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  [text only]  Last updated 04/08/2005
   

MEDIA CONTACT: Pat Vaughan Tremmel at (847) 491-4892 or p-tremmel@northwestern.edu

February 14, 2003

Citizenship Is Topic of Law School Lecture

CHICAGO --- Danielle Allen, associate professor of classical languages and literatures, political science and the committee on social thought at the University of Chicago, will deliver the 2003 Julius Rosenthal Lecture Series March 4-6 at Northwestern University School of Law, 357 E. Chicago Ave.

Free and open to the public, Allen’s three lectures will take place at 4 p.m. March 4 and at noon on March 5 and 6.

In an investigation of the history of citizenship in the United States, she will argue that the period from 1954 through 1964 should be seen as one of reconstitution that highlighted the foundational status of sacrifice in democratic political experience.

The lectures, titled “Loss, Distrust and Citizenship” (March 4), “Imperfect Democracy” (March 5) and “Political Friendship and the Good of Rhetoric” (March 6), are the basis for Allen’s forthcoming book titled “Talking to Strangers: on Rhetoric, Distrust and Citizenship.”

“The lecture series has assumed a preeminent position among distinguished legal lecture programs,” said David E. Van Zandt, professor of law and dean of Northwestern University School of Law. “Publication of the lectures has contributed to legal literature and scholarship for more than 60 years, and Professor Allen is certain to continue this tradition.”

Originally trained in the classics, Allen recently received a second doctorate in political science, providing a strong basis for her investigations into the essential philosophical, literary and cultural threads of the social fabric. Her recent book, “The World of Prometheus,” examines the theory and practice of punishment in classical Athens as it affected both the intellectual elite and ordinary citizens.

Her work contributes new perspectives to discussions of race and politics that go well beyond the confines of traditional scholarship.

Allen, who received master’s and doctoral degrees from Harvard University and a M.Phil and PhD from the University of Cambridge, has been affiliated with the University of Chicago since 1997.