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The Europe of the Intellectuals. Europe’s Key Problems in the Eyes of its Cultural Elite EUROPEAN ROUNDTABLE VII Stanford Continuing Studies October 28, 2006. St. Paul’s Church, Frankfurt/Main. National Assembly in St. Paul’s, Frankfurt, 1848.
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The Europe of the Intellectuals Europe’s Key Problems in the Eyes of its Cultural Elite EUROPEAN ROUNDTABLE VII Stanford Continuing Studies October 28, 2006
King Frederic William IV of Prussia rejecting a constitutional Emperorship
Members of the “Göttingen Seven” in the National Assembly of 1848 • Friedrich Christoph Dahlmann (History) • Wilhelm Eduard Albrecht (Public Law) • Georg Gottfried Gervinus (Literature) • Jacob Grimm (German)
Recipients of the Peace Prize of the German Book Publishers (1) • Martin Buber, the Jewish philosopher (1953), • Hermann Hesse, the German writer (1955) • Thornton Wilder, the American playwright (1957), • Paul Tillich, the protestant theologian (1962), • Gabriel Marcel, the French philosopher (1964)
Recipients of the Peace Prize of the German Book Publishers (2) • Léopold Sédar Senghor, the African writer and politician from Senegal (1968), • Alexander Mitscherlich, a German psychologist (1969), • Leszek Kołakowski, the Polish social theorist (1977), • Yehudi Menuhin (1979), the violinist, • Ernesto Cardenal from Nicaragua (1980)
Recipients of the Peace Prize of the German Book Publishers (3) • George F. Kennan of the U.S. (1982), • Teddy Kollek, the Mayor of Jerusalem (1985), • Václav Havel, the Czech writer and politician (1989), • György Konrad, Hungarian writer, president of the Berlin Academy of the Arts (1991), • Friedrich Schorlemmer, protestant minister and one of the inspirers of the democracy movement in Eastern Germany (1993)
Recipients of the Peace Prize of the German Book Publishers (4) • Jürgen Habermas, the philosopher (2001), • Chinua Achebe, the Nigerian novelist (2002), • Susan Sontag, the late American writer and social critic (2003) , • Orhan Pamuk, the Turkish writer (2005), • Wolf Lepenies, sociologist (2006)
Public intellectuals in France • Emile Zola • Jean-Paul Sartre & Simone de Beauvoir • Michel Foucault (1926-1984) • Jacques Derrida (1930-2004) • Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) • Jean Baudrillard (1927 - ) • Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) • Gabriel Marcel (1889-1973) • Alfred Grosser (1925 - )
Public intellectuals in Italy • Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527) • Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) • Umberto Eco (1932 - )
Public intellectuals in Germany • Ralf Dahrendorf (1929 - ) • Heinrich Böll (1917 – 1985) • Walter Jens (1923 - ) • Hans Küng (1928 - ) • Josef Ratzinger – Benedikt XVI (1927 - ) • Joseph Beuys (1921 – 1986)
Public intellectuals in controversy • E. O. Wilson (Biology, Harvard): Sociobiology controversy • Rolf Hochhuth (Writer, Germany): The Deputy • Martin Walser (Writer, Germany): Against the ritualized invocation of the Holocaust • Günter Grass (Writer, Germany): Revealing his membership in the Waffen-SS, 1944-45
Public intellectuals in Europe: Issues of concern • The future of the welfare state • The integration/expansion of the EU (including Turkish membership) • Multiculturalism in European societies • Relationship between religion and state • Europe and Islam • The future of the Atlantic relationship and the international order
Public intellectuals in the U.S.? • Paul Krugman • Norman Mailer • Tom Friedman • Robert Kagan • Michael Ignatieff • Harold Bloom
RUSSELL A. BERMANProfessor of German Studies and of Comparative LiteratureWalter A. Haas Professor in the HumanitiesSenior Fellow at the Institute for International Studies and the Hoover Institution
HANS ULRICH GUMBRECHTAlbert Guerard Professor of Literature and Professor of French and Italian
Hans Weiler’s Website:http://www.stanford.edu/~weiler(Click on “European Roundtable”)