Beyond the “Mere Property Career”: Lewis Henry Morgan, the Human Mind, and the American Experiment in the Age of Donald Trump

Poster for Daniel Moses Talk
Date: November 19, 2018
Time: 12:00 am - 12:00 am
Location: Kusler Cox Auditorium, Central Library of Rochester & Monroe County

Beyond the “Mere Property Career”: Lewis Henry Morgan, the Human Mind, and the American Experiment in the Age of Donald Trump

Monday, November 19th, 6.30-8.30pm

Kusler Cox Auditorium

Central Library of Rochester & Monroe County

115 South Avenue, Rochester, NY

In observance of Lewis Henry Morgan’s bicentennial year, Daniel Noah Moses considers Morgan’s scholarship as a quiet form of social criticism. Morgan was dissatisfied by what he considered to be the overemphasis around him on the pursuit of “gain.” In his mature years, during what has become known as The Gilded Age, he was concerned about the growing concentration of resources and power in the United States, and the implication of such trends for the prospects of self-government and human flourishing. In his ambivalence, he converted nostalgia into an undercover radicalism based on his grasp of an unfolding human narrative and the assumptions at the foundation of his work: because what was is no longer, what is cannot remain the same. He dedicated himself to exploring what holds societies together and how societies change. Looking to the future, he envisioned a “revival, in higher form of the liberty, equality, and fraternity” of ancient societies. Morgan embodies tension within the American experiment, along with a critique that is uncomfortably relevant now, in 2018, and very much worth talking about.

Daniel Noah Moses is the Director of Educator Programs at Seeds of Peace. After eleven years in Jerusalem, in 2017, he moved to Philadelphia. He earned his Ph.D. at the University of Rochester, where he wrote his dissertation about Morgan, later published as a book, The Promise of Progress: The Life and Work of Lewis Henry Morgan (2009).

The views and opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Seeds of Peace as an organization.