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<P><BR>By far the best book on Strauss is Shadia Drury's 1988 The Political Ideas <BR>of Leo Strauss. It may be that part of its excellence is related to her <BR>awareness that there is a sense in which no woman could be a Straussian. In <BR>fact, Strauss said that no woman could be a philosopher. But, for many of <BR>the bright young boys, or men, their purpose for studying with Strauss was <BR>to become "philosophers."</P>
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<P>Actually one of my teachers and dissertation advisers at Michigan was Arlene Saxonhouse, a woman (and feminist!) Straussian and Strauss student. She was not a reactionary creep like the old man, but she used Straussian reading techniques. She was very fair with me; I thought I was a Leninist at the time, and did a Strauss-(or anyway Saxonhouse-) style reading of The State and Revolution. She didn't bat an eye. She has a good little book on Women in Ancient Greek thought. Gave me a wholly distorted idea of what Straussianism was about. </P>
<P>I recommend Drury; haven't read the Political Ideas book, but Leo Strauss and the American Right is a fine book. jks</P></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><p><hr SIZE=1>
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