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2009 Graduate Center Commencement
10,000th Graduate Center Doctorate Awarded, First Recipient
Honored
Honorary Degrees Given to Lena Horne and Roger Hertog
James Oakes, Award-Winning Historian of Lincoln and American
Slavery, Was Speaker
Time and Place:
11 a.m., Thursday, May 28, 2009, Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln
Center, 10 Lincoln Center Plaza (Columbus Avenue & 65th
Street).
A Milestone Commencement:
This year, the Graduate Center awarded its 10,000th Doctorate.
Daniel Robinson, a philosophy professor at Oxford University
who was the first to receive a Graduate Center doctoral degree
in 1965, returned to be honored and to hood Kristen
Case,
this year’s student speaker who represented the 10,000th
recipient.
Historical context:
At the first commencement, there were
two Ph.D.s given out: one to Barbara Stern (English) and
one to Daniel
Robinson (Psychology). By alphabetical
order, Robinson was the first to receive a diploma, though
the degrees were technically awarded simultaneously, when
the faculty voted to accept the candidates. Another distinguished
alum, Stern was a professor at Rutgers for many years;
she died this past January.
Speaker:
James Oakes, Distinguished Professor of History at the Graduate
Center; leading historian of 19th-century America and co-recipient
of the 2008 Lincoln Prize for his book The Radical and the
Republican: Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and the
Triumph of Antislavery Politics.
Honorary Degrees & Awards:
Doctor of Humane Letters to Lena
Horne, legendary actor, singer,
and civil rights activist.
Doctor of Humane Letters to Roger
Hertog, influential philanthropist
in the arts, culture, and education.
President’s Distinguished Alumni Medal to Daniel
Robinson,
scholar renowned for his work in philosophy and psychology.
Graduates:
410 Doctorates and 39 Master's degrees awarded.
Participant Bios:
James Oakes -- Commencement Speaker
James Oakes, Distinguished Professor of History at the Graduate
Center and holder of the Humanities Chair, is one of the
leading historians of nineteenth-century America. His early
work focused on the South, examining slavery as an economic
and social system that shaped Southern life. His more recent
work examines antislavery thinking in the North and the political
processes that led to emancipation. His books include The
Ruling Race: A History of American Slaveholders and Slavery
and Freedom: An Interpretation of the Old South. In 2008,
he was awarded the Lincoln Prize, one of the most generous
and prestigious awards in the field of American history,
for his book The Radical and the Republican: Frederick Douglass,
Abraham Lincoln, and the Triumph of Antislavery Politics.
Read his Commencement Address.
Lena Horne -- Doctor of Humane Letters
Performing artist Lena Mary Calhoun Horne made her stage, recording,
and movie debuts in the 1930s. She soon became an international
star in all media, maintaining her career while facing discrimination
personally and professionally. She won three Grammy Awards,
including a Lifetime Achievement Award, and a Tony Award
for her one-woman show. She is also the winner of an NAACP
Image Award; a Sammy Cahn Lifetime Achievement Award; American
Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) Awards;
Drama Desk Awards; and New York Drama Critics Circle Awards.
A tireless fundraiser for civil rights causes and an advocate
for racial integration, Ms. Horne was a pivotal figure in
the twentieth-century struggle for racial equality and social
justice.
Roger Hertog -- Doctor of Humane Letters
Businessman Roger Hertog, an alumnus of City College, is
a supporter of the arts, culture, and education in New
York City. He has served on the Board of Directors of the
New-York Historical Society since 2003 and has been chairman
since 2007. He is also on the Board of Directors of the
New York Philharmonic and the Board of Trustees of the
New York Public Library. His interests extend to publishing,
and he was co-owner of both The New Republic and the New
York Sun. Since retiring as vice chairman of the board
of Alliance Bernstein in 2006, Mr. Hertog has turned his
attention to philanthropy, and in 2007, he was awarded
a National Humanities Medal for his “enlightened
philanthropy on behalf of the humanities.”
Daniel Robinson -- Distinguished Alumni Award
The first person to receive a Ph.D. (in Psychology) from
the Graduate Center in 1965, Daniel Robinson is currently
on the philosophy faculty at Oxford University and is Distinguished
Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at Georgetown. He is the
author or editor of 52 books, including the classic Intellectual
History of Psychology. His teaching and writings span such
subjects as moral philosophy, the philosophy of psychology,
legal philosophy, the philosophy of mind, intellectual history,
legal history, and the history of psychology—a scope
of expertise that he put to work as principal consultant
for the award-winning PBS series The Brain and The Mind.
Robinson has also served as president of, and been honored
by, two divisions of the American Psychological Association.
Kristen Case -- Student Speaker and 10,000th Degree Representative
Kristen Case is a 2009 Graduate of the Ph.D. Program in English.
She is the recipient of a Robert E. Gileece Fellowship, as
well as the English program’s Millennium Dissertation
Award. Ms. Case received a Masters of Fine Arts in poetry
from Brooklyn College, and has published poems in The Iowa
Review, Chelsea, The Saint Ann’s Review, and The Brooklyn
Review. She was the 2004 recipient of the Iowa Award, the
annual poetry prize of The Iowa Review. Her essay “On
Reading The Cantos: A Pragmatic Approach” was published
in Southwest Review last year.
Read her Commencemnt Address On Behalf of the Graduates.
The Graduate Center is devoted primarily to doctoral studies
and awards most of the City University of New York’s
Ph.D.s. An internationally recognized center for advanced
studies and a national model for public doctoral education,
the school offers more than thirty doctoral programs as well
as a number of master’s programs. Many of its faculty
members are among the world’s leading scholars in their
respective fields, and its alumni hold major positions in industry
and government, as well as in academia. The Graduate Center
is also home to more than thirty interdisciplinary research
centers and institutes focused on areas of compelling social,
civic, cultural, and scientific concerns. Located in a landmark
Fifth Avenue building, the Graduate Center has become a vital
part of New York City’s intellectual and cultural life
with its extensive array of public lectures, exhibitions, concerts,
and theatrical events. Further information on the Graduate
Center and its programs can be found at www.gc.cuny.edu.
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On Behalf of the Graduates
CUNY Graduate Center Commencement
May 28,
2009
by Kristen Case
Ph.D. Program in English
Chancellor Goldstein, President Kelly, distinguished guests,
members of the platform party and faculty, my fellow graduates
and their family and friends, it is a tremendous honor to be
speaking to you today. To my fellow graduates: as I contemplated
what I wanted to say to all of you, it occurred to me that
we have a lot in common. For one thing, we all chose a rather
difficult time to graduate, and many of us, myself included,
are struggling with the question of what comes next. But there
are some other things that we share as well.
As a group, we are probably quite a bit different from the
graduates attending similar ceremonies at other universities
in the city and around the country this month. More of us were
born outside the United States; more of us worked before we
attended graduate school; more of us are people of color; more
of us are raising families. Our lives as scholars have been
shaped by the genuine diversity of our colleagues.
Most of us also share the experience of teaching within the
CUNY system. During my time at the Graduate Center I have taught
students with mental and physical disabilities, students for
whom English is a second language, and many students who worked
full-time in addition to attending college. I taught students
who were preparing to serve in Iraq or Afghanistan, and students
returning from those wars. I taught a 55-year-old night nurse
who attended class at 6 p.m. before her shift, and was often
sleeping in the empty classroom before I arrived. I taught
a 25-year-old single mom who brought her daughter to class
when school was cancelled. I taught a student who was homeless.
I’m sure most of you have similar stories. Finding ways
to connect our scholarly work to the realities our students
brought to class has been, for many of us, one of the greatest
challenges of our time in graduate school.
As graduates of the CUNY Graduate Center, we share the experience
of working with leading scholars in our respective fields.
And because these scholars come from within the CUNY colleges,
they too understand the way academic work must answer to the
real world as reflected by the classrooms at Queens, or LaGuardia,
or John Jay College. I am grateful to my own extraordinary
mentor, Joan Richardson, for many things, but I am most grateful
to her for helping me trace the significance of my studies
back to the world outside the library.
Often, on my way from Brooklyn to the Graduate Center, I would
spot another student on the train, reading an academic book
and scribbling notes in the margins. Like me, she was on her
way to a seminar, maybe from work. I would bet that we have
all, at one time or another, done work on the subway, and this
image—of a student, immersed in her reading and yet aware
of the passengers around her, aware of the swaying of the car
and the blocks flying by overhead—seems to me an appropriate
emblem of what it is that we have to offer.
As we all know, this is a challenging moment for higher education.
But such moments, while frightening, hold tremendous possibility.
As graduates of a public university, we have a profound role
to play in the transformations this moment makes possible.
A society in which intellectual life is not a commodity reserved
for a few, but a public good, available to all, and in which
scholarship is informed by and responsible to, real-world experience,
is possible. Budget cuts and hiring freezes notwithstanding,
I believe it may be more possible—and it is certainly
more necessary—now than at anytime in recent memory.
Those of us who have done our work on the subway are particularly
well-equipped to help make this possibility a reality. Thank
you, and congratulations.
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Commencement Address
CUNY Graduate Center Commencement
MAY 28, 2009
by James Oakes
I assume that President Kelly’s invitation to speak
to you this morning is the latest piece of fallout from a book
I recently published about Abraham Lincoln. I did not realize
while writing it that the bicentennial of Lincoln’s birth
was approaching, nor could I have known that we were about
to elect a president who openly embraces Lincoln as his ideal.
This conjunction of events has kept me busy lately. Like many
of my fellow historians, I’ve been besieged with unusual
invitations—to speak at the annual black-tie dinner the
Abraham Lincoln Club of Wilmington, Delaware, for example,
or to do an interview, on Lincoln’s 200th birthday, with
the national radio of the Czech Republic. I have been asked
questions I never imagined I’d ever have to answer: Was
Abraham Lincoln Jewish? Was he gay? Were any of his ancestors
African? It’s easy enough to wave such questions away
by just saying no: Lincoln was not Jewish. Neither was he gay.
Nor did he have any black ancestors that anyone knows about.
But lurking behind this popular interest in Lincoln’s
identity is a powerful urge on the part of various groups to
claim some connection with him, and that urge is something
I cannot fully explain, or explain away.
Nor can I wave off so easily some of the other questions put
to me in the past year. A few months back, just prior to Barack
Obama’s inauguration, I was invited to do an interview
on Bloomberg television. I hesitated. Bloomberg is a financial
news network. What do they want with a historian of 19th-century
America? I should have said no.
My concerns heightened when I was introduced to viewers as
a presidential historian. Uh, oh, I thought. I write about
slavery and antislavery and the coming of the Civil War, so
it’s not hard for me to talk about Lincoln. But I’m
not a presidential historian. What if she starts asking me
about Franklin Roosevelt or Lyndon Johnson, or worse, Millard
Fillmore or William Henry Harrison? As the beads of sweat began
forming on my temples, she threw me her first curve ball: “What,” she
asked, “will Barack Obama’s economic policy be?”
There was no way for me to hide the blank stare spreading over
my face. Why couldn’t this be a radio interview, I thought
to myself. In befuddled ignorance I managed to mutter something
to the effect that Obama’s policy would likely be different
from that of the previous administration.
“How so?” she asked.
After a few more minutes of fumbling, the interview got around
to a very different kind of question: “Will Obama be
a great president?”
I couldn’t answer that one either—nobody can. But
at least I could trace the logic behind it. You are an expert
on Abraham Lincoln, the interviewer was assuming. Abraham Lincoln
was a great president. Therefore you know what it takes for
someone to become a great president. Does Barack Obama have
what it takes?
I left the interview frustrated, not because I couldn’t
speculate intelligently about Obama’s economic policy,
nor because I couldn’t predict the fate of his presidency.
Rather, I was frustrated because I realized that at that point—at
this late date in my career—I still couldn’t answer
the one question everybody assumes I should be able to answer:
What made Abraham Lincoln a great president?
It’s a hard question for me because I’ve never
subscribed to what’s known as “the Great Man theory
of history,” a point of view most closely associated
with the Scottish historian Thomas Carlyle. He believed that
the history of human civilization could be told as a series
of biographies of Great Men—those rare individuals who
rise above the chaos of events, take history by the horns,
and shape it to their wills. I don’t think history works
that way. On the other hand, I would not go as far as Leo Tolstoy,
who believed that history has neither rhyme nor reason, that
it is little more than the chaotic flow of unpredictable events.
If there are patterns in history, Tolstoy argued, they are
the work not of Great Men but of an inscrutable divine providence—this
puts history beyond human control and even beyond human understanding.
But that can’t be right either. I think there are patterns
in history, but they are the work less of great men than of
ordinary men and women who together create great forces and
great movements—human forces and social movements that
press against and shape the actions of those who exercise power.
I am close to Tolstoy in one respect. He believed that Abraham
Lincoln was the greatest man in all human history, and I am
inclined to believe—more modestly—that Lincoln
was our greatest president. And so, in a sense, Tolstoy’s
problem is mine as well: I don’t believe in Great Man
history, yet I do think that Abraham Lincoln was a Great Man.
How so?
Having failed on Bloomberg television, I went home and thought
about the nagging question. What made Lincoln Great? Now, if
CNN ever decides to ask me the question, this is what I would
say.
There are three things, different but closely related, that
made Lincoln great.
The first was his capacity for growth. This was a man who,
as a young politician, was little more than a party hack—who
in the 1830s used racial demagoguery to attack his political
opponents and who, as a lawyer in the 1840s, took cases defending
a master’s right to reclaim fugitive slaves.
Ten years later Lincoln was refusing to take those cases. In
1854 he began denouncing slavery, publicly and eloquently,
and by 1858 he was publicly denouncing racism as well. He continued
to grow during his presidency. Only weeks after the war began,
Lincoln took the first of several steps that would end in the
abolition of slavery, and once he made emancipation the policy
of his administration, Lincoln took the next step—toward
supporting citizenship and voting rights for blacks. The demagogic
hack of the 1830s and 40s had become a determined emancipationist
by the 1860s.
Lincoln had not been the first politician to raise his voice
against slavery. He was not the first elected official to endorse
emancipation during the Civil War. Nor was he the first to
support civil rights for the former slaves. He preferred to
move with public opinion at his back, and he certainly wanted
to make it appear as though he were responding to pressure
rather than taking the lead. “I claim not to have controlled
events,” he once said, “but confess plainly that
events have controlled me.” There was a vein of fatalism
running so deep in Lincoln that some historians see him as
essentially passive, “forced into glory,” as one
critic put it. But then most of history’s “Great
Men” are, in some sense, forced into glory. What distinguishes
the Giants from the Lilliputians is their very different responses
to the crises they confront. Not everybody can be forced into
glory.
A different person might have been forced into disrepute by
the very real pressures urging Lincoln to compromise with the
slaveholders, to reject emancipation, and to repudiate civil
rights for blacks. There were pressures from every direction.
As Frederick Douglass recalled, Lincoln was “assailed
by abolitionists; he was assailed by slaveholders; he was assailed
by men who were for peace at any price; he was assailed by
those who were for a more vigorous prosecution of the war;
he was assailed for not making the war an abolition war; and
he was most bitterly attacked for making the war an abolition
war.”
The political skill with which Lincoln negotiated these contradictory
pressures is, I believe, the second element of his greatness.
He refused to compromise with secession, yet he kept the four
border slave states from leaving the Union. He kept the War
Democrats loyal, yet he moved steadily toward an emancipation
policy that most Democrats despised. He maintained relationships—even
cultivated friendships—with radicals and abolitionists
who often distrusted him.
So Lincoln’s capacity for growth—his embrace of
emancipation and his moves toward racial equality—cannot
alone account for his greatness. He had to bring a good many
skeptical Americans along with him. And that required unsurpassed
political skill.
It also required his legendary way with words, his ability
to persuade those skeptics—and so I would rank Lincoln’s
literary gifts third in my list of elements that made him great.
His speeches are so impressive and well known that we give
them names: the Peoria speech, Cooper Union, the Gettysburg
address, the Second Inaugural. But how many of you know about
the public letters he began issuing halfway through his presidency
as part of a concerted campaign to persuade Northerners to
support the war, emancipation, and black troops? They, too,
have names familiar to most historians: the Greeley letter,
the Corning letter, and the most impressive of them, the Conkling
letter—Lincoln’s brilliant public reply to critics
back in his home state of Illinois who objected to a war for
emancipation, especially one in which blacks were allowed to
fight along with whites in the Union Army.
“You say you will not fight to free negroes,” Lincoln wrote. “Some
of them seem willing to fight for you; but, no matter. Fight you, then, exclusively
to save the Union.” But bear in mind, Lincoln warned, that when this
war is over and slavery has been abolished, “there will be some black
men who can remember that, with silent tongue, and clenched teeth, and steady
eye, and well-poised bayonet, they have helped mankind on to this great consummation;
while, I fear, there will be some white ones, unable to forget that, with malignant
heart, and deceitful speech, they have strove to hinder it.”
I don’t want to say that Lincoln was a great president
because he wrote beautiful sentences. My point is rather that
Lincoln’s literary skill was an element of his greatness,
precisely because he put it to use. Language was one of his
weapons—his “sword,” Douglas Wilson calls
it. It matters that at critical moments Lincoln wielded that
weapon to persuade Northerners that a war for Union had to
be a war for universal freedom and equality as well.
Lincoln was not great the way Thomas Carlyle thought men
could be great: He did not bestride American history and bend
it to his indomitable will. He did not free the slaves with
the stroke of his pen. He did not give our otherwise amoral
democracy a moral soul. To accomplish what he did, Lincoln
needed—among other things—the pressure of the abolitionists,
the commitment of the Republican Party, the determination of
runaway slaves, and the victory of the Union Army. They were
the wind at Lincoln’s back, the forces that controlled
him, the human forces and social movements he confronted, and
to which he chose to respond.
No doubt there are lessons here—and as this is a commencement
address, I’m tempted to send all of you newly minted
Ph.D.s out with some uplifting words of wisdom from Professor
Dumbledore, who once explained to Harry Potter that—not
unlike Abraham Lincoln—it was not the talents he possessed
that defined him, but the choices he made.
But that’s not what I want to say. I often tell my students
that in your last paragraph you’re allowed to say whatever
you want. Here’s what I want to say.
Even when we manage to elect the most impressive politician
to the highest public office—no matter how fine his convictions,
how sharp his political instincts, no matter how intelligent
and articulate—there still has to be pressure. Swooning
is not enough. Politicians need—and the best of them
cultivate—the pressure of public opinion if they are
to do the right thing. They want to be forced into glory. The
great ones can be.
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Daniel N. Robinson
In May of 1965, Daniel N. Robinson became
the first person to receive a Ph.D. from the Graduate Center
of the City University of New York. He was one of only two
doctoral graduates at that first commencement; we have asked
him to return today and hood the
10,000th.
But first we want to honor Dr. Robinson for his extraordinary
career.
In 1965, a reporter covering that first commencement asked
him what he hoped to achieve. He replied that he aspired to
the status of a footnote. As the author of eighteen books and
the editor of thirty more, he has far exceeded that modest
aspiration. Indeed, his book An Intellectual History of Psychology
has become a classic in the field; so too Wild Beasts and Idle
Humours: The Insanity Defense from Antiquity to the Present,
his definitive
history of the legal conception of mental competence.
Dr. Robinson is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Philosophy
at Georgetown and a Faculty Fellow at Oxford. He has been a
Visiting Professor at Princeton, Columbia, and Amherst. He
is a member of the Board of Scholars at Princeton’s James
Madison Program
where he delivered this year’s America’s Founding
and Future address.
Dr. Robinson has served as president of, and has been honored
by, two divisions of the American Psychological Association.
His teaching and writings span an extraordinary range of interests,
including moral philosophy, legal history, the philosophy of
the mind,
intellectual history, and the history and philosophy of psychology.
Dr. Robinson has served as a consultant to the National Science
Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Department
of Health and Human Services. PBS drew on his wide-ranging
expertise as principal consultant for their award-winning programs
The Brain and The Mind. The more than one hundred lectures
he has recorded for
the Teaching Company have secured his place among America’s
greatest teachers.
In honoring Dr. Robinson for his accomplishments, we at the
Graduate Center, along
with our 9,999 other alumni, are honored by those accomplishments.
It is with pride and admiration that I present Daniel N. Robinson
with
The Graduate Center President’s Distinguished Alumni
Medal.
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Lena Horne
As a singer, actress, and civil rights activist, you have brought
beauty, hope, and
enlightenment to millions across the world.
From the legendary Cotton Club in Harlem, you launched a career
that encompassed nightclubs, recordings, international concert
tours, film, television, and Broadway. One of the most beloved
singers of all time, you are emulated by musicians and revered
by audiences. In a field in which many careers flare for a
few brief moments, yours has
endured because it draws from a deep well of talent and experience.
Your voice is a powerful instrument, instantly identifiable
and impossible to disregard. It pierces indifference and despair,
lifts the spirit, and resonates long after the song has concluded.
With incomparable artistry, you have transformed songs such
as Stormy Weather and Just One of Those Things into timeless
standards. In collaborations with Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn,
Charlie Barnet, and Benny Carter, you have shaped a genre
that is America’s greatest cultural achievement.
Confronted with challenges, you have never recoiled, demonstrating
courage in the face of racial discrimination, the Hollywood
blacklist, and personal loss. You have transcended the
world of entertainment to become an icon of grace, strength,
and integrity.
In gratitude for your singular contribution to American culture,
The Graduate Center of
the City University of New York is proud to present you with
a
Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa.
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Roger Hertog
As a businessman, philanthropist, and civic
leader, you have inspired
our city and our nation.
After attending City College, you embarked upon a successful
career with Oppenheimer and Company, Sanford Bernstein and
Company, and Alliance Capital Management. But you have never
restricted your creativity to the world of finance. You have
moved with
comparable agility in the larger marketplace of ideas.
As a visionary board member and benefactor, you have sustained
many of the cultural and educational institutions that define
our remarkable city, including the New-York Historical Society,
the New York Public Library, the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
the New York
Philharmonic, and the City University of New York.
At Commentary, The New Republic, and The New York Sun, you
provoked thoughtful conversation among scholars, diplomats,
politicians, community activists—citizens who
care about the life of the mind and value the world of ideas.
At the Manhattan Institute, AEI, the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy, and the Shalem Center in Israel, you have
energized debate and reconfigured the terms of critical engagement.
At the Alexander Hamilton Center for Political Economy at NYU,
the Tikvah Project on Jewish Thought at Princeton, and the
Tikvah Center for Law and Jewish Thought at the NYU Law School,
you have extended the reach of academic inquiry.
You have, in short, been an advocate for
informed discussion and enlightened debate.
In gratitude for your steadfast commitment to the vibrancy
of intellectual life in America, The Graduate Center of the
City University of New York is pleased to present you with
a
Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa.
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