A Gift from Ronald L. Steel
In the summer of 2024, the Academy received a generous gift from the estate of the late Ronald L. Steel (1931-2023), a historian, writer, professor, and the Academy’s spring 2005 Bosch Fellow in Public Policy. For more than fifty years, with a style described by the New York Times as “astringent yet sparkling,” he was “one of the nation’s most prolific critics of America’s master plans for navigating a perilous, changing world.”
Born in Morris, Illinois, Steel earned degrees from Northwestern University and Harvard before joining the Army, and later the Foreign Service, stationed mainly in Europe, where he became a French translator. Returning to the US, he worked as an editor and published essays and books, including the definitive biography of the influential American journalist Walter Lippmann, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award, Bancroft Prize, and the LA Times Book Prize for History, and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. Steel received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Woodrow Wilson Center, and Institute of Advanced Study in Berlin. He taught at Yale, Dartmouth, Princeton, and the University of Southern California, among others.
The Academy is deeply honored that Steel chose to include our long-term security and success in his philanthropic legacy. For more information on how to support our mission with a planned gift, please visit americanacademy.de/support
This article was published in the 2024-25 Berlin Journal.
Photo: Annette Hornischer / American Academy in Berlin
Share This
Listening through the Iron Curtain
An intimate history of musical exchange
Feel-Ins, Know-Ins, Be-Ins
The spiritual jazz of Pharoah Sanders
Extracting Liberation
Policing the oceans for slave ships and regulating the fate of the rescued
Playing Guqin
Learning the instrument of philosophers and sages
Democratic Degeneration: Three Easy Paths to Regression
A celebrated philosopher discusses what's ailing democratic polities in the West
Tangible Knowledge
Climate change in pastoral Mongolia
Performing Sound
The Great Departure : Mass Migration from Eastern Europe and the Making of the Free World
A book review of alumna Tara Zara's book about how experiences of emigration shaped competing ideals of freedom in Eastern Europe and the West.
Spring 2020 Fellows Respond to Coronavirus
Thoughts on the pandemic from the Wannsee and abroad
Melt / Rise
The global interconnectedness of water
The Tide Was Always High
Music and musicians from Latin America are an inextricable part of the development of Los Angeles as a modern musical city.
Lose Your Tail
The 2018 commencement speech to graduates of Bard College Berlin
Yams
From the forthcoming collection The Last Suspicious Holdout
Diminuendo Lagrimoso
Tracing the decline of big opera voices
Earth’s Greatest Hits
Do aliens like human music?
In a Name
In this new short story, New York Times Magazine writer Thomas Chatterton Williams details writing in Paris and falling in love, having a mixed-race toddler, and time in Sweden.
Out of This World
Whence Afro-German Afrofuturism?
Repression in Russia
Committee to Protect Journalists presents 2007 report Sixty-five journalists were killed on the job in…
Writing the Divide
May Ayim’s intellectual activism in Germany
The Flattening Kurve
Why has Germany done so well in the fight against coronavirus?
Bigger Profits, Slower Growth
What are the possible economic causes of populist politics? Begin with the recent development of disintegrated supply chains.
Rethinking Capitalization
The ups and downs of racial identity
All Included
New owners and old apparitions
The Night Woman
A night in the woods
Art in the Time of Corona
Filmmaker and spring 2020 fellow Kevin Jerome Everson pushes on
Gate of Tears
Migration and impasse in Djibouti
The Horizontal City
Reflections on Berlin as the horizontalization of New York
This Land Is Your Land
Legislating dispossession in colonial West Africa
Cold Peace
Democracies, autocracies, and the fate of Ukraine
Remembering the Airlift
Found in Translation
Words Without Borders, the reach of literature
The Storm
From the forthcoming novel The Family Chao
Ruination and Reconstruction
Assessing the reconstruction of Vinh City with the technical and financial assistance of East Germany.
The Organs of Sense
Leibniz and his encounter with a blind astronomer.
The Roman Roots of Racial Capitalism
What an ancient empire can teach us about diversity
Where Fruit Flies Fear to Tread
In the first two decades that followed the Chernobyl explosion, the Zone of Alienation was off-limits. After 2002, the Ukrainian government opened the zone to limited, permitted tourism.
Attacking Zwarte Piet
Dutch folklore and racial history
The Mythology of the Sectarian Middle East
Divisions within, divisions without
Sweetmeats
Or, Who killed Issam Sukkar?
American Democracy’s Polycrisis
The Supreme Court and the future of democracy
