School as communism collapsed. The book is also a story of institutional integrity and the advancement of scholarship and democracy. Her book, remarkable in its range and the liveliness of its prose, offers an outstanding history of a special institution. -- Thomas Bender, University Professor of the Humanities at New York University (emeritus)
Judith Friedlander’s engaging intellectual history of the New School. . . . [offers] us a portrait of how an institution takes shape, a vision for thinking about how universities can fail, and some ideas about how they might be renewed amid the chaos of our current moment. This work will surely be of interest to anyone who is committed to academic freedom and democratic education. -- Samantha Hill * Times Higher Education *
Formidable in its endeavor and broad in its scope and marches with purpose. * International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society *
[Friedlander] recounts the whole saga with well-chosen excerpts....punctuated by occasional anecdotes that convey the human side of some of the characters in this remarkable tale. * Academe *
[An] excellent institutional history. * Gotham Blog *

Table of Contents
Prologue: In the Archives
Part I: A School of Social Research
1. The First Founding Moment
2. Alvin Johnson and The New Republic
3. Columbia University
4. The Idea Takes Shape
5. The New School Opens
6. Alvin Johnson Takes Over
Part II: The Universities in Exile
7. The Founding of the German University in Exile
8. The University in Exile Opens
9. Ring the Alarm
10. Ecole Libre des Hautes Etudes
Part III: The Middle Years
11. Alvin Johnson Retires
12. The Red Scare
13. The Orozco Mural
14. “The New School Really Isn’t News Any Longer”
15. “Save the School”
Part IV: “Between Past and Future”
16. The “New” New School
17. Three Doctoral Programs at Risk
Part V: Renewing the Legacy
18. Rebuilding the Graduate Faculty
19. Rekindling the Spirit
Epilogue: Extending the Legacy
Appendix A: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 6
Appendix B: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 7
Appendix C: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 9
Appendix D: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 18
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

A Light in Dark Times The New School for Social

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    A Hardback by Judith Friedlander

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      View other formats and editions of A Light in Dark Times The New School for Social by Judith Friedlander

      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 05/02/2019
      ISBN13: 9780231180184, 978-0231180184
      ISBN10: 0231180187

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Judith Friedlander reconstructs the history of the New School in the context of ongoing debates over academic freedom, intellectual dissidents, and democratic education. She tells a dramatic story of academic, political, and financial struggle through brief sketches of New School administrators, faculty members, trustees, and students.

      Trade Review
      In this fascinating and compellingly readable narrative, Judith Friedlander tells the multilayered story of an institution founded in moral passion and dedicated to the nurture of intellectual life in its most humane and democratic forms. Full of vivid personalities and international drama, A Light in Dark Times is an engrossing history of an exceptional university, an inspiring account of free thought rescued from the twentieth century’s most repressive regimes—and a book that speaks eloquently to our own turbulent times. -- Eva Hoffman, author of Exit Into History: A Journey Through the New Eastern Europe and Appassionata
      Friedlander's book expertly reveals how the New School emerged and gracefully interlaces the institutional story with the lives of the individuals who fostered the school’s development. The work raises questions about the defense of academic freedom; the complexities of rescuing refugees from political and religious persecution; and the tensions of an institution that, on the one hand, adhered to principles of free intellectual exchanges and, on the other, relied on its faculty to recruit colleagues who promoted discordant issues and methods. -- Alice Kessler-Harris, R. Gordon Hoxie Professor Emerita of American History, Columbia University
      Judith Friedlander’s A Light in Dark Times is a major, well-researched work which explores the emergence, evolution, and contribution of the New School as a catalyst of ideas. The book highlights the university’s role in educating generations of students, as well as serving as a home for noted scholars and intellectuals. Friedlander’s work does justice to the New School’s legacy and reminds us that throughout history ideas and ideals matter and that democracy and excellence are not mutually exclusive. This is a must-read. -- Vartan Gregorian, former president, Carnegie Corporation of New York
      The New School bloomed over the course of the twentieth century into a resonant, influential cultural institution for both the city and the country, gathering for its faculty distinguished scholars, writers, and artists from all over the world. Judith Friedlander has written a compelling account of its origins, its struggles, its triumphs, and particularly the vital role it played in attracting German émigré professors seeking to escape the Nazis. A rich and textured history. -- Michael Rosenthal, author of Nicholas Miraculous: The Amazing Career of the Redoubtable Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler
      Judith Friedlander’s history of the New School is at once deeply researched and a delight to read. She traces the New School’s growth and captures the intellectual, scholarly, and political motivations of the individuals who shaped it: the founders, John Dewey and Charles Beard, who saw higher education as linked to public life; its longtime president Alvin Johnson, who rescued scholars from Europe in the Nazi era; and Jonathan Fanton, who brought Eastern European scholars to the New School as communism collapsed. The book is also a story of institutional integrity and the advancement of scholarship and democracy. Her book, remarkable in its range and the liveliness of its prose, offers an outstanding history of a special institution. -- Thomas Bender, University Professor of the Humanities at New York University (emeritus)
      Judith Friedlander’s engaging intellectual history of the New School. . . . [offers] us a portrait of how an institution takes shape, a vision for thinking about how universities can fail, and some ideas about how they might be renewed amid the chaos of our current moment. This work will surely be of interest to anyone who is committed to academic freedom and democratic education. -- Samantha Hill * Times Higher Education *
      Formidable in its endeavor and broad in its scope and marches with purpose. * International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society *
      [Friedlander] recounts the whole saga with well-chosen excerpts....punctuated by occasional anecdotes that convey the human side of some of the characters in this remarkable tale. * Academe *
      [An] excellent institutional history. * Gotham Blog *

      Table of Contents
      Prologue: In the Archives
      Part I: A School of Social Research
      1. The First Founding Moment
      2. Alvin Johnson and The New Republic
      3. Columbia University
      4. The Idea Takes Shape
      5. The New School Opens
      6. Alvin Johnson Takes Over
      Part II: The Universities in Exile
      7. The Founding of the German University in Exile
      8. The University in Exile Opens
      9. Ring the Alarm
      10. Ecole Libre des Hautes Etudes
      Part III: The Middle Years
      11. Alvin Johnson Retires
      12. The Red Scare
      13. The Orozco Mural
      14. “The New School Really Isn’t News Any Longer”
      15. “Save the School”
      Part IV: “Between Past and Future”
      16. The “New” New School
      17. Three Doctoral Programs at Risk
      Part V: Renewing the Legacy
      18. Rebuilding the Graduate Faculty
      19. Rekindling the Spirit
      Epilogue: Extending the Legacy
      Appendix A: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 6
      Appendix B: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 7
      Appendix C: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 9
      Appendix D: Extended Notes and Commentary for Chapter 18
      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      Index

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