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William Lee Miller

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Occupation
  
Academic

Subject
  
Political ethics

Language
  
English

Name
  
William Miller


Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Journalist

Citizenship
  
American

Education
  
Yale Divinity School

William Lee Miller static01nytcomimages20120606usMILLERobitM

Born
  
April 21, 1926 Bloomington, Indiana (
1926-04-21
)

Alma mater
  
University of Nebraska, Yale Divinity School

Died
  
May 27, 2012, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
Lincoln's Virtues: An Ethical Bi, Arguing about Slavery: T, President Lincoln: The Duty, Two Americans: Truman, The first liberty

President Lincoln: The Duty of a Statesman


William Lee Miller (April 21, 1926 – May 27, 2012) was an American journalist, academic, and historian who taught in the University of Virginia's religious studies department for 17 years, and remained affiliated with the University after his 1999 retirement.

Contents

Early life and education

Miller was the son of a Presbyterian minister, and was born in Bloomington, Indiana. Due to his father's profession, Miller grew up in various parts of the United States, including Laramie, Wyoming, Hutchinson, Kansas, and Lincoln, Nebraska. He earned undergraduate degrees from the University of Nebraska and Yale University, and a Ph.D. from Yale Divinity School.

Political, journalistic, and government work

Between 1953 and 1965, Miller contributed to The Reporter. He was on staff at that publication between 1955 and 1958. In 1964, he released a collection of those writings in book form, titled Piety Along the Potomac.

Miller worked as the chief speechwriter for Adlai Stevenson II during the 1956 U.S. presidential election.

Between 1963 and 1969, while an associate professor at Yale University, he was a member of the New Haven Board of Aldermen.

He later worked in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, writing messages to be used by President Lyndon Johnson.

Academic work

Miller taught at Smith College, Yale University, and Indiana University before joining the faculty of the University of Virginia in 1982. He described his position in a 1992 Booknotes interview: "I'm not an historian. I'm a political ethicist. My present title is professor of ethics and institutions, which doesn't fit any department, but it fits me."

In the same interview, Miller acknowledged the influence of Reinhold and Richard Niebuhr on his thought and work:

"Reinhold Niebuhr was the greatest -- well, let's put it in the largest way, and then if you make me do it, I'll take it back -- the greatest American political thinker of the 20th century... ...He was a big influence on me, the reason I studied the things I did, and he would be my mentor -- my chief mentor... ...I didn't study directly with him; I studied at Yale under his brother, a man called Richard Niebuhr, who was kind of the Mycroft Holmes to his Sherlock Holmes -- you know, the Sherlock Holmes story, the one who's in the background and is even smarter than his well known brother. But Reinhold was down in New York, and we collaborated in many organizations. I wrote for his magazine. I knew him in various Ford Foundation things and then in Santa Barbara for a while."

His book Arguing About Slavery won the D.B. Hardeman Prize in 1996.

At the time of his retirement from the University of Virginia, Miller was Commonwealth Professor of Political and Social Thought, and after his retirement until his death he was the White Burkett Miller Center Scholar in Residence, Professor Emeritus.

References

William Lee Miller Wikipedia