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Max Ascoli (June 25, 1898 – January 1, 1978) was a Jewish Italian-American professor of political philosophy and law at the New School for Social Research, United States of America.[1]

Max Ascoli
Born(1898-06-25)June 25, 1898
DiedJanuary 1, 1978(1978-01-01) (aged 79)
NationalityItalian, American
Employer(s)New School for Social Research, University of Rome, University of Ferrara
Spouses
  • Anna Maria Cochetti (Anna Maria Armi);
  • Marion Rosenwald Ascoli
ChildrenPeter Ascoli
Parent(s)Enrico Ascoli, Adriana Finzi

Career

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Ascoli's career started in Italy and continued in the United States.[citation needed]

Background

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Ascoli was born in Ferrara, Italy on June 25, 1898, into an Italian Jewish family. He was the only child of Enrico Ascoli, a coal and lumber merchant, and Adriana Finzi. In 1920, he graduated in Law from the University of Ferrara. In 1921, he published a critical study of French socialist Georges Sorel. In 1924, he published a biography of philosopher Benedetto Croce. In 1928, he graduated in Philosophy from the University of Rome.[1]

Italy

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In 1928, Ascoli held the chair of Philosophy of Law at the University of Rome,[2] but he was arrested.[3]

In 1929, he accepted a post at the University of Cagliari (Sardinia). His opposition to the Italian fascist regime, however, led him into exile.

Among Ascoli’s closest friends were the Rossellini brothers, Carlo and Nello. They were devoted anti-fascist who were murdered by French right-wing agents of Mussolini in June 1937. After World War II Ascoli brought the widows and the two families along with the mother of the two brothers to the United States where they remained for several years.

United States

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In 1931, Ascoli received a Rockefeller Foundation scholarship and moved to the United States.[3] In 1939, he became an American citizen.

Ascoli met Alvin Johnson during his time with the Rockefeller Foundation and later joined the New School for Social Research that Johnson co-founded in New York.[4] He was active in the Mazzini Society, an anti-fascist organization founded in 1939 by Italian intellectuals who had fled fascist Italy.[2] Ascoli founded a number of other important cultural organizations in the US, including the Handicrafts Development Incorporated, a private organization that helped artists and artisans in Italy.[5]

His work with CADMA (Committee for the Assistance and Distribution of Materials to Artisans), which was headed by theorist and art critic Carlo Ludovico Ragghianti, and the House of Italian Handicraft supported the 1950-53 partially US-Government funded exhibition Italy at Work: Her Renaissance in Design Today co-curated by Meyric R. Rogers and Charles Nagel, Jr.[6]

In 1938, Ascoli teamed up with a noted writer and correspondent Dorothy Thompson. The two of them went on a lecture circuit to try to warn Americans about the dangers of fascism.

For many years, Ascoli taught at the New School for Social Research, becoming dean of the Graduate School (1939–41). He left the New School to serve the government for two years under Nelson A. Rockefeller, then Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs. He then went on to focus on a new magazine.[1]

During World War II, Ascoli worked for the OSS under Nelson Rockefeller. He was assigned to go to Latin America because the OSS feared that the Axis powers were trying to make inroads in such countries as Argentina, Mexico, and Brazil.

During the course of his career, Ascoli would teach at a number of prominent US institutions: Yale, Columbia, Chicago, North Carolina, and Harvard.[7]

The Reporter

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In 1949, Ascoli joined James Reston to found The Reporter (magazine), an influential, liberal magazine for some two decades (1949-1968). Its circulation peaked at 215,000 readers. In 1968, Ascoli merged the publication with Harper’s Magazine.[3]

In the early years of its publication, the magazine had a scoop with an article on the “China Lobby” a group of Republican lawmakers including Richard Nixon who were being paid to lobby by the forces of Chiang Kai-shek.

Contributors included: Dean Acheson, James Baldwin, McGeorge Bundy, Isaac Deutscher, Theodore Draper, John Kenneth Galbraith, Gertrude Himmelfarb, Irving Howe, Henry Kissinger, Irving Kristol, Boris Pasternak, Eugene V. Rostow, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Peter Viereck, and Edmund Wilson.

Among his staff were: Douglas Cater, his Washington correspondent who later joined the Johnson administration, Meg Greenfield, who succeeded Douglas Cater as Washington correspondent and later became an editor at the Washington Post, Claire Sterling, Italian correspondent, and Edmund Taylor, French correspondent.

Personal life and death

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Ascoli was married twice. His first wife was Italian poet Anna Maria Cochetti (who wrote under the pen name Anna Maria Armi); he divorced her in 1940. His second wife was Marion Rosenwald Ascoli, whom he married in 1940. Marion was the daughter of CEO of the Sears, Roebuck and Company, Julius Rosenwald.[8] (She was also previously married to Alfred K. Stern, whom she divorced in 1936.) She had been chairwoman and president of the Citizens Committee for Children of New York and previously president of the New York Fund for Children and of the Northside Center for Child Development in Harlem. Marion Ascoli died in 1990, aged 88. Their son is Peter Ascoli, author of Julius Rosenwald, a book about his maternal grandfather.[1][9][10][11]

Ascoli died after a long illness at his home in Manhattan on January 1, 1978, at the age of 79.[1]

Works

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The Immigration History Research Center Archives, University of Minnesota Libraries, houses Max Ascoli's papers.

His books include criticism of Italian fascist Corporatism.

Books written

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  • Vie dalla Croce (1924)
  • Saggi Vichiani (1928)
  • Gíustizia: Saggio di Filosofia del Diritto (1930)
  • Intelligence in Politics (1936)
  • Fascism: Who Benefits? (1939)
  • War Aims and America's Aims (1941)
  • Power of Freedom (1949)

Books co-written

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  • Fascism for Whom? with Arthur Feiler (1938)

Books edited

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  • Political and Economic Democracy, edited by Max Ascoli and Fritz Lehmann (1937)
  • Fall of Mussolini, His Own Story, translated from the Italian by Francis Frenaye, edited and with a preface by Max Ascoli (1948)
  • Reporter Reader (1956)
  • Our Times: The Best from the Reporter (1960)
  • Reporter Reader (1969)

Articles

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Max Ascoli Papers". Boston University. Archived from the original on 16 October 2013. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Ascoli, Max, Papers". University of Minnesota. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  3. ^ a b c "How Special Collections archival holdings tell the story of our time". Boston University. 23 November 2001. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  4. ^ Camurri, Renato (2009). "Idee in movimento: l'esilio degli intellettuali italiani negli Stati Uniti (1930-1945)". Memoria e Ricerca (31): 55–56.
  5. ^ Comar, Nicoletta. "Carlo Sbisà: Catalogo Generale Dell’Opera Pittorica." Doctoral Dissertation, Università degli Studi di Trieste, 2009. 23.
  6. ^ "Manchester University Press - Crafting design in Italy". Manchester University Press. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
  7. ^ Camurri, Renato (2009). "Idee in movimento: l'esilio degli intellettuali italiani negli Stati Uniti (1930-1945)". Memoria e Ricerca. May–Aug (31): 54–55.
  8. ^ Carpenter, Wava (2006). Designing Freedom and Prosperity: The Emergence of Italian Design in Postwar America. New York: Master Thesis, Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution; and Parsons The New School for Design. p. 40.
  9. ^ "Peter Ascoli". Spertus. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  10. ^ "Peter Max Ascoli". National Public Radio. 16 September 2006. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  11. ^ Fowler, Glenn (2 October 1990). "Marion Rosenwald Ascoli, 88, Longtime Advocate for Children". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  12. ^ "Max Ascoli". Foreign Affairs. 7 October 2011. Retrieved 9 March 2013.

Sources

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  • Null, Gary; Carl Stone (1976). The Italian-Americans. Harrisburg, PA: Stackpole Books. pp. 95–96.
  • Vericella, Diana (1999). Carpetto, George; Evanac, Diane M. (eds.). Italian Americans of the Twentieth Century. Tampa: Loggia Press. pp. 18–19.
  • "Ascoli, Max, Papers". University of Minnesota. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  • "Max Ascoli Papers". Boston University. Archived from the original on 16 October 2013. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
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