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MEDIA CONTACT: Pat
Vaughan Tremmel at (847) 491-4892 or p-tremmel@northwestern.edu
February 24, 2004
Stephen Carter to Deliver Rosenthal Lectures
CHICAGO --- Stephen L. Carter, best-selling author and one of the
nation’s leading public intellectuals, according to a recent
New York Times book review, will deliver Northwestern University
School of Law’s 2004 Julius Rosenthal Foundation Lecture Series,
focusing on war theory, nationalism and the rhetoric of killing.
Carter, the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Yale University, will
deliver three Rosenthal lectures, titled “Inconvenient Lives: Just War
Theory,” “Nationalism” and “The Rhetoric of Killing,” at
4 p.m. March 30 and at noon March 31 and April 1 at the School of Law, 357 E.
Chicago Avenue.
Established in 1919 in memory of Julius Rosenthal (1827-1905), the Rosenthal
Lecture Series has assumed a preeminent position in the legal world, and publication
of the lectures has made a notable contribution to legal literature and scholarship
for more than 70 years.
Carter’s non-fiction writings have won praise across the political spectrum.
His 1993 best seller, “The Culture of Disbelief: How American Law and Politics
Trivialize Religious Devotion” (1993), received plaudits from commentators
as diverse as Anna Quindlen, William F. Buckley and President Bill Clinton. His
1998 book, “Civility: Manners, Morals and the Etiquette of Democracy” (1998),
was lauded by, among others, Marian Wright Edelman and the late John Cardinal
O’Connor.
Carter has taught constitutional law, contracts, intellectual property, law and
religion, legal ethics, and law and science. Before joining the Yale faculty
in 1982, he served as a law clerk for Judge Spottswood W. Robinson III, of the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, and to U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. He also practiced law briefly with a
firm in Washington, D.C.
Carter received his bachelor’s degree from Stanford University and his
law degree from Yale. He also received honorary degrees from eight schools, including
the University of Notre Dame, Colgate University and the Virginia Theological
Seminary. Carter was the first non-theologian to receive the prestigious Louisville-Grawemeyer
Award in religion.
Julius Rosenthal was an eminent and beloved member of the Chicago Bar, and the
Rosenthal Lecture Series is one of the principal programs supported by the Julius
Rosenthal Foundation.
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