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Carlin Romano
American writer

Carlin Romano

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Carlin Romano
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Biography

Carlin Romano is an American writer and educator. Romano is a critic-at-large for the The Chronicle of Higher Education. He teaches at Ursinus College and the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School for Communication part-time.

Career

Romano is a critic-at-large for the The Chronicle of Higher Education. He was a writer for the Philadelphia Inquirer for many years. He teaches at Ursinus Collegeand the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School for Communication. He previously taught philosophy at Bennington College.

In 1981, Romano reviewed books about philosophers for The Village Voice Literary Supplement and one book for The New Yorker. His writing has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Nation, The Weekly Standard, Times Literary Supplement, and elsewhere.

Romano contributed an article on Umberto Eco to Oxford University Press's Encyclopedia of Aesthetics. In 1993, Romano wrote an essay for Danto and His Critics entitled, "Looking Beyond the Visible: The Case of Arthur C. Dantwo," about art critic Arthur Danto. In his essay, Romano sets up a dichotomy between "pragmatism" and "Hegelianism" and finds statements in Danto's books that he claims fit into one of these two schools of thought. The Institution of Philosophy: A Discipline in Crisis? (published 1989 by Open Court, edited by Avner Cohen and Marcelo Dascal), includes a proposal by Romano to set up a World Court of Philosophy in which appointed philosophers would stipulate philosophical conclusions.

He wrote America the Philosophical, a book with the main claim that the current United States has the "most philosophical culture in the history of the world."

In 2013 he was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship.

Life

Romano was born in Brooklyn, New York. He received his Bachelor of Arts in philosophy from Princeton University. He took an M.Phil. in philosophy from Yale University and a J.D. from Columbia University. One of the Fulbright Scholars in 2002, he lectured at Smolny State University, St. Petersburg. He was a Joan Shorenstein Center fellow in 1993. and a NAJP(National Arts Journalism Program) Fellow at Columbia University in 1998. In 1989 Romano received an Eisenhower Fellowship; in his case to travel to Israel. He is an ongoing elected Fellow of the New York Institute for the Humanities at New York University.

Controversial critiques

Martin Heidegger

In the October 18, 2009 issue of The Chronicle in "Heil Heidegger!", citing Heidegger's well-known past Nazi affiliations, Romano was highly critical of Martin Heidegger's work and its continued acceptance amongst American academics and intellectuals. The article was a review of the publication in English of French philosopher Emmanuel Faye’s Heidegger: The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy in Light of the Unpublished Seminars of 1933–1935 (first published in 2005, in France), highly critical of Heidegger for the same reason. Romano called on librarians to stop stocking the collected works of the German philosopher, which appear under the term Heidegger Gesamtausgabe. This controversial article renewed public dialogue about the relation between a person's politics and the merit of their work.

Catharine MacKinnon

The publication of "the most controversial by far" Only Words book review, written by Romano, provoked a strong reaction with his imagined description of himself raping the author, Catharine MacKinnon. This performative counterexample to MacKinnon's apparent contention that a rape in words is equivalent to a rape in deeds intensified the debate about legal sanctions against pornography. Romano said in defense of this review, "The worst thing that can happen to a flamboyant claim is to be tested by a good example."

Philip Roth

In a 2007 book review of Philip Roth's Exit Ghost, Romano revived the long-standing controversy over the extent that Roth's fiction is autobiographical. He used Claire Bloom's 1996 memoir Leaving a Doll's House as proof that Roth's books are "more autobiographical than imaginative."

Writings

  • America the Philosophical. New York: Knopf, 2012. ISBN 978-0679434702

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