This remarkable group of essays describes the "culture wars"
that consolidated a new, secular ethos in mid-twentieth-century
American academia and generated the fresh energies needed for a
wide range of scientific and cultural enterprises. Focusing on the
decades from the 1930s through the 1960s, David Hollinger discusses
the scientists, social scientists, philosophers, and historians who
fought the Christian biases that had kept Jews from fully
participating in American intellectual life. Today social critics
take for granted the comparatively open outlook developed by these
men (and men they were, mostly), and charge that their
cosmopolitanism was not sufficiently multicultural. Yet Hollinger
shows that the liberal cosmopolitans of the mid-century generation
defined themselves against the realities of their own time:
McCarthyism, Nazi and Communist doctrines, a legacy of anti-Semitic
quotas, and both Protestant and Catholic versions of the notion of
a "Christian America." The victory of liberal cosmopolitans was so
sweeping by the 1960s that it has become easy to forget the
strength of the enemies they fought.
Most books addressing the emergence of Jewish intellectuals
celebrate an illustrious cohort of literary figures based in New
York City. But the pieces collected here explore the long-postponed
acceptance of Jewish immigrants in a variety of settings,
especially the social science and humanities faculties of major
universities scattered across the country. Hollinger acknowledges
the limited, rather parochial sense of "mankind" that informed some
mid-century thinking, but he also inspires in the reader an
appreciation for the integrationist aspirations of a society truly
striving toward equality. His cast of characters includes Vannevar
Bush, James B. Conant, Richard Hofstadter, Robert K. Merton, Lionel
Trilling, and J. Robert Oppenheimer.
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