James Seaton
James Everett Seaton, Professor, Department of English, Michigan State University.
James Seaton was born in Iowa, received B. A. from the University of Illinois at Urbana, and .earned a Ph.D. in English and Comparative Literature with a major in Greek and Latin from the University of Iowa. He is a professor in the Department of English at Michigan State University, where he has taught since 1971. Seaton is married to playwright Sandra Seaton.
James Seaton has written or edited four books and published over 100 articles. He is a regular contributor to The Weekly Standard, and his essays and reviews have also appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Hudson Review, The American Scholar (magazine), Yale Journal of Law and Humanities, First Things, Modern Age, The University Bookman, The Review of Metaphysics and The Journal of the History of Ideas, and many other academic and non-academic publications.
Publications
Books Written or Edited by Seaton
- The Genteel Tradition in American Philosophy and Character and Opinion in the United States by George Santayana. Edited and with an introduction by James Seaton, with essays by James Seaton, Wilfred McClay, John Lachs, and Roger Kimball. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2009.
- Cultural Conservatism, Political Liberalism: From Criticism to Cultural Studies. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996.
- Beyond Cheering and Bashing: New Perspectives on The Closing of the American Mind. Edited by William K. Buckley and James Seaton. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green SU Popular Press, 1992.
- A Reading of Vergil's Georgics. Amsterdam: Hakkert, 1983.
Seaton's Contributions to Books
- Introduction to Santayana Edition volume of Three Philosophical Poets from MIT Press. Forthcoming.
- "The Humanities and Cultural Criticism: The Example of Ralph Ellison." Rejuvenating the Humanities. Ed. Ray Browne and Marshall Fishwick. Bowling Green: Bowling Green SU popular P, 1992. 101-108.
External links
- “The Liberal Paradox: Why Lionel Trilling’s 1950 classic remains essential reading in 2009.” The Weekly Standard 14.46 (August 31, 2009): 34-5. Available online at [1].
- “Dr. Franklin's Remedy.” The Weekly Standard 14.31 (May 4, 2009): 40-1. [2].
- “Alive in the Mind.” The Weekly Standard 14.28 (April 6, 2009): 36-8. [3].
- “A Stirring Defense of the Conversation.” [5].
- “His Master’s Voice: Edmund Wilson in the Library of America.” The Weekly Standard 13.36 (June 2, 2008): 35-7. [6].
- “The Word is Out: The Textbook that Teaches Life is a Text.” The Weekly Standard 13.23 (February 25, 2008):45-6. [7].
- “Lyric Poetry, the Novel, and Revolution: Milan Kundera’s Life is Elsewhere.” Humanitas XX, 1-2 (2007): 86- 95. [8].
- “Romantic at Heart: Bloom's critique of unreason, and what it owes to Santayana.” The Weekly Standard 13.14 (December 17, 2007): 42-5. [9].
- “Woman of Letters.” The Weekly Standard 13.1 (September 17, 2007): 38-41. [10]
- “Prudential Conservatism?” The University Bookman 45:2 (Spring 2007): 10-16. [11].
- “Joseph Conrad’s Moral Imagination.” Humanitas XIX, 1-2 (2006): 65-70. [12].
- “Mother Tongue.” The Weekly Standard 12.28 (April 2, 2007): 38-40. [13].
- “The Appiahn Way: How to Do the Right Thing in the 21st century.” The Weekly Standard 12.3 (October 9, 2006): 38-9. [14].
- “Natural Selection.” . The Weekly Standard. 11.32 (May 8, 2006): 41-3. [15]
- “America’s Critic: Edmund Wilson, Mandarin in Chief.” The Weekly Standard 11.14 (December 19, 2005): 33-6. [16].
- “The Enduring Mencken.” Modern Age. 46.4 (2004):352-6. [17].
- “Irving Babbitt and Cultural Renewal.” Humanitas. XVI.1 (2003): 4-14. [18].
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