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Allan Bloom

Allan David Bloom (September 14, 1930 – October 7, 1992) was an American philosopher, classicist, and academician. He studied under David Grene, Leo Strauss, Richard McKeon, and Alexandre Kojève. He subsequently taught at Cornell University, the University of Toronto, Tel Aviv University, Yale University, the École normale supérieure, and the University of Chicago.

Allan Bloom
Born
Allan David Bloom

(1930-09-14)September 14, 1930
DiedOctober 7, 1992(1992-10-07) (aged 62)
Alma materUniversity of Chicago (BA, PhD)
École Normale Supérieure
Notable workThe Closing of the American Mind (1987)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
ThesisThe Political Philosophy of Isocrates (1955)
Doctoral advisorLeo Strauss
Notable studentsMichael Sugrue
Main interests
Greek philosophy, history of philosophy, political philosophy, Renaissance philosophy, Nihilism, continental philosophy, French literature, Shakespeare
Notable ideas
The "openness" of relativism as leads paradoxically to the great "closing"[1]

Bloom championed the idea of Great Books education and became famous for his criticism of contemporary American higher education, with his views being expressed in his bestselling 1987 book, The Closing of the American Mind.[2] Characterized as a conservative in the popular media,[3] Bloom denied the label, asserting that what he sought to defend was the "theoretical life".[4] Saul Bellow wrote Ravelstein, a roman à clef based on Bloom, his friend and colleague at the University of Chicago.

Early life and education

Bloom was born in Indianapolis, Indiana to second-generation Jewish parents who were both social workers. The couple had a daughter, Lucille, two years earlier. As a thirteen-year-old, Bloom read a Reader's Digest article about the University of Chicago and told his parents he wanted to attend; his parents thought it was unreasonable and did not encourage his hopes.[5] Yet, when his family moved to Chicago in 1944, his parents met a psychiatrist and family friend whose son was enrolled in the University of Chicago's humanities program for gifted students. In 1946, Bloom was accepted to the same program, starting his degree at the age of fifteen, and spending the next decade of his life enrolled at the university in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood.[5] This began his lifelong passion for the 'idea' of the university.[6]

In the preface to Giants and Dwarfs: Essays, 1960–1990, he stated that his education "began with Freud and ended with Plato". The theme of this education was self-knowledge, or self-discovery—an idea that Bloom would later write, seemed impossible to conceive of for a Midwestern American boy. He credits Leo Strauss as the teacher who made this endeavor possible for him.[7]

Bloom graduated from the University of Chicago with a bachelor's degree at the age of 18.[8] One of his college classmates was the classicist Seth Benardete.[9] For post-graduate studies, he enrolled in the University of Chicago's Committee on Social Thought, where he was assigned classicist David Grene as tutor. Bloom went on to write his thesis on Isocrates. Grene recalled Bloom as an energetic and humorous student completely dedicated to studying classics, but with no definite career ambitions.[5] The committee was a unique interdisciplinary program that attracted a small number of students due to its rigorous academic requirements and lack of clear employment opportunities after graduation.[5] Bloom earned his Ph.D. from the Committee on Social Thought in 1955. He subsequently studied under the influential Hegelian philosopher Alexandre Kojève in Paris, whose lectures Bloom would later introduce to the English-speaking world. While teaching philosophy at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris, he befriended Raymond Aron, amongst many other philosophers. Among the American expatriate community in Paris, his friends included writer Susan Sontag.[10][11][12]

Career and death

I am not a conservative—neo or paleo. Conservatism is a respectable outlook ... I just do not happen to be that animal.

— Allan Bloom, Giants and Dwarfs[13]

Bloom studied and taught in Paris (1953–55) at the École Normale Supérieure,[14] and Germany (1957). Upon returning to the United States in 1955, he taught adult education students at the University of Chicago with his friend Werner J. Dannhauser, author of Nietzsche's View of Socrates. Bloom went on to teach at Yale from 1960 to 1963, at Cornell until 1970, and at the University of Toronto until 1979, when he returned to the University of Chicago. Among Bloom's former students are prominent journalists, government officials and political scientists such as Francis Fukuyama, Robert Kraynak, Pierre Hassner, Clifford Orwin, Janet Ajzenstat, John Ibbitson, James Ceaser, and Thomas Pangle.

In 1963, as a professor at Cornell, Allan Bloom served as a faculty member of the Cornell Branch of the Telluride Association, an organization focused on intellectual development and self-governance. The students received free room and board in the Telluride House on the Cornell University campus and assumed the management of the house themselves. While living at the house, Bloom befriended former U.S. Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins.[15] Bloom's first book was a collection of three essays on Shakespeare's plays, Shakespeare's Politics; it included an essay from Harry V. Jaffa. He translated and commented upon Rousseau's "Letter to M. d'Alembert on the Theater", bringing it into dialogue with Plato's Republic. In 1968, he published his most significant work of philosophical translation and interpretation, a translation of Plato's Republic. Bloom strove to achieve "translation ... for the serious student". The preface opens on page xi with the statement, "this is intended to be a literal translation."[16][page needed] Although the translation is not universally accepted, Bloom said he always conceptualized the translator's role as a matchmaker between readers and the texts he translated.[17][page needed] He repeated this effort as a professor of political science at the University of Toronto in 1978, translating Jean-Jacques Rousseau's Emile. Among other publications during his years of teaching was a reading of Swift's Gulliver's Travels, titled "Giants and Dwarfs"; it became the title for a collection of essays on, among others, Raymond Aron, Alexandre Kojève, Leo Strauss, and liberal philosopher John Rawls. Bloom was an editor for the scholarly journal Political Theory as well as a contributor to History of Political Philosophy (edited by Joseph Cropsey and Leo Strauss).

After returning to Chicago, he befriended and taught courses with Saul Bellow. In 1987 Bellow wrote the preface to The Closing of the American Mind.

Bloom's last book, which he dictated while in the hospital dying, and which was published posthumously, was Love and Friendship, an offering of interpretations on the meaning of love. There is an ongoing controversy over Bloom's semi-closeted homosexuality, possibly culminating, as in Saul Bellow's thinly fictionalized account in Ravelstein, in his death in 1992 from AIDS.[18] Bloom's friends do not deny his homosexuality, but whether he actually died of AIDS remains disputed.[19]

Philosophy

The substance of my being has been informed by the books I learned to care for.[20]

Bloom's work is not easily categorized, yet there is a thread that links all of his published material. He was concerned with preserving a philosophical way of life for future generations. He strove to do this through both scholarly and popular writing. His writings may be placed into two categories: scholarly (e.g., Plato's Republic) and popular political commentary (e.g., The Closing of the American Mind). On the surface, this is a valid distinction, yet closer examinations of Bloom's works reveal a direct connection between the two types of expression, which reflect his view of philosophy and the role of the philosopher in political life.[citation needed]

The Republic of Plato

Bloom's translation and essay on the Republic is radically different in many important aspects from the previous translations and interpretations of the Republic. Most notable is Bloom's discussion of Socratic irony. In fact, irony is the key to Bloom's take on the Republic (see his discussion of Books II–VI of the Republic.) Allan Bloom says a philosopher is immune to irony because he can see the tragic as comic and comic as tragic. Bloom refers to Socrates, the philosopher par excellence, in his Interpretative Essay stating, "Socrates can go naked where others go clothed; he is not afraid of ridicule. He can also contemplate sexual intercourse where others are stricken with terror; he is not afraid of moral indignation. In other words he treats the comic seriously and the tragic lightly".[21] Thus irony in the Republic refers to the "Just City in Speech", which Bloom looks at not as a model for future society, nor as a template for the human soul; rather, it is a city presented ironically, an example of the distance between philosophy and every potential philosopher. Bloom follows Strauss in suggesting that the "Just City in Speech" is not natural; it is man-made.

Critical reception

Some reviewers, such as Norman Gulley, criticized the quality of both the translation and the essay itself.[22]

The Closing of the American Mind

Students now arrive at the university ignorant and cynical about our political heritage, lacking the wherewithal to be either inspired by it or seriously critical of it.

— Allan Bloom, The Closing of the American Mind

The Closing of the American Mind was published in 1987, five years after Bloom published an essay in National Review about the failure of universities to serve the needs of students.[23] With the encouragement of Saul Bellow, his colleague at the University of Chicago, he expanded his thoughts into a book "about a life I've led",[5] that critically reflected on the current state of higher education in American universities. His friends and admirers imagined the work would be a modest success, as did Bloom, who recognized his publisher's modest advance to complete the project as a lack of sales confidence. Yet on the momentum of strong initial reviews, including one by Christopher Lehmann-Haupt in The New York Times and an op-ed piece by syndicated conservative commentator George Will titled, "A How-To Book for the Independent",[24] it became an unexpected best seller, eventually selling close to half a million copies in hardback and remaining at number one on The New York Times Bestseller List for nonfiction for four months.[25]

The book is a critique of the contemporary university and how Bloom sees it as failing its students. In it, Bloom criticizes the modern movements in philosophy and the humanities. Philosophy professors involved in ordinary language analysis or logical positivism disregard important "humanizing" ethical and political issues and fail to pique the interest of students.[26] Literature professors involved in deconstructionism promote irrationalism and skepticism of standards of truth and thereby dissolve the moral imperatives which are communicated through genuine philosophy and which elevate and broaden the intellects of those who engage with them.[27] To a great extent, Bloom's criticism revolves around his belief that the "great books" of Western thought have been devalued as a source of wisdom. Bloom's critique extends beyond the university to speak to the general crisis in American society. The Closing of the American Mind draws analogies between the United States and the Weimar Republic. The modern liberal philosophy, he says, enshrined in the Enlightenment thought of John Locke—that a just society could be based upon self-interest alone, coupled by the emergence of relativism in American thought—had led to this crisis.

For Bloom, this created a void in the souls of Americans, into which demagogic radicals as exemplified by 1960s student leaders could leap. (In the same fashion, Bloom suggests, the Nazi brownshirts once filled the gap created in German society by the Weimar Republic.) In the second instance, he argued, the higher calling of philosophy and reason understood as freedom of thought, had been eclipsed by a pseudo-philosophy, or an ideology of thought. Relativism was one feature of modern liberal philosophy that had subverted the Platonic–Socratic teaching.

Bloom's critique of contemporary social movements at play in universities or society at large is derived from his classical and philosophical orientation. For Bloom, the failure of contemporary liberal education leads to the sterile social and sexual habits of modern students, and to their inability to fashion a life for themselves beyond the mundane offerings touted as success. Bloom argues that commercial pursuits had become more highly valued than love, the philosophic quest for truth, or the civilized pursuits of honor and glory.

In one chapter, in a style of analysis which resembles the work of the Frankfurt School, he examined the philosophical effects of popular music on the lives of students, placing pop music, or as it is generically branded by record companies "rock music", in a historical context from Plato's Republic to Nietzsche's Dionysian longings. Treating it for the first time[citation needed] with genuine philosophical interest, he gave fresh attention to the industry, its target-marketing to children and teenagers, its top performers, its place in the late-capitalist bourgeois economy, and its pretensions to liberation and freedom. Some critics, including the popular musician Frank Zappa, argued that Bloom's view of pop music was based on the same ideas that critics of pop "in 1950s held, ideas about the preservation of 'traditional' white American society".[28]

Bloom, informed by Socrates, Aristotle, Rousseau, and Nietzsche, explores music's power over the human soul. He cites the soldier who throws himself into battle at the urging of the drum corps, the pious believer who prays under the spell of a religious hymn, the lover seduced by the romantic guitar, and points towards the tradition of philosophy that treated musical education as paramount. He names the pop-star Mick Jagger as a cardinal representative of the hypocrisy and erotic sterility of pop-rock music. Pop music employs sexual images and language to enthrall the young and to persuade them that their petty rebelliousness is authentic politics, when, in fact, they are being controlled by the money-managers whom successful performers like Jagger quietly serve. Bloom claims that Jagger is a hero to many university students who envy his fame and wealth but are really just bored by the lack of options before them.[29]

Along with the absence of literature in the lives of the young and their sexual but often unerotic relationships, the first part of The Closing tries to explain the current state of education in a fashion beyond the purview of an economist or psychiatrist—contemporary culture's leading umpires.

Critical reception

The book met with early critical acclaim including positive reviews in The New York Times, Time, Newsweek, the Chronicle of Higher Education, and The Washington Post. A second round of reviews was generally more critical.[30]

Martha Nussbaum, a political philosopher and classicist, and Harry V. Jaffa, a conservative, both argued that Bloom was deeply influenced by 19th-century European philosophers, especially Friedrich Nietzsche. Nussbaum wrote that, for Bloom, Nietzsche had been disastrously influential in modern American thought.[31]

In a passage of her review, Nussbaum wrote: "How good a philosopher, then, is Allan Bloom? The answer is, we cannot say, and we are given no reason to think him one at all."[31] The criticism of the book was continued by impassioned reviews of political theorist Benjamin Barber in Harper's; Alexander Nehamas, a scholar of ancient philosophy and Nietzsche, in the London Review of Books; and David Rieff in The Times Literary Supplement.[32] David Rieff called Bloom "an academic version of Oliver North: vengeful, reactionary, antidemocratic". The book, he said, was one that "decent people would be ashamed of having written." The tone of these reviews led James Atlas in The New York Times Magazine to conclude that "the responses to Bloom's book have been charged with a hostility that transcends the usual mean-spiritedness of reviewers."[5] One reviewer, the philosopher Robert Paul Wolff writing in the scholarly journal Academe, satirically reviewed the book as a work of fiction: he claimed that Bloom's friend Saul Bellow, who had written the introduction, had written a "coruscatingly funny novel in the form of a pettish, bookish, grumpy, reactionary complaint against the last two decades", with the "author" a "mid-fiftyish professor at the University of Chicago, to whom Bellow gives the evocative name 'Bloom.'"[32] Yet some reviewers tempered that criticism with an admission of the merits of Bloom's writing: for example, Fred Matthews, an historian from York University, began an otherwise relatively critical review in the American Historical Review with the statement that Bloom's "probes into popular culture" were "both amusing and perceptive" and that the work was "a rich, often brilliant, and disturbing book".[33]

Some critics embraced Bloom's argument. Norman Podhoretz noted that the closed-mindedness in the title refers to the paradoxical consequence of the academic "open mind" found in liberal political thought—namely "the narrow and intolerant dogmatism" that dismisses any attempt, by Plato or the Hebrew Bible for example, to provide a rational basis for moral judgments. Podhoretz continued, "Bloom goes on to charge liberalism with vulgarizing the noble ideals of freedom and equality, and he offers brilliantly acerbic descriptions of the sexual revolution and the feminist movement, which he sees as products of this process of vulgarization."[34]

In a 1989 article, Ann Clark Fehn discusses the critical reception of the book, noting that it had eclipsed other titles that year dealing with higher education—Ernest Boyer's College and E. D. Hirsch's Cultural Literacy—and quoting Publishers Weekly which had described Bloom's book as a "best-seller made by reviews."[35]

Camille Paglia, a decade after the book's release, called it "the first shot in the culture wars".[36] An early New York Times review by Roger Kimball called the book "an unparalleled reflection on the whole question of what it means to be a student in today's intellectual and moral climate."[37]

In an article on Bloom for The New Republic in 2000, conservative commentator Andrew Sullivan wrote that "reading [Bloom] ... one feels he has not merely understood Nietzsche; he has imbibed him. But this awareness of the abyss moved Bloom, unlike Nietzsche, toward love and political conservatism. Love, whether for the truth or for another, because it can raise us out of the abyss. Political conservatism because it best restrains the chaos that modernity threatens".[38] More recently, Bloom's book also received a more positive re-assessment from Jim Sleeper in The New York Times.[3]

Keith Botsford would later argue:

Bloom was writing vigorous polemic at a time when America sought to ensure that the intellect could not (and would not be allowed to) rise above gender and race; the mind was to be defined by its melanin and genetic content, and by what lay between our legs; or, in the academe, the canon was to be re-read and re-defined so that it fitted the latest theorem of gender or race. Bloom would have none of it. He loved people who were first-rate with real love ... Many profited. Others, mainly dwellers in the bas fonds of 'social studies', or those who seek to politicise culture, resented and envied.[8]

Love and Friendship

Bloom's last book, which he dictated while partially paralyzed and in the hospital, and which was published posthumously, was Love and Friendship. The book offered interpretations on the meaning of love, through a reading of novels by Stendhal, Jane Austen, Flaubert; Tolstoy in light of Rousseau's influence on the Romantic movement; plays by William Shakespeare; Montaigne's Essays; and Plato's Symposium.

Describing its creation, Bellow wrote:

Allan was an academic, but he was a literary man too — he had too much intelligence and versatility, too much humanity, to be confined to a single category ... He didn't like these helpful-to-the-sick cliches or conventional get-well encouragements ... [S]till partially paralyzed and unable even to sign his name, he dictated a book ... I mention this because it was a remarkable thing for a sick man and a convalescent to do and because it was equally remarkable that a political philosopher should choose at such a moment in his life to write about literature ... I like to think that his free and powerful intelligence, responding to great inner impulses under the stimulus of life-threatening sickness, turned to the nineteenth-century novel, to Shakespeare's love plays, and to the Platonic Eros, summoning us to the great poetry of affects and asking us to see what has happened to our own deepest feelings in this age of artificial euphorias.[39]

Of the work, Andrew Sullivan wrote "you cannot read [Bloom] on Romeo and Juliet or Antony and Cleopatra without seeing those works in a new light. You cannot read his account of Rousseau's La nouvelle Heloise without wanting to go back and read it—more closely—again ... Bloom had a gift for reading reality—the impulse to put your loving face to it and press your hands against it".[38] Recollecting his friend in an interview, Bellow said "Allan inhaled books and ideas the way the rest of us breathe air ... People only want the factual truth. Well, the truth is that Allan was a very superior person, great-souled. When critics proclaim the death of the novel, I sometimes think they are really saying that there are no significant people to write about. [But] Allan was certainly one."[40]

Personal life

Bloom was gay. His last book, Love and Friendship, was dedicated to his companion, Michael Z. Wu. Whether or not he died of AIDS is a subject of controversy.[41]

Selected works

  • Bloom, Allan, and Harry V. Jaffa. 1964. Shakespeare's Politics. New York: Basic Books.
  • Bloom, Allan. 1968 (2nd ed 1991). The Republic of Plato. (translated with notes and an interpretive essay). New York: Basic Books.
  • Bloom, Allan, Charles Butterworth, Christopher Kelly (Edited and translated), and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. 1968. Letter to d'Alembert on the theater in politics and the arts. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press; Agora ed.
  • Bloom, Allan, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. 1979. Emile (translator) with introduction. New York: Basic Books.
  • Alexandre Kojève (Raymond Queneau, Allan Bloom, James H. Nichols). Introduction to the reading of Hegel. Cornell, 1980.
  • Bloom, Allan. 1987. The Closing of the American Mind. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 5-551-86868-0.
  • Bloom, Allan, and Steven J. Kautz ed. 1991. Confronting the Constitution: The challenge to Locke, Montesquieu, Jefferson, and the Federalists from Utilitarianism, Historicism, Marxism, Freudism. Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research.
  • Bloom, Allan. 1991. Giants and Dwarfs: Essays, 1960–1990. New York: Touchstone Books.
  • Bloom, Allan. 1993. Love and Friendship. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • Bloom, Allan. 2000. Shakespeare on Love & Friendship. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Plato, Seth Benardete, and Allan Bloom. 2001. Plato's Symposium: A translation by Seth Benardete with commentaries by Allan Bloom and Seth Benardete. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Allan Bloom, The Closing of the American Mind, Simon and Schuster, 1987, p. 42.
  2. ^ Hitchens, Christopher (2002). Unacknowledged Legislation: Writers in the Public Sphere. Verso. p. 226.
  3. ^ a b Sleeper, Jim (September 4, 2005). "Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind". The New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  4. ^ Bloom, Allan. Giants and Dwarfs: Essays 1960–1990, Simon & Schuster, 1990 pp. 17–18
  5. ^ a b c d e f Atlas, James. "Chicago's Grumpy Guru: Best-Selling Professor Allan Bloom and the Chicago Intellectuals." New York Times Magazine. January 3, 1988. 12.
  6. ^ Bloom, Allan (1987). The Closing of the American Mind, p. 243. New York: Simon & Schuster
  7. ^ Bloom, Allan. 1991. Giants and Dwarfs: Essays, 1960–1990, p. 11. New York: Touchstone Books
  8. ^ a b Botsworth, Keith. 'Obituary: Professor Allan Bloom', The Independent, October 12, 1992.
  9. ^ "Biography".
  10. ^ E. Field, The Man Who Would Marry Susan Sontag, Wisconsin, 2005, pp. 158–70.
  11. ^ C. Rollyson and L. Paddock, Susan Sontag: The Making of an Icon, W. W. Norton, 2000, pp. 45–50.
  12. ^ Reborn: Journals and Notebooks 1947–1963, ed. D. Rieff, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008, pp. 188–89.
  13. ^ Bloom, Allan (1991). Giants and Dwarfs: Essays 1960–1990. Touchstone Books. p. 17.
  14. ^ Strauss had sent Bloom to Paris without sufficient funding, and when Bloom was broke he sold his books to Ernest Fortin, a young Catholic priest doing graduate studies there. Father Fortin reported that this forced-purchase of Strauss' works was his introduction to Strauss. J. Brian Benestad, ed., Human Rights, Virtue, and the Common Good: Untimely Meditations on Religion and Politics, at 317 (Rowman & Littlefield 1996).
  15. ^ Downey, Kirstin (2009). The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life of Frances Perkins, FDR's Secretary of Labor and His Moral Conscience. New York: Nan A. Talese/Doubleday. p. 384. ISBN 978-0-385-51365-4.
  16. ^ Bloom, Allan. 1968 (2nd ed 1991). The Republic of Plato. (translated, with notes and an interpretive essay, by Bloom). New York: Basic Books.
  17. ^ Bloom, Allan. 1991. Giants and Dwarfs: Essays, 1960–1990. New York: Touchstone Books
  18. ^ Bloom's homosexuality
    • Jim Sleeper (September 4, 2005). "Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind". The New York Times. Retrieved June 19, 2015. Far from being a conservative ideologue, Bloom, a University of Chicago professor of political philosophy who died in 1992, was an eccentric interpreter of Enlightenment thought who led an Epicurean, quietly gay life.
    • Donald Lazare (September 18, 2007). "'The Closing of the American Mind,' 20 Years Later". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved June 19, 2015. [Paul Wolfowitz said] in Bloom's Chicago circle when he was alive, 'It was sort of, Don't ask, don't tell.' But whether Bloom had AIDS is disputed.
  19. ^ Question of whether Bloom died from AIDS
    • D.T. Max. "With Friends Like Saul Bellow". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved June 19, 2015.
    • Joseph Epstein (2011). Gossip: The Untrivial Pursuit. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 146. ISBN 978-0-618-72194-8. No one ever said it aloud, but it was important to Bloom's friends, none of whom denied his homosexuality, that he died of an auto-immune disease rather than one associated with sexual promiscuity.
  20. ^ Allan Bloom, The Closing of the American Mind (New York, 1987), p. 245.
  21. ^ Bloom, Allan. 1968. The Republic of Plato, "Interpretative Essay," p. 387. New York: Basic Books
  22. ^ Gulley, Norman (July 1970). "The REPUBLIC of Plato: Translated, with Notes and an Interpretive Essay". Philosophical Quarterly. 20 (80): 269. doi:10.2307/2218401. JSTOR 2218401.
  23. ^ Bloom, Allan (September 25, 2006). "Our Listless Universities". National Review. Retrieved September 1, 2021.
  24. ^ Will, George F. (July 30, 1987). "A How-To Book for the Independent". The Washington Post.
  25. ^ Goldstein, William. "The Story behind the Best Seller: Allan Bloom's Closing of the American Mind." Publishers Weekly. July 3, 1987.
  26. ^ Bloom, Allan. 1987. The Closing of the American Mind, p. 278. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  27. ^ Bloom, Allan. 1987. The Closing of the American Mind, p. 279. New York: Simon & Schuster
  28. ^ Zappa, Frank (1987), , New Perspective's Quarterly, archived from the original on 2006-12-08
  29. ^ Bloom, Allan. "Music" pp. 68–81. The Closing of the American Mind. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  30. ^ Ferguson, Andrew (April 9, 2012), "The Book That Drove Them Crazy", The Weekly Standard, retrieved May 19, 2013
  31. ^ a b Nussbaum, Martha. "Undemocratic Vistas," New York Review of Books 34, no. 17 (November 5, 1987).
  32. ^ a b Atlas, James (1988-01-03). "Chicago's grumpy guru". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
  33. ^ Matthews, Fred (Apr 1990), "The Attack on 'Historicism': Allan Bloom's Indictment of Contemporary American Historical Scholarship", The American Historical Review, 95 (2): 429–447, doi:10.2307/2163758, JSTOR 2163758
  34. ^ Podhoretz, Norman. "Conservative Book Becomes a Best-Seller." Human Events July 11, 1987: 5–6.
  35. ^ Fehn, Ann Clark (Summer 1989), "Focus: Literature since 1945", The German Quarterly, 62 (3)
  36. ^ Paglia, Camille (July 1997). . Salon.com. Archived from the original on 11 April 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-09.
  37. ^ Kimball, Roger (April 5, 1987), "The Groves of Ignorance", The New York Times, retrieved May 19, 2013
  38. ^ a b Longing: Remembering Allan Bloom, The New Republic, April 17, 2000.
  39. ^ Saul Bellow, It All Adds Up (Penguin, 2007), pp. 277–279.
  40. ^ Wood, James (April 14, 2000), "The wordly mystic's late bloom", The Guardian, UK, retrieved May 19, 2013
  41. ^ "The University of Chicago Magazine: June 2000, Campus News".

Further reading

  • Atlas, James. "Chicago's Grumpy Guru: Best-Selling Professor Allan Bloom and the Chicago Intellectuals." New York Times Magazine. January 3, 1988.
  • "The Constitution in Full Bloom". 1990. Harvard Law Review 104, no. 2 (Dec 90): 645.
  • Bayles, Martha. 1998. "Body and soul: the musical miseducation of youth." Public Interest, no. 131, Spring 98: 36.
  • Beckerman, Michael. 2000. "Ravelstein Knows Everything, Almost". The New York Times (May 28, 2000).
  • Bellow, Adam. 2005. "Opening the American Mind". National Review 57, no. 23 (12/19/2005): 102.
  • Bellow, Saul. 2000. Ravelstein. New York, New York: Penguin.
  • Butterworth, Charles E., "On Misunderstanding Allan Bloom: The Response to The Closing of the American Mind." Academic Questions 2, no. 4: 56.
  • Edington, Robert V. 1990. "Allan Bloom's message to the state universities". Perspectives on Political Science; 19, no. 3
  • Fulford, Robert. "Saul Bellow, Allan Bloom, and Abe Ravelstein." Globe and Mail, November 2, 1999.
  • Goldstein, William. "The Story behind the Best Seller: Allan Bloom's Closing of the American Mind." Publishers Weekly. July 3, 1987.
  • Hook, Sidney. 1989. "Closing of the American Mind: An Intellectual Best Seller Revisited". American Scholar 58, no. Winter: 123.
  • Iannone, Carol. 2003. "What's Happened to Liberal Education?". Academic Questions 17, no. 1, 54.
  • Jaffa, Harry V. "Humanizing Certitudes and Impoverishing Doubts: A Critique of Closing of the American Mind." Interpretation. 16 Fall 1988.
  • Kahan, Jeffrey. 2002. "Shakespeare on Love and Friendship." Women's Studies 31, no. 4, 529.
  • Kinzel, Till. 2002. Platonische Kulturkritik in Amerika. Studien zu Allan Blooms The Closing of the American Mind. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot.
  • Matthews, Fred. "The Attack on 'Historicism': Allan Bloom's Indictment of Contemporary American Historical Scholarship." American Historical Review 95, no. 2, 429.
  • Mulcahy, Kevin V. 1989. "Civic Illiteracy and the American Cultural Heritage." Journal of Politics 51, no. 1, 177.
  • Nussbaum, Martha. "Undemocratic Vistas," New York Review of Books 34, no.17 (November 5, 1987)
  • Orwin, Clifford. "Remembering Allan Bloom." American Scholar 62, no. 3, 423.
  • Palmer, Michael, and Thomas Pangle ed. 1995. Political Philosophy and the Human Soul: Essays in Memory of Allan Bloom. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield Pub.
  • Rosenberg, Aubrey. 1981. "Translating Rousseau." University of Toronto Quarterly 50, no. 3, 339.
  • Schaub, Diana. 1994. "Erotic adventures of the mind." Public Interest, no. 114, 104.
  • Slater, Robert O (2005), "Allan Bloom", in Shook, John (ed.), (PDF), vol. 1, Bristol, England: Thoemmes Press, archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-07-10.
  • Sleeper, Jim. 2005. "Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind". New York Times Book Review (September 4, 2005): 27.
  • Wrightson, Katherine M. 1998. "The Professor as Teacher: Allan Bloom, Wayne Booth, and the Tradition of Teaching at the University of Chicago." Innovative Higher Education 23, no. 2, 103.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Allan Bloom at Wikiquote
  • Keith Botsford, Obituary: Professor Allan Bloom, The Independent, October 12, 1992
  • DePauw University News "Closing of the American Mind Author Allan Bloom Calls on DePauw Students to Seize "Charmed Years". Ubben Lecture Series: September 11, 1987, Greencastle, Indiana. (Accessed May 16, 2007).
  • Patner, Andrew. Chicago Sun-Times, April 16, 2000. (Accessed May 16, 2007).
  • West, Thomas G. The Claremont Institute, The Claremont Institute Blog Writings. June 1, 2000. (Accessed May 16, 2007).
  • A review of Political Philosophy & the Human Soul: Essays in Memory of Allan Bloom by Michael Palmer and Thomas L. Pangle, in Conference Journal.
  • Bloom's Lectures on Socrates, Aristotle, Machiavelli and Nietzsche at Boston University (1983)
  • Allan Bloom in philosophical discussion

allan, bloom, this, article, about, american, philosopher, british, horticulturalist, alan, bloom, confused, with, harold, bloom, allan, david, bloom, september, 1930, october, 1992, american, philosopher, classicist, academician, studied, under, david, grene,. This article is about the American philosopher For the British horticulturalist see Alan Bloom Not to be confused with Harold Bloom Allan David Bloom September 14 1930 October 7 1992 was an American philosopher classicist and academician He studied under David Grene Leo Strauss Richard McKeon and Alexandre Kojeve He subsequently taught at Cornell University the University of Toronto Tel Aviv University Yale University the Ecole normale superieure and the University of Chicago Allan BloomBornAllan David Bloom 1930 09 14 September 14 1930Indianapolis Indiana U S DiedOctober 7 1992 1992 10 07 aged 62 Chicago Illinois U S Alma materUniversity of Chicago BA PhD Ecole Normale SuperieureNotable workThe Closing of the American Mind 1987 Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophyThesisThe Political Philosophy of Isocrates 1955 Doctoral advisorLeo StraussNotable studentsMichael SugrueMain interestsGreek philosophy history of philosophy political philosophy Renaissance philosophy Nihilism continental philosophy French literature ShakespeareNotable ideasThe openness of relativism as leads paradoxically to the great closing 1 Influences Pre Socratics Socrates Isocrates Plato Aristotle Machiavelli Montaigne William Shakespeare Jean Jacques Rousseau Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel Friedrich Nietzsche Martin Heidegger Leo Strauss Alexandre Kojeve Raymond Aron Jean RacineInfluenced Janet Ajzenstat Francis Fukuyama Thomas Pangle Harvey C Mansfield Alan Keyes Paul Wolfowitz Michael SugrueBloom championed the idea of Great Books education and became famous for his criticism of contemporary American higher education with his views being expressed in his bestselling 1987 book The Closing of the American Mind 2 Characterized as a conservative in the popular media 3 Bloom denied the label asserting that what he sought to defend was the theoretical life 4 Saul Bellow wrote Ravelstein a roman a clef based on Bloom his friend and colleague at the University of Chicago Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career and death 3 Philosophy 3 1 The Republic of Plato 3 1 1 Critical reception 4 The Closing of the American Mind 4 1 Critical reception 5 Love and Friendship 6 Personal life 7 Selected works 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education EditBloom was born in Indianapolis Indiana to second generation Jewish parents who were both social workers The couple had a daughter Lucille two years earlier As a thirteen year old Bloom read a Reader s Digest article about the University of Chicago and told his parents he wanted to attend his parents thought it was unreasonable and did not encourage his hopes 5 Yet when his family moved to Chicago in 1944 his parents met a psychiatrist and family friend whose son was enrolled in the University of Chicago s humanities program for gifted students In 1946 Bloom was accepted to the same program starting his degree at the age of fifteen and spending the next decade of his life enrolled at the university in Chicago s Hyde Park neighborhood 5 This began his lifelong passion for the idea of the university 6 In the preface to Giants and Dwarfs Essays 1960 1990 he stated that his education began with Freud and ended with Plato The theme of this education was self knowledge or self discovery an idea that Bloom would later write seemed impossible to conceive of for a Midwestern American boy He credits Leo Strauss as the teacher who made this endeavor possible for him 7 Bloom graduated from the University of Chicago with a bachelor s degree at the age of 18 8 One of his college classmates was the classicist Seth Benardete 9 For post graduate studies he enrolled in the University of Chicago s Committee on Social Thought where he was assigned classicist David Grene as tutor Bloom went on to write his thesis on Isocrates Grene recalled Bloom as an energetic and humorous student completely dedicated to studying classics but with no definite career ambitions 5 The committee was a unique interdisciplinary program that attracted a small number of students due to its rigorous academic requirements and lack of clear employment opportunities after graduation 5 Bloom earned his Ph D from the Committee on Social Thought in 1955 He subsequently studied under the influential Hegelian philosopher Alexandre Kojeve in Paris whose lectures Bloom would later introduce to the English speaking world While teaching philosophy at the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris he befriended Raymond Aron amongst many other philosophers Among the American expatriate community in Paris his friends included writer Susan Sontag 10 11 12 Career and death EditI am not a conservative neo or paleo Conservatism is a respectable outlook I just do not happen to be that animal Allan Bloom Giants and Dwarfs 13 Bloom studied and taught in Paris 1953 55 at the Ecole Normale Superieure 14 and Germany 1957 Upon returning to the United States in 1955 he taught adult education students at the University of Chicago with his friend Werner J Dannhauser author of Nietzsche s View of Socrates Bloom went on to teach at Yale from 1960 to 1963 at Cornell until 1970 and at the University of Toronto until 1979 when he returned to the University of Chicago Among Bloom s former students are prominent journalists government officials and political scientists such as Francis Fukuyama Robert Kraynak Pierre Hassner Clifford Orwin Janet Ajzenstat John Ibbitson James Ceaser and Thomas Pangle In 1963 as a professor at Cornell Allan Bloom served as a faculty member of the Cornell Branch of the Telluride Association an organization focused on intellectual development and self governance The students received free room and board in the Telluride House on the Cornell University campus and assumed the management of the house themselves While living at the house Bloom befriended former U S Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins 15 Bloom s first book was a collection of three essays on Shakespeare s plays Shakespeare s Politics it included an essay from Harry V Jaffa He translated and commented upon Rousseau s Letter to M d Alembert on the Theater bringing it into dialogue with Plato s Republic In 1968 he published his most significant work of philosophical translation and interpretation a translation of Plato s Republic Bloom strove to achieve translation for the serious student The preface opens on page xi with the statement this is intended to be a literal translation 16 page needed Although the translation is not universally accepted Bloom said he always conceptualized the translator s role as a matchmaker between readers and the texts he translated 17 page needed He repeated this effort as a professor of political science at the University of Toronto in 1978 translating Jean Jacques Rousseau s Emile Among other publications during his years of teaching was a reading of Swift s Gulliver s Travels titled Giants and Dwarfs it became the title for a collection of essays on among others Raymond Aron Alexandre Kojeve Leo Strauss and liberal philosopher John Rawls Bloom was an editor for the scholarly journal Political Theory as well as a contributor to History of Political Philosophy edited by Joseph Cropsey and Leo Strauss After returning to Chicago he befriended and taught courses with Saul Bellow In 1987 Bellow wrote the preface to The Closing of the American Mind Bloom s last book which he dictated while in the hospital dying and which was published posthumously was Love and Friendship an offering of interpretations on the meaning of love There is an ongoing controversy over Bloom s semi closeted homosexuality possibly culminating as in Saul Bellow s thinly fictionalized account in Ravelstein in his death in 1992 from AIDS 18 Bloom s friends do not deny his homosexuality but whether he actually died of AIDS remains disputed 19 Philosophy EditThe substance of my being has been informed by the books I learned to care for 20 Bloom s work is not easily categorized yet there is a thread that links all of his published material He was concerned with preserving a philosophical way of life for future generations He strove to do this through both scholarly and popular writing His writings may be placed into two categories scholarly e g Plato s Republic and popular political commentary e g The Closing of the American Mind On the surface this is a valid distinction yet closer examinations of Bloom s works reveal a direct connection between the two types of expression which reflect his view of philosophy and the role of the philosopher in political life citation needed The Republic of Plato Edit Bloom s translation and essay on the Republic is radically different in many important aspects from the previous translations and interpretations of the Republic Most notable is Bloom s discussion of Socratic irony In fact irony is the key to Bloom s take on the Republic see his discussion of Books II VI of the Republic Allan Bloom says a philosopher is immune to irony because he can see the tragic as comic and comic as tragic Bloom refers to Socrates the philosopher par excellence in his Interpretative Essay stating Socrates can go naked where others go clothed he is not afraid of ridicule He can also contemplate sexual intercourse where others are stricken with terror he is not afraid of moral indignation In other words he treats the comic seriously and the tragic lightly 21 Thus irony in the Republic refers to the Just City in Speech which Bloom looks at not as a model for future society nor as a template for the human soul rather it is a city presented ironically an example of the distance between philosophy and every potential philosopher Bloom follows Strauss in suggesting that the Just City in Speech is not natural it is man made Critical reception Edit Some reviewers such as Norman Gulley criticized the quality of both the translation and the essay itself 22 The Closing of the American Mind EditMain article The Closing of the American Mind Students now arrive at the university ignorant and cynical about our political heritage lacking the wherewithal to be either inspired by it or seriously critical of it Allan Bloom The Closing of the American MindThe Closing of the American Mind was published in 1987 five years after Bloom published an essay in National Review about the failure of universities to serve the needs of students 23 With the encouragement of Saul Bellow his colleague at the University of Chicago he expanded his thoughts into a book about a life I ve led 5 that critically reflected on the current state of higher education in American universities His friends and admirers imagined the work would be a modest success as did Bloom who recognized his publisher s modest advance to complete the project as a lack of sales confidence Yet on the momentum of strong initial reviews including one by Christopher Lehmann Haupt in The New York Times and an op ed piece by syndicated conservative commentator George Will titled A How To Book for the Independent 24 it became an unexpected best seller eventually selling close to half a million copies in hardback and remaining at number one on The New York Times Bestseller List for nonfiction for four months 25 The book is a critique of the contemporary university and how Bloom sees it as failing its students In it Bloom criticizes the modern movements in philosophy and the humanities Philosophy professors involved in ordinary language analysis or logical positivism disregard important humanizing ethical and political issues and fail to pique the interest of students 26 Literature professors involved in deconstructionism promote irrationalism and skepticism of standards of truth and thereby dissolve the moral imperatives which are communicated through genuine philosophy and which elevate and broaden the intellects of those who engage with them 27 To a great extent Bloom s criticism revolves around his belief that the great books of Western thought have been devalued as a source of wisdom Bloom s critique extends beyond the university to speak to the general crisis in American society The Closing of the American Mind draws analogies between the United States and the Weimar Republic The modern liberal philosophy he says enshrined in the Enlightenment thought of John Locke that a just society could be based upon self interest alone coupled by the emergence of relativism in American thought had led to this crisis For Bloom this created a void in the souls of Americans into which demagogic radicals as exemplified by 1960s student leaders could leap In the same fashion Bloom suggests the Nazi brownshirts once filled the gap created in German society by the Weimar Republic In the second instance he argued the higher calling of philosophy and reason understood as freedom of thought had been eclipsed by a pseudo philosophy or an ideology of thought Relativism was one feature of modern liberal philosophy that had subverted the Platonic Socratic teaching Bloom s critique of contemporary social movements at play in universities or society at large is derived from his classical and philosophical orientation For Bloom the failure of contemporary liberal education leads to the sterile social and sexual habits of modern students and to their inability to fashion a life for themselves beyond the mundane offerings touted as success Bloom argues that commercial pursuits had become more highly valued than love the philosophic quest for truth or the civilized pursuits of honor and glory In one chapter in a style of analysis which resembles the work of the Frankfurt School he examined the philosophical effects of popular music on the lives of students placing pop music or as it is generically branded by record companies rock music in a historical context from Plato s Republic to Nietzsche s Dionysian longings Treating it for the first time citation needed with genuine philosophical interest he gave fresh attention to the industry its target marketing to children and teenagers its top performers its place in the late capitalist bourgeois economy and its pretensions to liberation and freedom Some critics including the popular musician Frank Zappa argued that Bloom s view of pop music was based on the same ideas that critics of pop in 1950s held ideas about the preservation of traditional white American society 28 Bloom informed by Socrates Aristotle Rousseau and Nietzsche explores music s power over the human soul He cites the soldier who throws himself into battle at the urging of the drum corps the pious believer who prays under the spell of a religious hymn the lover seduced by the romantic guitar and points towards the tradition of philosophy that treated musical education as paramount He names the pop star Mick Jagger as a cardinal representative of the hypocrisy and erotic sterility of pop rock music Pop music employs sexual images and language to enthrall the young and to persuade them that their petty rebelliousness is authentic politics when in fact they are being controlled by the money managers whom successful performers like Jagger quietly serve Bloom claims that Jagger is a hero to many university students who envy his fame and wealth but are really just bored by the lack of options before them 29 Along with the absence of literature in the lives of the young and their sexual but often unerotic relationships the first part of The Closing tries to explain the current state of education in a fashion beyond the purview of an economist or psychiatrist contemporary culture s leading umpires Critical reception Edit The book met with early critical acclaim including positive reviews in The New York Times Time Newsweek the Chronicle of Higher Education and The Washington Post A second round of reviews was generally more critical 30 Martha Nussbaum a political philosopher and classicist and Harry V Jaffa a conservative both argued that Bloom was deeply influenced by 19th century European philosophers especially Friedrich Nietzsche Nussbaum wrote that for Bloom Nietzsche had been disastrously influential in modern American thought 31 In a passage of her review Nussbaum wrote How good a philosopher then is Allan Bloom The answer is we cannot say and we are given no reason to think him one at all 31 The criticism of the book was continued by impassioned reviews of political theorist Benjamin Barber in Harper s Alexander Nehamas a scholar of ancient philosophy and Nietzsche in the London Review of Books and David Rieff in The Times Literary Supplement 32 David Rieff called Bloom an academic version of Oliver North vengeful reactionary antidemocratic The book he said was one that decent people would be ashamed of having written The tone of these reviews led James Atlas in The New York Times Magazine to conclude that the responses to Bloom s book have been charged with a hostility that transcends the usual mean spiritedness of reviewers 5 One reviewer the philosopher Robert Paul Wolff writing in the scholarly journal Academe satirically reviewed the book as a work of fiction he claimed that Bloom s friend Saul Bellow who had written the introduction had written a coruscatingly funny novel in the form of a pettish bookish grumpy reactionary complaint against the last two decades with the author a mid fiftyish professor at the University of Chicago to whom Bellow gives the evocative name Bloom 32 Yet some reviewers tempered that criticism with an admission of the merits of Bloom s writing for example Fred Matthews an historian from York University began an otherwise relatively critical review in the American Historical Review with the statement that Bloom s probes into popular culture were both amusing and perceptive and that the work was a rich often brilliant and disturbing book 33 Some critics embraced Bloom s argument Norman Podhoretz noted that the closed mindedness in the title refers to the paradoxical consequence of the academic open mind found in liberal political thought namely the narrow and intolerant dogmatism that dismisses any attempt by Plato or the Hebrew Bible for example to provide a rational basis for moral judgments Podhoretz continued Bloom goes on to charge liberalism with vulgarizing the noble ideals of freedom and equality and he offers brilliantly acerbic descriptions of the sexual revolution and the feminist movement which he sees as products of this process of vulgarization 34 In a 1989 article Ann Clark Fehn discusses the critical reception of the book noting that it had eclipsed other titles that year dealing with higher education Ernest Boyer s College and E D Hirsch s Cultural Literacy and quoting Publishers Weekly which had described Bloom s book as a best seller made by reviews 35 Camille Paglia a decade after the book s release called it the first shot in the culture wars 36 An early New York Times review by Roger Kimball called the book an unparalleled reflection on the whole question of what it means to be a student in today s intellectual and moral climate 37 In an article on Bloom for The New Republic in 2000 conservative commentator Andrew Sullivan wrote that reading Bloom one feels he has not merely understood Nietzsche he has imbibed him But this awareness of the abyss moved Bloom unlike Nietzsche toward love and political conservatism Love whether for the truth or for another because it can raise us out of the abyss Political conservatism because it best restrains the chaos that modernity threatens 38 More recently Bloom s book also received a more positive re assessment from Jim Sleeper in The New York Times 3 Keith Botsford would later argue Bloom was writing vigorous polemic at a time when America sought to ensure that the intellect could not and would not be allowed to rise above gender and race the mind was to be defined by its melanin and genetic content and by what lay between our legs or in the academe the canon was to be re read and re defined so that it fitted the latest theorem of gender or race Bloom would have none of it He loved people who were first rate with real love Many profited Others mainly dwellers in the bas fonds of social studies or those who seek to politicise culture resented and envied 8 Love and Friendship EditBloom s last book which he dictated while partially paralyzed and in the hospital and which was published posthumously was Love and Friendship The book offered interpretations on the meaning of love through a reading of novels by Stendhal Jane Austen Flaubert Tolstoy in light of Rousseau s influence on the Romantic movement plays by William Shakespeare Montaigne s Essays and Plato s Symposium Describing its creation Bellow wrote Allan was an academic but he was a literary man too he had too much intelligence and versatility too much humanity to be confined to a single category He didn t like these helpful to the sick cliches or conventional get well encouragements S till partially paralyzed and unable even to sign his name he dictated a book I mention this because it was a remarkable thing for a sick man and a convalescent to do and because it was equally remarkable that a political philosopher should choose at such a moment in his life to write about literature I like to think that his free and powerful intelligence responding to great inner impulses under the stimulus of life threatening sickness turned to the nineteenth century novel to Shakespeare s love plays and to the Platonic Eros summoning us to the great poetry of affects and asking us to see what has happened to our own deepest feelings in this age of artificial euphorias 39 Of the work Andrew Sullivan wrote you cannot read Bloom on Romeo and Juliet or Antony and Cleopatra without seeing those works in a new light You cannot read his account of Rousseau s La nouvelle Heloise without wanting to go back and read it more closely again Bloom had a gift for reading reality the impulse to put your loving face to it and press your hands against it 38 Recollecting his friend in an interview Bellow said Allan inhaled books and ideas the way the rest of us breathe air People only want the factual truth Well the truth is that Allan was a very superior person great souled When critics proclaim the death of the novel I sometimes think they are really saying that there are no significant people to write about But Allan was certainly one 40 Personal life EditBloom was gay His last book Love and Friendship was dedicated to his companion Michael Z Wu Whether or not he died of AIDS is a subject of controversy 41 Selected works EditBloom Allan and Harry V Jaffa 1964 Shakespeare s Politics New York Basic Books Bloom Allan 1968 2nd ed 1991 The Republic of Plato translated with notes and an interpretive essay New York Basic Books Bloom Allan Charles Butterworth Christopher Kelly Edited and translated and Jean Jacques Rousseau 1968 Letter to d Alembert on the theater in politics and the arts Ithaca NY Cornell University Press Agora ed Bloom Allan and Jean Jacques Rousseau 1979 Emile translator with introduction New York Basic Books Alexandre Kojeve Raymond Queneau Allan Bloom James H Nichols Introduction to the reading of Hegel Cornell 1980 Bloom Allan 1987 The Closing of the American Mind New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 5 551 86868 0 Bloom Allan and Steven J Kautz ed 1991 Confronting the Constitution The challenge to Locke Montesquieu Jefferson and the Federalists from Utilitarianism Historicism Marxism Freudism Washington DC American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research Bloom Allan 1991 Giants and Dwarfs Essays 1960 1990 New York Touchstone Books Bloom Allan 1993 Love and Friendship New York Simon amp Schuster Bloom Allan 2000 Shakespeare on Love amp Friendship Chicago University of Chicago Press Plato Seth Benardete and Allan Bloom 2001 Plato s Symposium A translation by Seth Benardete with commentaries by Allan Bloom and Seth Benardete Chicago University of Chicago Press See also EditAmerican philosophy List of American philosophersNotes Edit Allan Bloom The Closing of the American Mind Simon and Schuster 1987 p 42 Hitchens Christopher 2002 Unacknowledged Legislation Writers in the Public Sphere Verso p 226 a b Sleeper Jim September 4 2005 Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind The New York Times Retrieved April 23 2010 Bloom Allan Giants and Dwarfs Essays 1960 1990 Simon amp Schuster 1990 pp 17 18 a b c d e f Atlas James Chicago s Grumpy Guru Best Selling Professor Allan Bloom and the Chicago Intellectuals New York Times Magazine January 3 1988 12 Bloom Allan 1987 The Closing of the American Mind p 243 New York Simon amp Schuster Bloom Allan 1991 Giants and Dwarfs Essays 1960 1990 p 11 New York Touchstone Books a b Botsworth Keith Obituary Professor Allan Bloom The Independent October 12 1992 Biography E Field The Man Who Would Marry Susan Sontag Wisconsin 2005 pp 158 70 C Rollyson and L Paddock Susan Sontag The Making of an Icon W W Norton 2000 pp 45 50 Reborn Journals and Notebooks 1947 1963 ed D Rieff Farrar Straus and Giroux 2008 pp 188 89 Bloom Allan 1991 Giants and Dwarfs Essays 1960 1990 Touchstone Books p 17 Strauss had sent Bloom to Paris without sufficient funding and when Bloom was broke he sold his books to Ernest Fortin a young Catholic priest doing graduate studies there Father Fortin reported that this forced purchase of Strauss works was his introduction to Strauss J Brian Benestad ed Human Rights Virtue and the Common Good Untimely Meditations on Religion and Politics at 317 Rowman amp Littlefield 1996 Downey Kirstin 2009 The Woman Behind the New Deal The Life of Frances Perkins FDR s Secretary of Labor and His Moral Conscience New York Nan A Talese Doubleday p 384 ISBN 978 0 385 51365 4 Bloom Allan 1968 2nd ed 1991 The Republic of Plato translated with notes and an interpretive essay by Bloom New York Basic Books Bloom Allan 1991 Giants and Dwarfs Essays 1960 1990 New York Touchstone Books Bloom s homosexuality Jim Sleeper September 4 2005 Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind The New York Times Retrieved June 19 2015 Far from being a conservative ideologue Bloom a University of Chicago professor of political philosophy who died in 1992 was an eccentric interpreter of Enlightenment thought who led an Epicurean quietly gay life Donald Lazare September 18 2007 The Closing of the American Mind 20 Years Later Inside Higher Ed Retrieved June 19 2015 Paul Wolfowitz said in Bloom s Chicago circle when he was alive It was sort of Don t ask don t tell But whether Bloom had AIDS is disputed Question of whether Bloom died from AIDS D T Max With Friends Like Saul Bellow The New York Times Magazine Retrieved June 19 2015 Joseph Epstein 2011 Gossip The Untrivial Pursuit Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 146 ISBN 978 0 618 72194 8 No one ever said it aloud but it was important to Bloom s friends none of whom denied his homosexuality that he died of an auto immune disease rather than one associated with sexual promiscuity Allan Bloom The Closing of the American Mind New York 1987 p 245 Bloom Allan 1968 The Republic of Plato Interpretative Essay p 387 New York Basic Books Gulley Norman July 1970 The REPUBLIC of Plato Translated with Notes and an Interpretive Essay Philosophical Quarterly 20 80 269 doi 10 2307 2218401 JSTOR 2218401 Bloom Allan September 25 2006 Our Listless Universities National Review Retrieved September 1 2021 Will George F July 30 1987 A How To Book for the Independent The Washington Post Goldstein William The Story behind the Best Seller Allan Bloom s Closing of the American Mind Publishers Weekly July 3 1987 Bloom Allan 1987 The Closing of the American Mind p 278 New York Simon amp Schuster Bloom Allan 1987 The Closing of the American Mind p 279 New York Simon amp Schuster Zappa Frank 1987 On Junk Food for the Soul New Perspective s Quarterly archived from the original on 2006 12 08 Bloom Allan Music pp 68 81 The Closing of the American Mind New York Simon amp Schuster Ferguson Andrew April 9 2012 The Book That Drove Them Crazy The Weekly Standard retrieved May 19 2013 a b Nussbaum Martha Undemocratic Vistas New York Review of Books 34 no 17 November 5 1987 a b Atlas James 1988 01 03 Chicago s grumpy guru The New York Times Retrieved 2008 05 08 Matthews Fred Apr 1990 The Attack on Historicism Allan Bloom s Indictment of Contemporary American Historical Scholarship The American Historical Review 95 2 429 447 doi 10 2307 2163758 JSTOR 2163758 Podhoretz Norman Conservative Book Becomes a Best Seller Human Events July 11 1987 5 6 Fehn Ann Clark Summer 1989 Focus Literature since 1945 The German Quarterly 62 3 Paglia Camille July 1997 Ask Camille Salon com Archived from the original on 11 April 2008 Retrieved 2008 05 09 Kimball Roger April 5 1987 The Groves of Ignorance The New York Times retrieved May 19 2013 a b Longing Remembering Allan Bloom The New Republic April 17 2000 Saul Bellow It All Adds Up Penguin 2007 pp 277 279 Wood James April 14 2000 The wordly mystic s late bloom The Guardian UK retrieved May 19 2013 The University of Chicago Magazine June 2000 Campus News Further reading EditAtlas James Chicago s Grumpy Guru Best Selling Professor Allan Bloom and the Chicago Intellectuals New York Times Magazine January 3 1988 The Constitution in Full Bloom 1990 Harvard Law Review 104 no 2 Dec 90 645 Bayles Martha 1998 Body and soul the musical miseducation of youth Public Interest no 131 Spring 98 36 Beckerman Michael 2000 Ravelstein Knows Everything Almost The New York Times May 28 2000 Bellow Adam 2005 Opening the American Mind National Review 57 no 23 12 19 2005 102 Bellow Saul 2000 Ravelstein New York New York Penguin Butterworth Charles E On Misunderstanding Allan Bloom The Response to The Closing of the American Mind Academic Questions 2 no 4 56 Edington Robert V 1990 Allan Bloom s message to the state universities Perspectives on Political Science 19 no 3 Fulford Robert Saul Bellow Allan Bloom and Abe Ravelstein Globe and Mail November 2 1999 Goldstein William The Story behind the Best Seller Allan Bloom s Closing of the American Mind Publishers Weekly July 3 1987 Hook Sidney 1989 Closing of the American Mind An Intellectual Best Seller Revisited American Scholar 58 no Winter 123 Iannone Carol 2003 What s Happened to Liberal Education Academic Questions 17 no 1 54 Jaffa Harry V Humanizing Certitudes and Impoverishing Doubts A Critique of Closing of the American Mind Interpretation 16 Fall 1988 Kahan Jeffrey 2002 Shakespeare on Love and Friendship Women s Studies 31 no 4 529 Kinzel Till 2002 Platonische Kulturkritik in Amerika Studien zu Allan Blooms The Closing of the American Mind Berlin Duncker amp Humblot Matthews Fred The Attack on Historicism Allan Bloom s Indictment of Contemporary American Historical Scholarship American Historical Review 95 no 2 429 Mulcahy Kevin V 1989 Civic Illiteracy and the American Cultural Heritage Journal of Politics 51 no 1 177 Nussbaum Martha Undemocratic Vistas New York Review of Books 34 no 17 November 5 1987 Orwin Clifford Remembering Allan Bloom American Scholar 62 no 3 423 Palmer Michael and Thomas Pangle ed 1995 Political Philosophy and the Human Soul Essays in Memory of Allan Bloom Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield Pub Rosenberg Aubrey 1981 Translating Rousseau University of Toronto Quarterly 50 no 3 339 Schaub Diana 1994 Erotic adventures of the mind Public Interest no 114 104 Slater Robert O 2005 Allan Bloom in Shook John ed The Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers PDF vol 1 Bristol England Thoemmes Press archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 10 Sleeper Jim 2005 Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind New York Times Book Review September 4 2005 27 Wrightson Katherine M 1998 The Professor as Teacher Allan Bloom Wayne Booth and the Tradition of Teaching at the University of Chicago Innovative Higher Education 23 no 2 103 External links Edit Quotations related to Allan Bloom at Wikiquote Keith Botsford Obituary Professor Allan Bloom The Independent October 12 1992 DePauw University News Closing of the American Mind Author Allan Bloom Calls on DePauw Students to Seize Charmed Years Ubben Lecture Series September 11 1987 Greencastle Indiana Accessed May 16 2007 Patner Andrew Chicago Sun Times Allan Bloom warts and all April 16 2000 Accessed May 16 2007 West Thomas G The Claremont Institute The Claremont Institute Blog Writings Allan Bloom and America June 1 2000 Accessed May 16 2007 A review of Political Philosophy amp the Human Soul Essays in Memory of Allan Bloom by Michael Palmer and Thomas L Pangle in Conference Journal Bloom s Lectures on Socrates Aristotle Machiavelli and Nietzsche at Boston University 1983 Allan Bloom in philosophical discussion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allan Bloom amp oldid 1138293364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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