Allan David Bloom (14
September 1930 in Indianapolis, Indiana
– 7 October 1992 in Chicago
, Illinois
) was an
American philosopher, classicist, and academic. He studied under
David Grene,
Leo
Strauss,
Richard McKeon and
Alexandre Kojève.
He subsequently taught
at Cornell
University
, the University of Toronto
, Yale
University
, École Normale
Supérieure
of Paris, and the University of Chicago
. Bloom championed the idea of '
Great Books' education. Bloom 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. Although Bloom was characterised as a
conservative in the popular media, Bloom
explicitly stated that this was a misunderstanding, and made it
clear that he was not to be affliated with any conservative
movements.
In 2000,
years after Bloom's death, the Nobel laureate, Saul Bellow, Bloom's friend and teaching partner
at the University of
Chicago
, wrote a novel based on his colleague entitled
Ravelstein.
Early life and education
Allan Bloom was born to Jewish social-worker parents. The couple
had a daughter, Lucille, in 1928. The birth of Allan, two years
later, completed the family group.
As a thirteen-year- old, he read a
Readers 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. 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. This began his life-long
passion for the 'idea' of the university.
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.
Bloom graduated from Chicago with his
bachelor’s degree at the age of
18. For post-graduate studies, he enrolled in the
Committee on Social Thought,
where he was assigned
Classicist David Grene as tutor, and 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. 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. Bloom
earned his Ph.D. from the Committee on Social Thought in 1955.
He
subsequently studied under the influential Hegelian-Marxist 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 and
Paul Ricoeur, amongst
other philosophers.
Career
"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
|
Bloom
studied and taught in Paris (1953-55) at the École Normale
Supérieure
, and Germany (1957). Upon returning to the
United States he taught adult education students at the University
of Chicago with his friend
Werner
J. Dannhauser, author of
Nietzsche's View of
Socrates.
Bloom later taught at Yale
, Cornell
, Tel Aviv University
and the University of Toronto
, before returning to the University of
Chicago.
In 1963, as a Professor at Cornell, Allan Bloom served as a faculty
member of the
Telluride
Association, a club for the formation of character.
The
students received free room and board in the Telluride House on the
Cornell
University
campus and assumed the management of the house
themselves.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 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 "the
first translation of Plato's Republic that attempts to be strictly
literal." 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. He repeated
this effort while a Professor 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, entitled "Giants and
Dwarfs"; it became the title for a collection of essays on, among
others,
Raymond Aron,
Alexandre Kojeve,
Leo Strauss, and
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. Bellow wrote the Preface to
The Closing of the American Mind in 1987, the book that
made Bloom famous and wealthy. Bellow later immortalized his dead
friend in the novel
Ravelstein.
Bloom's last book, which he dictated while in hospital, and which
was published posthumously, was
Love and Friendship, where
he offered interpretations on the meaning of love.
Philosophy
| "The substance of my being has been
informed by the books I learned to care for." |
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 comment (e.g.
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.
Plato's Republic
Bloom’s translation and interpretive essay on
Plato’s
Republic was published in 1968. For Bloom, previous
translations were lacking. In particular, Bloom was eager to sweep
away the
Christian Platonist layers
that had coated the translations and scholarly analysis. In 1971,
he wrote, "With the
Republic, for example, a long
tradition of philosophy tells us what the issues are. [...] This
sense of familiarity may be spurious; we may be reading the text as
seen by the tradition rather than raising Plato's own questions.
Up until the late 20th century, most English language Platonists
were following a tradition that blended Christian
theology with
Plato. This
view, named Christian Platonism, interprets Plato as prophet of the
coming Christian age, a
monotheist in a
polytheist world. In this school,
Socrates is considered a pre-Christian
saint; the tradition emphasizes
Socrates'
'goodness' and other-worldly attributes, such as accepting his
death like a
martyr. In the words of
George Grant, "Straussians say
that Christianity led to overextension of soul."
Yet there developed a different type of
Platonism,
Pagan
Platonism, a type of which Bloom became aware and most certainly
adopted from his teacher
Leo Strauss
(1899-1973), the most important representative of this thought in
the past century. Adherents have a significantly different view of
Plato’s Republic.
Strauss developed this point of view by studying ancient Islamic
and Jewish theorists, such as
Al-Farabi
(870-950) and
Moses Maimonides
(1135-1204). Each philosopher was faithful to his religion but
sought to integrate classical political philosophy into
Islam and
Judaism. Islam has a
prophet-legislator
Muhammad and similarly,
Jewish law is a function of its theology. Thus these philosophers
had to write with great skill, incorporating the ideas of
Plato and
Aristotle, many of
which contradicted or contravened Islamic or Jewish thought and
practice, without being seen to challenge the theology. According
to Strauss,
Al-Farabi and
Moses Maimonides were really writing for
potential philosophers within the pious faithful. Strauss calls
this the discovery of esoteric writing, and he first presents it as
a possibility in
Persecution and the Art of Writing
(1952). Christianity differed from these faiths in that philosophy
was always free to establish a foothold in Christendom, without
necessarily being seen as
heretical. All
one has to do is think of
Saint
Augustine (354-430) and his
City of God and
On
Free Will.
Strauss took this insight and applied it eventually to
Plato’s writings themselves. Bloom's translation and
essay of the
Republic takes this stance; therefore, it 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. Thus irony in the
Republic refers to the '
Just City in Speech' Bloom looks at it
not as a model for future
society, nor as a
template for the human
soul; rather, it is an
ironic city, 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, and thus
ironic.
Closing of the American Mind
| "Education in our times must try to
find whatever there is in students that might yearn for completion,
and to reconstruct the learning that would enable them autonomously
to seek that completion."- Allan Bloom, Closing of the American
Mind |
Closing of the American Mind was published in 1987, five
years after Bloom published an essay in
The National
Review about the failure of universities to serve the needs of
students. 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" 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 entitled "A How-To Book for the
Independent" 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 Non-fiction Best Seller
list for four months.
Bloom's
Closing of the American Mind is a critique of the
contemporary university and how Bloom sees it as failing its
students. In it, Bloom criticizes
analytic philosophy as a movement,
"Professors of these schools simply would not and could not talk
about anything important, and they themselves do not represent a
philosophic life for the students." 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.
"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 60's student leaders
could leap.
(In the same fashion, Bloom suggests, that
the Nazi brownshirts once filled the lacuna 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. The
Great Books of Western Thought simply became the ramblings of dead
white men rather than beacons leading to the highest calling.
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 a famous 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 with genuine philosophical interest, he gave fresh
attention to the industry, its target-marketing to children and
teenagers, its top performers, its place in our 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. 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-music. Pop music employs
sexual images and language to enthrall the young, and 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. In fact, Bloom claims, 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. Along with the absence of literature in the
lives of the young, and their sexual but often unerotic
relationships, the first part of
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 was met with much critical acclaim. The success of the
work attracted a wide spectrum of critics; some of the reviewers
made interesting bedfellows.
Martha
Nussbaum, a liberal
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. Jaffa went so far as to
point out the lack of attention Bloom paid to the moral role
gay rights were playing in the lives of
current students. According to Jaffa, while Bloom discusses
contemporary social movements, particularly those that gained
ascendancy in the 1960s, he is virtually silent on the
gay rights movement.
In a passage from her negative review, the review which made her
famous, 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." The outraged "assault" on the book was
continued by negative and impassioned reviews by
Benjamin Barber in
Harper's; by the post-modernist
Alexander Nehamas in The
London Review of Books; and by
David Rieff in The
Times Literary Supplement.
David Rieff, indeed, 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 "the responses to Bloom's book have been
charged with a hostility that transcends the usual
mean-spiritedness of reviewers."
One reviewer, the philosopher Robert Paul Wolff writing in the scholarly
journal Academe, 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", using as the narrator a "mid-fiftyish professor at the
University of Chicago, to whom Bellow gives the evocative name
'Bloom.'" Yet some reviewers tempered that criticism with an
admission of the merits of Bloom's writing: for example, Fred
Matthews, a 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".
Some critics embraced Bloom's argument. Thus
Norman Podhoretz in his review 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."
In a 1989 article (
The German Quarterly, Vol. 62, No. 3,
Focus: Literature since 1945 (Summer, 1989)), Ann Clark Fehn
discusses the critical reception of the book, noting that it had
eclipsed other titles that year dealing with higher education
(
College, by Ernest Boyer, and
Cultural Literacy,
by E. D. Hirsch), and quoting
Publisher's Weekly, which
had described Bloom's book as a "best-seller made by
reviews."
Camille Paglia, a decade after the
book's release, called it "the first shot in the culture wars" (a
term, however, that Bloom never used)
The linguist and popular-writer Noam Chomsky declared the book to be "mind-bogglingly stupid." On the other hand, a 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." Bloom's book has recently been given extremely positive critical re-assessments, within the New York Times amongst other publications. Writing of it in The New Republic, in 2000, 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."
As
Keith Botsford would later
summarise the controversy:
Love and Friendship
Bloom's last book, which he dictated while in 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, of Tolstoy in
light of Rousseau's influence on the
Romantic movement, of plays by
William Shakespeare, of Montaigne's
Essays, and finally of
Plato's Symposium.
Describing its creation, Bellow wrote:
Of the work,
Andrew Sullivan wrote
"you cannot read him 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." 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."
Quotes
- "The meaning of life is unclear, but that is why we must spend
our lives clarifying it rather than letting the question go. The
university's function is to remind students of the importance and
urgency of the question and give them the means to pursue it.
Universities do have other responsibilities, but this should be
their highest priority." (Our Listless Universities,
National Review, December 10, 1982)
- "There is nothing wild, Dionysian, searching, in our
promiscuity. It has a dull, sterilized, scientific character."
(Our Listless Universities, National Review,
December 10, 1982)
- "As it now stands, students have powerful images of what a
perfect body is and pursue it incessantly. But deprived of literary
guidance, they no longer have any image of a perfect soul, and
hence do not long to have one. They do not even imagine that there
is such a thing." (Closing of the American Mind, 67)
- "Education is the movement from darkness to light."
(Closing of the American Mind, 265)
- "The most successful tyranny is not the one that uses force to
assure uniformity but the one that removes the awareness of other
possibilities, that makes it seem inconceivable that other ways are
viable, that removes the sense that there is an outside."
(Closing of the American Mind, 249)
- "Law may prescribe that the male nipples be made equal to the
female ones, but they still will not give milk." (Closing of
the American Mind, 131)
- "There is one thing a professor can be absolutely sure of;
almost every student entering the university believes, or says he
believes, that truth is relative. If this belief is put to the
test, one can count on the student's reaction: they will be
uncomprehending." (Closing of the American Mind, 25
(Opening Sentence))
- "Music is the medium of the human soul in its most
ecstatic condition of wonder and terror. Nietzsche, who in large
measure agrees with Plato's analysis, says...that a mixture of
cruelty and coarse sensuality characterized this state... Music is
the soul's primitive and primary speech... without articulate
speech or reason. It is not only not reasonable, it is hostile to
reason." (Closing of the American Mind, 72)
- "Rock music has one appeal only, a barbaric appeal, to sexual
desire- not love, not eros, but sexual desire undeveloped and
untutored." (Closing of the American Mind, 73)
- 'The relativity of truth is not a theoretical insight but a
moral postulate, the condition of a free society, or so [the
students] see it. They have all been equipped with this framework
early on, and it is the modern replacement for the inalienable
natural rights that used to be the traditional American grounds for
a free society. That it is a moral issue for students is revealed
by the character of their response when challenged—a combination of
disbelief and indignation: "Are you an absolutist?," the only
alternative they know, uttered in the same tone as "Are you a
monarchist?" or "Do you really believe in witches?"' (Closing
of the American Mind, 25)
- "Indignation is the soul's defense against the wound of doubt
about its own; it reorders the cosmos to support the justice of its
cause. It justifies putting Socrates to death. Recognizing
indignation for what it is constitutes knowledge of the soul, and
is thus an experience more philosophic than the study of
mathematics." (Closing of the American Mind, 71)
- "Men may live more truly and fully in reading Plato and
Shakespeare than at any other time, because then they are
participating in essential being and are forgetting their
accidental lives." (Closing of the American Mind,
380)
Bibliography (of Published texts)
- Bloom, Allan. 2000. Shakespeare on Love &
Friendship. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press.
- Bloom, Allan. 1993. Love and Friendship. New York:
Simon & Schuster.
- Bloom, Allan. 1991. Giants and Dwarfs: Essays,
1960-1990. New York: Touchstone Books.
- Bloom, Allan. 1987. Closing of the American Mind. New
York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 5-551-86868-0.
- Alexandre Kojève (Raymond Queneau, Allan Bloom, James H.
Nichols). Introduction to the reading of Hegel. Cornell,
1980.
- Bloom, Allan. 1968 (2nd ed 1991). 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, N.Y.: Cornell
University Press; Agora ed.
- Bloom, Allan, and Harry V.
Jaffa. 1964. Shakespeare's Politics. New
York: Basic Books.
- 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, and Jean-Jacques
Rousseau. 1979. Emile (translator) with introduction.
New York: Basic Books.
- 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.
Bibliography on Allan Bloom
- Atlas, James. “Chicago’s Grumpy Guru: Best-Selling Professor
Allan Bloom and the Chicago Intellectuals.” New York Times
Magazine. 3 January 1988.
- "The Constitution in Full Bloom". 1990. Harvard Law
Review 104, no. 2 (Dec90): 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". New York Times (28 May 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, 2 November 1999.
- Goldstein, William. “The Story behind the Best Seller: Allan
Bloom’s Closing of the American Mind.” Publishers
Weekly. 3 July 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 (5 November 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, U.S.A.: 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 John Shook (Ed.) The Dictionary of
Modern American Philosophers. (Vol 1) Bristol, England:
Thoemmes Press.
- Sleeper, Jim. 2005. "Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind".
New York Times Book Review (4 September 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.
See also
Notes
- Allan Bloom, Giants and Dwarfs: Essays 1960-1990,
Touchstone Books, 1991.
- Atlas, James. “Chicago’s Grumpy Guru: Best-Selling Professor
Allan Bloom and the Chicago Intellectuals.” New York Times
Magazine. 3 January 1988. 12.
- Bloom, Allan. 1987. Closing of the American Mind,
p.243. New York: Simon & Schuster
- Bloom, Allan. 1991. Giants and Dwarfs: Essays,
1960-1990, p.11. New York: Touchstone Books
- Keith Botsworth, Obituary: Professor Allan Bloom, The
Independent, 12 October 1992
- 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).
- Bloom, Allan. 1968( 2nd ed 1991). Republic of Plato.
(translated with notes and an interpretive essay). New York: Basic
Books.
- Bloom, Allan. 1991. Giants and Dwarfs: Essays, 1960-1990. New
York: Touchstone Books
- Allan Bloom, Closing of the American Mind (New York,
1987), page 245.
- "The Political Philosopher in a Democratic Society," Giants
& Dwarfs, 1990, p.106)
- George Grant: A Biography. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1993. p. 292.
- George Grant: A Biography. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1993. Grant's private correspondence in 1983 states:
"I have for quite a while believed that one of the deepest strains
in Strauss' writing about Plato has been to criticize the long hold
of Christian Platonism in the western and eastern interpretation of
Plato. He has done this wisely & with no foolishly
polemical spirit" -- p. 293
- Bloom, Allan. Republic of Plato, "Interpretative
Essay," p.387. New York: Basic Books
- [1],
- Goldstein, William. “The Story behind the Best Seller: Allan
Bloom’s Closing of the American Mind.” Publishers Weekly. 3 July
1987.
- Zappa, Frank. "On Junk Food for the Soul." New
Perspective's Quarterly. 1987. Available online at: "On Junk
Food for the Soul"
- Bloom, Allan. “Music” p. 68-81. Closing of the American
Mind. New York: Simon & Schuster.
- Nussbaum, Martha. "Undemocratic Vistas," New York Review of
Books 34, no.17 (5 November 1987)
- Jaffa, Harry V. "Humanizing Certitudes and Impoverishing
Doubts: A Critique of Closing of the American Mind".
Interpretation. 16 Fall 1988.
- The American Historical Review, Vol. 95, No. 2 (Apr.,
1990), pp. 429-447. url: http://www.jstor.org/pss/2163758 Accessed
16 May 2008)
- Podhoretz, Norman. “Conservative Book Becomes a Best-Seller.”
Human Events 11 July 1987: 5–6.
- Chomsky, Noam. "Understanding Power." Ed. Mitchell, Peter R.
and John Schoeffel. New York: The New Press, 2002. pg. 233.
Chomsky's criticism seems to derive from his view that education
ought to train students to learn how to think for themselves, as
opposed to learning what to read - a view which he attributes to
Bloom.
- New York Times. Arts. "The Groves of Ignorance". April
5, 1987. url:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE4DC1131F936A35757C0A961948260
- Allan Bloom and the Conservative Mind - New York
Times
- Longing: Remembering Allan Bloom, The New Republic,
April 17, 2000.
- The wordly mystic's late bloom James Wood, The
Guardian, Saturday 15 April 2000
External links
- Keith Botsford, Obituary: Professor Allan Bloom, The
Independent, 12 October 1992
- DePauw University News "Closing of the American Mind Author Allan Bloom
Calls on DePauw Students to Seize "Charmed Years". Ubben
Lecture Series: 11 September 1987, Greencastle, Indiana. (Accessed
16 May 2007).
- Patner, Andrew. Chicago
Sun-Times, "Allan Bloom, warts and all" 16 April 2000.
(Accessed 16 May 2007).
- West, Thomas G. The
Claremont Institute, The
Claremont Institute Blog Writings. "Allan Bloom and America" 1 June 2000.
(Accessed 16 May 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)