2024 Visiting Scholar
George Cotkin
2024 Jim & Linda Burke Visiting Scholar
George Cotkin’s research and teaching examines how morality and history intersect — asking readers if historical narratives help to illuminate moral problems.
He poses questions such as: Can moral categories help us to understand history better?
What are the dangers and benefits from thinking morally about historical actors and
actions? And, can morality be viewed as a process of thinking rather than one of judging?
Through this lens, Cotkin and his students discuss bombing (conventional and atomic),
the potential for our “understanding” of evil and its value for historical analysis,
and the challenges of historical understanding in general.
Cotkin’s published works include “William James, Public Philosopher” (Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1992; paperback edition, University of Illinois Press, 1994), “Reluctant
Modernism: American Thought and Culture, 1880-1920” (Twayne, 1992; paperbound edition
in print, Rowman and Littlefield, 2004), and “Existential America” (Johns Hopkins
University Press, 2003; paperback edition 2005).
Of particular interest to those studying at the Doel Reed Center is “Morality’s Muddy
Waters: Ethical Quandaries in Modern America” (Penn Press, 2010), which examines the
inevitability of the atomic bomb. Most recently, “Dive Deeper: Journeys with Moby-Dick,”
traces the titular novel’s history through popular and high culture.
Cotkin is currently a well-regarded professor of history at California Polytech State
University, where he has taught since 1980. With degrees from Brooklyn College (B.A.)
and Ohio State University (M.A. and Ph.D), Cotkin has been recognized with the Distinguished
Teaching Award (Cal Poly, 1988-89), Cal Poly Nominee for Trustees’ Outstanding Professor
Award (CSU System, 1992), National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship (1991-92),
and is a Senior Fulbright Scholar (University of Rome, 1994).