*** Welcome to piglix ***

Center for Dewey Studies


The Center for John Dewey Studies at Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC) was established as the central home for the works and study of philosopher/educator John Dewey. Led by Dr. Larry Hickman, "the Center for Dewey Studies is the home of ongoing publishing projects and research materials that focus on the life and work of the American philosopher and educator John Dewey." "By virtue of its publications and research, the Center has become the international focal point for research on Dewey's life and work." As the major Center for Dewey Studies in the world, SIUC hosts scholars from around the globe. "Besides publishing and making available electronically Dewey's works, the SIU Carbondale Center for Dewey Studies helps establish sister centers for Dewey Studies at universities around the world. Right now there are sister centers in Germany, Italy, Hungary, Poland, Japan, Turkey and China. The SIU Carbondale center partners with these sister centers for conferences and other scholarly forums for discussion and investigation of Dewey's works and ideas, but also partners with some of the centers for other activities, such as, in the case of the Chinese center, translating and publishing."

Celebrating its 50th Anniversary in 2011, the Center was founded in 1961 by Lewis E. Hahn initiating as the "Co-operative Research on Dewey Publications." "SIUC has a center dedicated to the study of his life and works because former University President Delyte Morris acquired the majority of Dewey materials for the University, beating out such other hopefuls as Columbia University." "From the outset the "Dewey Project," as it was called until 1971, was unique in the history of American letters: the first full-scale collected edition of the writing of an American philosopher; the only philosophical edition fully supported for more than a decade by a public university; and the first, and for a number of years the only, edition of philosophical writings ever edited according to the rigorous standards of the Modern Language Association's Center for Editions of American Authors.

But why John Dewey? And why Southern Illinois University? Quite simply, through what seems in retrospect to have been a fortuitous congruence of persons and events. George E. Axtelle, director of the Dewey Project for its first five years and a lifelong student of Dewey's work, had, in the years before his retirement from New York University, prepared - with William Gruen and Joseph Ratner - a proposal to develop an analytic concordance of the major philosophical terms in John Dewey's writings."

37 volumes of the philosopher's complete works were completed by the center in the early 1990s.

The Collected Works of John Dewey


...
Wikipedia

...