Michael Joseph Sugrue (February 1, 1957 – January 16, 2024) was an American historian and university professor. He spent his early career teaching at Columbia University and conducting research as a Mellon fellow at Johns Hopkins University prior to teaching at Princeton University, where he was the Behrman Fellow at Princeton's Council on the Humanities. After holding various positions at Princeton for over a decade, Sugrue left in 2004 to become a professor of history at Ave Maria University.
In 2020, Sugrue began to acquire an audience when his daughter, Genevieve Sugrue, started publishing his 1992 lecture series Great Minds of the Western Intellectual Tradition (taken while he was teaching at Princeton) on YouTube.
In 1992, Sugrue encountered Tom Rollins, the founder of The Great Courses, who was absent of an available professor to lecture on Machiavelli as part of a series on the history of Western philosophy.[11] Sugrue stepped in to lecture, and the series became a bestseller.[12] Later, as part of a Great Minds program with Darren Staloff (who was also a professor at Princeton), a number of Sugrue's lectures were video-taped and organized into categories including Great Minds of the Western Tradition, Great Authors of the Western Literary Tradition and The Bible in Western Culture.[13]
In 2004, Sugrue became a professor of history at Ave Maria University,[14] where he chaired the history department and taught for about twenty years.[2] During his time at Ave Maria, Sugrue taught an online lecture series for The Great Courses titled "Plato, Socrates, and the Dialogues".[5] He also chaired the university's Core Curriculum Committee.[14] By 2021, Sugrue had retired.[2]
Beginning in 2020, Sugrue's daughter Genevieve Sugrue began uploading his video-taped lectures on YouTube, where they garnered over 2.5 million views.[3]The New York Times reported that the lectures became an "internet phenomenon" during the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] "The lectures you're about to see", he told viewers in an introduction recorded in 1992, "cover the last 3,000 years of Western intellectual history".[2] After the popularization of his channel, Sugrue posted new lectures as well as recorded discussions with colleague Darren Staloff.[2]
Personal life
Sugrue was a Catholic,[15] saying "it is not clear to me that love is a lesser value than truth—I like them both".[16] He was diagnosed with metastatic cancer in 2011 and underwent chemotherapy until his death.[16] In his sickness he is said to have reflected a stoic attitude saying, "Being sick teaches you, you're not in control, you're not in charge...And you have to learn to play at the hand you're dealt."[13] Sugrue died in Naples, Florida, on January 16, 2024, from complications from prostate cancer.[2]
Selected works
Sugrue, Michael (1992). South Carolina College: The Education of an Antebellum Elite (Thesis). Columbia University.
Sugrue, Michael (1994). "'We Desired Our Future Rulers to be Educated Men': South Carolina College, the Defense of Slavery, and the Development of Secessionist Politics". History of Higher Education Annual. 14: 39–71.[17]
^History of Higher Education, 1994 (Report). History of Higher Education Annual, Higher Education Program, Pennsylvania State University, 403 South Allen Street, Suite 115, University Park, PA 16801-5202 ($10 individuals, $12. 1994. The next article, "'We Desired Our Future Rulers To Be Educated Men': South Carolina College, the Defense of Slavery, and the Development of Secessionist Politics" by Michael Sugrue, focuses on the role of college president Thomas Cooper and political changes before and during the Civil War.
^Sugrue, M. (1994). We desired our future rulers to be educated men: South Carolina college, the defense of slavery, and the development of secessionist politics. History of Higher Education Annual, 14, 39-72.
MacDonald, Heather (2018). The Diversity Delusion: How Race and Gender Pandering Corrupt the University and Undermine Our Culture. St. Martin's Press. ISBN9781250200914.
Golfe Folgado, María; Cava Salgado, Unai (2024). "Michael Sugrue In Memoriam". La Torre del Virrey (in Spanish). 35: F. de serie 25–28.