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Carol Iannone was a conservative writer and literary critic. She first made her mark as a strong critic of feminism in articles such as "The Barbarism of Feminist Scholarship."[1] She has published extensively in Commentary, National Review, First Things, Modern Age, The American Conservative, Academic Questions, and other conservative and neoconservative publications. She passed away in December 2023.[2]

Career

She was the founding Vice President of the National Association of Scholars, and an editor of Academic Questions, the quarterly publication of NAS. She was a regular contributor at the Phi Beta Cons blog at National Review Online.

In 1991 President George H. W. Bush nominated her to be on the board of the National Endowment for the Humanities, which was strongly opposed by officers of the Modern Language Association and other academics; they argued that she was not a distinguished scholar.[3][4] She had virtually no record of publication in scholarly journals, and had never authored a scholarly book. The campaign against her, backed by many liberal academics and by Sen. Edward Kennedy, succeeded in defeating her nomination.

Iannone's interests have gone beyond literature. In her article, "Bryan was right", she wrote that Christians are mistaken when they say that God and Darwinian evolution are compatible.

In recent years she wrote increasingly on issues of national identity, criticizing the neoconservative belief that America is an idea rather as a culture.

References

  1. ^ Iannone, Carol (Fall 1987). "The Barbarism of Feminist Scholarship". The Intercollegiate Review. 23 (1): 35. ProQuest 1294824933.[non-primary source needed]
  2. ^ "Remembering Carol Iannone by Steve Balch | NAS". www.nas.org. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  3. ^ "Writers' Group Opposes Nominee Professor Carol Iannone Lacks Credentials for Humanities Advisory Panel, PEN Says", The Philadelphia Inquirer, May 4, 1991, p. C03
  4. ^ Masters, Kim (1991) "NEH Nominee Rejected In Senate; Iannone Unqualified, Panel Democrats Say", The Washington Post, July 18, 1991, p. D01, retrieved 2011-07-31