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Alfred de Grazia

Alfred de Grazia (December 29, 1919 – July 13, 2014), born in Chicago, Illinois, was a political scientist and author. He developed techniques of computer-based social network analysis in the 1950s,[1] developed new ideas about personal digital archives in the 1970s,[2] and defended the catastrophism thesis of Immanuel Velikovsky.

Alfred de Grazia in Naxos, Greece, August 2003

Origins edit

His father, Joseph Alfred de Grazia, was born in Licodia, province of Catania, in Sicily and was politically active in a troubled period in the history of the island. He emigrated to the United States at the age of twenty, after having hit the mayor of Licodia with his clarinet during a political scuffle.[3] He became a bandmaster, music teacher, in and out of the WPA[4] and a musical union leader[5] in Chicago. In 1916, he married Chicago-born Katherine Lupo Cardinale whose parents had emigrated from Sicily. Her brother was the boxer Charles Kid Lucca, Canadian champion welter-weight champion from 1910 to 1914.[6] They had three more sons, Sebastian de Grazia, winner of the Pulitzer Prize,[7] Edward de Grazia, a prominent first amendment lawyer and co-founder of Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University,[8] and Victor de Grazia who was Deputy-Governor of the State of Illinois from 1973 to 1977.[9][10]

Education edit

De Grazia attended the University of Chicago, receiving an A.B. there in 1939, attended law school at Columbia University from 1940 to 1941, and in 1948 earned a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Chicago.[11] His thesis was published in 1951 as Public and Republic: Political Representation in America. When reviewed by The New York Times it was called "A thoroughgoing examination of the meaning of representation, the fundamental element in any definition of republic."[12] and August Heckscher in the New York Herald Tribune said it was "A sober scholarly volume, authoritative in its field."[13] Charles E. Merriam, founder of the behavioristic approach in political science, wrote: "All scholars in the field of political science and particularly those in the area of representation are under lasting obligation to the writer of this volume for a learned and helpful treatment of one of the major problems of our times. The book will enrich the literature on this very important subject."[14]

Military activity edit

 
French Medal of Honor Recipient Alfred de Grazia helping celebrate World War II Victory Day in France

In World War II, de Grazia served in the United States Army, rising from private to captain. He specialized in mechanized warfare, intelligence and psychological warfare. He received training in this then new field in Washington D.C. and the newly established Camp Ritchie in Maryland.[15][16] He served with the 3rd, 5th and 7th Armies and as a liaison officer with the British 8th Army. He took part in six campaigns, from North Africa to Italy (Battle of Monte Cassino) to France and Germany.[17]

De Grazia co-authored a report on psychological warfare for the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force.[18] By the end of the war, he was Commanding Officer of the Psychological Warfare Propaganda Team attached to the headquarters of the 7th Army.[15] With his fiancée and later wife, wife Jill deGrazia (née Bertha Oppenheim), he carried on an extensive wartime correspondence of over 2,000 lengthy letters, published on the web under the title "Letters of Love and War".[19][20] Scott Turow cites the letters as being among the sources for his 2005 novel Ordinary Heroes[21]

De Grazia wrote manuals of psychological warfare for the CIA for the Korean War and organized and investigated psychological operations for the United States Department of Defense during the Vietnam War. His reports on psychological operations, now largely declassified, include Target Analysis and Media in Propaganda to Audiences Abroad (1952),[22] Elites Analysis (1955), as well as Psychological Operations in Vietnam (1968). On October 31, 2014, he was posthumously designated a Distinguished Member of the Regiment of Psychological Operations of the Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.[15]

For his service in World War II, de Grazia earned the Bronze Star and the EAME Campaign Medal, as well as the Croix de Guerre from France.[citation needed] On December 31, 2013, he was awarded the highest French distinction, being made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor by decree of President François Hollande.[23] He is also a posthumous recipient of the Robert A. McClure Medal for Exemplary Service in Psychological Operations.

Academic career edit

De Grazia was an assistant professor of political science at the University of Minnesota from 1948 to 1950 before joining the political science faculty of Brown University as an associate professor.[11] In 1952, he was appointed director of the Committee for Research in the Social Sciences at Stanford University, supported by a Ford Foundation grant. He wrote the textbook The Elements of Political Science in two volumes: Political Behavior and Political Organization (1952).[24] One reviewer of it wrote: "Mr. De Grazia has undertaken to dissect the whole body of political science... He achieves his purpose with unfailing clarity, and his readers will learn from him the range, the goals, and the techniques of the study of politics ..."[25]

In 1955, he failed to receive academic tenure at Stanford after conducting a study of "the origins and present restrictions on the political activities of workers" for a foundation. He left the institution in 1957.[26] From 1959 to 1983, he was a tenured professor of government and social theory at New York University.[11]

In 1957 de Grazia founded PROD: Political Research: Organization and Design, which was described as "probably...the authentic spokesman for the newest currents among the avant-garde of political behavior".[27] It was later renamed The American Behavioral Scientist, an academic journal devoted to the Chicago school of behaviorist sociology. In 1965, he began the Universal Reference System, the first computerized reference system in the social sciences.[28]

De Grazia was a staunch supporter of the power of Congress against the encroachments of the presidency, which he called the "Executive Force"[29][30] According to Raymond Tatalovich and Steven Schier:

The thesis developed by Alfred de Grazia, coming in 1965 at the high-water mark of the Great Society, is that "the executive of the national government represents and leads the national movement towards a society of order. Congress ... expresses the national urge to liberty. ... Challenging the liberalism of academia, de Grazia doubts that the president can be the tribune of the people, and to call him the "custodian of the public interest or of the national interest is presumptuous," because he is custodian of a public interest, his own, and that may be popular or not, shared by Congress or not. When de Grazia speaks of the "problem of dictatorship," he is citing the growth of the executive apparatus. That is to say, "there is a dictator only because the bureaucratic state must have a face."

The civil service is viewed by de Grazia as "the great engine of the Executive Force," not Congress, because "Congress ... is an institution deeply imbedded in federalism, the free enterprise system, and decentralization of society and politics. In represents basically these values."

...

Concerning both the "ends" and the "means" of government, Alfred de Grazia is a conservative. ... He is not troubled ... about "oligarchy and seniority" wielding disproportionate influence within the legislative process, because Congress operates principally through "the decision system of successive majorities." By that, de Grazia means that different majorities rule in subcommittees, committees, and the floor of each house of Congress.[31]

The American Enterprise Institute published several of his books on the subject, including Congress and the Presidency: their Role in Modern Times, a debate with Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., who defended the case for a strong presidency.[32]

Support for Velikovsky edit

 
de Grazia (right) and Immanuel Velikovsky in 1964

De Grazia became interested in Immanuel Velikovsky's catastrophist theories. Following considerable criticism of Velikovsky's claims by the scientific community, de Grazia dedicated the entire September 1963 issue of American Behavioral Scientist to the issue.[33][34] He also self-published two books on it, The Velikovsky Affair: The Warfare of Science and Scientism and Cosmic Heretics: A Personal History of Attempts to Establish and Resist Theories of Quantavolution and Catastrophe in the Natural and Human Sciences.

Michael Polanyi stated:

A number of sociologists actually supported the popular view against the scientists. They came out first in The American Behavioral Scientist (September, 1963) and then again in a book (de Grazia 1966), which angrily attacked the whole community of natural scientists for paying no attention to Velikovsky. For my part I believe that the scientists were quite right in refusing to pay serious attention to Velikovsky's writings, and that the sociologists' attack on them was totally unfounded.[33]

In a review of the second book, Henry Bauer suggests that de Grazia's efforts may be responsible for Velikovsky's continuing notability.[35]

In both books de Grazia subscribes to the thesis that, in the words of Henry Bauer, "the affair revealed something seriously rotten in the state of science". The review however suggests that the rejection came about ...

because Velikovsky wanted instant recognition as the authority on science when he had no standing in any science, no qualifications, had not paid his dues through recognized achievements and presented his ideas in the form of a popularly published book rather than through technical articles.

The review further suggests that "de Grazia does not understand how the content of science is generated" and that his "understanding of science as a social activity is ambiguous."[35]

In the second book, de Grazia upholds Velikovsky's most general claim, that geologically recent (in the last 15,000 years) extraterrestrially-caused catastrophes occurred, and had a significant impact on the Earth and its inhabitants. De Grazia terms this belief "Quantavolution".[35]

Later career edit

In the early 1970s, de Grazia founded the "University of the New World" in Haute-Nendaz Switzerland, as an unstructured alternative to American universities. He invited Beat author William S. Burroughs to teach at it. In his biography of Burroughs, Ted Morgan described the students that it attracted as "drifters and dropouts on the international hippie circuit"; he suggested that this resulted in a culture clash with the "prim Swiss", and that the university lacked adequate facilities or a sound business model.[36]

In 2002, de Grazia was appointed visiting professor in the Department of Mathematics, Statistics, Computing and Applications of the University of Bergamo in Italy.[37] He had previously been a visiting lecturer at the University of Rome, the University of Bombay, the University of Istanbul, and the University of Gothenburg in Sweden.[11]

Personal life edit

Alfred de Grazia was married to Jill Oppenheim (d. 1996) from 1942 to 1971, to Nina Mavridis from 1972 to 1973,[11] and from 1982 to his death to Anne-Marie (Ami) Hueber-de Grazia, a French writer.[38][39]

He had seven children with Jill Oppenheim. One of them, Carl, a musician, died in 2000. One of his daughters, Victoria de Grazia, a Professor of Contemporary History at Columbia University, is a member of the American Academy.[40]

The entire WWII correspondence between Alfred de Grazia and Jill Oppenheim, comprising about a thousand letters dated from February 1942 to September 1945, survived and was published and placed online, edited by Ami Hueber de Grazia.

Works edit

  • Michels, Robert, First lectures in political sociology. Translated, with an introduction, by Alfred de Grazia. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, [1949]. And Harper & Row, 1965.[41]
  • Public and republic: political representation in America. New York: Knopf, 1951.[42][43][44][45]
  • The elements of political science Vol 1: Political Behavior and Vol. 2: Political organization. Series: Borzoi Books in Political Science. New York: Knopf, 1952. And second revised edition: Politics and government: the elements of political science. [1962]. New York: Collier, 1962– ;new revised edition, New York: Free Press London: Collier Macmillan, 1965.[46][47]
  • The Western Public: 1952 and beyond. [A study of political behaviour in the western United States.]. Stanford: Stanford University Press, [1954.][48]
  • The American way of government. National edition. New York : Wiley, [1957]. There is also a "National, State and Local edition".[49]
  • Foundation for Voluntary Welfare. Grass roots private welfare : winning essays of the 1956 national awards competition of the Foundation for Voluntary Welfare. Alfred de Grazia, editor. New York: New York University Press, 1957.
  • American welfare. New York: New York University Press, 1961 (with Ted Gurr).[50]
  • World politics: a study in international relations. Series: College Outline Series. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1962.
  • Apportionment and representative government. Series: Books that matter. New York : Praeger, c.1963
  • Essay on apportionment and representative government. Washington : American Enterprise Institute, 1963 [51][52]
  • Revolution in teaching: new theory, technology, and curricula. With an introduction by Jerome Bruner. New York: Bantam Books, [1964] (editor, with David A. Sohn).
  • Universal Reference System. Political science, government, and public policy: an annotated and intensively indexed compilation of significant books, pamphlets, and articles, selected and processed by the Universal Reference System. Prepared under the direction of Alfred De Grazia, general editor, Carl E. Martinson, managing editor, and John B. Simeone, consultant. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Research Pub. Co., 1965–69. Plus nine more volumes on the subjects of: International Affairs; Economic Regulation; Public Policy and the Management of Science; Administrative Management; Comparative Government and Cultures; Legislative Process; Bibliography of Bibliographies in Political Science, Government and Public Policy; Current Events and Problems of Modern Society; Public Opinion, Mass Behavior and Political Psychology; Law, Jurisprudence and Judicial Process.
  • Republic in crisis: Congress against the executive force. New York: Federal Legal Publications, [1965]
  • Political behavior. Series: Elements of political science; 1. New, revised edition. New York: Free press paperback, 1966.
  • Congress, The First Branch of Government, editor, Doubleday – Anchor Books, 1967[53]
  • Congress and the Presidency: Their Roles in Modern Times, with Arthur M. Schlesinger, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, Washington, 1967.[54]
  • Passage of the Year, Poetry, Quiddity Press, Metron publications, Princeton, N.J., 1967.[55]
  • The Behavioral Sciences: Essays in honor of George A. Lundberg, editor, Behavioral Research Council, Great Barrington, Mass;, 1968.
  • Kalos: What is to be Done with Our World?,, New York University Press, 1968.
  • Old Government, New People: Readings for the New politics, et al., Scott, Foresman, Glenview, Ill., 1971.
  • Politics for Better or Worse, Scott, Foresman, Glenview, Ill., 1973.
  • Eight Branches of Government: American Government Today, w. Eric Weise, Collegiate Pub., 1975.
  • Eight Bads – Eight Goods: The American Contradictions, Doubleday – Anchor Books, 1975.
  • Supporting Art and Culture: 1001 Questions on Policy, Lieber-Atherton, New York, 1979.
  • Kalotics: A Revolution of Scientists and Technologists for World Development, Kalos Foundation, Bombay, 1979.
  • A Cloud Over Bhopal: Causes, Consequences, and Constructive Solutions, Kalos Foundation for the India-America Committee for the Bhopal Victims: Popular Prakashan, Bombay, 1985.
  • The Babe, Child of Boom and Bust in Old Chicago, umbilicus mundi, Quiddity Press, Metron Publications, Princeton, N.J., 1992.[56]
  • The Student: at Chicago in Hutchin's Hey-day, Quiddity Press, Metron Publications, Princeton N.J., 1991.[57]
  • The Taste of War: Soldiering in World War II, Quiddity Press, Metron Publications, Princeton, N.J., 1992.[17]
  • Twentieth Century Fire-Sale, Poetry, Quiddity Press, Metron Publications, Princeton, N.J., 1996.[58]
  • The American State of Canaan – the peaceful, prosperous juncture of Israel and Palestine as the 51st State of the United States of America, Metron Publications, Princeton, NJ, 2009 LCCN 2008945276.

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ de Grazia, Alfred; Deutschmann, Paul; and Hunter, Floyd. "Manual of Elite Target Analysis" on the Alfred de Grazia website
  2. ^ de Grazia, Alfred de. "The Personal Archive: On Retrieving Valuable Cultural Resources" on the Alfred de Grazia website
  3. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 10, 2016. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  4. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 10, 2016. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  5. ^ "The Babe: 09. THE DAD AND THE MUSIC". www.grazian-archive.com. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on October 20, 2014. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  7. ^ "Sebastian de Grazia, 83; Wrote of Machiavelli". The New York Times. January 4, 2001. from the original on July 13, 2016.
  8. ^ Martin, Douglas (April 23, 2013). "Edward de Grazia, Lawyer Who Fought Censorship of Books, Is Dead at 86". The New York Times. from the original on October 4, 2015.
  9. ^ Pearson, Rick (April 9, 2005). "Victor R. De Grazia, 76". Chicago Tribune. from the original on November 23, 2018.
  10. ^ Memoir (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 20, 2006. Retrieved December 19, 2005.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. ^ a b c d e "Contemporary Authors Online". Gale. 2009. Reproduced in "Biography Resource Center". Farmington Hills, Michigan: Gale. 2009.
  12. ^ Binkley, W. E. The New York Times (August 26, 1951) p.6
  13. ^ Heckscher, August New York Herald Tribune Book Review (March 18, 1951) p.13.
  14. ^ "University of Chicago Law Review, Volume 18, Issue 4 (1951)". Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  15. ^ a b c The Proper Gander February 18, 2015, at the Wayback Machine magazine of the Psychological Operations Regiment at Fort Bragg, NC, Vol. 1, No. 1. (October 2014)
  16. ^ See credits of Bauer, Christian. The Ritchie Boys (documentary film, 2004)
  17. ^ a b de Grazia, Alfred. The Taste of War: Soldiering in World War II 2010-11-30 at the Wayback Machine Metron, 1992.
  18. ^ Herz, Martin and de Grazia, Alfred. Combat Propaganda by Leaflet Shell, Psychological Warfare study produced for the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force 2010-07-04 at the Wayback Machine Georgetown University Library, Washington D.C.
  19. ^ "Wartime Love Story to Unfold on the Net" Chicago Sun-Times (February 14, 1997)
  20. ^ Quoted in Spain, Tom and Shohl, Michael. I'll Be Home for Christmas: The Library of Congress Revisits the Spirit of Christmas in World War II. Delacorte Press (1999).
  21. ^ Turow, Scott. "Ordinary Heroes" March 10, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ US Army Military History Institute. Psychological Warfare since WWII – A working bibliography [permanent dead link]
  23. ^ "Décret du 31 décembre 2013 portant nomination". legifrance.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  24. ^ "Book Reviews: The Elements of Political Science. By ALFRED DE GRAZIA. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. 1952. Pp. xvi, 635, xxvi. $5.50.) - William Ebenstein, 1952". Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  25. ^ Muller, Steven (Spring 1954) Review by Steven Muller, American Quarterly Vol. 6, No. 1, pp.88, 90-91)
  26. ^ Lowen, Rebecca S. (1997). Creating the Cold War university: the transformation of Stanford. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520917903.
  27. ^ Dahl, Robert A. (December 1961) "The Behavioral Approach in Political Science: Epitaph for a Monument to a Successful Protest" in The American Political Science Review, Vol. 55, No. 4, pp.763-772.
  28. ^ Clifton, Brock (April 1967). "Political science". Library Trends. 15 (4). Illinois Digital Environment for Access for Learning and Scholarship (IDEALS), special issue: Bibliography: Current State and Future Trends, Part 2: 628–647. hdl:2142/6341. PDF February 26, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Alfred de Grazia, Republic in Crisis: Congress against the Executive Force Federal Legal Publications, Inc. (1965)
  30. ^ Review by Cornelius Cotter, American Political Science Review Vol 60, Issue 03, September 1966 p723-724 [1]
  31. ^ Tatalovich, Raymond and Schier, Steven (2014) The Presidency and political science: paradigms of presidential power from the founding to the present Routledge. p.130
  32. ^ Schlesinger, Arthur M. and de Grazia, Alfred. (1967) Congress and the Presidency: their Role in Modern Times American Enterprise Institute
  33. ^ a b Polanyi, Michael "Lecture 4: Myths, ancient and modern" July 21, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Lecture at University of Chicago Spring 1969. Polanyi archive
  34. ^ Lakatos, Imre; Feyerabend, Paul and Motterlini, Matteo. For and against method: including Lakatos's lectures on scientific method and the Lakatos-Feyerabend correspondence. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999. ISBN 0-226-46774-0 ISBN 0-226-46775-9
  35. ^ a b c Bauer, Henry H. (1985). "Inside the Velikovsky Affair" (PDF). Skeptical Inquirer. 9 (3): 284–288.
  36. ^ Morgan, Ted (1990). Literary Outlaw. New York: Avon. pp. 453–454. ISBN 0-8050-0901-9.
  37. ^ unibg.it Staff entry
  38. ^ "Publisher's Note" 2009-08-26 at the Wayback Machine on the Alfred de Grazia website
  39. ^ De Grazia, Alfred (1984). Cosmic Heretics, Metron. ISBN 0-940268-08-6. "Chapter 15: 'The Knowledge Industry'", p. 329.
  40. ^ "Ten Historians are elected to the American Academy" American Historical Association (November 2005)
  41. ^ Hunter, Floyd in Social Forces Vol. 29, No. 2 (December 1950), pp. 220-221, University of North Carolina Press [2]
  42. ^ Merriam, Charles E., in The University of Chicago Law Review Vol. 18, No. 4 (Summer, 1951), pp. 825-826 [3]
  43. ^ Stapleton, Laurence in The New England Quarterly Vol. 25, No. 1 (March 1952), p. 129 [4]
  44. ^ Brockunier, S. H. in The Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol. 38, No. 1 (June 1951), pp. 92-93, publ. by Organization of American Historians [5]
  45. ^ "Willard N. Hogan in Indiana Law Review". Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  46. ^ Ebenstein, William in The Western Political Quarterly Vol. 5, No. 3 (September 1952), pp. 539-540, publ. by University of Utah on behalf of Western Political Science Association [6]
  47. ^ Steven Muller, in American Quarterly Vol. 6, No. 1 (Spring, 1954), pp. 88+90-91, The Johns Hopkins University Press [7]
  48. ^ C.J.C. in International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs, 1944-) Vol. 31, No. 4 (October 1955), p. 552, Blackwell Publishing [8]
  49. ^ Wright, Esmond in International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs: 1944-) Vol. 34, No. 2 (April 1958), pp. 263-264, Blackwell Publishing [9]
  50. ^ . February 8, 2016. Archived from the original on February 8, 2016. Retrieved May 18, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  51. ^ Paul T. David in Political Science Quarterly Vol. 79 No 4 (December 1964), pp. 612-614 [10]
  52. ^ Revista Mexicana de Sociologia, Vol. 26, No. 3 (September–December 1964), pp. 908-910 [11]
  53. ^ W. Wayne Shannon, in The Journal of Politics Vol. 29, No. 4 (November 1967), pp. 889-890, Cambridge University Press on behalf of Southern Political Science Association[12]
  54. ^ Thomas E. Cronin in Public Administration Review Vol. 29, No 6 (Nov.-Dec. 1969 pp. 670-679)[13]
  55. ^ "Passage" on the Alfred de Grazia website
  56. ^ "Babe" on the Alfred de Grazia website
  57. ^ "The Student" on the Alfred de Grazia website
  58. ^ "Fire-Sale" on the Alfred de Grazia website

Further reading

  • Tresman, Ian (ed.) Quantavolution - Challenges to Conventional Science, Knowledge Computing, UK (2010) ASIN B00587G1FI (hardcover) Festschrift in honor of de Grazia's 90th birthday.

External links edit

  • The Grazian Archive: archived works of Alfred de Grazia

alfred, grazia, december, 1919, july, 2014, born, chicago, illinois, political, scientist, author, developed, techniques, computer, based, social, network, analysis, 1950s, developed, ideas, about, personal, digital, archives, 1970s, defended, catastrophism, t. Alfred de Grazia December 29 1919 July 13 2014 born in Chicago Illinois was a political scientist and author He developed techniques of computer based social network analysis in the 1950s 1 developed new ideas about personal digital archives in the 1970s 2 and defended the catastrophism thesis of Immanuel Velikovsky Alfred de Grazia in Naxos Greece August 2003 Contents 1 Origins 2 Education 3 Military activity 4 Academic career 5 Support for Velikovsky 6 Later career 7 Personal life 8 Works 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksOrigins editHis father Joseph Alfred de Grazia was born in Licodia province of Catania in Sicily and was politically active in a troubled period in the history of the island He emigrated to the United States at the age of twenty after having hit the mayor of Licodia with his clarinet during a political scuffle 3 He became a bandmaster music teacher in and out of the WPA 4 and a musical union leader 5 in Chicago In 1916 he married Chicago born Katherine Lupo Cardinale whose parents had emigrated from Sicily Her brother was the boxer Charles Kid Lucca Canadian champion welter weight champion from 1910 to 1914 6 They had three more sons Sebastian de Grazia winner of the Pulitzer Prize 7 Edward de Grazia a prominent first amendment lawyer and co founder of Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University 8 and Victor de Grazia who was Deputy Governor of the State of Illinois from 1973 to 1977 9 10 Education editDe Grazia attended the University of Chicago receiving an A B there in 1939 attended law school at Columbia University from 1940 to 1941 and in 1948 earned a Ph D in political science from the University of Chicago 11 His thesis was published in 1951 as Public and Republic Political Representation in America When reviewed by The New York Times it was called A thoroughgoing examination of the meaning of representation the fundamental element in any definition of republic 12 and August Heckscher in the New York Herald Tribune said it was A sober scholarly volume authoritative in its field 13 Charles E Merriam founder of the behavioristic approach in political science wrote All scholars in the field of political science and particularly those in the area of representation are under lasting obligation to the writer of this volume for a learned and helpful treatment of one of the major problems of our times The book will enrich the literature on this very important subject 14 Military activity edit nbsp French Medal of Honor Recipient Alfred de Grazia helping celebrate World War II Victory Day in France In World War II de Grazia served in the United States Army rising from private to captain He specialized in mechanized warfare intelligence and psychological warfare He received training in this then new field in Washington D C and the newly established Camp Ritchie in Maryland 15 16 He served with the 3rd 5th and 7th Armies and as a liaison officer with the British 8th Army He took part in six campaigns from North Africa to Italy Battle of Monte Cassino to France and Germany 17 De Grazia co authored a report on psychological warfare for the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force 18 By the end of the war he was Commanding Officer of the Psychological Warfare Propaganda Team attached to the headquarters of the 7th Army 15 With his fiancee and later wife wife Jill deGrazia nee Bertha Oppenheim he carried on an extensive wartime correspondence of over 2 000 lengthy letters published on the web under the title Letters of Love and War 19 20 Scott Turow cites the letters as being among the sources for his 2005 novel Ordinary Heroes 21 De Grazia wrote manuals of psychological warfare for the CIA for the Korean War and organized and investigated psychological operations for the United States Department of Defense during the Vietnam War His reports on psychological operations now largely declassified include Target Analysis and Media in Propaganda to Audiences Abroad 1952 22 Elites Analysis 1955 as well as Psychological Operations in Vietnam 1968 On October 31 2014 he was posthumously designated a Distinguished Member of the Regiment of Psychological Operations of the Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg North Carolina 15 For his service in World War II de Grazia earned the Bronze Star and the EAME Campaign Medal as well as the Croix de Guerre from France citation needed On December 31 2013 he was awarded the highest French distinction being made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor by decree of President Francois Hollande 23 He is also a posthumous recipient of the Robert A McClure Medal for Exemplary Service in Psychological Operations Academic career editDe Grazia was an assistant professor of political science at the University of Minnesota from 1948 to 1950 before joining the political science faculty of Brown University as an associate professor 11 In 1952 he was appointed director of the Committee for Research in the Social Sciences at Stanford University supported by a Ford Foundation grant He wrote the textbook The Elements of Political Science in two volumes Political Behavior and Political Organization 1952 24 One reviewer of it wrote Mr De Grazia has undertaken to dissect the whole body of political science He achieves his purpose with unfailing clarity and his readers will learn from him the range the goals and the techniques of the study of politics 25 In 1955 he failed to receive academic tenure at Stanford after conducting a study of the origins and present restrictions on the political activities of workers for a foundation He left the institution in 1957 26 From 1959 to 1983 he was a tenured professor of government and social theory at New York University 11 In 1957 de Grazia founded PROD Political Research Organization and Design which was described as probably the authentic spokesman for the newest currents among the avant garde of political behavior 27 It was later renamed The American Behavioral Scientist an academic journal devoted to the Chicago school of behaviorist sociology In 1965 he began the Universal Reference System the first computerized reference system in the social sciences 28 De Grazia was a staunch supporter of the power of Congress against the encroachments of the presidency which he called the Executive Force 29 30 According to Raymond Tatalovich and Steven Schier The thesis developed by Alfred de Grazia coming in 1965 at the high water mark of the Great Society is that the executive of the national government represents and leads the national movement towards a society of order Congress expresses the national urge to liberty Challenging the liberalism of academia de Grazia doubts that the president can be the tribune of the people and to call him the custodian of the public interest or of the national interest is presumptuous because he is custodian of a public interest his own and that may be popular or not shared by Congress or not When de Grazia speaks of the problem of dictatorship he is citing the growth of the executive apparatus That is to say there is a dictator only because the bureaucratic state must have a face The civil service is viewed by de Grazia as the great engine of the Executive Force not Congress because Congress is an institution deeply imbedded in federalism the free enterprise system and decentralization of society and politics In represents basically these values Concerning both the ends and the means of government Alfred de Grazia is a conservative He is not troubled about oligarchy and seniority wielding disproportionate influence within the legislative process because Congress operates principally through the decision system of successive majorities By that de Grazia means that different majorities rule in subcommittees committees and the floor of each house of Congress 31 The American Enterprise Institute published several of his books on the subject including Congress and the Presidency their Role in Modern Times a debate with Arthur M Schlesinger Jr who defended the case for a strong presidency 32 Support for Velikovsky edit nbsp de Grazia right and Immanuel Velikovsky in 1964 De Grazia became interested in Immanuel Velikovsky s catastrophist theories Following considerable criticism of Velikovsky s claims by the scientific community de Grazia dedicated the entire September 1963 issue of American Behavioral Scientist to the issue 33 34 He also self published two books on it The Velikovsky Affair The Warfare of Science and Scientism and Cosmic Heretics A Personal History of Attempts to Establish and Resist Theories of Quantavolution and Catastrophe in the Natural and Human Sciences Michael Polanyi stated A number of sociologists actually supported the popular view against the scientists They came out first in The American Behavioral Scientist September 1963 and then again in a book de Grazia 1966 which angrily attacked the whole community of natural scientists for paying no attention to Velikovsky For my part I believe that the scientists were quite right in refusing to pay serious attention to Velikovsky s writings and that the sociologists attack on them was totally unfounded 33 In a review of the second book Henry Bauer suggests that de Grazia s efforts may be responsible for Velikovsky s continuing notability 35 In both books de Grazia subscribes to the thesis that in the words of Henry Bauer the affair revealed something seriously rotten in the state of science The review however suggests that the rejection came about because Velikovsky wanted instant recognition as the authority on science when he had no standing in any science no qualifications had not paid his dues through recognized achievements and presented his ideas in the form of a popularly published book rather than through technical articles The review further suggests that de Grazia does not understand how the content of science is generated and that his understanding of science as a social activity is ambiguous 35 In the second book de Grazia upholds Velikovsky s most general claim that geologically recent in the last 15 000 years extraterrestrially caused catastrophes occurred and had a significant impact on the Earth and its inhabitants De Grazia terms this belief Quantavolution 35 Later career editIn the early 1970s de Grazia founded the University of the New World in Haute Nendaz Switzerland as an unstructured alternative to American universities He invited Beat author William S Burroughs to teach at it In his biography of Burroughs Ted Morgan described the students that it attracted as drifters and dropouts on the international hippie circuit he suggested that this resulted in a culture clash with the prim Swiss and that the university lacked adequate facilities or a sound business model 36 In 2002 de Grazia was appointed visiting professor in the Department of Mathematics Statistics Computing and Applications of the University of Bergamo in Italy 37 He had previously been a visiting lecturer at the University of Rome the University of Bombay the University of Istanbul and the University of Gothenburg in Sweden 11 Personal life editAlfred de Grazia was married to Jill Oppenheim d 1996 from 1942 to 1971 to Nina Mavridis from 1972 to 1973 11 and from 1982 to his death to Anne Marie Ami Hueber de Grazia a French writer 38 39 He had seven children with Jill Oppenheim One of them Carl a musician died in 2000 One of his daughters Victoria de Grazia a Professor of Contemporary History at Columbia University is a member of the American Academy 40 The entire WWII correspondence between Alfred de Grazia and Jill Oppenheim comprising about a thousand letters dated from February 1942 to September 1945 survived and was published and placed online edited by Ami Hueber de Grazia Works editMichels Robert First lectures in political sociology Translated with an introduction by Alfred de Grazia Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1949 And Harper amp Row 1965 41 Public and republic political representation in America New York Knopf 1951 42 43 44 45 The elements of political science Vol 1 Political Behavior and Vol 2 Political organization Series Borzoi Books in Political Science New York Knopf 1952 And second revised edition Politics and government the elements of political science 1962 New York Collier 1962 new revised edition New York Free Press London Collier Macmillan 1965 46 47 The Western Public 1952 and beyond A study of political behaviour in the western United States Stanford Stanford University Press 1954 48 The American way of government National edition New York Wiley 1957 There is also a National State and Local edition 49 Foundation for Voluntary Welfare Grass roots private welfare winning essays of the 1956 national awards competition of the Foundation for Voluntary Welfare Alfred de Grazia editor New York New York University Press 1957 American welfare New York New York University Press 1961 with Ted Gurr 50 World politics a study in international relations Series College Outline Series New York Barnes amp Noble 1962 Apportionment and representative government Series Books that matter New York Praeger c 1963 Essay on apportionment and representative government Washington American Enterprise Institute 1963 51 52 Revolution in teaching new theory technology and curricula With an introduction by Jerome Bruner New York Bantam Books 1964 editor with David A Sohn Universal Reference System Political science government and public policy an annotated and intensively indexed compilation of significant books pamphlets and articles selected and processed by the Universal Reference System Prepared under the direction of Alfred De Grazia general editor Carl E Martinson managing editor and John B Simeone consultant Princeton N J Princeton Research Pub Co 1965 69 Plus nine more volumes on the subjects of International Affairs Economic Regulation Public Policy and the Management of Science Administrative Management Comparative Government and Cultures Legislative Process Bibliography of Bibliographies in Political Science Government and Public Policy Current Events and Problems of Modern Society Public Opinion Mass Behavior and Political Psychology Law Jurisprudence and Judicial Process Republic in crisis Congress against the executive force New York Federal Legal Publications 1965 Political behavior Series Elements of political science 1 New revised edition New York Free press paperback 1966 Congress The First Branch of Government editor Doubleday Anchor Books 1967 53 Congress and the Presidency Their Roles in Modern Times with Arthur M Schlesinger American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research Washington 1967 54 Passage of the Year Poetry Quiddity Press Metron publications Princeton N J 1967 55 The Behavioral Sciences Essays in honor of George A Lundberg editor Behavioral Research Council Great Barrington Mass 1968 Kalos What is to be Done with Our World New York University Press 1968 Old Government New People Readings for the New politics et al Scott Foresman Glenview Ill 1971 Politics for Better or Worse Scott Foresman Glenview Ill 1973 Eight Branches of Government American Government Today w Eric Weise Collegiate Pub 1975 Eight Bads Eight Goods The American Contradictions Doubleday Anchor Books 1975 Supporting Art and Culture 1001 Questions on Policy Lieber Atherton New York 1979 Kalotics A Revolution of Scientists and Technologists for World Development Kalos Foundation Bombay 1979 A Cloud Over Bhopal Causes Consequences and Constructive Solutions Kalos Foundation for the India America Committee for the Bhopal Victims Popular Prakashan Bombay 1985 The Babe Child of Boom and Bust in Old Chicago umbilicus mundi Quiddity Press Metron Publications Princeton N J 1992 56 The Student at Chicago in Hutchin s Hey day Quiddity Press Metron Publications Princeton N J 1991 57 The Taste of War Soldiering in World War II Quiddity Press Metron Publications Princeton N J 1992 17 Twentieth Century Fire Sale Poetry Quiddity Press Metron Publications Princeton N J 1996 58 The American State of Canaan the peaceful prosperous juncture of Israel and Palestine as the 51st State of the United States of America Metron Publications Princeton NJ 2009 LCCN 2008945276 See also editVelikovskyismReferences editNotes de Grazia Alfred Deutschmann Paul and Hunter Floyd Manual of Elite Target Analysis on the Alfred de Grazia website de Grazia Alfred de The Personal Archive On Retrieving Valuable Cultural Resources on the Alfred de Grazia website Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library oral history interview of Nancy Shlaes de Grazia PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 10 2016 Retrieved October 10 2016 Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library oral history interview of Nancy de Grazia PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 10 2016 Retrieved October 10 2016 The Babe 09 THE DAD AND THE MUSIC www grazian archive com Retrieved May 18 2023 Charlie Lucca Boxer Archived from the original on October 20 2014 Retrieved October 10 2016 Sebastian de Grazia 83 Wrote of Machiavelli The New York Times January 4 2001 Archived from the original on July 13 2016 Martin Douglas April 23 2013 Edward de Grazia Lawyer Who Fought Censorship of Books Is Dead at 86 The New York Times Archived from the original on October 4 2015 Pearson Rick April 9 2005 Victor R De Grazia 76 Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on November 23 2018 Memoir Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on February 20 2006 Retrieved December 19 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c d e Contemporary Authors Online Gale 2009 Reproduced in Biography Resource Center Farmington Hills Michigan Gale 2009 Binkley W E The New York Times August 26 1951 p 6 Heckscher August New York Herald Tribune Book Review March 18 1951 p 13 University of Chicago Law Review Volume 18 Issue 4 1951 Retrieved May 18 2023 a b c The Proper Gander Archived February 18 2015 at the Wayback Machine magazine of the Psychological Operations Regiment at Fort Bragg NC Vol 1 No 1 October 2014 See credits of Bauer Christian The Ritchie Boys documentary film 2004 a b de Grazia Alfred The Taste of War Soldiering in World War II Archived 2010 11 30 at the Wayback Machine Metron 1992 Herz Martin and de Grazia Alfred Combat Propaganda by Leaflet Shell Psychological Warfare study produced for the Supreme Headquarters of the Allied Expeditionary Force Archived 2010 07 04 at the Wayback Machine Georgetown University Library Washington D C Wartime Love Story to Unfold on the Net Chicago Sun Times February 14 1997 Quoted in Spain Tom and Shohl Michael I ll Be Home for Christmas The Library of Congress Revisits the Spirit of Christmas in World War II Delacorte Press 1999 Turow Scott Ordinary Heroes Archived March 10 2009 at the Wayback Machine US Army Military History Institute Psychological Warfare since WWII A working bibliography permanent dead link Decret du 31 decembre 2013 portant nomination legifrance gouv fr in French Retrieved May 18 2023 Book Reviews The Elements of Political Science By ALFRED DE GRAZIA New York Alfred A Knopf Inc 1952 Pp xvi 635 xxvi 5 50 William Ebenstein 1952 Retrieved May 18 2023 Muller Steven Spring 1954 Review by Steven Muller American Quarterly Vol 6 No 1 pp 88 90 91 Lowen Rebecca S 1997 Creating the Cold War university the transformation of Stanford Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520917903 Dahl Robert A December 1961 The Behavioral Approach in Political Science Epitaph for a Monument to a Successful Protest in The American Political Science Review Vol 55 No 4 pp 763 772 Clifton Brock April 1967 Political science Library Trends 15 4 Illinois Digital Environment for Access for Learning and Scholarship IDEALS special issue Bibliography Current State and Future Trends Part 2 628 647 hdl 2142 6341 PDF Archived February 26 2015 at the Wayback Machine Alfred de Grazia Republic in Crisis Congress against the Executive Force Federal Legal Publications Inc 1965 Review by Cornelius Cotter American Political Science Review Vol 60 Issue 03 September 1966 p723 724 1 Tatalovich Raymond and Schier Steven 2014 The Presidency and political science paradigms of presidential power from the founding to the present Routledge p 130 Schlesinger Arthur M and de Grazia Alfred 1967 Congress and the Presidency their Role in Modern Times American Enterprise Institute a b Polanyi Michael Lecture 4 Myths ancient and modern Archived July 21 2011 at the Wayback Machine Lecture at University of Chicago Spring 1969 Polanyi archive Lakatos Imre Feyerabend Paul and Motterlini Matteo For and against method including Lakatos s lectures on scientific method and the Lakatos Feyerabend correspondence Chicago University of Chicago Press 1999 ISBN 0 226 46774 0 ISBN 0 226 46775 9 a b c Bauer Henry H 1985 Inside the Velikovsky Affair PDF Skeptical Inquirer 9 3 284 288 Morgan Ted 1990 Literary Outlaw New York Avon pp 453 454 ISBN 0 8050 0901 9 unibg it Staff entry Publisher s Note Archived 2009 08 26 at the Wayback Machine on the Alfred de Grazia website De Grazia Alfred 1984 Cosmic Heretics Metron ISBN 0 940268 08 6 Chapter 15 The Knowledge Industry p 329 Ten Historians are elected to the American Academy American Historical Association November 2005 Hunter Floyd in Social Forces Vol 29 No 2 December 1950 pp 220 221 University of North Carolina Press 2 Merriam Charles E in The University of Chicago Law Review Vol 18 No 4 Summer 1951 pp 825 826 3 Stapleton Laurence in The New England Quarterly Vol 25 No 1 March 1952 p 129 4 Brockunier S H in The Mississippi Valley Historical Review Vol 38 No 1 June 1951 pp 92 93 publ by Organization of American Historians 5 Willard N Hogan in Indiana Law Review Retrieved May 18 2023 Ebenstein William in The Western Political Quarterly Vol 5 No 3 September 1952 pp 539 540 publ by University of Utah on behalf of Western Political Science Association 6 Steven Muller in American Quarterly Vol 6 No 1 Spring 1954 pp 88 90 91 The Johns Hopkins University Press 7 C J C in International Affairs Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944 Vol 31 No 4 October 1955 p 552 Blackwell Publishing 8 Wright Esmond in International Affairs Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944 Vol 34 No 2 April 1958 pp 263 264 Blackwell Publishing 9 American Welfare By Alfred de Grazia and Ted Gurr New York New York University Press 1961 470 pp 6 50 February 8 2016 Archived from the original on February 8 2016 Retrieved May 18 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Paul T David in Political Science Quarterly Vol 79 No 4 December 1964 pp 612 614 10 Revista Mexicana de Sociologia Vol 26 No 3 September December 1964 pp 908 910 11 W Wayne Shannon in The Journal of Politics Vol 29 No 4 November 1967 pp 889 890 Cambridge University Press on behalf of Southern Political Science Association 12 Thomas E Cronin in Public Administration Review Vol 29 No 6 Nov Dec 1969 pp 670 679 13 Passage on the Alfred de Grazia website Babe on the Alfred de Grazia website The Student on the Alfred de Grazia website Fire Sale on the Alfred de Grazia website Further reading Tresman Ian ed Quantavolution Challenges to Conventional Science Knowledge Computing UK 2010 ASIN B00587G1FI hardcover Festschrift in honor of de Grazia s 90th birthday External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfred de Grazia The Grazian Archive archived works of Alfred de Grazia The American State of Canaan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfred de Grazia amp oldid 1192733245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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