Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Joan Kennedy Taylor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American journalist (1926–2005)
Joan Kennedy Taylor
Taylor speaking at a conference in 1981
Taylor speaking at a conference in 1981
Born(1926-12-21)December 21, 1926
DiedOctober 29, 2005(2005-10-29) (aged 78)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationJournalist, editor
RelativesDeems Taylor (father)

Joan Kennedy Taylor (December 21, 1926 – October 29, 2005) was an American journalist, author, editor, public intellectual, and political activist. She is best known for her advocacy ofindividualist feminism and for her role in the development of the modern Americanlibertarian movement.

Early life

[edit]

Taylor was born in Manhattan to prominent parents.[1] Her father was composer, radio personality, and musical journalistDeems Taylor. Her mother was actress, playwright, and poet Mary Kennedy. She grew up in New York, in suburban Connecticut, and, after her parents separated when she was six years old, around the world. Her father's biographer, James Pegolotti, writes that "[b]y 1942, owing to a peregrinating mother, Joan had attended eight schools, in such far-flung spots as Peking, Paris, and Ellsworth, Maine, as well as New York."[2]

After graduating fromSt. Timothy's School, Taylor returned to New York to study playwrighting atBarnard College. There she met Donald A. Cook, a psychology undergraduate at nearbyColumbia University. After their marriage in 1948, Taylor went to work as an actress on stage, radio, and television (with the usual assortment of accompanying dead-end day jobs). Much of her spare time she devoted to auditing graduate courses in psychology at Columbia, where Cook was now pursuing a Ph.D., and to dabbling in the ideas ofG. I. Gurdjieff andP. D. Ouspensky.[3]

In the early 1950s, the Cooks hosted a series of legendary parties at their ground-floor apartment on 112th Street, near the Barnard and Columbia campuses.Joyce Johnson, in her memoirMinor Characters, recalls the place as "like an apartment at the bottom of a well – midnight even on a sunny day. The door was never locked. You never knew whom you'd find there. Psychologists, Dixieland jazz musicians, poets, runaway girls, a madman named Carl Solomon whom an old Columbia classmate of [Donald's], Allen Ginsberg, had met in a psychiatric ward."[4] Nor were Solomon andAllen Ginsberg the onlyBeat Generation luminaries to attend these gatherings. There were alsoWilliam S. Burroughs,Lucien Carr,Gregory Corso, andJack Kerouac.

Career

[edit]

In the mid-1950s, Taylor abandoned acting and went into publishing, taking a job atAlfred A. Knopf and Company. It was in 1957, James Pegolotti reports, when, "[a]s a publicity assistant at Knopf, Joan read an advance copy of[Ayn] Rand'sAtlas Shrugged and found the book fascinating. She wrote a letter of appreciation to the author, who responded by inviting her to lunch. The two women established a friendship, partly because of Joan's deep interest in... 'Objectivism.' For Taylor, Rand blended literary aptitude and economic philosophy into an attractive package."[5]

Taylor began writing about politics from her new Objectivist perspective and soon founded and edited an independent monthly political magazine,Persuasion (1964–1968),[6] the first political magazine ever personally endorsed and recommended by Ayn Rand. In the December 1965 issue ofThe Objectivist Newsletter, Rand wrote thatPersuasion "does a remarkable educational job in tying current political events to wider principles, evaluating specific events in a rational frame-of-reference, and maintaining a high degree of consistency. It is of particular interest and value to all those who are eager to fight on the level of practical politics, but flounder hopelessly for lack of proper material."[7]

Taylor's first book,When to See a Psychologist, written with clinical psychologist Lee M. Shulman, appeared in 1968. In the early 1970s, she worked as a co-therapist with various clinicians at both theStockbridge, Massachusetts Free Clinic and theAusten Riggs Center. She began studying law in a Manhattan attorney's office and worked her way up to paralegal status. She also began working on behalf of feminist causes, which had gradually attracted her interest since the early 1960s when she readThe Feminine Mystique byBetty Friedan.

During the Vietnam War, Joan was part of a group of Objectivists that put together a conference in Washington, DC, in an effort to end the military draft. "It was very successful," she recalled. "We got a couple of hundred people at the conference. [One of the conference speakers,]Martin Anderson, decided that he would like to work on the presidential campaign and he went to seeNixon and he said, 'I'm down here speaking on the economics of the draft and I thought maybe I could persuade you to make [elimination of the draft] one of your issues.' Nixon, who had been raised a Quaker, said yes, he'd be interested. And he hired Marty to be one of his aides. He went from being an aide in the campaign, to being an aide in the White House, to being the person who was the liaison with the commission that was supposed to decide what should be done with the Army. He got them all to decide unanimously for abolishing the draft."[8]

In the mid-1970s, she joined theLibertarian Party and embarked on several years of political activism under its auspices. She helped to write the national party platform in the late 1970s, advised the party'sEd Clark for president campaign of 1980 on feminist issues, and indefatigably promoted the ERA and abortion rights to a party membership that was not particularly receptive to feminist concerns.

In 1977, at the invitation of its editor,Roy A. Childs, Jr., Taylor joined the staff of the monthly magazineLibertarian Review, where she began writing regularly on feminist and other topics. Two years later, she became a regular biweekly commentator on the nationally syndicated daily radio program,Byline, which was underwritten by the libertarianCato Institute. Soon she was writing forReason magazine andInquiry Magazine, as well as theLibertarian Review. In the 1980s, she even spent a brief time as an editor ofThe Freeman, then as now the oldest libertarian magazine on the market.

As director of the book publishing program of theManhattan Institute, 1981–1985, Taylor "discovered" a then virtually unknown political scientist namedCharles Murray and commissioned him to write the book that becameLosing Ground (1984), editing his manuscript as it was written, arranging for its publication byBasic Books, and masterminding the publicity campaign that made it not only a bestseller, but, according to at least one source, one of the seventeen most influential works of sociology ever published.[9]

The last two decades of Taylor's life were devoted almost entirely to her feminist concerns. From 1989 to 2003 she served as national coordinator of the Association of Libertarian Feminists (and as editor of its newsletter), and throughout the 1990s she also served as vice president and as a member of the board of directors of Feminists for Free Expression, a group of which she had been a founding member. She taught courses at theNew School (then still the New School for Social Research) – one on "Different Voices: Feminism at the Crossroads" and another on "Women and the Law." As a writer on feminist topics, she contributed to magazines and books, she lectured all over the country, and she published two books of her own,Reclaiming the Mainstream: Individualist Feminism Rediscovered (Prometheus, 1992) andWhat to Do When You Don't Want to Call the Cops: A Non-Adversarial Approach to Sexual Harassment (New York University Press, 1999).

Early in 2002, Taylor was diagnosed with bladder cancer. Late in 2005 she died from the effects of the cancer and related kidney failure.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Milestones: Jan. 3, 1927".Time. 1927-01-03.ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved2023-01-10.
  2. ^James A. Pegolotti,Deems Taylor: A Biography (Boston: Northeastern University Press,2003), p. 280.
  3. ^Pegolotti,Deems Taylor: A Biography, p. 309.
  4. ^Joyce Johnson,Minor Characters (Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1983), p. 59. In Johnson's account, Donald Cook, graduate student and psychology instructor, is thinly disguised as "Alex Greer," graduate student and philosophy instructor.
  5. ^Pegolotti,Deems Taylor: A Biography, pp. 317–18.
  6. ^Riggenbach, Jeff (May 20, 2011)."The Power ofPersuasion".Mises Daily.Ludwig von Mises Institute.
  7. ^Ayn Rand, "A Recommendation."The Objectivist Newsletter, Vol. 4 No. 12, December 1965, p. 8.
  8. ^"Joan Kennedy Taylor Remembered, the Atlas Society | Ayn Rand, Objectivism, Atlas Shrugged".
  9. ^Dan Clawson, ed.,Required Reading: Sociology's Most Influential Books (Amherst, MA:University of Massachusetts Press, 1998).

Further reading

[edit]
  • Riggenbach, Jeff.Persuaded by Reason: Joan Kennedy Taylor and the Rebirth of American Individualism. New York: Cook & Taylor, 2014.
  • Walker, Jesse.Joan Kennedy Taylor, RIP.Reason, October 30, 2005.

External links

[edit]
International
National
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joan_Kennedy_Taylor&oldid=1305508655"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp