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Intellectual

An intellectual is a person who engages in critical thinking, research, and reflection about the reality of society, and who proposes solutions for its normative problems.[2][3] Coming from the world of culture, either as a creator or as a mediator, the intellectual participates in politics, either to defend a concrete proposition or to denounce an injustice, usually by either rejecting, producing or extending an ideology, and by defending a system of values.[4]

Erasmus of Rotterdam was one of the foremost intellectuals of his time.
Foreign Policy magazine named the lawyer Shirin Ebadi a leading intellectual for her work protecting human rights in Iran.[1]

Etymological background edit

"Man of letters" edit

The term "man of letters" derives from the French term belletrist or homme de lettres but is not synonymous with "an academic".[5][6] A "man of letters" was a literate man, able to read and write, and thus highly valued in the upper strata of society in a time when literacy was rare. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the term Belletrist(s) came to be applied to the literati: the French participants in—sometimes referred to as "citizens" of—the Republic of Letters, which evolved into the salon, a social institution, usually run by a hostess, meant for the edification, education, and cultural refinement of the participants.

In the late 19th century, when literacy was relatively common in European countries such as the United Kingdom, the "Man of Letters" (littérateur)[7] denotation broadened to mean "specialized", a man who earned his living writing intellectually (not creatively) about literature: the essayist, the journalist, the critic, et al. Examples include Samuel Johnson, Walter Scott and Thomas Carlyle. In the 20th century, such an approach was gradually superseded by the academic method, and the term "Man of Letters" became disused, replaced by the generic term "intellectual", describing the intellectual person. The archaic term is the basis of the names of several academic institutions which call themselves Colleges of Letters and Science.

"Intellectual" edit

The earliest record of the English noun "intellectual" is found in the 19th century, where in 1813, Byron reports that 'I wish I may be well enough to listen to these intellectuals'.[8]: 18  Over the course of the 19th century, other variants of the already established adjective 'intellectual' as a noun appeared in English and in French, where in the 1890s the noun (intellectuels) formed from the adjective intellectuel appeared with higher frequency in the literature.[8]: 20  Collini writes about this time that "[a]mong this cluster of linguistic experiments there occurred ... the occasional usage of 'intellectuals' as a plural noun to refer, usually with a figurative or ironic intent, to a collection of people who might be identified in terms of their intellectual inclinations or pretensions."[8]: 20 

In early 19th-century Britain, Samuel Taylor Coleridge coined the term clerisy, the intellectual class responsible for upholding and maintaining the national culture, the secular equivalent of the Anglican clergy. Likewise, in Tsarist Russia, there arose the intelligentsia (1860s–1870s), who were the status class of white-collar workers. For Germany, the theologian Alister McGrath said that "the emergence of a socially alienated, theologically literate, antiestablishment lay intelligentsia is one of the more significant phenomena of the social history of Germany in the 1830s".[9]: 53  An intellectual class in Europe was socially important, especially to self-styled intellectuals, whose participation in society's arts, politics, journalism, and education—of either nationalist, internationalist, or ethnic sentiment—constitute "vocation of the intellectual". Moreover, some intellectuals were anti-academic, despite universities (the academy) being synonymous with intellectualism.[citation needed]

 
The front page of L'Aurore (13 January 1898) featured Émile Zola's open letter J'Accuse…! asking the French President Félix Faure to resolve the Dreyfus affair.

In France, the Dreyfus affair (1894–1906), an identity crisis of antisemitic nationalism for the French Third Republic (1870–1940), marked the full emergence of the "intellectual in public life", especially Émile Zola, Octave Mirbeau and Anatole France directly addressing the matter of French antisemitism to the public; thenceforward, "intellectual" became common, yet initially derogatory, usage; its French noun usage is attributed to Georges Clemenceau in 1898. Nevertheless, by 1930 the term "intellectual" passed from its earlier pejorative associations and restricted usages to a widely accepted term and it was because of the Dreyfus Affair that the term also acquired generally accepted use in English.[8]: 21 

In the 20th century, the term intellectual acquired positive connotations of social prestige, derived from possessing intellect and intelligence, especially when the intellectual's activities exerted positive consequences in the public sphere and so increased the intellectual understanding of the public, by means of moral responsibility, altruism, and solidarity, without resorting to the manipulations of demagoguery, paternalism and incivility (condescension).[10]: 169  The sociologist Frank Furedi said that "Intellectuals are not defined according to the jobs they do, but [by] the manner in which they act, the way they see themselves, and the [social and political] values that they uphold.[11][page needed]

According to Thomas Sowell, as a descriptive term of person, personality, and profession, the word intellectual identifies three traits:

  1. Educated; erudition for developing theories;
  2. Productive; creates cultural capital in the fields of philosophy, literary criticism, and sociology, law, medicine, and science, etc.; and
  3. Artistic; creates art in literature, music, painting, sculpture, etc.[12][page needed]

Historical uses edit

In Latin language, at least starting from the Carolingian Empire, intellectuals could be called litterati, a term which is sometimes applied today.[citation needed]

The word intellectual is found in Indian scripture Mahabharata in the Bachelorette meeting (Swayamvara Sava) of Draupadi. Immediately after Arjuna and Raja-Maharaja (kings-emperors) came to the meeting, Nipuna Buddhijibina (perfect intellectuals) appeared at the meeting.[citation needed]

In Imperial China in the period from 206 BC until AD 1912, the intellectuals were the Scholar-officials ("Scholar-gentlemen"), who were civil servants appointed by the Emperor of China to perform the tasks of daily governance. Such civil servants earned academic degrees by means of imperial examination, and were often also skilled calligraphers or Confucian philosophers. Historian Wing-Tsit Chan concludes that:

Generally speaking, the record of these scholar-gentlemen has been a worthy one. It was good enough to be praised and imitated in 18th century Europe. Nevertheless, it has given China a tremendous handicap in their transition from government by men to government by law, and personal considerations in Chinese government have been a curse.[13]: 22 

In Joseon Korea (1392–1910), the intellectuals were the literati, who knew how to read and write, and had been designated, as the chungin (the "middle people"), in accordance with the Confucian system. Socially, they constituted the petite bourgeoisie, composed of scholar-bureaucrats (scholars, professionals, and technicians) who administered the dynastic rule of the Joseon dynasty.[14]: 73–4 

Public intellectual edit

External videos
  "Role of Intellectuals in Public Life", panel featuring Michael Ignatieff, Russell Jacoby, Roger Kimball, Susie Linfield, Alex Star, Ellen Willis and Alan Wolfe, March 1, 2001, C-SPAN

The term public intellectual describes the intellectual participating in the public-affairs discourse of society, in addition to an academic career.[15] Regardless of their academic fields or professional expertise, public intellectuals address and respond to the normative problems of society, and, as such, are expected to be impartial critics who can "rise above the partial preoccupation of one's own profession—and engage with the global issues of truth, judgment, and taste of the time".[16][11]: 32  In Representations of the Intellectual (1994), Edward Saïd said that the "true intellectual is, therefore, always an outsider, living in self-imposed exile, and on the margins of society".[17]: 1–2  Public intellectuals usually arise from the educated élite of a society; although the North American usage of the term intellectual includes the university academics.[18] The difference between intellectual and academic is participation in the realm of public affairs.[19]

Jürgen Habermas' Structural Transformation of Public Sphere (1963) made significant contribution to the notion of public intellectual by historically and conceptually delineating the idea of private and public. Controversial, in the same year, was Ralf Dahrendorf's definition: "As the court-jesters of modern society, all intellectuals have the duty to doubt everything that is obvious, to make relative all authority, to ask all those questions that no one else dares to ask".[20]: 51 

An intellectual usually is associated with an ideology or with a philosophy.[21][page needed] The Czech intellectual Václav Havel said that politics and intellectuals can be linked, but that moral responsibility for the intellectual's ideas, even when advocated by a politician, remains with the intellectual. Therefore, it is best to avoid utopian intellectuals who offer 'universal insights' to resolve the problems of political economy with public policies that might harm and that have harmed civil society; that intellectuals be mindful of the social and cultural ties created with their words, insights and ideas; and should be heard as social critics of politics and power.[17]: 13 

Public engagement edit

The determining factor for a "thinker" (historian, philosopher, scientist, writer, artist) to be considered a public intellectual is the degree to which the individual is implicated and engaged with the vital reality of the contemporary world, i.e. participation in the public affairs of society. Consequently, being designated as a public intellectual is determined by the degree of influence of the designator's motivations, opinions, and options of action (social, political, ideological), and by affinity with the given thinker.[citation needed]

After the failure of the large-scale May 68 movement in France, intellectuals within the country were often maligned for having specific areas of expertise while discussing general subjects like democracy. Intellectuals increasingly claimed to be within marginalized groups rather than their spokespeople, and centered their activism on the social problems relevant to their areas of expertise (such as gender relations in the case of psychologists). A similar shift occurred in China after the Tiananmen Square Massacre from the "universal intellectual" (who plans better futures from within academia) to minjian ("grassroots") intellectuals, the latter group represented by such figures as Wang Xiaobo, social scientist Yu Jianrong, and Yanhuang Chunqiu editor Ding Dong (丁東).[22]

Public policy edit

In the matters of public policy, the public intellectual connects scholarly research to the practical matters of solving societal problems. The British sociologist Michael Burawoy, an exponent of public sociology, said that professional sociology has failed by giving insufficient attention to resolving social problems, and that a dialogue between the academic and the layman would bridge the gap.[23][page needed] An example is how Chilean intellectuals worked to reestablish democracy within the right-wing, neoliberal governments of the military dictatorship of 1973–1990, the Pinochet régime allowed professional opportunities for some liberal and left-wing social scientists to work as politicians and as consultants in effort to realize the theoretical economics of the Chicago Boys, but their access to power was contingent upon political pragmatism, abandoning the political neutrality of the academic intellectual.[24]

In The Sociological Imagination (1959), C. Wright Mills said that academics had become ill-equipped for participating in public discourse, and that journalists usually are "more politically alert and knowledgeable than sociologists, economists, and especially ... political scientists".[25]: 99  That, because the universities of the U.S. are bureaucratic, private businesses, they "do not teach critical reasoning to the student", who then does not know "how to gauge what is going on in the general struggle for power in modern society".[25][page needed] Likewise, Richard Rorty criticized the quality of participation of intellectuals in public discourse as an example of the "civic irresponsibility of intellect, especially academic intellect".[26]: 142 

External videos
  Booknotes interview with Posner on Public Intellectuals: A Study of Decline, June 2, 2002, C-SPAN

The American legal scholar Richard Posner said that the participation of academic public intellectuals in the public life of society is characterized by logically untidy and politically biased statements of the kind that would be unacceptable to academia. He concluded that there are few ideologically and politically independent public intellectuals, and disapproved public intellectuals who limit themselves to practical matters of public policy, and not with values or public philosophy, or public ethics, or public theology, nor with matters of moral and spiritual outrage.

Intellectual status class edit

Socially, intellectuals constitute the intelligentsia, a status class organised either by ideology (e.g., conservatism, fascism, socialism, liberal, reactionary, revolutionary, democratic, communism), or by nationality (American intellectuals, French intellectuals, Ibero–American intellectuals, et al.). The term intelligentsiya originated from Tsarist Russia (c. 1860s–1870s), where it denotes the social stratum of those possessing intellectual formation (schooling, education), and who were Russian society's counterpart to the German Bildungsbürgertum and to the French bourgeoisie éclairée, the enlightened middle classes of those realms.[10]: 169–71 

In Marxist philosophy, the social class function of the intellectuals (the intelligentsia) is to be the source of progressive ideas for the transformation of society: providing advice and counsel to the political leaders, interpreting the country's politics to the mass of the population (urban workers and peasants). In the pamphlet What Is to Be Done? (1902), Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924) said that vanguard-party revolution required the participation of the intellectuals to explain the complexities of socialist ideology to the uneducated proletariat and the urban industrial workers in order to integrate them to the revolution because "the history of all countries shows that the working class, exclusively by its own efforts, is able to develop only trade-union consciousness" and will settle for the limited, socio-economic gains so achieved. In Russia as in Continental Europe, socialist theory was the product of the "educated representatives of the propertied classes", of "revolutionary socialist intellectuals", such as were Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.[27]: 31, 137–8 

The Hungarian Marxist philosopher György Lukács (1885–1971) identified the intelligentsia as the privileged social class who provide revolutionary leadership. By means of intelligible and accessible interpretation, the intellectuals explain to the workers and peasants the "Who?", the "How?" and the "Why?" of the social, economic and political status quo—the ideological totality of society—and its practical, revolutionary application to the transformation of their society.

The Italian communist theoretician Antonio Gramsci (1891–1937) developed Karl Marx's conception of the intelligentsia to include political leadership in the public sphere. That because "all knowledge is existentially-based", the intellectuals, who create and preserve knowledge, are "spokesmen for different social groups, and articulate particular social interests". That intellectuals occur in each social class and throughout the right-wing, the centre and the left-wing of the political spectrum and that as a social class the "intellectuals view themselves as autonomous from the ruling class" of their society.

Addressing their role as a social class, Jean-Paul Sartre said that intellectuals are the moral conscience of their age; that their moral and ethical responsibilities are to observe the socio-political moment, and to freely speak to their society, in accordance with their consciences.[28]: 119 

The British historian Norman Stone said that the intellectual social class misunderstand the reality of society and so are doomed to the errors of logical fallacy, ideological stupidity, and poor planning hampered by ideology.[17] In her memoirs, the Conservative politician Margaret Thatcher wrote that the anti-monarchical French Revolution (1789–1799) was "a utopian attempt to overthrow a traditional order [...] in the name of abstract ideas, formulated by vain intellectuals".[29]: 753 

Latin America edit

The American academic Peter H. Smith describes the intellectuals of Latin America as people from an identifiable social class, who have been conditioned by that common experience and thus are inclined to share a set of common assumptions (values and ethics); that ninety-four per cent of intellectuals come either from the middle class or from the upper class and that only six per cent come from the working class. [30]

Philosopher Steven Fuller said that because cultural capital confers power and social status as a status group they must be autonomous in order to be credible as intellectuals:

It is relatively easy to demonstrate autonomy, if you come from a wealthy or [an] aristocratic background. You simply need to disown your status and champion the poor and [the] downtrodden [...]. [A]utonomy is much harder to demonstrate if you come from a poor or proletarian background [...], [thus] calls to join the wealthy in common cause appear to betray one's class origins. [31]: 113–4 

United States edit

 
The Congregational theologian Edwards Amasa Park proposed segregating the intellectuals from the public sphere of society in the United States.

The 19th-century U.S. Congregational theologian Edwards Amasa Park said: "We do wrong to our own minds, when we carry out scientific difficulties down to the arena of popular dissension".[26]: 12  In his view, it was necessary for the sake of social, economic and political stability "to separate the serious, technical role of professionals from their responsibility [for] supplying usable philosophies for the general public". This expresses a dichotomy, derived from Plato, between public knowledge and private knowledge, "civic culture" and "professional culture", the intellectual sphere of life and the life of ordinary people in society.[26]: 12 

In the United States, members of the intellectual status class have been demographically characterized as people who hold liberal-to-leftist political perspectives about guns-or-butter fiscal policy.[32]

In "The Intellectuals and Socialism" (1949), Friedrich Hayek wrote that "journalists, teachers, ministers, lecturers, publicists, radio commentators, writers of fiction, cartoonists, and artists" form an intellectual social class whose function is to communicate the complex and specialized knowledge of the scientist to the general public. He argued that intellectuals were attracted to socialism or social democracy because the socialists offered "broad visions; the spacious comprehension of the social order, as a whole, which a planned system promises" and that such broad-vision philosophies "succeeded in inspiring the imagination of the intellectuals" to change and improve their societies.[33] According to Hayek, intellectuals disproportionately support socialism for idealistic and utopian reasons that cannot be realized in practice.[34]

Persecution of intellectuals edit

Totalitarian governments manipulate and apply anti-intellectualism to repress political dissent. Intellectuals were targeted by the Nazis, the communist regime in China, in communist Romania by the Romanian Communist Party (PCR) and the Securitate, the Khmer Rouge, and in conflicts in Bangladesh, the former Yugoslavia, and Poland.[citation needed]

Criticism edit

 
The economist Milton Friedman identified the intelligentsia and the business class as interfering with capitalism.

The French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre noted that "the Intellectual is someone who meddles in what does not concern them" (L'intellectuel est quelqu'un qui se mêle de ce qui ne le regarde pas).[35]: 588–9 

Noam Chomsky expressed the view that "intellectuals are specialists in defamation, they are basically political commissars, they are the ideological administrators, the most threatened by dissidence."[36] In his 1967 article "The Responsibility of Intellectuals", Chomsky analyzes the intellectual culture in the U.S., and argues that it is largely subservient to power. He is particularly critical of social scientists and technocrats, who provide a pseudo-scientific justification for the crimes of the state.

In "An Interview with Milton Friedman" (1974), the American economist Milton Friedman said that businessmen and intellectuals are enemies of capitalism: most intellectuals believed in socialism while businessmen expected economic privileges. In his essay "Why Do Intellectuals Oppose Capitalism?" (1998), the American libertarian philosopher Robert Nozick of the Cato Institute argued that intellectuals become embittered leftists because their superior intellectual work, much rewarded at school and at university, are undervalued and underpaid in the capitalist market economy. Thus, intellectuals turn against capitalism despite enjoying more socioeconomic status than the average person.[37]

The economist Thomas Sowell wrote in his book Intellectuals and Society (2010) that intellectuals, who are producers of knowledge, not material goods, tend to speak outside their own areas of expertise, and yet expect social and professional benefits from the halo effect derived from possessing professional expertise. In relation to other professions, public intellectuals are socially detached from the negative and unintended consequences of public policy derived from their ideas. Sowell gives the example of Bertrand Russell (1872–1970), who advised the British government against national rearmament in the years before the Second World War.[38]: 218–276 

References edit

  1. ^ Amburn, Brad (2009). "The World's Top 20 Public Intellectuals". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 31 January 2020.
  2. ^ The New Fontana dictionary of Modern Thought Third Edition, A. Bullock & S. Trombley, Eds. (1999) p. 433.
  3. ^ Jennings, Jeremy and Kemp-Welch, Tony. "The Century of the Intellectual: From Dreyfus to Salman Rushdie", Intellectuals in Politics, Routledge: New York (1997) p. 1.
  4. ^ Ory, Pascal and Sirinelli, Jean-François. Les Intellectuels en France. De l’affaire Dreyfus à nos jours (The Intellectuals in France: From the Dreyfus Affair to Our Days), Paris: Armand Colin, 2002, p. 10.
  5. ^ The Oxford English Reference Dictionary Second Edition, (1996) p. 130.
  6. ^ The New Cassel's French–English, English–French Dictionary (1962) p. 88.
  7. ^ "Littérateur, n.". Discover the Story of English (Second (1989) ed.). Oxford English Dictionary. June 2012 [First published in New English Dictionary, 1903].
  8. ^ a b c d Collini, Stefan (2006). Absent Minds. Intellectuals in Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199291055.
  9. ^ Kramer, Hilton (1999). The Twilight of the Intellectuals. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee.
  10. ^ a b Williams, Raymond. Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society (1983)
  11. ^ a b Furedi, Frank (2004). Where Have All The Intellectuals Gone?. London and New York: Continuum Press.
  12. ^ Sowell, Thomas (1980). Knowledge and Decisions. Basic Books.
  13. ^ Charles Alexander Moore, ed. (1967). The Chinese Mind: Essentials of Chinese Philosophy and Culture. U of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0824800758.
  14. ^ The Korea Foundation (2016). Koreana – Winter 2015. 한국국제교류재단. ISBN 979-1156041573.
  15. ^ Etzioni, Amitai. Ed., Public Intellectuals, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2006.
  16. ^ Bauman, 1987: 2.
  17. ^ a b c Jennings, Jeremy; Kemp-Welch, Tony (1997). "The Century of the Intellectual: From Dreyfus to Salman Rushdie". In Jennings, Jeremy; Kemp-Welch, Tony (eds.). Intellectuals in Politics: From the Dreyfus Affair to Salman Rushdie. Routledge. pp. 100–110. ISBN 0-415-14995-9.
  18. ^ McKee (2001)
  19. ^ Bourdieu 1989
  20. ^ Ralf Dahrendorf, Der Intellektuelle und die Gesellschaft, Die Zeit, 20 March 1963, reprinted in The Intellectual and Society, in On Intellectuals, ed. Philip Rieff, Garden City, NY, 1969
  21. ^ McLennan, Gregor (2004). "Traveling With Vehicular Ideas: The Case of the Third Way". Economy and Society. 33 (4): 484–99. doi:10.1080/0308514042000285251. S2CID 145227353.
  22. ^ Béja, Jean-Philippe (2020). "Review of Minjian: The Rise of China's Grassroots Intellectuals". China Review. 20 (4): 285–287. ISSN 1680-2012. JSTOR 26959862.
  23. ^ Gattone, Charles (2006). The Social Scientist As Public Intellectual: Critical Reflections In A Changing World. Rowman and Littlefield.
  24. ^ Sorkin (2007)
  25. ^ a b Mills, Charles Wright (1959). The Sociological Imagination. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  26. ^ a b c Bender, Thomas (1993). Intellect and Public Life. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  27. ^ Le Blanc, Paul. Revolution, Democracy, Socialism: Selected Writings of Lenin (Pluto Press, London: 2008)
  28. ^ Scriven 1993
  29. ^ Thatcher, Margaret (1993). The Downing Street Years. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-8317-5448-6.
  30. ^ Smith, Peter H. (2017). A view from Latin America. The New History.
  31. ^ Fuller, Steve (2005). The Intellectual: The Positive Power of Negative Thinking. Cambridge: Icon.
  32. ^ "Public Praises Science; Scientists Fault Public, Media: Section 4: Scientists, Politics and Religion – Pew Research Center for the People & the Press". People-press.org. 9 July 2009. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  33. ^ "The Intellectuals and Socialism", The University of Chicago Law Review (Spring 1949)
  34. ^ "Papers of Interest" (PDF). Mises Institute. 18 August 2014.
  35. ^ Annie Cohen-Solal, Sartre, Gallimard, 1989
  36. ^ Chomsky, Noam (2003). Understanding Power. Penguin Books India. p. 206. ISBN 9780143029915.
  37. ^ Nozick, Robert (January–February 1998). "Why do intellectuals oppose capitalism?". Cato Policy Report. 20 (1): 1, 9–11.
  38. ^ Sowell, Thomas (2010). Intellectuals and Society. Basic Books.

Bibliography edit

  • Aron, Raymond (1962) The Opium of the Intellectuals. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers.
  • Basov, Nikita et al. (2010). The Intellectual: A Phenomenon in Multidimensional Perspectives, Inter-Disciplinary Press 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Bates, David, ed., (2007). Marxism, Intellectuals and Politics. London: Palgrave.
  • Benchimol, Alex. (2016) Intellectual Politics and Cultural Conflict in the Romantic Period: Scottish Whigs, English Radicals and the Making of the British Public Sphere (London: Routledge).
  • Benda, Julien (2003). The Treason of the Intellectuals. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers.
  • Camp, Roderic (1985). Intellectuals and the State in Twentieth-Century Mexico. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  • Coleman, Peter (2010) The Last Intellectuals. Sydney: Quadrant Books.
  • Di Leo, Jeffrey R., and Peter Hitchcock, eds. (2016) The New Public Intellectual: Politics, Theory, and the Public Sphere. (Springer).
  • Finkielkraut, Alain (1995). The Defeat of the Mind. Columbia University Press.
  • Gella, Aleksander, Ed., (1976). The Intelligentsia and the Intellectuals. California: Sage Publication.
  • Gouldner, Alvin W. (1979). The Future of the Intellectuals and the Rise of the New Class. New York: The Seabury Press.
  • Gross, John (1969). The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters. New York: Macmillan.
  • Huszar, George B. de, ed., (1960). The Intellectuals: A Controversial Portrait. Glencoe, Illinois: The Free Press. Anthology with many contributors.
  • Johnson, Paul (1990). Intellectuals. New York: Harper Perennial ISBN 0-06-091657-5. Highly ideological criticisms of Rousseau, Shelley, Marx, Ibsen, Tolstoy, Hemingway, Bertrand Russell, Brecht, Sartre, Edmund Wilson, Victor Gollancz, Lillian Hellman, Cyril Connolly, Norman Mailer, James Baldwin, Kenneth Tynan, Noam Chomsky, and others.
  • Kennedy, Michael D. (2015). Globalizing knowledge: Intellectuals, universities and publics in transformation (Stanford University Press). 424pp online review.
  • Konrad, George et al. (1979). The Intellectuals On The Road To Class Power. Sussex: Harvester Press.
  • Lasch, Christopher (1997). The New Radicalism in America, 1889–1963: The Intellectual as a Social Type. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
  • Lemert, Charles (1991). Intellectuals and Politics. Newbury Park, Calif.: Sage Publications.
  • McCaughan, Michael (2000). True Crime: Rodolfo Walsh and the Role of the Intellectual in Latin American Politics. Latin America Bureau ISBN 1-899365-43-5.
  • Michael, John (2000). Anxious Intellects: Academic Professionals, Public Intellectuals, and Enlightenment Values. Duke University Press.
  • Misztal, Barbara A. (2007). Intellectuals and the Public Good. Cambridge University Press.
  • Molnar, Thomas (1961). The Decline of the Intellectual. Cleveland: The World Publishing Company.
  • Piereson, James (2006). The New Criterion, Vol. XXV, p. 52.
  • Posner, Richard A. (2002). Public Intellectuals: A Study of Decline. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press ISBN 0-674-01246-1.
  • Rieff, Philip, Ed., (1969). On Intellectuals. New York: Doubleday & Co.
  • Sawyer, S., and Iain Stewart, eds. (2016) In Search of the Liberal Moment: Democracy, Anti-totalitarianism, and Intellectual Politics in France since 1950 (Springer).
  • Showalter, Elaine (2001). Inventing Herself: Claiming A Feminist Intellectual Heritage. London: Picador.
  • Viereck, Peter (1953). Shame and Glory of the Intellectuals. Boston: Beacon Press.

Further reading edit

  • Aczél, Tamás & Méray, Tibor. (1959) The Revolt of the Mind. New York: Frederick A. Praeger.
  • Barzun, Jacques (1959). The House of Intellect. New York: Harper.
  • Berman, Paul (2010). The Flight of the Intellectuals. New York: Melville House.
  • Carey, John (2005). The Intellectuals And The Masses: Pride and Prejudice Among the Literary Intelligentsia, 1880–1939. Chicago Review Press.
  • Chomsky, Noam (1968). "The Responsibility of Intellectuals." In: The Dissenting Academy, ed. Theolord Roszak. New York: Pantheon Books, pp. 254–298.
  • Grayling, A.C. (2013). "Do Public Intellectuals Matter?," Prospect Magazine, No. 206.
  • Hamburger, Joseph (1966). Intellectuals in Politics. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Hayek, F.A. (1949). "The Intellectuals and Socialism," The University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. XVI, No. 3, pp. 417–433.
  • Huizinga, Johan (1936). In the Shadows of Tomorrow. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
  • Kidder, David S., Oppenheim, Noah D., (2006). The Intellectual Devotional. Emmaus, Pennsylvania: Rodale Books ISBN 1-59486-513-2.
  • Laruelle, François (2014). Intellectuals and Power. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Lilla, Mark (2003). The Reckless Mind – Intellectuals in Politics. New York: New York Review Books.
  • Lukacs, John A. (1958). "Intellectuals, Catholics, and the Intellectual Life," Modern Age, Vol. II, No. 1, pp. 40–53.
  • MacDonald, Heather (2001). The Burden of Bad Ideas. New York: Ivan R. Dee.
  • Milosz, Czeslaw (1990). The Captive Mind. New York: Vintage Books.
  • Molnar, Thomas (1958). "Intellectuals, Experts, and the Classless Society," Modern Age, Vol. II, No. 1, pp. 33–39.
  • Moses, A. Dirk (2009) German Intellectuals and the Nazi Past. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Rothbard, Murray N. (1989). "World War I as Fulfillment: Power and the Intellectuals," The Journal of Libertarian Studies, Vol. IX, No. 1, pp. 81–125.
  • Sapiro, Gisèle. (2014). The French Writers' War 1940–1953 (1999; English edition 2014); highly influential study of intellectuals in the French Resistance online review.
  • Shapiro, J. Salwyn (1920). "The Revolutionary Intellectual," The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. CXXV, pp. 320–330.
  • Shenfield, Arthur A. (1970). "The Ugly Intellectual," The Modern Age, Vol. XVI, No. 1, pp. 9–14.
  • Shlapentokh, Vladimir (1990) Soviet Intellectuals and Political Power. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
  • Shore, Marci (2009). Caviar and Ashes. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Small, Helen (2002). The Public Intellectual. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
  • Strunsky, Simeon (1921). "Intellectuals and Highbrows," Part II, Vanity Fair, Vol. XV, pp. 52, 92.
  • Whittington-Egan, Richard (2003-08-01). "The Vanishing Man of Letters: Part One". Contemporary Review.
  • Whittington-Egan, Richard (2003-10-01). "The Vanishing Man of Letters: Part Two". Contemporary Review.
  • Wolin, Richard (2010). The Wind from the East: French Intellectuals, the Culture Revolution and the Legacy of the 1960s. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.

External links edit

  • The Responsibility of Intellectuals, by Noam Chomsky, 23 February 1967.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 September 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2006. (105 KB) classified by profession, discipline, scholastic citations, media affiliation, number of web hits and sex.
  • Barton, Laura (2 July 2004). "Here's a Few You Missed". The Guardian. London.
  • "The Optimist's Book Club", The New Haven Advocate—discussion of public intellectuals in the 21st century.

intellectual, this, article, about, term, practician, intellect, process, developing, intellect, intellectualism, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, . This article is about the term for a practician of intellect For the process of developing intellect see intellectualism This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Intellectual news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message An intellectual is a person who engages in critical thinking research and reflection about the reality of society and who proposes solutions for its normative problems 2 3 Coming from the world of culture either as a creator or as a mediator the intellectual participates in politics either to defend a concrete proposition or to denounce an injustice usually by either rejecting producing or extending an ideology and by defending a system of values 4 Erasmus of Rotterdam was one of the foremost intellectuals of his time Foreign Policy magazine named the lawyer Shirin Ebadi a leading intellectual for her work protecting human rights in Iran 1 Contents 1 Etymological background 1 1 Man of letters 1 2 Intellectual 2 Historical uses 3 Public intellectual 3 1 Public engagement 3 2 Public policy 4 Intellectual status class 4 1 Latin America 4 2 United States 5 Persecution of intellectuals 6 Criticism 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksEtymological background edit Man of letters edit The term man of letters derives from the French term belletrist or homme de lettres but is not synonymous with an academic 5 6 A man of letters was a literate man able to read and write and thus highly valued in the upper strata of society in a time when literacy was rare In the 17th and 18th centuries the term Belletrist s came to be applied to the literati the French participants in sometimes referred to as citizens of the Republic of Letters which evolved into the salon a social institution usually run by a hostess meant for the edification education and cultural refinement of the participants In the late 19th century when literacy was relatively common in European countries such as the United Kingdom the Man of Letters litterateur 7 denotation broadened to mean specialized a man who earned his living writing intellectually not creatively about literature the essayist the journalist the critic et al Examples include Samuel Johnson Walter Scott and Thomas Carlyle In the 20th century such an approach was gradually superseded by the academic method and the term Man of Letters became disused replaced by the generic term intellectual describing the intellectual person The archaic term is the basis of the names of several academic institutions which call themselves Colleges of Letters and Science Intellectual edit The earliest record of the English noun intellectual is found in the 19th century where in 1813 Byron reports that I wish I may be well enough to listen to these intellectuals 8 18 Over the course of the 19th century other variants of the already established adjective intellectual as a noun appeared in English and in French where in the 1890s the noun intellectuels formed from the adjective intellectuel appeared with higher frequency in the literature 8 20 Collini writes about this time that a mong this cluster of linguistic experiments there occurred the occasional usage of intellectuals as a plural noun to refer usually with a figurative or ironic intent to a collection of people who might be identified in terms of their intellectual inclinations or pretensions 8 20 In early 19th century Britain Samuel Taylor Coleridge coined the term clerisy the intellectual class responsible for upholding and maintaining the national culture the secular equivalent of the Anglican clergy Likewise in Tsarist Russia there arose the intelligentsia 1860s 1870s who were the status class of white collar workers For Germany the theologian Alister McGrath said that the emergence of a socially alienated theologically literate antiestablishment lay intelligentsia is one of the more significant phenomena of the social history of Germany in the 1830s 9 53 An intellectual class in Europe was socially important especially to self styled intellectuals whose participation in society s arts politics journalism and education of either nationalist internationalist or ethnic sentiment constitute vocation of the intellectual Moreover some intellectuals were anti academic despite universities the academy being synonymous with intellectualism citation needed nbsp The front page of L Aurore 13 January 1898 featured Emile Zola s open letter J Accuse asking the French President Felix Faure to resolve the Dreyfus affair In France the Dreyfus affair 1894 1906 an identity crisis of antisemitic nationalism for the French Third Republic 1870 1940 marked the full emergence of the intellectual in public life especially Emile Zola Octave Mirbeau and Anatole France directly addressing the matter of French antisemitism to the public thenceforward intellectual became common yet initially derogatory usage its French noun usage is attributed to Georges Clemenceau in 1898 Nevertheless by 1930 the term intellectual passed from its earlier pejorative associations and restricted usages to a widely accepted term and it was because of the Dreyfus Affair that the term also acquired generally accepted use in English 8 21 In the 20th century the term intellectual acquired positive connotations of social prestige derived from possessing intellect and intelligence especially when the intellectual s activities exerted positive consequences in the public sphere and so increased the intellectual understanding of the public by means of moral responsibility altruism and solidarity without resorting to the manipulations of demagoguery paternalism and incivility condescension 10 169 The sociologist Frank Furedi said that Intellectuals are not defined according to the jobs they do but by the manner in which they act the way they see themselves and the social and political values that they uphold 11 page needed According to Thomas Sowell as a descriptive term of person personality and profession the word intellectual identifies three traits Educated erudition for developing theories Productive creates cultural capital in the fields of philosophy literary criticism and sociology law medicine and science etc and Artistic creates art in literature music painting sculpture etc 12 page needed Historical uses editIn Latin language at least starting from the Carolingian Empire intellectuals could be called litterati a term which is sometimes applied today citation needed The word intellectual is found in Indian scripture Mahabharata in the Bachelorette meeting Swayamvara Sava of Draupadi Immediately after Arjuna and Raja Maharaja kings emperors came to the meeting Nipuna Buddhijibina perfect intellectuals appeared at the meeting citation needed In Imperial China in the period from 206 BC until AD 1912 the intellectuals were the Scholar officials Scholar gentlemen who were civil servants appointed by the Emperor of China to perform the tasks of daily governance Such civil servants earned academic degrees by means of imperial examination and were often also skilled calligraphers or Confucian philosophers Historian Wing Tsit Chan concludes that Generally speaking the record of these scholar gentlemen has been a worthy one It was good enough to be praised and imitated in 18th century Europe Nevertheless it has given China a tremendous handicap in their transition from government by men to government by law and personal considerations in Chinese government have been a curse 13 22 In Joseon Korea 1392 1910 the intellectuals were the literati who knew how to read and write and had been designated as the chungin the middle people in accordance with the Confucian system Socially they constituted the petite bourgeoisie composed of scholar bureaucrats scholars professionals and technicians who administered the dynastic rule of the Joseon dynasty 14 73 4 Public intellectual editExternal videos nbsp Role of Intellectuals in Public Life panel featuring Michael Ignatieff Russell Jacoby Roger Kimball Susie Linfield Alex Star Ellen Willis and Alan Wolfe March 1 2001 C SPANThe term public intellectual describes the intellectual participating in the public affairs discourse of society in addition to an academic career 15 Regardless of their academic fields or professional expertise public intellectuals address and respond to the normative problems of society and as such are expected to be impartial critics who can rise above the partial preoccupation of one s own profession and engage with the global issues of truth judgment and taste of the time 16 11 32 In Representations of the Intellectual 1994 Edward Said said that the true intellectual is therefore always an outsider living in self imposed exile and on the margins of society 17 1 2 Public intellectuals usually arise from the educated elite of a society although the North American usage of the term intellectual includes the university academics 18 The difference between intellectual and academic is participation in the realm of public affairs 19 Jurgen Habermas Structural Transformation of Public Sphere 1963 made significant contribution to the notion of public intellectual by historically and conceptually delineating the idea of private and public Controversial in the same year was Ralf Dahrendorf s definition As the court jesters of modern society all intellectuals have the duty to doubt everything that is obvious to make relative all authority to ask all those questions that no one else dares to ask 20 51 An intellectual usually is associated with an ideology or with a philosophy 21 page needed The Czech intellectual Vaclav Havel said that politics and intellectuals can be linked but that moral responsibility for the intellectual s ideas even when advocated by a politician remains with the intellectual Therefore it is best to avoid utopian intellectuals who offer universal insights to resolve the problems of political economy with public policies that might harm and that have harmed civil society that intellectuals be mindful of the social and cultural ties created with their words insights and ideas and should be heard as social critics of politics and power 17 13 Public engagement edit The determining factor for a thinker historian philosopher scientist writer artist to be considered a public intellectual is the degree to which the individual is implicated and engaged with the vital reality of the contemporary world i e participation in the public affairs of society Consequently being designated as a public intellectual is determined by the degree of influence of the designator s motivations opinions and options of action social political ideological and by affinity with the given thinker citation needed After the failure of the large scale May 68 movement in France intellectuals within the country were often maligned for having specific areas of expertise while discussing general subjects like democracy Intellectuals increasingly claimed to be within marginalized groups rather than their spokespeople and centered their activism on the social problems relevant to their areas of expertise such as gender relations in the case of psychologists A similar shift occurred in China after the Tiananmen Square Massacre from the universal intellectual who plans better futures from within academia to minjian grassroots intellectuals the latter group represented by such figures as Wang Xiaobo social scientist Yu Jianrong and Yanhuang Chunqiu editor Ding Dong 丁東 22 Public policy edit In the matters of public policy the public intellectual connects scholarly research to the practical matters of solving societal problems The British sociologist Michael Burawoy an exponent of public sociology said that professional sociology has failed by giving insufficient attention to resolving social problems and that a dialogue between the academic and the layman would bridge the gap 23 page needed An example is how Chilean intellectuals worked to reestablish democracy within the right wing neoliberal governments of the military dictatorship of 1973 1990 the Pinochet regime allowed professional opportunities for some liberal and left wing social scientists to work as politicians and as consultants in effort to realize the theoretical economics of the Chicago Boys but their access to power was contingent upon political pragmatism abandoning the political neutrality of the academic intellectual 24 In The Sociological Imagination 1959 C Wright Mills said that academics had become ill equipped for participating in public discourse and that journalists usually are more politically alert and knowledgeable than sociologists economists and especially political scientists 25 99 That because the universities of the U S are bureaucratic private businesses they do not teach critical reasoning to the student who then does not know how to gauge what is going on in the general struggle for power in modern society 25 page needed Likewise Richard Rorty criticized the quality of participation of intellectuals in public discourse as an example of the civic irresponsibility of intellect especially academic intellect 26 142 External videos nbsp Booknotes interview with Posner on Public Intellectuals A Study of Decline June 2 2002 C SPANThe American legal scholar Richard Posner said that the participation of academic public intellectuals in the public life of society is characterized by logically untidy and politically biased statements of the kind that would be unacceptable to academia He concluded that there are few ideologically and politically independent public intellectuals and disapproved public intellectuals who limit themselves to practical matters of public policy and not with values or public philosophy or public ethics or public theology nor with matters of moral and spiritual outrage Intellectual status class editMain article Intelligentsia Socially intellectuals constitute the intelligentsia a status class organised either by ideology e g conservatism fascism socialism liberal reactionary revolutionary democratic communism or by nationality American intellectuals French intellectuals Ibero American intellectuals et al The term intelligentsiya originated from Tsarist Russia c 1860s 1870s where it denotes the social stratum of those possessing intellectual formation schooling education and who were Russian society s counterpart to the German Bildungsburgertum and to the French bourgeoisie eclairee the enlightened middle classes of those realms 10 169 71 In Marxist philosophy the social class function of the intellectuals the intelligentsia is to be the source of progressive ideas for the transformation of society providing advice and counsel to the political leaders interpreting the country s politics to the mass of the population urban workers and peasants In the pamphlet What Is to Be Done 1902 Vladimir Lenin 1870 1924 said that vanguard party revolution required the participation of the intellectuals to explain the complexities of socialist ideology to the uneducated proletariat and the urban industrial workers in order to integrate them to the revolution because the history of all countries shows that the working class exclusively by its own efforts is able to develop only trade union consciousness and will settle for the limited socio economic gains so achieved In Russia as in Continental Europe socialist theory was the product of the educated representatives of the propertied classes of revolutionary socialist intellectuals such as were Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels 27 31 137 8 The Hungarian Marxist philosopher Gyorgy Lukacs 1885 1971 identified the intelligentsia as the privileged social class who provide revolutionary leadership By means of intelligible and accessible interpretation the intellectuals explain to the workers and peasants the Who the How and the Why of the social economic and political status quo the ideological totality of society and its practical revolutionary application to the transformation of their society The Italian communist theoretician Antonio Gramsci 1891 1937 developed Karl Marx s conception of the intelligentsia to include political leadership in the public sphere That because all knowledge is existentially based the intellectuals who create and preserve knowledge are spokesmen for different social groups and articulate particular social interests That intellectuals occur in each social class and throughout the right wing the centre and the left wing of the political spectrum and that as a social class the intellectuals view themselves as autonomous from the ruling class of their society Addressing their role as a social class Jean Paul Sartre said that intellectuals are the moral conscience of their age that their moral and ethical responsibilities are to observe the socio political moment and to freely speak to their society in accordance with their consciences 28 119 The British historian Norman Stone said that the intellectual social class misunderstand the reality of society and so are doomed to the errors of logical fallacy ideological stupidity and poor planning hampered by ideology 17 In her memoirs the Conservative politician Margaret Thatcher wrote that the anti monarchical French Revolution 1789 1799 was a utopian attempt to overthrow a traditional order in the name of abstract ideas formulated by vain intellectuals 29 753 Latin America edit The American academic Peter H Smith describes the intellectuals of Latin America as people from an identifiable social class who have been conditioned by that common experience and thus are inclined to share a set of common assumptions values and ethics that ninety four per cent of intellectuals come either from the middle class or from the upper class and that only six per cent come from the working class 30 Philosopher Steven Fuller said that because cultural capital confers power and social status as a status group they must be autonomous in order to be credible as intellectuals It is relatively easy to demonstrate autonomy if you come from a wealthy or an aristocratic background You simply need to disown your status and champion the poor and the downtrodden A utonomy is much harder to demonstrate if you come from a poor or proletarian background thus calls to join the wealthy in common cause appear to betray one s class origins 31 113 4 United States edit nbsp The Congregational theologian Edwards Amasa Park proposed segregating the intellectuals from the public sphere of society in the United States The 19th century U S Congregational theologian Edwards Amasa Park said We do wrong to our own minds when we carry out scientific difficulties down to the arena of popular dissension 26 12 In his view it was necessary for the sake of social economic and political stability to separate the serious technical role of professionals from their responsibility for supplying usable philosophies for the general public This expresses a dichotomy derived from Plato between public knowledge and private knowledge civic culture and professional culture the intellectual sphere of life and the life of ordinary people in society 26 12 In the United States members of the intellectual status class have been demographically characterized as people who hold liberal to leftist political perspectives about guns or butter fiscal policy 32 In The Intellectuals and Socialism 1949 Friedrich Hayek wrote that journalists teachers ministers lecturers publicists radio commentators writers of fiction cartoonists and artists form an intellectual social class whose function is to communicate the complex and specialized knowledge of the scientist to the general public He argued that intellectuals were attracted to socialism or social democracy because the socialists offered broad visions the spacious comprehension of the social order as a whole which a planned system promises and that such broad vision philosophies succeeded in inspiring the imagination of the intellectuals to change and improve their societies 33 According to Hayek intellectuals disproportionately support socialism for idealistic and utopian reasons that cannot be realized in practice 34 Persecution of intellectuals editTotalitarian governments manipulate and apply anti intellectualism to repress political dissent Intellectuals were targeted by the Nazis the communist regime in China in communist Romania by the Romanian Communist Party PCR and the Securitate the Khmer Rouge and in conflicts in Bangladesh the former Yugoslavia and Poland citation needed Criticism edit nbsp The economist Milton Friedman identified the intelligentsia and the business class as interfering with capitalism The French philosopher Jean Paul Sartre noted that the Intellectual is someone who meddles in what does not concern them L intellectuel est quelqu un qui se mele de ce qui ne le regarde pas 35 588 9 Noam Chomsky expressed the view that intellectuals are specialists in defamation they are basically political commissars they are the ideological administrators the most threatened by dissidence 36 In his 1967 article The Responsibility of Intellectuals Chomsky analyzes the intellectual culture in the U S and argues that it is largely subservient to power He is particularly critical of social scientists and technocrats who provide a pseudo scientific justification for the crimes of the state In An Interview with Milton Friedman 1974 the American economist Milton Friedman said that businessmen and intellectuals are enemies of capitalism most intellectuals believed in socialism while businessmen expected economic privileges In his essay Why Do Intellectuals Oppose Capitalism 1998 the American libertarian philosopher Robert Nozick of the Cato Institute argued that intellectuals become embittered leftists because their superior intellectual work much rewarded at school and at university are undervalued and underpaid in the capitalist market economy Thus intellectuals turn against capitalism despite enjoying more socioeconomic status than the average person 37 The economist Thomas Sowell wrote in his book Intellectuals and Society 2010 that intellectuals who are producers of knowledge not material goods tend to speak outside their own areas of expertise and yet expect social and professional benefits from the halo effect derived from possessing professional expertise In relation to other professions public intellectuals are socially detached from the negative and unintended consequences of public policy derived from their ideas Sowell gives the example of Bertrand Russell 1872 1970 who advised the British government against national rearmament in the years before the Second World War 38 218 276 References edit Amburn Brad 2009 The World s Top 20 Public Intellectuals Foreign Policy Retrieved 31 January 2020 The New Fontana dictionary of Modern Thought Third Edition A Bullock amp S Trombley Eds 1999 p 433 Jennings Jeremy and Kemp Welch Tony The Century of the Intellectual From Dreyfus to Salman Rushdie Intellectuals in Politics Routledge New York 1997 p 1 Ory Pascal and Sirinelli Jean Francois Les Intellectuels en France De l affaire Dreyfus a nos jours The Intellectuals in France From the Dreyfus Affair to Our Days Paris Armand Colin 2002 p 10 The Oxford English Reference Dictionary Second Edition 1996 p 130 The New Cassel s French English English French Dictionary 1962 p 88 Litterateur n Discover the Story of English Second 1989 ed Oxford English Dictionary June 2012 First published in New English Dictionary 1903 a b c d Collini Stefan 2006 Absent Minds Intellectuals in Britain Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0199291055 Kramer Hilton 1999 The Twilight of the Intellectuals Chicago Ivan R Dee a b Williams Raymond Keywords A Vocabulary of Culture and Society 1983 a b Furedi Frank 2004 Where Have All The Intellectuals Gone London and New York Continuum Press Sowell Thomas 1980 Knowledge and Decisions Basic Books Charles Alexander Moore ed 1967 The Chinese Mind Essentials of Chinese Philosophy and Culture U of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0824800758 The Korea Foundation 2016 Koreana Winter 2015 한국국제교류재단 ISBN 979 1156041573 Etzioni Amitai Ed Public Intellectuals Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers 2006 Bauman 1987 2 a b c Jennings Jeremy Kemp Welch Tony 1997 The Century of the Intellectual From Dreyfus to Salman Rushdie In Jennings Jeremy Kemp Welch Tony eds Intellectuals in Politics From the Dreyfus Affair to Salman Rushdie Routledge pp 100 110 ISBN 0 415 14995 9 McKee 2001 Bourdieu 1989 Ralf Dahrendorf Der Intellektuelle und die Gesellschaft Die Zeit 20 March 1963 reprinted in The Intellectual and Society in On Intellectuals ed Philip Rieff Garden City NY 1969 McLennan Gregor 2004 Traveling With Vehicular Ideas The Case of the Third Way Economy and Society 33 4 484 99 doi 10 1080 0308514042000285251 S2CID 145227353 Beja Jean Philippe 2020 Review of Minjian The Rise of China s Grassroots Intellectuals China Review 20 4 285 287 ISSN 1680 2012 JSTOR 26959862 Gattone Charles 2006 The Social Scientist As Public Intellectual Critical Reflections In A Changing World Rowman and Littlefield Sorkin 2007 a b Mills Charles Wright 1959 The Sociological Imagination Oxford Oxford University Press a b c Bender Thomas 1993 Intellect and Public Life Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press Le Blanc Paul Revolution Democracy Socialism Selected Writings of Lenin Pluto Press London 2008 Scriven 1993 Thatcher Margaret 1993 The Downing Street Years London HarperCollins ISBN 0 8317 5448 6 Smith Peter H 2017 A view from Latin America The New History Fuller Steve 2005 The Intellectual The Positive Power of Negative Thinking Cambridge Icon Public Praises Science Scientists Fault Public Media Section 4 Scientists Politics and Religion Pew Research Center for the People amp the Press People press org 9 July 2009 Retrieved 14 April 2010 The Intellectuals and Socialism The University of Chicago Law Review Spring 1949 Papers of Interest PDF Mises Institute 18 August 2014 Annie Cohen Solal Sartre Gallimard 1989 Chomsky Noam 2003 Understanding Power Penguin Books India p 206 ISBN 9780143029915 Nozick Robert January February 1998 Why do intellectuals oppose capitalism Cato Policy Report 20 1 1 9 11 Sowell Thomas 2010 Intellectuals and Society Basic Books Bibliography edit Aron Raymond 1962 The Opium of the Intellectuals New Brunswick N J Transaction Publishers Basov Nikita et al 2010 The Intellectual A Phenomenon in Multidimensional Perspectives Inter Disciplinary Press Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Bates David ed 2007 Marxism Intellectuals and Politics London Palgrave Benchimol Alex 2016 Intellectual Politics and Cultural Conflict in the Romantic Period Scottish Whigs English Radicals and the Making of the British Public Sphere London Routledge Benda Julien 2003 The Treason of the Intellectuals New Brunswick N J Transaction Publishers Camp Roderic 1985 Intellectuals and the State in Twentieth Century Mexico Austin University of Texas Press Coleman Peter 2010 The Last Intellectuals Sydney Quadrant Books Di Leo Jeffrey R and Peter Hitchcock eds 2016 The New Public Intellectual Politics Theory and the Public Sphere Springer Finkielkraut Alain 1995 The Defeat of the Mind Columbia University Press Gella Aleksander Ed 1976 The Intelligentsia and the Intellectuals California Sage Publication Gouldner Alvin W 1979 The Future of the Intellectuals and the Rise of the New Class New York The Seabury Press Gross John 1969 The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters New York Macmillan Huszar George B de ed 1960 The Intellectuals A Controversial Portrait Glencoe Illinois The Free Press Anthology with many contributors Johnson Paul 1990 Intellectuals New York Harper Perennial ISBN 0 06 091657 5 Highly ideological criticisms of Rousseau Shelley Marx Ibsen Tolstoy Hemingway Bertrand Russell Brecht Sartre Edmund Wilson Victor Gollancz Lillian Hellman Cyril Connolly Norman Mailer James Baldwin Kenneth Tynan Noam Chomsky and others Kennedy Michael D 2015 Globalizing knowledge Intellectuals universities and publics in transformation Stanford University Press 424pp online review Konrad George et al 1979 The Intellectuals On The Road To Class Power Sussex Harvester Press Lasch Christopher 1997 The New Radicalism in America 1889 1963 The Intellectual as a Social Type New York W W Norton amp Co Lemert Charles 1991 Intellectuals and Politics Newbury Park Calif Sage Publications McCaughan Michael 2000 True Crime Rodolfo Walsh and the Role of the Intellectual in Latin American Politics Latin America Bureau ISBN 1 899365 43 5 Michael John 2000 Anxious Intellects Academic Professionals Public Intellectuals and Enlightenment Values Duke University Press Misztal Barbara A 2007 Intellectuals and the Public Good Cambridge University Press Molnar Thomas 1961 The Decline of the Intellectual Cleveland The World Publishing Company Piereson James 2006 The Rise amp Fall of the Intellectual The New Criterion Vol XXV p 52 Posner Richard A 2002 Public Intellectuals A Study of Decline Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01246 1 Rieff Philip Ed 1969 On Intellectuals New York Doubleday amp Co Sawyer S and Iain Stewart eds 2016 In Search of the Liberal Moment Democracy Anti totalitarianism and Intellectual Politics in France since 1950 Springer Showalter Elaine 2001 Inventing Herself Claiming A Feminist Intellectual Heritage London Picador Viereck Peter 1953 Shame and Glory of the Intellectuals Boston Beacon Press Further reading editAczel Tamas amp Meray Tibor 1959 The Revolt of the Mind New York Frederick A Praeger Barzun Jacques 1959 The House of Intellect New York Harper Berman Paul 2010 The Flight of the Intellectuals New York Melville House Carey John 2005 The Intellectuals And The Masses Pride and Prejudice Among the Literary Intelligentsia 1880 1939 Chicago Review Press Chomsky Noam 1968 The Responsibility of Intellectuals In The Dissenting Academy ed Theolord Roszak New York Pantheon Books pp 254 298 Grayling A C 2013 Do Public Intellectuals Matter Prospect Magazine No 206 Hamburger Joseph 1966 Intellectuals in Politics New Haven Yale University Press Hayek F A 1949 The Intellectuals and Socialism The University of Chicago Law Review Vol XVI No 3 pp 417 433 Huizinga Johan 1936 In the Shadows of Tomorrow New York W W Norton amp Company Kidder David S Oppenheim Noah D 2006 The Intellectual Devotional Emmaus Pennsylvania Rodale Books ISBN 1 59486 513 2 Laruelle Francois 2014 Intellectuals and Power Cambridge Polity Press Lilla Mark 2003 The Reckless Mind Intellectuals in Politics New York New York Review Books Lukacs John A 1958 Intellectuals Catholics and the Intellectual Life Modern Age Vol II No 1 pp 40 53 MacDonald Heather 2001 The Burden of Bad Ideas New York Ivan R Dee Milosz Czeslaw 1990 The Captive Mind New York Vintage Books Molnar Thomas 1958 Intellectuals Experts and the Classless Society Modern Age Vol II No 1 pp 33 39 Moses A Dirk 2009 German Intellectuals and the Nazi Past Cambridge Cambridge University Press Rothbard Murray N 1989 World War I as Fulfillment Power and the Intellectuals The Journal of Libertarian Studies Vol IX No 1 pp 81 125 Sapiro Gisele 2014 The French Writers War 1940 1953 1999 English edition 2014 highly influential study of intellectuals in the French Resistance online review Shapiro J Salwyn 1920 The Revolutionary Intellectual The Atlantic Monthly Vol CXXV pp 320 330 Shenfield Arthur A 1970 The Ugly Intellectual The Modern Age Vol XVI No 1 pp 9 14 Shlapentokh Vladimir 1990 Soviet Intellectuals and Political Power Princeton N J Princeton University Press Shore Marci 2009 Caviar and Ashes New Haven Yale University Press Small Helen 2002 The Public Intellectual Oxford Blackwell Publishing Strunsky Simeon 1921 Intellectuals and Highbrows Part II Vanity Fair Vol XV pp 52 92 Whittington Egan Richard 2003 08 01 The Vanishing Man of Letters Part One Contemporary Review Whittington Egan Richard 2003 10 01 The Vanishing Man of Letters Part Two Contemporary Review Wolin Richard 2010 The Wind from the East French Intellectuals the Culture Revolution and the Legacy of the 1960s Princeton N J Princeton University Press External links edit nbsp Look up intellectual literati or public intellectual in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Intellectual The Responsibility of Intellectuals by Noam Chomsky 23 February 1967 Richard Posner s table of 600 public intellectuals PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 September 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2006 105 KB classified by profession discipline scholastic citations media affiliation number of web hits and sex Barton Laura 2 July 2004 Here s a Few You Missed The Guardian London The Optimist s Book Club The New Haven Advocate discussion of public intellectuals in the 21st century Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intellectual amp oldid 1210325095 Man of Letters, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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