
As part of its 300th anniverÂsary celÂeÂbraÂtion, Yale UniÂverÂsiÂty gathÂered togethÂer some of its foreÂmost facÂulÂty and offered an extendÂed series of lecÂtures on the state of AmerÂiÂcan democÂraÂcy. ColÂlecÂtiveÂly entiÂtled “DemoÂcÂraÂtÂic VisÂtas,” this wide-rangÂing series explores AmerÂiÂcan democÂraÂcy in hisÂtorÂiÂcal and conÂtemÂpoÂrary terms and looks at how it meshÂes with othÂer fixÂtures of our social life — reliÂgion, famÂiÂly, ecoÂnomÂic marÂkets, techÂnoÂlogÂiÂcal innoÂvaÂtion, etc. From this page, you can access all of the illuÂmiÂnatÂing preÂsenÂtaÂtions in audio and video, includÂing those by Yale’s PresÂiÂdent Richard Levin and Richard BrodÂhead, the forÂmer Dean of Yale ColÂlege and now PresÂiÂdent of Duke UniÂverÂsiÂty.
The one caveat worth menÂtionÂing is that these talks were recordÂed not long before 9/11. And, in some respects, this may give the lecÂtures an out-datÂed feel. Can we realÂly have a valuÂable disÂcusÂsion about AmerÂiÂcan democÂraÂcy withÂout addressÂing 9/11, the war on terÂror, and the war in Iraq? In some ways no, but in many ways yes. AmerÂiÂca is still largeÂly AmerÂiÂca, the same counÂtry it was six years ago, and, for the most part, these disÂcernÂing lecÂtures remain highÂly relÂeÂvant today. Indeed, Yale has already uploaded some of them to its new podÂcast colÂlecÂtion on iTunes.





