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Matthew Stolz Obituary

Matthew F. Stolz Retired professor of political science at S.F. State University, died of cancer at his Berkeley home on Feb. 20. Professor. Stolz, 71, led the life of a political theorist in the classical tradition of Plato and Aristotle, constantly interrogating himself, his students and his colleagues in his quest to understand the political world. A dedicated teacher, he also contributed to scholarship by publishing politics of the New Left (Glencoe, 1971) and by writing about the political philosophy of Hannah Arendt. At the time of his death, he was at work on a series of essays on the political thought of Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams. In the 1970's, Professor Stolz founded the S.F. State Political Theory Colloquium, which gave tangible form to his commitment to political dialogue by bringing together graduate students, visiting scholars and faculty for intensive readings of current political theory. He co-authored papers with members of the group and drew graduate students into the process of publication. Participating British scholar Harro Hopfl characterized him as a "brilliant political theorist" who imbued his students with a full sense of the seriousness of political and civic discourse. Born in Oakland in 1935, Professor Stolz was educated at Fremont High School and the University of Cal. at Berkeley. He graduated in 1956 as a member of Phi Beta Kappa and as political science scholar-of-the-year. He received his doctorate from Berkeley in 1965. As the son of working-class parents, he appreciated the price students paid for their education and was devoted to redeeming that investment. He declined employment at a prestigious private college to teach at public schools, first, U.C. Davis and then S.F. State. He joined the S.F. State political science dept. in 1967 and retired in 2004. For the past two decades he was senior faculty member in political theory and unofficial 'dean' of political theorists at the university. Professor Stolz was a demanding teacher with high standards and expectations for his students. Instead of lecturing formally, he turned his classrooms into arenas for thoughtful discourse. He insisted that his students master the primary texts in political theory and he dazzled and tutored the most gifted of them. A soft-spoken and gentlemanly scholar, his commitment to theory was not as an academic specialty but as a vocation. As one of his protégés wrote in dedicating a recent book to Professor Stolz, "He was a brilliant teacher who taught me how to dwell in thinking." Although a quiet man, Professor Stolz often spoke out as the conscience of his department. He said the best department meeting he ever attended was one in which the chair threw an eraser at him. He was passionate about politics and considered the sixties a glorious moment in which theory and practice came together. He was a union member and walked the picket lines in civil rights demonstrations and in the 1968-69 S.F. State University strike. He was also active in protests against the Vietnam War and both Iraq wars. Professor Stolz loved S.F. State and identified with its students. He brought his wide-ranging reading to the classroom in an array of courses from Hegel to the Frankfurt School to the Italian tradition of political theory. But his first love was always the Greeks and the Classical tradition. A few days before his death he was asked if he would like a chaplain and replied, "I would prefer a political theorist." In private life he was a voracious reader, dubbed "the fastest reader in the West" by colleague Mason Drukman. With an extensive library of books and music, he ingested prodigious quantities of classical and modern literature and literary criticism, contemporary philosophy and all periods of European and American history and music. In his later life, he enjoyed visits to Europe, especially sabbaticals in Florence and Bologna. Professor Stolz blended his love of reading with a love for the outdoors, shared with his closest friends. He greeted nature with a sharp eye, taking pleasure in identifying plants and birds, especially at Inverness and the Marin seashore. His greatest botanical pleasure was an annual search for the uncommon species Fritillaria biflora, the chocolate lily. While walking with great vigor he would bring up ideas from whatever he had been reading, talking about them the way other people gossip or discuss sporting events. In his last days, Professor Stolz was surrounded by the people he loved most, including his wife Kathleen Kahn; his stepdaughter Sasha Crehan and his granddaughter Olivia Feinstein all of Berkeley; his granddaughter Melissa Crehan of Eugene and his many close friends and colleagues. In lieu of flowers, his family suggests that donations to the Matthew Stolz Fund for political theory students be sent to the S.F. State Univ. Foundation, c/o Prof. Gerard Heather, Political Science Dept, S.F. State Univ. 1600 Holloway Ave, S.F. CA 94132.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by San Francisco Chronicle on Mar. 8, 2007.

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