First Among Equals with Teresa Bejan - Lecture 3/3: Blind Spots
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On March 20, 21, and 22, 2023, Princeton University’s James Madison
Program in American Ideals and Institutions hosted Teresa Bejan,
Professor of Political Theory and a Fellow of Oriel College at the
University of Oxford, to deliver the annual Charles E. Test, M.D. '37
Distinguished Lectures.
As a defining premise of modern political thought, equality often
commands more allegiance than investigation. Yet the idea that human
beings are equal is an ancient one, with deep roots in Roman Law and
Christianity. This three-lecture series explores how and why, in
17th-century England, this long-standing idea began to have profound
political consequences—if not all of the consequences modern
egalitarians expect.
Wednesday, March 22nd - Lecture Three of Three: Blind Spots
This lecture explores the “first among equals” problem in 17th-century
England. While the Levellers, Diggers, and early Quakers were committed
to the equality of human beings, their visions of a society of equals
remained profoundly hierarchical—for instance, with respect to women and
the enslaved. Modern scholars often dismiss these and other exclusions
as blind spots. But the woman known as “The First English Feminist,”
Mary Astell, saw them as evidence of deeper difficulties with equality
as a relational ideal.
Teresa M. Bejan is Professor of Political Theory and Fellow of Oriel
College at the University of Oxford. Professor Bejan’s research brings
historical perspectives to bear on questions in contemporary political
theory. She has written extensively on themes of free speech, civility,
tolerance, and equality in historical contexts ranging from ancient
Athens to 20th-century analytic political philosophy. In 2021, Professor
Bejan was awarded the Philip Leverhulme Prize in Politics, which
celebrates early career researchers who have already achieved
international recognition and have exceptional future promise.
Her first book, Mere Civility: Disagreement and the Limits of Toleration
(2017, paperback 2019), examined contemporary calls for civility in
light of 17th-century debates about religious toleration. It defended an
ideal of ‘mere civility’ consistent with American free speech
fundamentalism derived from Roger Williams, the founder of Rhode Island.
Her current book manuscript, entitled First Among Equals, explores the
fascinating but forgotten history of equality before modern
egalitarianism. Her next major research project is the Clarendon edition
of John Locke’s Letters on Toleration.
Professor Bejan has also published peer-reviewed articles in the
American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political
Science, Journal of Politics, British Journal of Political Science,
Political Theory, History of Political Thought, and more. Her Special
Forum on “The Historical Rawls” (co-edited with Sophie Smith and Annette
Zimmermann) was published in 2021 in the journal Modern Intellectual
History. Alongside her academic work, Professor Bejan writes regularly
for popular venues, including The New York Times, The Atlantic, and The
Washington Post.
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