It is interesting that both Roy and Bruce mention anti-semitism. One
theory has always been that "outsider status" is somehow necessary for
these communities to flourish. In 18th century Europe, the systematic
exclusion of women from the academy encouraged the female-led salons
to flourish. Many of the bloomsberries had hoped for fellowships that
didn't, in the event, appear.
Two questions:
1. Are creative communities that develop outside universities
qualitatively different from those inside? Put differently, does an
academic appointment not encourage the kind of risk-taking and big
intellectual leaps that outsider communities seem to support?
2. Does it matter if outsider status is a matter of "exclusion" or
"choice"? If you think of RAND, for example, its participants worked
largely outside the academy, but they were hardly excluded.
Evelyn Forget