Ralph Waldo Emerson spoke at Harvard University in 1837 in a Phi Beta Kappa address. That address known as American Scholar reaches for individual expression, not history and social hierarchy. There are many Phi Beta Kappa addresses, both before and after him. Many Transcendentalists orators at Harvard and a few anti-Transcendentalists orators as well. And many others who are optimists, technology, and utilitarians at many colleges. After the Fugitive Slave Act in 1850, three speakers of Harvard, Brown, and Yale advocated law, rather than conscience. All three of them were lawyers. There was a rich diversity of opinion: Transcendental oratory, anti-Transcendentalists, and optimist, technological, and utilitarian thought.Download the article from SSRN at the link.
February 20, 2025
Brophy on The Jurisprudence of Antebellum Phi Beta Kappa Addresses
Alfred L. Brophy, University of North Carolina School of Law, has published The Jurisprudence of Antebellum Phi Beta Kappa Addresses. Here is the abstract.
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