2020 NSSR Viewbook

Page 7

INTRODUCTION

The New School for Social Research and the University: Past, Present, and Future sociologists Emil Lederer and Peter Berger, psychologists Max Wertheimer and Jerome Bruner, philosophers Hannah Arendt and Reiner Schürmann, and historian Charles Tilly. The mission of The New School for Social Research—inspired by progressive American thought, European critical theory, and the legacy of the University in Exile—is grounded in the core social sciences and broadened with a commitment to philosophical and historical inquiry. Now, more than 100 years after the university’s founding, The New School for Social Research remains true to the ideal of a school of free inquiry for students and faculty of different ethnicities, religions, and geographical origins who are willing to challenge academic orthodoxy, connect social theory to empirical observation, and take the intellectual and political risks necessary to improve social conditions.

5 THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH

The New School for Social Research fosters an intellectual environment that challenges orthodoxy, promotes public debate, and cultivates academic rigor. Scholars including Charles A. Beard, James Harvey Robinson, Thorstein Veblen, and John Dewey came together in 1919 to establish a “new school” where “well qualified investigators and thinkers [could] enjoy the advantages of one another’s thought and discoveries, and … talk freely upon any theme they judge fit.” The establishment of The New School transformed the academy—something it continues to do today. In 1933, recognizing the danger Hitler represented, leaders of The New School created the University in Exile, a haven for European scholars and artists whose lives were threatened by National Socialism. The University in Exile was fully incorporated into The New School in 1934 and was later renamed the Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science. In this way, The New School established a reputation for upholding the highest standards of scholarly inquiry while encouraging a persistently critical perspective on the major political, cultural, and economic issues of the day. The Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science, eventually renamed The New School for Social Research, continues to attract distinguished and socially active faculty who challenge long-held theories and push scholarship and social discourse in new directions. Scholars who have graced the school’s halls include economists Adolph Lowe and Robert Heilbroner, political scientists Arnold Brecht and Aristide Zolberg,


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The Office of Admission and Application Procedures

1min
page 100

Graduate Minors and Academic Resources

4min
pages 98-99

Dissertations

2min
pages 94-97

Academic Publications

3min
pages 90-93

Husserl Archives

0
page 89

Center for Research with Infants and Toddlers

0
page 88

Transregional Center for Democratic Studies

1min
page 87

Janey Program in Latin American Studies

0
page 86

Institute for Critical Social Inquiry

1min
page 85

Center for Attachment Research

1min
page 84

Center for Public Scholarship

1min
page 83

Safran Center for Psychological Services

1min
page 81

Graduate Institute for Design, Ethnography, and Social Thought

0
page 80

Sándor Ferenczi Center

0
page 82

Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility

1min
page 79

Robert L. Heilbroner Center for Capitalism Studies

1min
page 77

Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis

0
page 78

Politics

6min
pages 50-55

Institute for Philosophy and the New Humanities

0
page 76

Psychology

19min
pages 56-67

Sociology

10min
pages 68-75

Liberal Studies

8min
pages 38-43

Philosophy

10min
pages 44-49

Historical Studies

8min
pages 32-37

Economics

10min
pages 24-29

Gender and Sexuality Studies

1min
pages 30-31

The New School for Social Research and the University: Past, Present, and Future

1min
page 7

Creative Publishing and Critical Journalism

8min
pages 18-23

Message from the Dean

2min
page 8

Intellectual Life in New York City

1min
pages 9-11

Anthropology

6min
pages 12-17
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.