Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day are behind us, praise
the Lord. When I was a young man, I was
reasonably sure that I would see the new millennium in, but that was then so
far in the future that I gave no thought to what would come after. We are now far enough past Y2K to be confident
that there is no going back, so I shall in this post try to come to terms with the
latest post-millennial year to show up, 2015.
At my age, each year brings one signal anniversary after another,
many of events half a century in the past.
Last year was the fiftieth anniversary of my being awarded tenure. This year I hit yet another half century mark: the publication of A Critique of Pure Tolerance, the only book I ever co-authored. I
have told the story of the writing of this book elsewhere, so I shan't tell it
again, unless someone asks. Forgive an
old man's maunderings. At least I am not
standing on street corners "stopping one in three."
A Critique of Pure
Tolerance was only the second book to appear under my name, and slender
though my contribution to it was, I think it is fair to say that I made more of
a splash with it than with my first book, Kant's
Theory of Mental Activity. My Excel
spreadsheet of royalty reports [yes, I keep one], tells me that the book sold
more than 70,000 copies in English before it went out of print, apparently in
1992.
The year after it was published, a German translation
appeared, to be followed by translations into Swedish and Italian [1968], French
and Spanish [1969], Catalan [not to be confused with Spanish], Portuguese,
Norwegian, and Japanese [1970], and just last year, Turkish. The reason for this world-wide interest was
of course Herbert Marcuse's name on the title page. Herbert had become something of a radical
rock star with the publication of One-Dimensional
Man, which appeared in 1964, just before "the sixties" were
getting started. He had become the role
model, cheer leader, and philosophical mentor all of us youngsters longed for,
never mind that very few of us could actually understand what he was saying.
Herbert himself seemed vastly amused by his notoriety, which
extended even to his name appearing in a New
Yorker cartoon. After he retired
from Brandeis and went to teach in Southern California, he liked to tell a story
about his son, Peter, who was working out there as a city planner. As Herbert told the story, one day he was
walking on the beach when a young man approached very hesitantly and deferentially. "Excuse me, sir," the young man
said, "aren't you Peter Marcuse's father?" It was not until many years later that I
fully appreciated that story. I told it
when I was invited to speak to the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where
my son, Tobias, is a very highly regarded senior professor.
The year 2015 is also the fiftieth anniversary of the actual
writing of far and away my most famous book, In Defense of Anarchism, but that too is a story I have told
elsewhere.
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