Dear STS Community,

In the latest issue of the MIT Faculty Newsletter, a short note written by Ruth 
Perry, professor emerita of literature, in memoriam to Leo Marx, professor 
emeritus (STS): https://fnl.mit.edu/march-april-2022/leo-marx/.
IN MEMORIAM
Leo Marx
Ruth Perry<https://web.mit.edu/directory/?id=rperry&d=mit.edu>

[cid:E09B5232-4985-4FA1-A651-2EAA753E7A02]

Leo Marx died a few weeks ago at the advanced age of 102. He was one of the 
leading scholars of his generation in America, a classic humanist, using the 
literature of great minds and the contingencies of history to think through 
current problems about the effects of technology on society.

With the exception of Noam Chomsky, Leo was probably the most significant 
thinker to grace the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences in the 
last 50 years. But rather than detail his books and articles, ably done 
elsewhere, I want to write about him as a colleague, for there, too, he 
exemplified the best of our profession. To begin with, he was a brilliant 
teacher; his remarks in the classroom illuminated the words of many an American 
author for generations of students. Moreover, he was always willing to share 
his love of writers like Emerson and Thoreau and to visit one’s class as a 
guest lecturer. Those occasions transformed the quotidian into celebrations, 
full of light and pleasure for everyone, as he communicated his joy in the work 
and his delight in enthralling the rest of us.

Not that we agreed about everything. Although he had been radical in his school 
days, an admiring student of F. O. Matthiesson at Harvard, for a long time he 
had no women writers on his syllabi in American literature. He staunchly 
supported women in the workplace, but declined to include them on his reading 
lists. I argued the case for Sarah Orne Jewett’s New England classic Country of 
the Pointed Firs at the very least, and urged other women writers of the 
nineteenth century on him. Eventually, under pressure from students as well, he 
yielded the point; but he asked me to guest lecture on Jewett at first and it 
took a while for him to thoroughly appreciate this part of the intellectual 
world. But he did change his mind and his personal literary canon expanded as 
he grew older.

Leo was exceptionally kind to younger scholars and shared his influence 
wherever he could, with a letter or a recommendation or a contact where it 
would do the most good.

He would read the jejune works of those who came to admire him even when he had 
no institutional responsibility to do so – and then took the time to give good 
practical succinct advice. Open to most everyone who called, he gave his time 
and attention to hundreds of would-be scholars, teachers, and students over the 
years. He did not protect himself from visitors the way most busy and 
influential scholars do but was courteous to the young and unknown, the awkward 
and shy, the fearful and bold alike.

Leo was also a loving and thoughtful friend. I still cherish the MIT sweatpants 
that he and Jane (his incisive partner of 62 years) brought me in the hospital 
after a hip replacement. He gave me essential advice on the first chapter of my 
last book. I daresay there are hundreds of people today who could tell such 
tales of his generosity. Besides being a mensch, he wrote deeply meaningful 
essays and books about things that matter, and his inspired writings will live 
on long after these stories of his kindnesses have faded with the tellers.

You can also access the latest issue on the web: https://fnl.mit.edu or as a 
printable PDF file of the March/April 2022 issue by clicking 
here<https://fnl.mit.edu/issue/march-april-2022/?utm_source=direct_email&utm_medium=email#pdfdownload>.

Best,
Gus
_______________________________________
Gus Zahariadis (he, him, his)
Assistant to the Director; Sr. Admin III
Program in Science, Technology, and Society
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
77 Massachusetts Ave, E51-163B
Cambridge, MA 02139
T: 617.253.3452
g...@mit.edu<mailto:g...@mit.edu>
https://sts-program.mit.edu




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