>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 11/10/2004 10:06:48 AM >>>
Chronicle of Higher Education, November 12, 2004
Liberal Groupthink Is Anti-Intellectual
By MARK BAUERLEIN
<<<<>>>>>

gee, this guy really has felt the wrath of 'liberal' academic
orthodoxy, just think what a career he would have without
all those big, bad, liberalistas...   michael

Mark Bauerlein Joins National Endowment for the Arts as Director of
Research & Analysis
June 3, 2004

Washington, D.C. - The National Endowment for the Arts announced today
the appointment of Mark Bauerlein to be Director of Research & Analysis.
He will be responsible for identifying research needs relevant to the
agency and the arts community, and developing a research, evaluation,
and analysis program to address those needs.

National Endowment for the Arts Chairman Dana Gioia said, "We are
pleased to have Mark Bauerlein join the NEA to direct the activities of
this crucial arm of the agency's work. A widely published author, he is
a person of enormous energy and genuine intellectual depth. He will be
invaluable in the NEA's new efforts to serve the American public with
meaningful research on arts and arts education."

Mark Bauerlein was born in California and grew up outside Washington,
D.C. He returned to California and earned a doctorate in English at UCLA
in 1988. The following year he joined the faculty of Emory University in
Atlanta.

Bauerlein's work has spanned many fields. His first book was a study of
Walt Whitman's poetry, which argued that Leaves of Grass was a "language
experiment" in which the poet tried to create an emotional, individual
idiom that broke free of convention and matched the vitality and
freshness of American democracy. From there he proceeded to 19th-century
American philosophy, mainly Ralph Waldo Emerson, William James, and
Charles Sanders Peirce and to a second book, The Pragmatic Mind:
Explorations in the Psychology of Belief. That book outlined the
thinking central to the only home-grown philosophical tradition in the
United States, pragmatism.

Other books include a general study of literary criticism, a historical
account of the 1906 Atlanta riots, and two co-authored volumes, one an
encyclopedic chronicle of civil rights for African Americans and the
other a handbook of literary terms. He has also published essays and
reviews in the Wall Street Journal, Times Literary Supplement (London),
The Weekly Standard, Yale Review, Partisan Review, and many scholarly
journals.

Bauerlein believes that the Endowment is uniquely positioned to foster
instrumental research in the arts and culture. He notes "Chairman Gioia
has laid out an agenda of leadership in the field, and the Office of
Research is poised to reach out to cultural groups, arts organizations,
educators, journalists, and intellectuals to promote high standards and
evidence-based policies."

Bauerlein's wife, Sherrill Deakins, is an interior designer in Atlanta.




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