Fifth Annual Dean's Interdisciplinary Symposium

November 19, 2012 1:50 PM - 3:15 PM

Date:
November 19, 2012

Time:
1:50-3:15pm

Location:
D'Angelo 206

Please join us on Monday, November 19th from 1:50-3:15 pm
(Common Hour) in D’Angelo 206 as five distinguished scholars
from St. John’s College celebrate the 300th anniversary of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s birth.

Symposium Participants

Introduction: Dr. Michael Wolfe, Professor of History
Rousseau and Women Writers: Dr. Zoe Petropoulou, Associate
Professor of French
How Rousseau Invented America: New World Science: Dr. Robert Fanuzzi, Associate Professor of English
Rousseau and the Religion of Self-Love: Dr. Michael Henry,
Professor of Philosophy
Rousseau's Legacy to Child Psychology: Dr. John Hogan, Professor of Psychology

Discussant: Dr. Michael Wolfe
Fifth Annual Dean’s
Interdisciplinary Symposium
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Restless Genius and Revolutionary
Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) remains a highly controversial
figure who made singular contributions in his day to a broad range
of fields. These included political theory and philosophy, ethics,
sociology, psychology, the education of children, aesthetics,
literature, and music. Rousseau was a fiercely independent and
protean writer whose radical views and tumultuous life constantly
challenged conventional thinking during the Age of Enlightenment,
opening the way for new ideas and practices that helped shape the
French Revolution and the advent of the modern era.