Priests of Our Democracy: The ...

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“Marjorie Heins, a civil liberties lawyer and founder of the Free Expression Policy Project, tracks the collision of politics, academic freedom, free speech, and the Constitution in this dense, well-researched study . . . . This compelling study demonstrates that precedent does not guarantee indefinite protection, and every generation must fight for its freedoms.” ― Publishers Weekly

“What is & academic freedom, and why should it deserve special protection? These questions underpin Heinss history of the efforts to police the politics of schoolteachers and university professors. As the title suggests, Heins endorses Justice Felix Frankfurters assertion that teachers are & priests of Americas democracy, requiring exceptional freedoms to exchange ideas because of their special responsibility to foster & those habits of open-mindedness and critical inquiry which alone make for responsible citizens. The book shows how this assertion, and the body of case law underpinning it, emerged in the mid-twentieth century in response to efforts by anticommunists to control the classroom. It examines lawyers, activists, and individual citizens who challenged the establishment.” ― Journal of American Studies

“The tension between national security and individual freedoms remains today. Heins presents a fascinating perspective on how these tensions became influential in debates over academic freedom, while offering a somewhat scathing review of the high courts ability to truly lead. Heins reminds the reader that the court more often follows societal trends than pushes towards progress.” ― H-Net

“Priests of Our Democracy is a smart, well-crafted insightful book by an especially qualified author.” — Michael Steven Smith ― Against the Current

“Priests of Our Democracyis rich with detailed accounts of the many ways teachers and professors have struggled to define their rights of political expression, not only in the McCarthy era but also before and since. Heins shows that academic freedom is multidimensional, and its meanings are profoundly affected by cultural and political conditions. It is a narrative that encourages us to believe that substantial progress has been made…” — Richard Flacks ― The Journal of Higher Education

“[A] masterpiece of legal journalism… attention-grabbing and compelling.” — Alan Wald ― Society for U.S. Intellectual History blog

“[Hein’s] exhaustive research and meticulous analysis of Supreme Court decisions is an important addition to the growing literature on anti-Communism repression of this period….The significance of her book lies in her careful unraveling of the court’s rulings on issues of academic freedom, most of them postwar Red Scare cases…This is an important and valuable book for anyone interested in the Constitutional dimension of the anti-Communism that marred the history of the mid-twentieth century U.S….Marjorie Heins has done a remarkable job.” — Steve Leberstein ― Working USA

“An excellent history of how the law has dealt with academic McCarthyism Anyone with a stake in education [should read this book] for not only is it a good read about an important subject, but Heins tells a cautionary tale of an extensive and durable problem of which they are probably unaware.” — Professor Andrew Feffer ― History News Network

“Combining the legal insights of a constitutional scholar with the archival diligence of an historian, Marjorie Heins has written the definitive study of the Supreme Courts most important academic freedom decision. Its an engrossing account of the assault on educators during the McCarthy era that should be required reading for anyone who values our increasingly endangered First Amendment rights.” — Ellen Schrecker,Professor of History, Yeshiva University

“Fact-filled, balanced, and yet thought-provoking I recommend this book to students, scholars, and citizens who care about academic freedom and about the fate of public discourse in America. I also recommend Priests of Our Democracy to those who worry that the war against terror has become in part a war against civil rights and civil liberties at home.” — Jonah Raskin ― Truthout

“Heins has done a more than admirable job of explaining the history of academic freedom in the United States, especially in New York state and New York City, in the twentieth century.” — Clay Calvert ― Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly

“Heins juxtaposes her compelling and distressing account of the anticommunist purges that reached into the ivory towers of our colleges and universities with a chilling cautionary tale that asks whether history is repeating itself through the repressive reactions to 9/11.” — Stephen Rohde ― Los Angeles Review of Books

“In this insightful and illuminating history of academic freedom and the Constitution, Marjorie Heins brings to life the characters, controversies, and cases that have framed the evolution of this critical and contentious realm of American liberty.” — Geoffrey R. Stone,Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago

“In this well-written study, civil liberties lawyer Heins pens an excellent historical account of the Cold War suppression of academic freedom in the US (at all educational levels) during the heyday of McCarthyism.” — W.T. Howard, Bloomsburg University ― CHOICE

“Marjorie Heins has given a human face to leading American controversies and cases about academic freedom, creatively integrating personal interviews and archival sources into her account of the developing law.” — David Rabban,University Distinguished Teaching Professor, University of Texas School of Law

“Marjorie Heins, a civil liberties lawyer, casts a gimlet eye on New York schools in the early 1950s, when teachers were fired merely for refusing to say whether they were communists . . . . Of course, some teachers were actually communists (and not all priests are perfect). But Ms. Heins’s point, which she places in historical and contemporary context, is that ‘the American political system is all too vulnerable to political repression and to demonizing the dissenter.’ She makes a powerful case.” — Sam Roberts ― The New York Times

“The author, Marjorie Heins, is a civil-liberties lawyer who provides a meticulous examination of the course of the First Amendment through the courts and the legislation’s recognition of academic freedom during the McCarthy era. She also offers a chilling chapter on the consequences for university life since September 11, 2001, and concludes with an argument for the defense of academic freedom.” — M.J. Heale ― Journal of American History

“Well written, thorough, and full of personal details about the subjects, this is a telling account of teachers’ struggle for academic freedom in America.” — Harry Charles, St. Louis ― Library Journal

“With clarity and insight Marjorie Heins brings to life a part of American history often overlooked despite its importance to our democracy today. The tension between individual freedom and national security is as taut as it ever has been. We have much to learn from our earlier mistakes in yielding too readily to claims of the latter. This compelling book, which brilliantly illuminates earlier Supreme Court decisions, and the people and events behind them, is a wonderful place to begin.” — Margaret H. Marshall,former Chief Justice, Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court

Additional information

Authors

Marjorie Heins

Cover-Types

9780814790519, Hardcover

Language

English

Pages

376

Publishers

New York University Press

Year of Publication

2013 A.D