|
The
Path to the Great Stage
How
a historian sees Yale's past
October
1999
by Bruce Fellman
A major
anniversary is always a time of reflection,
and as the University began thinking about appropriate ways to celebrate
its 300th birthday, an updated history (the celebrated chronicle
of Yale's past by the late George Pierson only went as far as 1937)
was high on the list of priorities. Two years ago, President Levin
asked Gaddis Smith, the Larned Professor of History, to take on
the job of examining the evolution of the University's place in
the modern world.
Smith
was a natural choice: He is a specialist in international relations,
and his Yale roots go deep. A member of the Class of 1954 who was
chairman of the Yale Daily News and received his doctorate
in history from Yale in 1961, Smith has, except for a brief stint
at Duke, spent his entire career at the University. "I've known
or met all but the first two Presidents and Yale College deans who
have served this century, and I've seen a lot of our history first-hand,"
he explains.
The result
of Smith's examination of both his own memory and the University's
vast archives is to be a book, Yale and the External World: The
Shaping of the University in the Twentieth Century, that will
be published next year by Yale University Press. Parts of the work-in-progress,
which the author expects to include 24 chapters and be over 600
pages long, were used in the fall semester of 1998 as the text of
Smith's DeVane Lectures. These explored how Yale evolved from a
"very insular and isolated place" at the beginning of the century
to an institution that plays a powerful role on an increasingly
international stage at the century's end.
In the
book, Smith expands on this basic theme and discusses how it has
played out in such areas as curriculum, admissions, the faculty,
and identity. "The ideal 'Yale man' used to be a WASP of the right
stock," notes Smith. "But as we recognized that other people have
a place here, the University has had to change and grow. Looking
back over the last 100 years, it's become clear to me that Yale's
worst moments have come from intolerance, and it's been at its best
when it developed a relaxed confidence and became open to people
of differing views and backgrounds."
While
Smith says that his investigations did not turn up "anything that
totally blows my mind," they did emphasize the role that Yale's
leaders have played in terms of whether change is accepted or rejected.
"Presidents really are important," says the historian, who characterizes
Whitney Griswold as "the most charming President," A. Bartlett Giamatti
as the "darkest pessimist" and a "deeply haunted man," and current
President Levin as an "optimist."
"My
hero is Kingman Brewster," notes Smith.
"He presided over challenging times, and he stressed that Yale people
could make a difference in the world."
There's
been something of a retrenchment since the turbulent 1960s, and
though students and the University are very active in the local
community, "there seems to be little interest in the broad national
and international issues," says Smith. "In fact, students are quieter
than at any time since the 1950s, and I'd like to see them taking
a stronger stand."
But what
seems like complacency may, says the historian, be nothing more
than the failure, so far, of universities to "create an international
role for themselves."
In the
last baccalaureate address
of the decade, President Levin urged graduates to "take more interest
in public issues at the national and global level." Smith expects
that this tack will set Yale's direction for the next century. "As
I look ahead, I'm very optimistic," he says.
|