“Rather More than One-Third Had No Jewish Blood”: American Progressivism and German-Jewish Cosmopolitanism at the New School for Social Research, 1933–1939
Abstract
:Introduction
The Founding of the University in Exile
The Presentation of the University in Exile, 1933–1939
Johnson and Judaism
The Graduate Faculty and Judaism
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References
- From 1935 onward, the Graduate Faculty received over 5,000 requests a year for positions. The New School also became a place where academics from other universities could ferry exiles they did not want or could not take. The faculty members themselves were committed to helping fellow and possibly future exiles. For example, Graduate Faculty members donated 3% of their salaries to aiding exiles, particularly young scholars whom the aid committees designed to help persecuted intellectuals often ignored. Robert Jackall, “Book Review: Peter M. Rutkoff and William B. Scott, New School: A History of The New School for Social Research,” Contemporary Sociology Vol. 16, No. 3 (May 1987): 277 and Claus-Dieter Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile: Refugee Scholars and the New School for Social Research, trans. Rita Kimber and Robert Kimber (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1993), 16, 76–78.
- The entire list of faculty who found a home at the New School in the 1930s and 1940s may be found here: “The University in Exile,” accessed December 31, 2011, . Krohn also produces a list. Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 205–210.
- Besides the obvious influence of a luminary like Strauss, the New School was a center of some major intellectual traditions. Due to Wertheimer, the New School was the first center of Gestalt psychology in America; Alfred Schütz helped introduce phenomenology to American philosophy and sociology; Arnold Brecht and Schütz helped develop the comparative study of governments; and the work of New School economists has been recently rediscovered and evaluated. For more on the New School’s influence, the major account remains Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile. See also D. Brett King, Michael Wertheimer, Heidi Keller, and Kevin Crochetiére, “The Legacy of Max Wertheimer and Gestalt Psychology,” Social Research 61, no. 4 (Winter 1994): 907–935; Elisabeth Allgoewer, “Emil Lederer: Business Cycles, Crises, and Growth,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought 25, no. 3 (September 2003): 327–348; George Psathas, “Alfred Shutz’s Influence on American Sociologists and Sociology,” Human Studies 27, no. 1 (2004): 1–35; Harald Hagemann, “Dismissal, Expulsion, and Emigration of German-speaking Economists after 1933,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought 27, no. 4 (December 2005): 405–420; Gary Mongiovi, “Emigré Economists and American Neoclassical Economics, 1933–1945,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought 27, no. 4 (December 2005): 427–437; Gerhard Loewenberg, “The Influence of European Émigré Scholars on Comparative Politics, 1925–1965,” American Political Science Review 100, no. 4 (November 2006): 597–604; George Steinmetz, “Ideas in Exile: Refugees from Nazi Germany and the Failure to Transplant Historical Sociology into the United States,” International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 23, no. 1 (March 2010): 1–27; and Harald Hagermann, “European Émigrés and the ‘Americanization’ of Economics,” The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought 18, no. 5 (2011): 643–671.
- Other works on the University in Exile include Monika Plessner, “Die deutsche ‘University in Exile’ in New York und ihr amerikanischer Gründer,” Frankfurter Hefte 19 (March 1964): 181–186; Benita Luckmann, “Eine deutsche Universität im Exil: Die ‘Graduate Faculty’ der New School for Social Research,” in Soziologie in Deutschland und Österreich, 1918–1945: Materialien zur Entwicklung, Emigration, und Wirkungsgeschichte, ed. M. Rainer Lepsius (Opalden: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1981), 427–441; Benita Luckmann, “Exil oder Emigration: Aspekte der Amerikanisierung an der ‘New School for Social Research’ in New York,” Leben im Exil: Probleme der Integration deutscher Flüchtlinge im Ausland, 1933–1945, ed. Wolfgang Frühwald and Wolfgang Schieder (Hamburg: Hoffman und Campe, 1981), 227–234; Peter M. Rutkoff and William B. Scott, New School: A History of the New School for Social Research (New York: The Free Press, 1986); Stanford M. Lyman, “A Haven for Homeless Intellects: The New School and Its Exile Faculties,” International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 7, no. 3 (Spring 1994): 493–512; Wilfred M. McClay, “Historical Research on the Refugee Intellectuals: Problems and Prospects,” International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 7, no. 3 (Spring 1994): 513–524; and Claus-Dieter Krohn, “Differenz oder Distanz? Hybriditätsdiskurse deutscher refugee scholars im New York der 1930er Jahre,” in Exil, Entwurzelung, Identität, ed. Claus-Dieter Krohn, Erwin Rothermund, and Lutz Winckler (Munich: Edition Text + Kritik, 2009), 20–39. The intellectual migration has also attracted an enormous amount of scholarly attention. The major general works on the subject include: Laura Fermi, Illustrious Immigrants: The Intellectual Migration from Europe, 1930–1941 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972); Lewis Coser, Refugee Scholars in America: Their Impact and Their Experiences (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1984); Ilja Srubar, ed., Exil, Wissenchaft, Identität: Die Emigration deutscher Sozialwissenschaftler, 1933–1945 (Berlin: Suhrkamp, 1988); Ernst Stiefel, Deutsche Juristen im amerikanischen Exil, 1933–1950 (Tübingen: Mohr, 1991); Sven Papcke, Deutsche Soziologie im Exil: Gegenwartsdiagnose und Epochenkritik, 1933–1945 (Frankfurt: Campus Verlag, 1993); Alfons Söllner, Deutsche Politikwissenschaftler in der Emigration: Ihre Akkulturation und Wirkungsgeschichte, samt einer Bibliographie (Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1996); Mitchell G. Ash and Alfons Söllner, eds. Forced Migration and Scientific Change: Émigré German-Speaking Scientists and Scholars after 1933 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002); Jean-Michel Palmier, Weimar in Exile: The Antifascist Emigration to Europe and America (New York: Verso Press, 2006); David Kettler and Gerhard Lauer, eds. Exile, Science, and Bildung: The Contested Legacies of German Émigré Intellectuals (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005); Axel Fair-Schulz and Mario Kessler, eds. German Scholars in Exile: New Studies in Intellectual History (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2011); and David Kettler, The Liquidation of Exile: Studies in the Intellectual Emigration of the 1930s (New York: Anthem Press, 2011).
- The émigrés’ occasionally used the terms “cosmopolitan” and “cosmopolitanism,” which are also widely used in the secondary literature. For these reasons, I use the terms. Also, the division of progressives into “right-leaning” and “left-leaning” is taken from Gary Gerstle, “The Protean Character of American Liberalism,” American Historical Review 99, no. 4 (October 1994): 1051.
- Daniel Rodgers examined in great detail the connections between American and European ideas in the progressive era. See Daniel Rodgers, Atlantic Crossings: Social Politics in a Progressive Age (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000).
- Professors fired included James McKeen Cattell, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Dana, and Leon Fraser.
- This did not mean that New School scholars would never work for Butler or at Columbia. For example, in the 1930s Johnson worked on Butler’s Commission on Economic Reconstruction at Columbia.
- The educational philosophies of Dewey and Veblen, who viewed the primary goals of education as being the creation of “critical and inquisitive minds” dedicated to solving society’s ills through research and a commitment to “democratic cosmopolitanism,” were particularly influential on the New School’s founders. Rutkoff and Scott, New School, 12–18 and Jackall, “Book Review,” 276.
- Seligman had studied in Germany under Karl Knies and Gustav Schmoller. Perhaps he helped stir Johnson’s interest in German academia.
- Croly offered Johnson the position because he had read and admired his essay “The Soul of Capitalism,” written for the April-June 1914 edition of The Unpopular Review. Dorothy Ross briefly discusses Johnson’s work from this period in her well-known The Origins of American Social Science. In this discussion, however, Ross paints Johnson as a “Roosevelt progressive” and “antisocialist,” ignoring his close connections to Dewey and other left-leaning progressives as well as his recruitment of a number of prominent German socialists. Dorothy Ross, The Origins of American Social Science (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 408.
- Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 61.
- Johnson edited the encyclopedia with his former mentor Seligman. Both the Rockefeller and Carnegie Foundations contributed $1.25 million to the project, which the Social Science Research Council oversaw. Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” New School for Social Research Archives, New School for Social Research, New York, New York (hereafter referred to as the NSSRA), Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 3. For more on the encyclopedia, see Rutkoff and Scott, New School, chapter 4. In the end, more German social scientists produced articles for the Encyclopedia than academics from any other country.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 2.
- Alvin Johnson to Agnes deLima, April 13, 1933, Alvin Johnson Papers at Yale. Quoted in Rutkoff and Scott, New School, 274. Also see “Faculty of Exiles is Projected Here,” New York Times, May 13, 1933, 7.
- Lederer and Johnson also hoped that Karl Mannheim, the famed founder of the sociology of knowledge and Lederer’s former colleague from the University of Heidelberg, would join the New School faculty. Mannheim declined, instead accepting a position as a lecturer at the London School of Economics. This remained a sour point between Lederer and Mannheim for the rest of their lives (Lederer died in May 1939, Mannheim in January 1947).
- Hans Speier, “Emil Lederer, Life and Work,” Hans Speier Papers, German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collection, M.E. Grenander Department of Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University at Albany, State University of New York (hereafter referred to as the Speier Papers), Box 7, Folder 2: 27.
- Alvin Johnson Papers at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Archives and Special Collections, Lincoln, Nebraska (hereafter referred to as the Johnson Papers at Nebraska), Box 47, Folder Graduate Faculty-University in Exile and Rutkoff and Scott (1986), 94.
- This did not mean that the University in Exile was, in its first years, on sound financial footing. According to Speier, “almost every month, and certainly at the end of every semester, one did not know whether the [University in Exile] would continue or not.” “Gesprächsweise Mitteilungen zu einer intellektuellen Autobiographie,” Speier Papers, Box 2, Folder 31: 129; Johnson Papers at Nebraska, Box 47, Folder Graduate Faculty-University in Exile; and Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 10. Halle was part owner of the Gulf Oil Company and associated with the Rockefeller Foundation. For more on the Rockefeller Foundation and other philanthropic organizations and anti-Semitism, see Marjorie Lamberti, “The Reception of Refugee Scholars from Nazi Germany in America: Philanthropy and Social Change in Higher Education,” Jewish Social Studies 12, no. 3 (Spring-Summer 2006): 157–192. Interestingly, Lederer and Marschak had, in April and May 1933, asked the foundation to support the immigration of several scholars. Between 1933 and 1945, the Rockefeller Foundation spent $1.4 million helping displaced scholars. For more on the Rockefeller Foundation, see Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 29–38. The philanthropist Doris Duke eventually aided Johnson in his project, contributing $250,000 to the New School. Additional important exile aid committees included the British Academic Assistance Council; the Zurich based Notgemeinschaft deutscher Wissenchaftler im Ausland; and the United States Emergency Committee in Aid of Displaced Foreign Scholars. There were a number of specifically Jewish aid agencies, including the Joint Distribution Committee, the Hicem, and the Jewish Agency for Palestine, which helped intellectual exiles. Aid committees sometimes paid half of an exiles scholars’ salary. All told, the Emergency Committee gave $800,000 to support 335 scholars; the Rockefeller Foundation gave $1.4 million dollars to aid 303 scholars (which represented half of all U.S. money given to aid exiles; roughly half of this aid, approximately $540,000, went to the New School); the Oberlaender Trust gave $317,000 for 300 scholars; the Carnegie Foundation gave $110,000; the Lucius D. Littauer fund donated $100,000; the New York Foundation offered $23,000; and the Rosenwald family, into which Max Ascoli married, donated $100,000, all to exile causes. Most foundations assisted only scholars who were above 30, so as not to affect young American academics’ job prospects (Oberlaender did not abide by this). Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 28, 72.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 5 and “Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science (‘The University in Exile’), 1933–1934,” in Graduate Faculty of the New School Catalogues, Fall 1933-Summer 1937, NSSRA. In its first year, the Advisory Committee for the University in Exile included Charles C. Burlingham (a lawyer); Wilbur L. Cross (governor of Connecticut); Dewey (then emeritus professor of philosophy at Columbia); Felix Frankfurter (professor of law at Harvard); Ernest Gruening (director of the Division of Territories and Island Possessions for the U.S. Department of the Interior); Oliver Wendell Holmes (former U.S. Supreme Court Justice); Robert M. Hutchins (president of the University of Chicago); Robert M. MacIver (professor of political science and sociology at Columbia); William A. Neilson (president of Smith College); George A. Plimpton (a publisher); Seligman (then professor emeritus of political economy at Columbia); and Herbert Bayard Swope (a journalist).
- The New School was not permanently chartered until January 17, 1941. Until then, all masters and doctoral exams needed to be taken at New York University. “Absolute Charter of the New School for Social Research,” Johnson Papers at Nebraska, Box 47, Folder Graduate Faculty-University in Exile.
- Palmier, Weimar in Exile, 468. Krohn has described the American government’s attitude toward refugees as apathetic. It is estimated that 7,500 “academic professionals, doctors, lawyers … as well as students” lost their jobs. If one includes artists, writers, and others who made their living off of cultural pursuits as well as intellectuals, approximately 12,000 individuals lost their jobs. In April 1933, 16% of university faculty were dismissed. By 1938, 39% of all university faculty were fired. In the social sciences, 47% of all faculty were lost. Approximately 60% of dismissed faculty emigrated, with the United States becoming the most popular home for exiles. Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 11–15, 25.
- “University in Exile,” Johnson Papers at Nebraska, Box 47, Folder Graduate Faculty-University in Exile and Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 8. Other individuals whom Johnson hoped to bring over included Mannheim, Ascoli, Brecht, Rudolf Littauer, and Werner Hegemann. All except Mannheim would join the New School. In 1934, Johnson added several members to the faculty, including Hans Staudinger, Albert Salomon, Alfred Kähler, Fritz Lehmann, Carl Mayer, and Hans Simons.
- Johnson took pains to explain that “[n]o member of the Graduate Faculty is a Marxist as the term is understood in America.” “University in Exile,” Johnson Papers at Nebraska, Box 47, Folder Graduate Faculty-University in Exile.
- Arthur J. Vidich, “Book Review: Peter M. Rutkoff and William B. Scott, New School: A History of The New School for Social Research,” Contemporary Sociology 16, no. 3 (May 1987): 275.
- As Johnson said, “the German social scientist stands nearer to the political and administrative life of the country [than American academics], participating in expert commissions and in national and city governmental bodies.” Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 3.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 3. For details on the University in Exile’s founding and funding, see Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, chapter five.
- 71. Intellectuals in Exile. Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 71.
- Five of the founders were also economists.
- In The Jewish Origins of Cultural Pluralism, Daniel Greene traces this idea through Horace Kallen and the Menorah Association at Harvard. See Daniel Greene, The Jewish Origins of Cultural Pluralism: The Menorah Association and American Diversity (Bloomington, ID: Indiana University Press, 2011).
- Other prominent members of this organization were Dewey, Kallen, and Albert Einstein.
- Aid organizations also recognized that anti-Semitism was a significant barrier to the émigrés finding jobs in America. Even academics sympathetic to the exiles’ plight were wary of recruiting too many Jews. For example, when attempting to create a temporary committee to help European colleagues, Joseph Schumpeter declared that he wanted this committee to aid “as few Jews as possible.” There were also political difficulties involved in aiding exiles, and aid organizations regularly received complaints that the New School scholars were communists dedicated to undermining America. Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 22–24, 35; Alvin Johnson to Clara Mayer, May 17, 1945. Cited in Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 22 and Joseph A. Schumpeter to W.C. Mitchell, April 22, 1933. Cited in Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 23.
- Fritz Ringer, The Decline of the German Mandarins: The German Academic Community, 1890–1933 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1969), 6.
- Fritz Ringer, Max Weber: An Intellectual Biography (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), 9.
- Recent scholarship has argued that one must see this embrace of a secular-intellectual culture as representing not a rejection of Judaism, but rather its transformation. That is to say, although Jews did reject elements of their Jewish heritage, they formed a new identity in distinctly Jewish spaces and in accordance with Jewish cultural-intellectual traditions. See, for example, Malachi Haim Hacohen, Karl Popper: The Formative Years, 1902–1945: Politics and Philosophy in Interwar Vienna (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), chapter 1 and chapter 7 and Till van Rahden, Jews and Other Germans: Civil Society, Religious Diversity, and Urban Politics in Breslau, 1860–1925, trans. Marcus Brainard (Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 2008).
- It is the unfortunate fact that the Graduate Faculty meeting minutes from the years 1933 to 1944 are presently lost. According to Sonia Salas, Associate Director of Administration at the New School for Social Research, when the Graduate Faculty relocated from 65 5th Avenue in 2007 the faculty’s archival material was sent offsite without an inventory. The person in charge of moving the material has since left the New School, and presently New School administrators are unable to pinpoint the material’s location. Hopefully, these files will one day be found.
- “Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science (‘The University in Exile’), 1933–1934,” in Graduate Faculty of the New School Catalogues, Fall 1933-Summer 1937, NSSRA.
- See reference 37.
- See reference 37.
- Alvin Johnson, “Foreword,” Social Research 1, no. 1 (February 1934), 1.
- See reference 37.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 1.
- See reference 37.
- Johnson, “Foreword,” 2.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 1.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 2.
- Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 8.
- See reference 47.
- Daniel Tanner, Crusade For Democracy (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1991), 17.
- John Dewey, The Later Works of John Dewey, volume 17, 1925–1953 (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 2008), 147–148, 597–598.
- Alvin Johnson, “Eclipse of the Great Man,” American Journal of Economics and Sociology 20, no. 4 (July 1961): 424.
- There were a variety of responses to immigrants from various world regions. Dewey, for example, believed (Western and Central) European immigrants could contribute more to the American nation than non-European immigrants. This discussion centers on progressive responses to European immigrants. See Thomas D. Fallace, Dewey and the Dilemma of Race: An Intellectual History, 1895–1922 (New York: Teachers College Press, 2010), 127.
- John Dewey, Reconstruction in Philosophy (New York: Henry Holt Press, 1920), 202–205. See also Robert B. Westbrook, John Dewey and American Democracy (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993), 212–215 and Fallace, Dilemma of Race, 101, 124.
- Rivka Shpak-Lisak, Pluralism and Progressives: Hull House and the New Immigrants, 1890–1919 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989), 141–142 and Gerstle, “Protean Character,” 1051–1052, 1055.
- He repeatedly stressed that America, as an exceptional nation, needed to incorporate—but move beyond—its old and new European roots. Westbrook, American Democracy, 214 and Fallace, Dilemma of Race, 121.
- Noah Pickus, True Faith and Allegiance: Immigration and American Civic Nationalism (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007), 7 and Douglas Charles Rossinow, Visions of Progress: The Left-Liberal Tradition in America (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008), 41. During the war, Kallen termed this “cultural pluralism.” Sidney Ratner, “Horace M. Kallen and Cultural Pluralism,” Modern Judaism 4, no. 2 (1984): 185–200 and William Toll, “Horace M. Kallen: Pluralism and American Jewish Identity,” American Jewish History 85, no. 1 (March 1997): 57–74. Rossinow stresses that among left-leaning progressives, there was “no consensus on questions of race and ethnicity.” Thus, one should not ignore that amongst these progressives, there were differences in thought. Kallen, for instance, argued that America should become a nation of nations, that is to say, ethnic groups should fully retain their identity, using English as a common, public language. He did not believe they should assimilate into a so-called “melting pot” (a well-known progressive term from the period) that would see European immigrants abandon their cultural heritages and embrace American (i.e., Anglo-Saxon) culture. Dewey, however, believed that America should assimilate European contributions in the service of creating a new, American identity (although he too rejected an embrace of Anglo-Saxondom). This is seen in a letter Dewey wrote Kallen in 1915, responding to Kallen’s 1915 essay “Democracy versus the Melting Pot.” Dewey argued in favor of immigrants “assimilat[ing] to one another—not to Anglosaxondom[.]” John Dewey to Horace Kallen, March 31, 1915, Horace M. Kallen Papers, Box 7, Folder 13, American Jewish Archives, Cincinnati, OH. This rejected the “melting pot metaphor” of complete assimilation which Dewey “never did care for[.]” Thanks to David Weinfeld for sending me a copy of this letter. The citation for Kallen’s piece is Horace M. Kallen, “Democracy versus the Melting-Pot, Parts I and II,” The Nation, February 18 and 25, 1915. Addams’ (and William I. Thomas’) beliefs more closely echoed Dewey’s than Kallen’s. Shpak-Lisak (1989), 25–29. For Kallen’s views, see Horace M. Kallen, Culture and Democracy in the United States: Studies in the Group Psychology of the American Peoples (New York: Boni & Liveright, 1924). For more on Dewey and Addams, see Eric P. Kaufmann, The Rise and Fall of Anglo-America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2004), 98–100. There is a significant debate about Dewey’s opinions toward immigrants. See Walter Feinberg, “Progressive Education and Social Planning,” Teachers College Record 73, no. 4 (May 1972): 484–505; Clarence J. Karier, “Liberalism and the Quest for Orderly Change,” History of Education Quarterly 12, no. 1 (Spring 1972): 57–80; J. Christopher Eisele, “John Dewey and the Immigrants,” History of Education Quarterly 15, no. 1 (Spring 1975): 67–85; Charles L. Zerby, “John Dewey and the Polish Question: A Response to Revisionist Historians,” 15, no. 1 History of Education Quarterly (Spring 1975): 17–30; and Ronald K. Goodenow, “Racial and Ethnic Tolerance in John Dewey’s Educational and Social Thought: The Depression Years,” Educational Theory 27 (Winter 1977): 48–64. As Westbrook has noted, these debates center on the so-called Polish question, which refers to Dewey’s wartime analyses of Polish immigrants’ politics. Westbrook, American Democracy, 212. A full-length work that presents Dewey as more conservative than traditionally supposed has recently been published. See Fallace, Dilemma of Race. For more on Dewey, see Eisele, “Immigrants” and Pickus, True Faith, 71–75. Also see Jonathan Hanse, The Lost Promise of Patriotism: Debating American Identity, 1890–1920 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003).
- Gerstle argues that the left-leaning progressives shifted from a cultural to an economic focus in the interwar years because they adopted the perspective that cultural questions were fundamentally irrational and unable to be measured. By contrast, they believed that economic issues, being quantifiable, could be measured and thus changed. This latter belief was undergirded by the new sciences of psychology and psychiatry, which emphasized that ordinary people’s behaviors were subject to irrational emotions. To Dewey and other progressives, cultural politics no longer appeared a useful means to achieve progressive aims. After Hitler’s rise, however, left-leaning progressives returned to cultural questions. In particular, the 1940s saw a boon of left-leaning progressive (now termed liberal) literature discussing long-ignored issues like civil rights, Zionism, and immigration reform. This shift was fostered not only by Nazism, but also by liberals’ analysis of the Soviet Union. Whereas in the 1920s, they viewed collectivist Soviet projects as rational, by the 1940s—in the wake of Stalin’s purges, the starvation of the kulaks, and other Soviet crimes—they considered these projects economic manifestations of (irrational) totalitarianism. Now, culture appeared just as rational as the irrational economy. Gerstle, “Protean Character,” 1057–1059, 1065, 1070–1071. See also David A. Hollinger, “Ethnic Diversity, Cosmopolitanism and the Emergence of the American Liberal Intelligentsia,” American Quarterly 27, no. 2 (May 1975): 133–151.
- M. R. M. Fay H. Babbe. See, for example: Norman Hapgood, “Schools, Colleges, and Jews,’ Harper’s Weekly 62, January 22, 1916, 78; Norman Hapgood, “Harvard ‘Talk’ about Jews,’ Literary Digest 73, June 24, 1922, 28; E.S.M., “As for the Jews of Harvard …” Life 80 (2070), July 6, 1922, 15; Victor S. Yarros, Robert M. Lovett, Fay H. Babbe, M. R. M., Joseph Girdansky, Charles Sheres, Donald A. Roberts, and W.L. Whittlesey, “Anti-Semitism and the Colleges,” The Nation 115, no. 2975, 45–46; “‘What Was Your Father’s Name?’” The Nation 115, no. 2987, 323; “Colleges Deny Bias Against Any Sect: Columbia, Brown, Harvard, and Dartmouth Say Jews Are Not Discriminated Against,” The New York Times, April 30, 1926, 11; “Denies Yeshiva Is Protest: G.A. Rogers Says Jewish College Will Not Bar Outsiders,” The New York Times, June 3, 1926, 22; “Dr. Wise Criticizes Greek Fraternities: Urges Jewish Students Not to Deny Their Race—Decries College Quota System,” The New York Times, April 4, 1927, 23; “Jewish University Is Planned Here: First College of Kind Will be Non-Sectarian, Its Organizers Decide,” The New York Times, May 16, 1929, 6; “Sifts Anti-Jewish Bias in Trade and Schools: American Jewish Congress Is Weighing Group Action to Combat Discrimination,” The New York Times, May 22, 1930, 14; “Bias in Colleges Denied: Dr. Rypins Finds Medical Schools Do Not Bar Jews,” The New York Times, December 17, 1934, 39. These systems were of course responses to the fact that Jews were making inroads into American universities and beginning a process of “de-Christianization” of the university system. See David A. Hollinger, Science, Jews, and Secular Culture: Studies in Mid-Twentieth Century American Intellectual History (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998), chapter 2.
- The term “genteel anti-Semitism” seems to have been derived from the 1947 Gregory Peck-starring drama Gentleman’s Agreement. In this film, Peck played a journalist who pretended to be a Jew to expose the anti-Semitism of the protestant community of Darien, Connecticut. The film won the Academy Award for Best Picture, Best Supporting Actress (Celeste Holm), and Best Director (Elia Kazan). It was nominated for five other Oscars, including Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, Film Editing, and Writing for a Screenplay. Leonard Dinnerstein, Antisemitism in America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 83–84 and Robert A. Rosenbaum, Waking to Danger: Americans and Nazi Germany, 1933–1941 (Santa Barbara: Praeger, 2010), 40–42.
- In the late-nineteenth century, the Protestant elite coalesced around the idea that educational training needed to reproduce an aristocratic class composed of men who retained a “manly, Christian character.” Jews were naturally excluded from this process. Jerome Karabel, The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2005), 29, 132.
- Michael Greenberg and Seymour Zenchelsky, “Private Bias and Public Responsibility: Anti-Semitism at Rutgers in the 1920s and 1930s,” History of Education Quarterly 33, no. 3 (Autumn 1993): 295–296.
- For a discussion of these issues, see Oliver B. Pollak, “Antisemitism, the Harvard Plan, and the Roots of Reverse Discrimination,” Jewish Social Studies 45, no. 2 (Spring 1983): 113–122; Harold S. Wechsler, “The Rationale for Restriction: Ethnicity and College Admission in America, 1910–1980,” American Quarterly 36, no. 5 (Winter 1984): 646, 650–651; and Karabel, The Chosen, 133–134. Wechsler argues that the restriction on Jewish immigration at Columbia indicated the shift from elite secondary schools to elite colleges as the gatekeepers of American aristocracy.
- Marcia G. Synott, “The Admission and Assimilation of Minority Students at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, 1900–1970,” History of Education Quarterly 19, no. 3 (Autumn 1979): 285–304; Marcia G. Synott, The Half-Open Door: Discrimination and Admissions at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, 1900–1970 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1979); Pollak (1983); Wachsler (1984), 650–652; Tamar Buchsbaum, “A Note on Antisemitism in Admissions at Dartmouth,” Jewish Social Studies 49, no. 1 (Winter 1987): 79–80; Greenberg and Zenchelsky (1993), 297; Dan Oren, Joining the Club: A History of Jews and Yale (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000); Karabel (2005); and Zev Eleff, “‘The Envy of the World and the Pride of the Jews:’ Debating the American Jewish University in the Twenties,” Modern Judaism 31, no. 2 (May 2011): 230. For example, at the May 1918 meeting of the members of the Association of New England Deans, there were fears about the rise of Jewish students at universities. Synott, “Admission and Assimilation,” 288–289.
- Peter Novick, That Noble Dream: The ‘Objectivity Question’ and the American Historical Profession (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 172–173 and Hollinger (1998), 25.
- John Higham, Send These to Me: Jews and Other Immigrants in Urban America (New York: Atheneum Press, 1975), 138–173.
- Higham, Send These, 166.
- From 1946 to 1947, Johnson, NYSCADE, the American Jewish Committee (AJC), Brooklyn Democratic Assemblyman Bernard Austin, and Republican State Senator Walter J. Mahoney introduced the Austin-Mahoney Bill to ban quotas (the only other academic to support the Austin-Mahoney bill was president Harold Taylor of Sarah Lawrence College). The Archdiocese of New York opposed the bill by arguing that it gave the state power to make educational decisions, which violated the individual freedom of parents. To protest the Archdiocese’s opposition, NYSCADE organized rallies in New York City’s garment district to collect signatures. In the first week of March 1947, NYSCADE, the AJC, and a group of Jewish war veterans staged sit-ins at Albany’s capitol building to demand the Austin-Mahoney bill’s passage. The bill was nevertheless defeated. However, NYSCADE and the AJC redrafted the bill in such a way that religious schools were exempted from its provisions. This change enabled the bill’s passing in October 1947. Pamela Rice, “A Legislative Attack on Educational Discrimination,” The Journal of Negro Education 23, no. 1 (Winter 1954): 99; Martha Biondi, To Stand and Fight: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006), 107; and Tod Ottman, “Forging SUNY in New York’s Political Cauldron,” in SUNY at Sixty: The Promise of the State University of New York, eds. John B. Clark, W. Bruce Leslie, and Kenneth P. O’Brien (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, Albany, 2010), 22–25.
- The foundation constantly worried that it recruited too many Jews. Indeed, the Rockefeller Foundation was considering funding the University of Frankfurt but believed that too many Jews worked there. Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 22–24, 35.
- Throughout the early-1930s faculty members were accused of being, variably, communists or Nazi-sympathizers. The FBI even set up an investigation whereby agents infiltrated the New School by acting as students. Unsurprisingly, no charges were ever filed against faculty members. Krohn, Intellectuals in Exile, 21–24, 72, 160.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report to the Trustees of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, February 1935, by Alvin Johnson, Chairman,” NSSRA, Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records, Folders 27–60, Folder 38: 12.
- Alvin Johnson, “Report of the Dean of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, September 1939,” Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records Folders 27–60, Folder 38 Graduate Faculty Reports 1935–1951: 3.
- Of the American subscribers, there were 18 public libraries; 99 university, college, and school libraries; 170 teachers, professors, and academics; and 236 businesspeople and miscellaneous subscribers. Of the foreign subscribers, there were 4 public libraries; 24 university, college, and school libraries; 34 teachers, professors, and academics; and 52 businessmen and miscellaneous subscribers. “Report of the Dean of the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science in the New School for Social Research, September 1936,” Box Graduate Faculty Administration Records Folders 27–60, Folder 38 Graduate Faculty Reports 1935–1951: 6.
- This despite the fact that several progressives associated with the New School, including Kallen, Bourne, and Seligman, were sympathetic with the Zionist cause.
- Albert Salomon, “Max Weber’s Sociology,” Social Research 2, no. 1 (February 1935): 63.
- Arthur Feiler, “Discussion III,” Social Research 4, no. 3 (September 1937): 407.
- Frieda Wunderlich, “Education in Nazi Germany,” Social Research 4, no. 3 (September 1937): 348.
- Wunderlich, “Education,” 350–351.
- Wunderlich, “Education,” 355 and Frieda Wunderlich, “Book Review: Edward Y. Hartshorne, Jr., The German Universities and National Socialism,” Social Research 6, no. 3 (September 1939): 441.
- Emil Lederer, “The Search for Truth,” Social Research 4, no. 3 (September 1937): 279.
- Lederer, “Search,” 280.
- There is also the possibility that Lederer and other faculty members did not want to impel discussions of American racial issues. At the time, American communists placed racial concerns at the top of their agenda. Mentioning race, therefore, may have associated the New School with communism, something that faculty members wanted to avoid.
- In addition to this explanation, New School scholars pointed to a variety of factors that contributed to Hitler’s victory. These included Weimar politicians’ ignorance of the centralized nature of their authority (Lederer); the mass panic of the Depression, which opened a space for interest groups, notably East Prussian landowners, to support revolutionary ends (Feiler); the state’s inability to reduce unemployment (Colm and Wunderlich); urbanization (Brandt); the ability of lawmakers to change the law too often (Max Ascoli); an ill-considered constitution (Brecht); the medieval German intellectual legacy (G.A. Borgese); the state’s dominance of society and subsequent rise of a bureaucratic aristocracy (Salomon); the Nazis’ organized militancy (Ascoli); and the political and organizational skills of the Nazis (Hans Simons).
- Emil Lederer, “Comment on Keynes, II,” Social Research 3, no. 4 (November 1936): 487.
- Emil Lederer, “On Revolutions,” Social Research 3, no. 1 (February 1936): 9–11, 16–17.
- Eduard Heimann, “Socialism and Democracy,” Social Research 1, no. 3 (May 1934): n.308 and Eduard Heimann, “I,” Social Research 4, no. 3 (September 1937): 398.
- Adolf Löwe, “The Task of Democratic Education: Pre-Hitler Germany and England,” Social Research 4, no. 3 (September 1937): 383–385.
- Frieda Wunderlich, “New Aspects of Unemployment in Germany,” Social Research 1, no. 1 (February 1934): 109 and Gerhard Colm, “VI,” Social Research 4, no. 3 (September 1937): 411–412.
- Emil Lederer, “Freedom and Science,” Social Research 1, no. 2 (May 1934): 222–223, 227–228.
- Lederer, “Search,” 278–281.
- Albert Salomon, “Tocqueville, Moralist and Sociologist,” Social Research 2, no. 4 (November 1935): 407.
- Albert Salomon, “The Place of Alfred Weber’s Kultursoziologie in Social Thought,” Social Research 3, no. 4 (November 1936): 498–500.
- Salomon noted that this was what Greek intellectuals did in the past vis-à-vis the Roman world. Without Greek intellectuals, he maintained, Cicero’s De re publica would have been impossible. Albert Salomon, “II,” Social Research 4, no. 3 (September 1937): 332–334.
- The two were, of course, related; in a democracy, anti-Semitism would theoretically not be as salient as it was in a fascist state. This became a central argument of Jewish groups in the 1940s and 1950s. During this period, major American Jewish organizations, including the AJC, the American Jewish Congress, and the Anti-Defamation League, argued that combating all forms of discrimination would help mitigate anti-Semitism. See Stuart Svonkin, Jews against Prejudice (New York: Columbia University Press, 1999).
- Gerhard Colm, “Economics Today,” Social Research 4, no. 2 (May 1937): 194–197, 199–202.
- Wunderlich, “Education,” 360 and Löwe, “Task,” 388–391.
- This is the influential thesis advocated in George L. Mosse’s German Jews beyond Judaism. According to Mosse, the “classical concept of Bildung largely determined the post-emancipatory Jewish identity.” George L. Mosse, German Jews beyond Judaism (Bloomington, ID: Indiana University Press, 1997), 7. Mosse had implicitly advocated this thesis in earlier work, including George L. Mosse, Germans and Jews: The Right, the Left, and the Search for a ‘Third Force’ in Pre-Nazi Germany (London: Orbach and Chambers, 1970). Although some scholars have questioned aspects of this thesis, “the greater validity” of the notion that for many German-Jews Bildung and the universalist intellectual ideal became a “new Jewish tradition” has been generally accepted. For critiques of aspects of Mosse’s thesis, see Paul Mendes-Flohr, “Book Review: George L. Mosse, German Jews Beyond Judaism,” Studies in Contemporary Jewry 5 (1989), 377–379; Steven E. Aschheim, “German Jews beyond Bildung and Liberalism: The Radical Jewish Revival in the Weimar Republic,” in Culture and Catastrophe: German and Jewish Confrontations with National Socialism and Other Crises (New York: New York University Press, 1997), 31–44; and Shulamit Volkov, “The Ambivalence of Bildung: Jews and Other Germans,” in The German-Jewish Dialogue Reconsidered: A Symposium in Honor of George L. Mosse, ed. Klaus L. Berghahn (New York: Peter Lang, 1996), 81–98 (these citations were taken from Aschheim). Works that make use of this thesis include George L. Mosse, “Das deutsch-jüdische Bildungsbürgertum im 19. Jahrhundert,” in Bildungsbürgertum im 19. Jahrhundert, ed. Werner Conze und Jürgen Kocka, (Stuttgart, Klett-Cotta, 1990), 168–180; David Sorkin, The Transformation of German Jewry, 1780–1840 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991); Paul Mendes-Flohr, German Jews: A Dual Identity (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999); and Simone Lässig, Jüdische Wege ins Bürgertum: Kulturelles Kapital und sozialer Aufstieg im 19. Jahrhundert (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck .
- Recently, Simone Lässig has argued that German authorities impelled Jews’ acceptance of Bildung. See Lässig, Jüdische Weg.
- This was a major point of Mosse, German Jews. Quote from Steven E. Aschheim, “George Mosse at 80: A Critical Laudatio,” Journal of Contemporary History 34, no. 2 (April 1999): 310.
- Jeffrey Peck, Mitchell Ash, and Christiane Lemke, “Natives, Strangers, and Foreigners: Constituting Germans by Constructing Others,” in After Unity: Reconfiguring German Identities, ed. Konrad Jarausch (New York: Berghahn Books, 1997), 66 and Leon Poliakov, The History of Anti-Semitism, volume 4: Suicidal Europe, 1870–1933 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003), 143–144. Jewish cosmopolitanism had, of course, come under significant attack from nationalist German scholars. For example, in the third volume of his Deutsche Geschichte im 19. Jahrhundert, Heinrich von Treitschke portrayed Jewish cosmopolitanism as a mask for Jewish hatred of Christianity. Peter Pulzer, Jews and the German State: The Political History of a Minority, 1848–1933 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2002), 21. This criticism remained salient amongst academics in interwar Europe as well. For instance, in the late-teens and early 1920s, Max Hildebert Boehm railed against international, cosmopolitan Jewry. See Poliakov, Suicidal Europe, 143–145.
- The image of the international, cosmopolitan Jew famously recurred throughout Nazi propaganda.
- Malachi Haim Hacohen, “Dilemmas of Cosmopolitanism: Karl Popper, Jewish Identity, and ‘Central European Culture,’” Journal of Modern History 71, no. 1 (March 1999): 105–106.
- As Malachi Hacohen has argued, Jews, as the “losers of ethnopolitics,” were forced to adopt such beliefs. Hacohen, “Dilemmas,” 107.
- Merle Fainsod, “Book Review: Political and Economic Democracy. Edited by Max Ascoli and Fritz Lehmann,” American Political Science Review 31, no. 4 (August 1937): 729–731.
- For positive reviews and citations, see Ray F. Harvey, “Book Review: War in Our Time. Edited by Hans Speier and Alfred Kähler,” Public Opinion Quarterly 3, no. 3 (July 1939); Harold J. Tobin, “Book Review: War in Our Time. Edited by Hans Speier and Alfred Kähler,” American Political Science Review 33, no.4 (August 1939); Robert Gale Woolbert, “Recent Books on International Relations,” Foreign Affairs 17, no. 4 (July 1939); Boris Erich Nelson, “Book Review: War in Our Time. Edited by Hans Speier and Alfred Kähler,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 207 (January 1940); Quincy Wright, “Rights and Duties under International Law: As Affected by the United States Neutrality Act and the Resolutions of Panama,” American Journal of International Law 34, no. 2 (April 1940); Quincy Wright, “International Law and Commercial Relations,” Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at Its Annual Meeting 35 (April 24–26, 1941); and William O. Shanahan, “The Literature on War: Part II,” The Review of Politics 4, no. 3 (July 1942). An outlier is W.G. Weaver, “Book Review. War in Our Time. Edited by Hans Speier and Alfred Kähler,” American Sociological Review 4, no. 5 (October 1939).
- Nathan C. Leites, “Book Review: War in Our Time. Edited by Hans Speier and Alfred Kähler,” American Journal of Sociology 46, no. 2 (September 1940).
- Erich Kahler, “Forms and Features of Anti-Judaism,” Social Research 6, no. 4 (November 1939): 455.
- Kahler, “Forms and Features,” 479.
- Kahler, “Forms and Features,” 480.
- Kahler, “Forms and Features,” 482. In addition to Kahler, in 1939 Feiler published a book review where he acknowledged Jews’ centrality to the National Socialist imagination. He declared that the Nazis represented an “enormous danger” to the Jews, rightly predicting that if Eastern European governments followed the racist National Socialist lead then the future of the entire Jewish people was at stake. Feiler also disagreed with the assumption of Sir John Hope Simpson, the author of the report he reviewed, that the Jewish problem was primarily an economic one that land reforms, industrialization, and market expansion could solve. Instead, Feiler attributed Jew hatred not to any economic base, but to “the non-economic, super-economic, irrational causes of Europe’s self-destruction and decay.” By 1939, then, members of the Graduate Faculty argued that the Jews played a special historical role in the National Socialist imagination. Arthur Feiler, “Book Review: Sir John Hope Simpson, Refugees, a Preliminary Report of a Survey,” Social Research 6, no. 1 (February 1939): 117.
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Bessner, D. “Rather More than One-Third Had No Jewish Blood”: American Progressivism and German-Jewish Cosmopolitanism at the New School for Social Research, 1933–1939. Religions 2012, 3, 99-129. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3010099
Bessner D. “Rather More than One-Third Had No Jewish Blood”: American Progressivism and German-Jewish Cosmopolitanism at the New School for Social Research, 1933–1939. Religions. 2012; 3(1):99-129. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3010099
Chicago/Turabian StyleBessner, Daniel. 2012. "“Rather More than One-Third Had No Jewish Blood”: American Progressivism and German-Jewish Cosmopolitanism at the New School for Social Research, 1933–1939" Religions 3, no. 1: 99-129. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3010099
APA StyleBessner, D. (2012). “Rather More than One-Third Had No Jewish Blood”: American Progressivism and German-Jewish Cosmopolitanism at the New School for Social Research, 1933–1939. Religions, 3(1), 99-129. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel3010099