Bryan Garsten
Bio
Bryan Garsten is Professor of Political Science and Humanities. His award-winning book Saving Persuasion: A Defense of Rhetoric and Judgment (Harvard) explores the history of philosophical thought about the promises and pitfalls of rhetorical speech in politics and argues for the benefits of a politics of persuasion. Recently, his writings explore and respond to some of the deepest questions about liberalism that have been posed by its critics. The Journal of Democracy listed his essay, “A Liberalism of Refuge” as one of its most-read articles of 2024. His new manuscript, The Heart of a Heartless World, under contract with Harvard Press, will explore dilemmas of liberal thought rooted in eighteenth and nineteenth-century political thought. His scholarly work also includes articles on representative government and popular sovereignty, Aristotle’s political and rhetorical thought, a series of articles on Benjamin Constant’s liberalism and its relation to religion, writing on Hobbes and representation and more. He edited a volume of Robert Wokler’s essays, Rousseau, the Age of Enlightenment and their Legacies (Princeton) and, with Benjamin Barasch and David Bromwich, a forthcoming volume of essays called Humanistic Judgment: Ten Experiments in Reading (Yale).
Bryan has long been interested in experiments in liberal education and in how colleges and universities can encourage a more thoughtful public discourse. He coordinated the creation of a common curriculum for Yale-NUS College in Singapore and was lead-writer of an influential report, A New Community of Learning, about how that project understood the purposes of liberal education today. He chaired Yale’s Humanities Program, revitalized its link to its alumni, and set it on a path to successfully expanding both the Directed Studies program and the number of majors in the Humanities Program. A past member of the National Forum on the Future of Liberal Education and the Harvard Higher Education Leaders Forum, he frequently presents at conferences about liberal education and its civic importance. He is a member of the Alliance for Civics in the Academy and of the Civic Collaboratory of Citizens University. At Yale, he is the founding director of Citizens Thinkers Writers, a civic thought program for New Haven high school students and Yale undergraduates that will celebrate its tenth anniversary in the coming year. He is the founding Director of the Yale Center for Civic Thought.
Contact
115 Prospect Street, Rosenkranz Hall, Room 422
1(203) 436-3696
bryan.garsten@yale.edu
Education
-
Ph.D, Harvard University, 2003
-
M. Phil, Cambridge University, 1997
-
A.B, Harvard College, 1996
Articles
- “The Liberalism of Refuge”. Journal of Democracy, Vol. 35, Issue 2, Pg. 136-151, April 2024
- “The great reconciliation of reason and myth”, Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, August 21, 2023
- “The spirit of accusation”, Yale News, Guest Column, October 13, 2019
- “A Challenge, Not an Epitaph: A Response to Patrick Deneen’s Why Liberalism Failed” Commonweal, December 3, 2018
- “What is Modern Liberty For?” Online Library of Liberty, May 4, 2018
- “From popular sovereignty to civil society in post-revolutionary France”, Popular Sovereignty in Historical Perspective, pp. 236 - 269, 2016
- “Deliberating and Acting Together [in Aristotle’s Politics]”, The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle’s Politics, pp. 324 - 349, 2013
- “The Rhetoric Revival in Political Theory”, Annual Review of Political Science, Vol. 14:159-180 (Volume publication date June 2011)
- “Representative Government and Popular Sovereignty”, Political Representation, pp. 90 - 110, 2010
- “Religion and the Case Against Ancient Liberty”, Political Theory, September 25, 2009