Mark Lilla  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Wiki Commons
Tumblr
Wikisource
YouTube
Shop


Featured:
Mark Lilla is an essayist and historian of ideas living in New York City. A frequent contributor to the New York Review of Books, the New Republic, and the New York Times, he is best known for his books The Reckless Mind: Intellectuals in Politics and The Stillborn God: Religion, Politics, and the Modern West. After holding professorships at New York University and the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago, he joined Columbia University in 2007 as Professor of the Humanities. He lectures widely and has delivered the Weizmann Memorial Lecture in Israel and the Carlyle Lectures at Oxford University.


Biography

Mark Lilla was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1956 into what he describes as a non-strict Roman Catholic family. After briefly attending Wayne State University Lilla graduated from the University of Michigan in 1978 with a degree in economics and political science. While attending the Kennedy School of Government he began writing journalism, and after graduating in 1980 became an editor of the public policy quarterly The Public Interest, where he remained until 1984. Returning to Harvard, he worked with sociologist Daniel Bell and political theorists Judith Shklar and Harvey Mansfield, receiving his PhD in Government in 1990. His daughter, Sophie Marie Lilla, was born in 1994.

Writings

The recurring theme of Lilla's writings is the contested heritage of the modern Enlightenment, especially regarding politics and religion. His first book, G.B. Vico: The Making of an Anti-Modern examines an early figure in the European Counter-Enlightenment, and has an affinity with the works of Isaiah Berlin. (With Ronald Dworkin and Robert Silvers, he edited the memorial volume, The Legacy of Isaiah Berlin in 2001.) In the 1990s he wrote widely on twentieth-century European philosophy, editing with Thomas Pavel the New French Thought series at Princeton University Press, and writing The Reckless Mind, a mediation on the "philotyrannical" bent of twentieth-century continental philosophy. In recent years he has concentrated on theology and politics, publishing a wide-ranging study of modern political theology, The Stillborn God.





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Mark Lilla" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on original research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools