Christian Moraru
Professor, American Literature & Critical Theory
The Treason of the Intellectuals by Julien Benda
Originally published in French as La trahison des clercs in 1927 and
translated into English shortly thereafter, Julien Benda's The Treason of the
Intellectuals has been among the most influential titles in modern
intellectual history on both sides of the Atlantic. Constantly in the
background of the debate around culture, nation, and the intellectuals' place
in them, the book stays fresh and provocative despite the ever-renewed
attempts to harness it to this or that political agenda. As we move into the
twentieth-first century, Benda's thoughts about the "systematic
nationalization" the brightest minds have undergone in modern times remain
equally insightful and troubling. The Treason's "disinterested
intelligence" argument is certainly not to be taken indiscriminately but as a
challenge to those of us reflecting on the social, ethnic, national, or
international bearings of our work as we do it.