Manuscript Society

Last updated
Manuscript Society
Founded1951;72 years ago (1951)
Yale University
TypeSenior society
EmphasisArts and letters
ScopeLocal
SymbolSun
FlowerSunflower
Chapters1
NicknameManuscript
Headquarters344 Elm Street
New Haven , Connecticut
United States

Manuscript Society is a senior society at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. [1] [2] It is reputedly the arts and letters society at Yale. [3]

Contents

History

Founded in 1951, Manuscript was Yale's seventh "landed" senior society. [1] [4] That is, its alumni trust owns the society's meeting place or "tomb". [5] The Manuscript Society was one of the first senior societies to offer membership to rising females at Yale College. [2]

Each delegation is selected by consensus among Manuscript alumni, trustees, delegates, and significant others, unlike other Yale societies where undergraduate members more freely select, recruit, and initiate their society's next delegation. [6]

The Wrexham Foundation is the society's alumni arm. [7] Since 1956, the foundation has underwritten the Wrexam Prize, a scholarship in the humanities for the senior who writes the best essay in the field of the humanities. [7]

Manuscript briefly played host to the 1991-92 classes of Skull and Bones, who were temporarily locked out of their tomb by alumni who objected to its undergraduates' decision to offer membership to women. [3] From its beginning the society also retained close connections with the campus literary society Chi Delta Theta, which formed in 1821 [8] [9]

Manuscript Society is part of a four-society "Consortium" with the Aurelian Honor Society, Book and Snake, and Berzelius.

Traditions

The society holds the number 344 to be sacred. [3] It supposedly holds Enlightenment ideals, and the sun and sunflowers are both important symbols to members. [10]

The society holds an annual gathering in its tomb on Halloween. [11] [2] Its members also invite guests to events featuring notable alumni. [11]

Chapter house

Designed by King-lui Wu, Manuscript's white granite tomb was built in 1952. [1] [12] [13] The tomb is mid-century modern, unusual amid other societies' elaborate mid-to-late-19th century buildings. [1] It featured a circular intaglio mural in white-glazed brick that was designed by Josef Albers. [1] [12] The circle, which is only visible in direct sunlight, symbolizes the bond connecting the members. [1] [12]

It appears from the outside to have only one level, yet conceals several subterranean floors and a courtyard. [13] The tomb holds a collection of notable modern and contemporary art. [11] The Yale University Art Gallery is said to have temporarily stored pieces there. [3] Wu said that he designed the building "for privacy, not for secrecy." [14] Dan Kiley deisgned the landscaping which includes a Japanese water garden. [11] [15]

Manuscript is described in the novel Joe College by Tom Perrotta as "basically the cool people's version of a secret society". [16]

Notable members

Anderson Cooper Anderson Cooper.jpg
Anderson Cooper
Jodie Foster Jodie Foster.4783.jpg
Jodie Foster
David Gergen David Gergen.jpg
David Gergen
H. John Heinz III John Heinz.jpg
H. John Heinz III
Richard Rhodes Richard Rhodes.jpg
Richard Rhodes
NameClassNotabilityReferences
Josef Albers HonoraryArtist [3]
Jen Banbury 1989Playwright, author, and journalist
Alan Bernheimer 1970Poet [3]
Noah Bookbinder 1995Professor of law at George Washington University [3] [17]
Maia Brewton 1998Child actress and lawyer [3]
Richard H. Brodhead 19689th President of Duke University [3] [2]
Cleanth Brooks HonoraryLiterary critic [3]
Matthew Bruccoli 1953 F. Scott Fitzgerald scholar [3]
David Calleo 1955Intellectual historian, political economist at Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University [3]
Anderson Cooper 1989Journalist and news anchor with CNN [18] [1]
Robert A. Dahl HonoraryProfessor of political science at Yale University [3]
Eli Whitney Debevoise II 1974U.S. Director of the World Bank [3]
Charles Derber 1965Professor of sociology and social critic [3]
Juan Negrín Fetter 1967Director of Wixarika Research Center [3] [19]
Robert Fiore 1964Film producer and director [3]
Jodie Foster 1985Director and Academy Award winning actress [3] [1] [4]
Henry Geldzahler 1957Art historian and curator [3]
Tamar Gendler 1987Professor, chair of the Yale University department of philosophy [3]
David Gergen 1963Presidential advisor and political commentator [3] [18]
Robert Glick 1962Director of the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research [3]
Cyrus Hamlin HonoraryLiterary critic and longtime Yale professor [3]
E. D. Hirsch, Jr. HonoraryLiterary critic and proponent of cultural literacy [3]
H. John Heinz III 1960U.S. Senator
Cheryl Henson 1984Puppeteer and president of the Jim Henson Foundation [3]
Rodger Kamenetz 1970Professor and certified dream therapist [3]
Zoe Kazan 2005Actor and playwright [20]
Byron Kim 1983Minimalist artist [3]
Anthony Lapham 1958 CIA top lawyer in the 1970s [3] [21]
Brooke Lyons 2003Actor
Jane Maienschein 1972Director of the Center for Biology and Society, at Arizona State University [3]
Richard Maltby, Jr. 1959 Tony Award-winning director [3]
Patrick McCaughey HonoraryFormer director of the Yale Center for British Art [3] [22]
Ved Mehta HonoraryAuthor and advocate for the blind [3]
Ted Morgan 1954 Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist [3]
Wallace Notestein HonorarySterling Professor of English History at Yale [3]
Soni Oyekan 1970Chemical engineer and inventor [3]
Michael Pertschuk 1954Consumer advocate, author and former government official [3]
Scott Peterson 1988Author and journalist [3]
James Prosek 1997Author and naturalist [3] [23]
Dale Purves 1960Neuroscientist, director of Neuroscience and Behavioural Disorders at Duke [3]
Richard Rhodes 1959Pulitzer Prize-winning author [3]
Duncan Robinson HonoraryMaster of Magdalene College and Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum [3]
Richard Selzer HonorarySurgeon, author, and professor of surgery at Yale [3]
William Kelly Simpson HonoraryArt historian and head of college of Timothy Dwight College [3]
Steven Smith HonoraryPolitical scientist and head of college of Branford College [3]
Paul Steiger 1964Editor-in-Chief of ProPublica, former managing editor of the Wall Street Journal [3]
Robert Storr HonoraryCurator, critic, painter, and writer.
Robert Farris Thompson HonoraryArt historian and master of Timothy Dwight College [3]
Rosanna Warren 1976Poet and scholar [3]
Elisabeth Waterston 1999Actor [3] [24]
Stephen F. Williams 1958Senior Circuit Judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit [3]
Jonathan Zittrain 1991Professor of Internet Law at Harvard University [3]
Karl Zinsmeister 1981Director of the White House Domestic Policy Council under George W. Bush [3]

See also

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References

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