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- Duration: 63:46
- Published: 11 May 2011
- Uploaded: 26 Jul 2011
- Author: NEHgov
The selection of the 2000 Jefferson Lecturer led to a spate of controversy. The initial selection was President Bill Clinton. William R. Ferris, chairman of the NEH, said that his intent was to establish a new tradition for every President to deliver a Jefferson Lecture during his or her presidency, and that this was consistent with the NEH's broader effort to increase public awareness of the humanities. However, some scholars and political opponents objected that the choice of Clinton represented an inappropriate and unprecedented politicization of the NEH. William J. Bennett, a conservative Republican and former chairman of the NEH under President Reagan, charged that the proposal was an example of how Clinton had "corrupted all of those around him." In the wake of the controversy, President Clinton declined the honor; a White House spokesperson said the President "didn't want the work of the National Endowment for the Humanities to be called into question."
Ultimately the 2000 honor went to historian James M. McPherson, whose lecture turned out to be very popular. Subsequently, the NEH revised the criteria for the award to place more emphasis on speaking skills and public appeal.
The next Jefferson Lecture, by playwright Arthur Miller, again led to attacks from conservatives such as Jay Nordlinger, who called it "a disgrace," and George Will, who did not like the political content of Miller's lecture and argued that Miller was not legitimately a "scholar."
The most recent Jefferson Lecturers have included journalist/author Tom Wolfe; Straussian conservative political philosopher Harvey Mansfield; and novelist John Updike, who, in a nod to the NEH's Picturing America arts initiative, devoted his 2008 lecture to the subject of American art. In his 2009 lecture, bioethicist and self-described "humanist" Leon Kass expressed his view that science has become separated from its humanistic origins, and the humanities have lost their connection to metaphysical and theological concerns.
{| border="1" |+ ! Year !! Lecturer !! Lecture Title |- | 1972 || Lionel Trilling || "Mind in the Modern World" |- | 1973|| Erik Erikson || "Dimensions of a New Identity" |- | 1974 || Robert Penn Warren || "Poetry and Democracy" |- | 1975 || Paul A. Freund || "Liberty: The Great Disorder of Speech" |- | 1976 || John Hope Franklin || "Racial Equality in America" |- | 1977 || Saul Bellow || "The Writer and His Country Look Each Other Over" |- | 1978 || C. Vann Woodward || "The European Vision of America" |- | 1979 || Edward Shils || "Render Unto Caesar: Government, Society, and Universities in their Reciprocal Rights and Duties" |- | 1980 || Barbara Tuchman || "Mankind's Better Moments" |- | 1981 || Gerald Holton || "Where is Science Taking Us?" |- | 1982 || Emily Vermeule || "Greeks and Barbarians: The Classical Experience in the Larger World" |- | 1983 || Jaroslav Pelikan || "The Vindication of Tradition" |- | 1984 || Sidney Hook || "Education in Defense of a Free Society" |- | 1985 || Cleanth Brooks || "Literature and Technology" |- | 1986 || Leszek Kołakowski || "The Idolatry of Politics" |- | 1987 || Forrest McDonald || "The Intellectual World of the Founding Fathers" |- | 1988 || Robert Nisbet || "The Present Age" |- | 1989 || Walker Percy || "The Fateful Rift: The San Andreas Fault in the Modern Mind" |- | 1990 || Bernard Lewis || "Western Civilization: A View from the East" |- | 1991 || Gertrude Himmelfarb || "Of Heroes, Villains and Valets" |- | 1992 || Bernard Knox || "The Oldest Dead White European Males" |- | 1993 || Robert Conquest || "History, Humanity and Truth" |- | 1994 || Gwendolyn Brooks || "Family Pictures" |- | 1995 || Vincent Scully || "The Architecture of Community" |- | 1996 || Toni Morrison || "The Future of Time" |- | 1997 || Stephen Toulmin || "A Dissenter's Story" |- | 1998 || Bernard Bailyn || "To Begin the World Anew: Politics and the Creative Imagination" |- | 1999 || Caroline Walker Bynum || "Shape and History: Metamorphosis in the Western Tradition" |- | 2000 || James M. McPherson || "'For a Vast Future Also': Lincoln and the Millennium" |- | 2001 || Arthur Miller || "On Politics and the Art of Acting" |- | 2002 || Henry Louis Gates, Jr. || "Mr. Jefferson and the Trials of Phillis Wheatley" |- | 2003 || David McCullough || "The Course of Human Events" |- | 2004 || Helen Vendler || "The Ocean, the Bird, and the Scholar" |- | 2005 || Donald Kagan || "In Defense of History" |- | 2006 || Tom Wolfe || "The Human Beast" |- | 2007 || Harvey Mansfield || “How to Understand Politics: What the Humanities Can Say to Science” |- | 2008 || John Updike || “The Clarity of Things: What Is American about American Art” |- | 2009 || Leon Kass || "'Looking for an Honest Man': Reflections of an Unlicensed Humanist." || |- | 2010 || Jonathan Spence || "When Minds Met: China and the West in the Seventeenth Century" || |- |}
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