Last Thoughts on The Last Intellectuals |
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Authors: | Russell Jacoby |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of History, UCLA, Bunche Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() Over twenty years ago my book The Last Intellectuals put into circulation the phrase “public intellectual.” The term unexpectedly enjoyed great success. It encapsulated a new division between a professional or academic intellectual focused on his or her specialty and an intellectual orientated to a larger public. The former tend to disappear into the university, while they latter write for the educated public. In the twenty years since its publication, my book has been sharply challenged. Moreover the emergence of African-American and women intellectuals, and well as new developments such as Internet, have possibly undermined my thesis. Yet these phenomena amount to revisions, not refutations, of my thesis. Moreover the role of intellectuals in France and Germany suggest that the same process of academization is taking place in other advanced industrial nations. What is called for is not nostalgia or its opposite, a celebration of everything that happens, but a consideration of the real shifts that affect the lives and work of intellectuals. |
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Keywords: | Intellectuals The Last Intellectuals Posner Habermas Generations Horkheimer Mills Bernard-Henri Lévy Internet Specialization Anderson |
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