Joel Spingarn | |
Office: | President of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People |
Term Start: | 1930 |
Term End: | 1939 |
Predecessor: | Moorfield Storey |
Successor: | Arthur B. Spingarn |
Office1: | Chair of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People |
Term Start1: | 1914 |
Term End1: | 1919 |
Predecessor1: | Oswald Garrison Villard |
Successor1: | Mary White Ovington |
Birth Name: | Joel Elias Spingarn |
Birth Date: | 17 May 1875 |
Birth Place: | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Party: | Republican (before 1912) Progressive (1912–1916) |
Spouse: | Amy Einstein |
Children: | 2 sons, including Stephen 2 daughters |
Relatives: | Arthur B. Spingarn (brother) |
Education: | Columbia University (BA) |
Joel Elias Spingarn (May 17, 1875 - July 26, 1939) was an American educator, literary critic, civil rights activist, military intelligence officer, and horticulturalist.
Spingarn was born in New York City to an upper middle-class Jewish family. His younger brother was Arthur B. Spingarn. He graduated from Columbia College in 1895. He grew committed to the importance of the study of comparative literature as a discipline distinct from the study of English or any other language-based literary studies.
Politics was one of his lifetime passions. In 1908, as a Republican he ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. In 1912 and 1916, he was a delegate to the national convention of the Progressive Party. At the first of those conventions, he failed in his attempts to add a statement condemning racial discrimination to the party platform.
He served as professor of comparative literature at Columbia University from 1899 to 1911. His academic publishing established him as one of America's foremost comparativists. It included two editions of A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance in 1899 and 1908 as well as edited works like Critical Essays of the Seventeenth-Century in 3 volumes. He summarized his philosophy in The New Criticism: A Lecture Delivered at Columbia University, March 9, 1910.[1] There he argued against the constraints of such traditional categories as genre, theme, and historical setting in favor of viewing each work of art afresh and on its own terms.[2] Spingarn's criticism and aesthetical thought was deeply influenced by the Italian philosopher Benedetto Croce, with whom he was in correspondence since 1899. Croce had Spingarn's masterwork translated in Italian (La critica letteraria nel Rinascimento. Saggio sulle origini dello spirito classico nella letteratura moderna, trad. di Antonio Fusco, pref. di B. Croce, Laterza, Bari 1905). Their correspondence was published in Naples in 2001 (Carteggio Croce-Spingarn, a cura di Emanuele Cutinelli-Rendina, Istituto italiano per gli studi storici, Napoli, 2001).
From 1904, his role in academic politics marked him as an independent spirit—too independent for the university's autocratic president Nicholas Murray Butler. His differences with the administration ranged from personality conflicts to educational philosophy. Things came to a head in 1910, when he offered a resolution at a university faculty meeting in support of Harry Thurston Peck, a Columbia professor who had been summarily dismissed by Butler because of a public scandal involving a breach-of-promise suit. That precipitated Spingarn's dismissal just five weeks later.[3] He became part of a distinguished series of prominent academics who resigned or were dismissed during Butler's tenure as president, including George Edward Woodberry, Charles Beard, and James Harvey Robinson—all of them, like Peck and Spingarn, notable progressive scholars.
Without an academic appointment but of independent means, Spingarn continued to publish in his field much as he had before, writing, editing, and contributing to collections of essays. He was commissioned in the U.S. Army and served as a major during World War I.[4] In 1919 he was a co-founder of the publishing firm of Harcourt, Brace and Company.
He also took up the other cause of his life, racial justice. An influential liberal Republican, he helped realize the concept of a unified black movement by joining the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) shortly after its founding and was one of the first Jewish leaders of that organization, serving as chairman of its board from 1913 to 1919, its treasurer from 1919 to 1930, its second president from 1930 until his death in 1939.
In 1914 he established the Spingarn Medal, awarded annually by the NAACP for outstanding achievement by an African American.
During World War I, according to an NAACP publication, he was instrumental in seeing that "a training camp for Negro officers at Des Moines was established and about 1,000 Negro officers commissioned."[5] Spingarn also served as an intelligence officer on the Military Intelligence Board (MIB), and provided information to the government about the NAACP's membership, which had been accused of having Communist influences.[6] [7]
W. E. B. Du Bois (who had been unsuccessfully recommended by Spingarn for the MIB[8]) dedicated his 1940 autobiography Dusk of Dawn to Spingarn's memory, calling him "scholar and knight."[9]
Always interested in gardening, in the years following 1920 he amassed the world's largest collection of clematis—250 species—and published the results of his research on the early history of landscape gardening and horticulture in Dutchess County, New York.[10] He served as a member of the Board of Managers for the New York Botanical Garden.[11]
He lived with his wife, Amy Einstein Spingarn, in Manhattan and at their country estate which later became the Troutbeck Inn and Conference Center[12] in Amenia, New York. They had two sons, including Stephen J. Spingarn, and two daughters.
He died after a long illness on July 26, 1939. His will included a bequest to fund the Spingarn Medal in perpetuity.
. Lewis . David Levering . David Levering Lewis . W. E. B. Du Bois: Biography of a Race, 1868–1919 . 1994 . Henry Holt and Company . 9780805035681 . 553–560 . November 27, 2022.