List of University of Chicago faculty
This list of University of Chicago faculty contains past and current instructors and administrators at the University of Chicago.
Business
Graduate Library School (1928–1989)
- Lester Asheim
 - Lee Pierce Butler
 - Leon Carnovsky
 - Herman H. Fussler
 - Frances E. Henne
 - Carleton B. Joeckel
 - Jesse Shera
 - Don R. Swanson
 - Peggy Sullivan
 - Douglas Waples
 - Louis Round Wilson
 - Victor Yngve
 
This School, established with funding from the Carnegie Foundation, so important to the development of U.S. librarianship in the 20th century, was closed in 1989. For details see: Graduate Library School, University of Chicago, 1928-1989.
Literature
- Frederick A. de Armas – Andrew W. Mellon Professor in Humanities and Professor of Spanish and Comparative Literature; Chair of the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
 - Saul Bellow (X. 1939) – former Raymond W. and Martha Hilpert Gruner Distinguished Service Professor in the Committee on Social Thought and English; winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the Nobel Prize in Literature
 - Lauren Berlant – George M. Pullman Professor of English
 - David Bevington – editor, scholar of the work of William Shakespeare
 - Homi K. Bhabha – former Professor of English
 - Allan Bloom – author of The Closing of the American Mind; former Professor in the Committee on Social Thought
 - Wayne C. Booth – George M. Pullman Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus
 - Kenneth Burke – literary theorist
 - John Maxwell Coetzee – 2003 Nobel Prize laureate in Literature; Distinguished Professor in the Committee on Social Thought
 - T.S. Eliot – influential poet, dramatist and literary critic; member of the University of Chicago's Committee on Social Thought
 - Ralph Ellison – National Book Award winner for Invisible Man
 - Leela Gandhi – postcolonial theorist and British English professor
 - Gerald Graff (A.B. 1959) – former Professor of English and Education
 - Daryl Hine – poet and translator; MacArthur Fellow in 1986
 - Mark Strand – former professor in the Committee on Social Thought; Pulitzer Prize winner
 - Thornton Wilder – professor (1930–1937); winner of the National Book Award, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and three-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize
 - Norman Maclean – author of A River Runs Through It
 - Thomas Pavel – Gordon J. Laing Distinguished Service Professor in the Committee on Social Thought and the Departments of Romance Languages and Comparative Literature
 - Robert Pinsky – poet-critic; former assistant professor of the humanities
 - A.K. Ramanujan – poet and scholar of Indian literature; MacArthur Fellow in 1983
 - David E. Wellbery – chair of the department of Germanic Studies
 - A.B. Yehoshua – Israeli novelist, essayist, and playwright
 - Adam Zagajewski – member of the Committee on Social Thought
 - Chicago School of literary criticism – group of faculty members at the University of Chicago (R.S. Crane, Elder Olson, Wayne Booth) who founded neo-Aristotelianism[1]
 
Law School
- Douglas Baird - former Dean of the Law School
 - Gerhard Casper – former Dean of the Law School and Provost at the University of Chicago; President Emeritus of Stanford University
 - Ronald Coase – Professor Emeritus of Law; Nobel laureate in Economics; co-founder of law and economics movement, arguably the most influential intellectual movement in legal scholarship in the second half of the 20th century
 - Aaron Director – played a central role in the development of the law and economics movement; founded the Journal of Law and Economics, which he co-edited with Ronald Coase
 - Frank Easterbrook – judge on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals
 - Richard Epstein – currently the James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law
 - Richard H. Helmholz - legal historian
 - Elena Kagan – former Professor and Dean of Harvard Law School; now a US Supreme Court Justice
 - Leon Kass
 - Karl Llewellyn – major figure in the school of legal realism
 - Catharine MacKinnon – feminist
 - Michael W. McConnell – federal judge on the US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit; leading constitutional originalist
 - Martha Nussbaum – philosopher and public intellectual, currently Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics
 - Barack Obama – President of the United States of America
 - Richard Posner – helped start law and economics movement
 - Roberta Cooper Ramo – first woman President, American Bar Association
 - Antonin Scalia – United States Supreme Court justice; professor at the Law School (1977–1982)
 - Geoffrey R. Stone – First Amendment scholar, Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor of Law
 - Cass Sunstein
 - James Boyd White – founder of "Law and Literature" movement
 - Diane Wood – judge on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals
 
Oriental Institute
Main article: Oriental Institute, Chicago
- Miguel Civil – Professor Emeritus of Sumerology
 - Fred Donner – Professor of Islamic History
 - Peter Dorman – Professor Emeritus of Egyptology
 - Norman Golb – Ludwig Rosenberger Professor in Jewish History and Civilization
 - Walter Kaegi – Professor of Byzantine-Islamic Studies
 - Robert K. Ritner – Professor of Egyptology
 - Martha Roth – Professor of Assyriology; Editor, Chicago Assyrian Dictionary
 - Gil Stein – Director, Oriental Institute
 - Matthew Stolper – Professor of Assyriology and Achaemenid Empire; director of Persepolis Fortification Project; member of the American Institute of Iranian Studies, American Oriental Society, and British School of Archaeology in Iraq
 - Edward F. Wente – Professor Emeritus of Egyptology
 - K. Aslihan Yener – Professor of ancient Anatolian Archeology; director of the Amuq Valley Regional Projects in Antioch (Antakya, Turkey)
 
Mathematics
- Abraham Adrian Albert
 - László Babai – known for work in computer science and discrete mathematics, especially for his work on interactive proof systems; Gödel Prize winner
 - Alexander A. Beilinson
 - Gilbert Ames Bliss
 - Oskar Bolza
 - Luis Caffarelli – world leader in the field of partial differential equations
 - Alberto Calderón – co-founded the Chicago school of mathematical analysis; winner of Bôcher Memorial Prize, the Wolf Prize, and the National Medal of Science
 - Ngô Bảo Châu – Fields Medal winner
 - Shiing-shen Chern – one of the most influential figures in differential geometry; famous for Chern classes; National Medal of Science and Wolf Prize winner
 - Arthur Byron Coble
 - Leonard Eugene Dickson – first recipient of the Cole Prize in algebra
 - Vladimir Drinfeld – Fields Medal winner
 - Charles Fefferman – received full professorship at the University of Chicago at age 22, making him the youngest ever appointed in the United States; Fields Medal winner
 - Victor Ginzburg – known for his works in geometric representation theory
 - George Glauberman
 - Paul Halmos – mathematician and mathematical expositor
 - Israel Herstein
 - Lars Hörmander – Fields Medal winner
 - Irving Kaplansky
 - John L. Kelley
 - Serge Lang
 - Greg Lawler
 - William Lawvere – known for his work in category theory, topos theory, and the philosophy of mathematics
 - Saunders Mac Lane – co-founder of category theory
 - J. Peter May – algebraic topologist
 - Paul Meier – statistician, promoter of randomized trials in medicine
 - E. H. Moore
 - Robert Lee Moore
 - Andrei Okounkov – former Dickson Instructor in Mathematics and the College; Fields Medal winner
 - David Pingree – MacArthur Fellow in 1981
 - Daniel Quillen – former Dickson Instructor in Mathematics and the College; Fields Medal winner
 - Alexander Razborov - Andrew MacLeish Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Computer Science
 - Paul Sally – mathematics educator
 - Irving Segal
 - Stephen Smale – Fields Medal and Wolf Prize winner
 - Robert Soare – known for work in mathematical logic
 - Norman Steenrod – topologist
 - Marshall Stone
 - Karen Uhlenbeck – MacArthur Fellow in 1983
 - André Weil – known for seminal work in number theory and algebraic geometry; leader of influential Bourbaki group; Wolf Prize winner
 - Efim Zelmanov – Fields Medal winner
 - Antoni Zygmund – one of the most influential mathematicians in the field of analysis in the 20th century; co-founder, with student Calderón, of the Chicago school of mathematical analysis
 
History
- Robert Bartlett – Professor of Medieval History (1984–1992), and currently Wardlaw Professor of Mediaeval History, University of St. Andrew's; Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and author of many books, including The Making of Europe: Conquest, Colonization, and Social Change (Princeton University Press, 1994)
 - Daniel Boorstin – Professor at the University of Chicago for 25 years; Pulitzer Prize winner (1974); Librarian of Congress
 - John W. Boyer – Dean of the College and the Martin A. Ryerson Distinguished Service Professor of History
 - James Henry Breasted – Professor of Egyptology and Oriental History
 - John Leonard Clive– historian, winner of the National Book Award for Biography and History
 - Ioan P. Culianu – historian of religion
 - Bruce Cumings – Gustavus F. and Ann M. Swift Distinguished Service Professor in History and the College
 - Lorraine Daston – visiting professor in the Committee on Social Thought
 - Shannon Lee Dawdy – associate professor, MacArthur Fellow
 - Fred M. Donner – Professor of Near Eastern History; Guggenheim Fellow (2007)
 - Sheila Fitzpatrick – Bernadotte E. Schmitt Distinguished Service Professor of History; ground-breaking historian of modern Russian and Soviet history; mentor to several established and up-and-coming "revisionist" historians of the Soviet Union, constituting a "Fitzpatrick School of Soviet History"
 - Cornell Fleischer – Kanuni Suleyman Professor of Ottoman and Modern Turkish Studies; MacArthur "Genius" Fellow (1988)
 - John Hope Franklin – pioneering scholar of African-American history; civil rights leader; Professor of History from 1964; John Matthews Manly Distinguished Service Professor, 1969–82; resident of the American Historical Association (1979); winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Pulitzer Prize
 - Ramón A. Gutiérrez – Preston & Sterling Morton Distinguished Service Professor of United States History; Director of the Center for the Study of Race, Politics and Culture; author of award-winning book When Jesus Came the Corn Mothers Went Away: Marriage, Sexuality and Power in New Mexico, 1500–1846 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1991); MacArthur Fellow (1983)[2]
 - Jan E. Goldstein – intellectual historian of modern Europe, co-editor of the Journal of Modern History
 - Marshall G. S. Hodgson – pioneer in Islamic Studies and global history, member of the Committee on Social Thought
 - Thomas C. Holt – James Westfall Thompson Professor of American and African American History; MacArthur Fellow in 1990
 - Akira Iriye – Professor of History until 1989; now Charles Warren Professor Emeritus of American History at Harvard; leading diplomatic and international historian, specializing in U.S.-Japan relations during the 20th century; Guggenheim Fellow (1974) and President of the American Historical Association (1988)
 - Walter Kaegi – professor of Byzantine and late Roman history; co-founder of the Byzantine Studies Conference; editor of the journal Byzantinische Forschungen; voting member of Oriental Institute, Chicago; author of many books, including Byzantium and the Decline of Rome (Princeton, 1968) and "Byzantine Military Unrest 471–843: An Interpretation (Amsterdam: 1981)
 - Leszek Kołakowski – philosopher and historian of ideas; MacArthur Fellow in 1983
 - William Hardy McNeill – Professor Emeritus of History
 - Arnaldo Momigliano – historiographer; MacArthur Fellow in 1987
 - David Nirenberg – Deborah R. and Edgar D. Jannotta Professor of Medieval History and Committee on Social Thought
 - Francesca Rochberg – Assyriologist, historian of science
 - Hans Rothfels – Professor of History (1946–1951)
 - Bernadotte E. Schmitt – winner of the Pulitzer Prize
 - Noel Swerdlow – winner of a Macarthur Fellowship
 - James Westfall Thompson – Professor of History (1895–1933), leading American historian of the European Middle Ages and early modern period; president of the American Historical Association, 1941 (died in office)
 - Karl Weintraub – Professor of History (1954–2004) and leading scholar of European cultural history and the history of autobiography
 - John Woods – Professor of Iranian and Central Asian History
 
Classics
- Danielle Allen – Dean of the Division of Humanities; MacArthur Fellow
 - Clifford Ando – Professor of Roman Empire History; author of Imperial Ideology and Provincial Loyalty in the Roman Empire (2000) (which won APA's Goodwin Award in 2003), and The Matter of the Gods (2008); editor of Roman Religion (2003) and co-editor, with Jörg Rüpke, of Religion and Law in Classical and Christian Rome (2006)
 - Shadi Bartsch – Professor of Gender Issues in Antiquity and in Roman literature and culture; Quantrell Teaching Award and Faculty Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching
 - Jonathan M. Hall – Professor of Greek History; Chair of Classics Department; author of Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity (Cambridge, 1997); APA's Goodwin Award; 2004 Gordon J. Laing Prize; Quantrell Teaching Award; Phyllis Fay Horton Distinguished Service
 - James M. Redfield – Edward Olson Distinguished Service Professor of Classics
 - Peter White – professor of Roman poetry, comedy and satire and Greco-Roman historiography; Associate Chair for Undergraduate Affairs; author of Promised Verse: Poets in the Society of Augustan Rome; APA's Goodwin Award; Quantrell Teaching Award
 
Philosophy
- Hannah Arendt – former Professor in the Committee on Social Thought
 - Rudolf Carnap – Professor of Philosophy; leading member of the Vienna Circle
 - Arnold Davidson – Professor of the Philosophy of Religion in the Divinity School; also in the Department of Philosophy, the Department of Comparative Literature, the Committee on Historical and Conceptual Studies of Science, and the College
 - Donald Davidson – Professor of Philosophy (1976–1981)
 - John Dewey – former Professor of Philosophy
 - Burton Dreben – logician, became an Instructor in 1955
 - Charles Hartshorne – former Professor of Philosophy
 - John Haugeland – David B. and Clara E. Stern Professor of Philosophy
 - Jonathan Lear – John U. Nef Distinguished Service Professor at the Committee on Social Thought and in the Department of Philosophy
 - Jean-Luc Marion – Professor of the Philosophy of Religion and Theology in the Divinity School; also in the Department of Philosophy and the Committee on Social Thought
 - George Herbert Mead – former Professor of Philosophy
 - Martha Nussbaum – Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics in the Divinity School; also in the Law School, the Department of Philosophy, and the College
 - Robert B. Pippin – Evelyn Stefansson Nef Distinguished Service Professor in the John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought, the Department of Philosophy, and the College
 - Paul Ricoeur – John Nuveen Professor Emeritus in the Divinity School (1971–1991)
 - Bertrand Russell – Visiting Professor of Philosophy (1938–1939)
 - Leo Strauss – Professor of Political Philosophy (1949–1967)
 - Paul Johannes Tillich – Professor of Religion (1962)
 - James Hayden Tufts – former Professor of Philosophy
 
Religion
- Richard T. Antoun – professor (1989); Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Binghamton University; stabbed to death by student in 2009
 - Wendy Doniger – Historian of Religions (1978– )
 - Mircea Eliade – Sewell Avery Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions (1958–1986), best known for his "myth of the Eternal Return" and his book The Sacred and the Profane: The Nature of Religion
 - Joseph Kitagawa – Historian of Religions
 - Bruce Lincoln – Historian of Religions
 - David Tracy – Professor Emeritus of Theology (1970–); leading figure in theological hermeneutics and proponent of theological pluralism in works such as Plurality and Ambiguity (University of Chicago Press, 1986)
 - Joachim Wach – Historian of Religions (1944–55)
 - Christian K. Wedemeyer – Associate Professor of the History of Religions; MacArthur Fellow in 1987
 
Science
- Warder Clyde Allee – ecologist and professor of zoology
 - Zonia Baber – geographer and geologist
 - Myrtle Bachelder – chemist and Women's Army Corps officer; noted for her secret work on the Manhattan Project atomic bomb program, and for the development of techniques in the chemistry of metals
 - Ralph Buchsbaum – invertebrate zoologist
 - R. Stephen Berry – physical chemist; MacArthur Fellow in 1983
 - John T. Cacioppo – biological psychologist, Tiffany and Margaret Blake Distinguished Service Professor
 - Marcela Carena – particle physicist
 - John Carlstrom – astrophysicist; MacArthur Fellow
 - Sean M. Carroll – cosmologist
 - Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin – geologist; developed planetesimal theory
 - Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar – 1983 Nobel Prize laureate in Physics
 - Fay-Cooper Cole – witness at the Scopes Monkey Trial
 - Andrew M. Davis – Professor of Astronomy and Geophysical Sciences; developed resonant ionization mass spectrometry
 - Savas Dimopoulos – particle physicist
 - Michael Dickinson – bioengineer and neuroscientist
 - Enrico Fermi – 1938 Nobel Prize laureate in Physics
 - James Franck – Nobel laureate
 - Daniel Friedan – theoretical physicist; MacArthur Fellow in 1987
 - T. Theodore Fujita – atmospheric scientist and renowned tornado expert; developer of Fujita scale
 - Murray Gell-Mann – 1969 Nobel Prize in Physics
 - Henry A. Gleason – ecologist, botanist, and taxonomist
 - Maria Goeppert-Mayer – developed model for nuclear shell structure at the University of Chicago, for which she received a Nobel in Physics in 1963
 - George Ellery Hale – solar astronomer, best known for his discovery of magnetic fields in sunspots
 - James Hartle – theoretical physicist at the Enrico Fermi Institute
 - Gerhard Herzberg – 1971 Nobel Prize laureate in Chemistry
 - Edwin Hubble – astronomer, observational cosmologist
 - Ole J. Kleppa – pioneer in high temperature thermochemistry; inventor of the Kleppa Calorimeter
 - Edward W. Kolb – cosmologist
 - Martin Kreitman – geneticist; MacArthur Fellow in 1991
 - Bruce Lahn – professor of Human Genetics
 - Ernest Lawrence – 1939 Nobel Prize laureate in Physics
 - Richard Lewontin – pioneered use of molecular biology on questions of evolution and genetic variation
 - Albert J. Libchaber – physicist; recipient of Wolf Prize in Physics in 1986; MacArthur Fellow in 1986
 - Frank Rattray Lillie – embryologist and zoologist
 - Joseph Lykken – particle physicist
 - Martha McClintock – biological psychologist
 - Albert A. Michelson – first American Nobel laureate in the sciences; known for the Michelson-Morley experiment, a cornerstone of relativity theory; measured the speed of light
 - Robert Millikan – Nobel laureate in Physics; known for his measurement of the charge of the electron and the photoelectric effect; performed famed oil-drop experiment at the University of Chicago's Ryerson Laboratory, which has been designated a historic physics landmark by the American Physical Society
 - Robert S. Mulliken – 1966 Nobel Prize in Chemistry; 1983 Priestley Medal
 - John Keith Moffat – Louis Block Professor in Biochemistry, Molecular, and Cell Biology; former Deputy Provost for Research; and Guggenheim Fellow noted for Time resolved crystallography
 - Yoichiro Nambu – winner of Sakurai Prize, Wolf Prize, Nobel Prize in Physics, and the National Medal of Science; considered founder of string theory; known for "color charge" in quantum chromodynamics and work on spontaneous symmetry breaking in particle physics
 - Eugene Parker – astrophysicist, known for his work on the solar wind
 - Stuart Rice – chemist; National Medal of Science winner
 - Howard Taylor Ricketts – pathologist
 - Bernard Roizman – virologist, member of the National Academy of Sciences
 - Florence B. Seibert – biochemist, winner of the Garvan–Olin Medal; member of the National Women's Hall of Fame
 - Stephen Shenker – theoretical physicist, string theorist; MacArthur Fellow in 1987
 - Paul Sigler – former professor; worked out the structure of the RNA molecule responsible for the initiation of protein synthesis[3]
 - Maria Spiropulu – particle physicist
 - Otto Struve – astronomer
 - Edward Teller – "Father of the hydrogen bomb"
 - Michael S. Turner – cosmologist
 - Russell Tuttle – primate morphologist
 - Harold Urey – Nobel Prize in Chemistry
 - Carlos E.M. Wagner – particle physicist
 - Frank Wilczek – theoretical physicist, mathematician; 2004 Nobel Prize laureate
 - Sewall Wright – National Medal of Science winner; one of the founders of population genetics
 
Medicine and health policy
- Raphael Carl Lee – surgeon, medical researcher, biomedical engineer; MacArthur Fellow in 1981
 - Harold Pollack – professor and Chair of the Center for Health Administration Studies
 - Mark Siegler – Director of the MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics
 - Daniel Sulmasy – medical ethicist
 - Olufunmilayo Olopade – Distinguished Service Professor in Medicine and Human genetics; MacArthur Fellow
 
Social sciences
- Arjun Appadurai (A.M. 1973, Ph.D. 1976) – former Professor of Anthropology
 - Gary Becker (A.M. 1953, Ph.D. 1955) – University Professor in Economics, Graduate School of Business, and Sociology
 - Chris Blattman – economist, political scientist, member of the Pearson Institute
 - Leonard Bloomfield – linguist who led the development of structural linguistics
 - Donald Bogue (A.M., Ph.D.) – current professor of sociology at the University of Chicago
 - Dipesh Chakrabarty – Lawrence A. Kimpton Distinguished Service Professor in History and South Asian Languages & Civilizations
 - Ronald Coase – Clifton R. Musser Professor Emeritus of Economics, The Law School
 - Constantin Fasolt – Professor of Early Modern European History
 - Robert Fogel – Charles R. Walgreen Distinguished Service Professor of American Institutions
 - John Hope Franklin – John Matthews Manly Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in History
 - Milton Friedman – Paul Snowden Russell Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in Economics
 - Susan Gal – Mae & Sidney G. Metzl Distinguished Service Professor of Anthropology and Linguistics; leading scholar in studies of Eastern Europe, linguistic anthropology, and gender
 - Clifford Geertz – Professor of Anthropology (1960–1970)
 - Matthew Gentzkow – Richard O. Ryan Professor of Economics and Neubauer Family Faculty Fellow
 - Susan Goldin-Meadow – Beardsley Ruml Distinguished Service Professor in the Departments of Psychology, Comparative Human Development, the College, and the Committee on Education
 - Chauncy Harris – pioneering geographer at the University of Chicago in the first department of geography in the United States
 - Friedrich Hayek – former Professor in the Committee on Social Thought
 - James Heckman – winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 2000
 - Hans Joas – visiting Professor of Sociology and Social Thought and a Member of the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago
 - Morton A. Kaplan – Professor of Political Science
 - Evelyn M. Kitagawa (B.A. 1941, Ph.D. 1951) – Professor of Sociology
 - Karin Knorr-Cetina – George Wells Beadle Distinguished Service Professor of Anthropology and Sociology
 - Lawrence Kohlberg (A.B. 1949, Ph.D. 1958) – Professor in the Committee on Human Development (1962–1968)
 - Maynard C. Krueger – socialist Vice-Presidential candidate and Professor of Economics 1933? – ??
 - Harold Lasswell – one of the most influential political scientists of the 20th century
 - Steven Levitt – Alvin H. Baum Professor in Economics
 - Mark Lilla – Professor in the Committee on Social Thought (1999–2007)
 - John A. List – economist, pioneer in the field of experimental economics
 - Robert Lucas Jr. (A.B. 1959, Ph.D. 1964) – John Dewey Distinguished Service Professor in Economics
 - Jacob Marschak – economist, leader of the Cowles Commission
 - Raven I. McDavid, Jr. – linguist, dialectologist
 - John Mearsheimer – R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science
 - Charles Edward Merriam – founder of the behavioral approach to political science
 - Merton H. Miller – Robert R. McCormick Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus, Graduate School of Business
 - Hans Morgenthau – international relations theorist; his book Politics Among Nations defined the international relations field
 - Robert Pape (Ph.D. 1988) – Professor of Political Science
 - Vivian Paley – early childhood education researcher; MacArthur Fellow in 1989
 - Robert E. Park – Professor of Sociology (1914–1936)
 - Henry Paulson – fellow at the Harris School of Public Policy Studies and the chairman of the Paulson Institute; 74th United States Secretary of the Treasury
 - Kenneth Prewitt – Director of the Census Bureau from 1998-2001, appointed Assistant Professor in 1965
 - Alfred Radcliffe-Brown – Professor of Anthropology (1931–1937); developed theory of Structural Functionalism
 - Robert Redfield – Professor of Anthropology (1927–1958)
 - Albert Rees – former University of Chicago and Princeton University economics professor, former Provost at Princeton, advisor to President Gerald Ford
 - Carl Rogers – one of the founders of humanistic psychology
 - Marshall Sahlins – Charles F. Grey Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Anthropology
 - Edward Sapir – creator of the Sapir–Whorf hypothesis, arguably the most influential figure in American linguistics
 - Saskia Sassen – Ralph Lewis Professor of Sociology (1998–2007)
 - David M. Schneider – Professor of Anthropology (1960–1986)
 - Richard Shweder – Harold H. Swift Distinguished Service Professor of Human Development in the Department of Comparative Human Development
 - Michael Silverstein – Charles F. Grey Distinguished Service Professor of anthropology, linguistics, and psychology; MacArthur Fellow in 1982
 - Theda Skocpol – former Professor of Sociology (1981–1986); now Dean of Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Harvard
 - George Stigler – Charles R. Walgreen Distinguished Service Professor in Economics and Graduate School of Business
 - William I. Thomas (Ph.D. 1896) – Professor of Sociology (1896–1918)
 - Frederic Thrasher – sociologist and prominent member of the Chicago School of Sociology
 - Victor Turner – former Professor in the Committee on Social Thought
 - Thorstein Veblen – Professor of Political Economy (1892–1906)
 - Stephen Walt – former Professor (1989–1999) and Deputy Dean of Social Sciences (1996–1999); Dean of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government after tenure at the University of Chicago
 - Naomi Weisstein – professor of psychology; Guggenheim fellow
 - William Julius Wilson – Lucy Flower University Professor of Sociology (1972–1996)
 - Albert Wohlstetter – awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom; influenced prominent neoconservatives, including Paul Wolfowitz; prominent theorist of the Cold War
 - Dali Yang – William Claude Reavis Professor in the Department of Political Science, Faculty Director of the University of Chicago Center in Beijing
 - Theodore O. Yntema (Ph.D. 1929) – economist, director of the Cowles Commission
 - Iris Marion Young – former Professor of Political Science
 
Arts and entertainment
- Walter Blair – English professor
 - Jan Chiapusso – piano pedagogue
 - John Eaton – composer; MacArthur Fellow in 1990
 - Roger Ebert (X. 1970) – film critic and lecturer at Graham School; winner of the Pulitzer Prize
 - Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle – MacArthur Fellow in 2001
 - Shulamit Ran – William H. Colvin Professor of Music, 1973–present; winner of the Pulitzer Prize; student of Ralph Shapey
 - Ralph Shapey – composer; MacArthur Fellow in 1982
 
University Presidents
- See also: The Presidents of the University of Chicago, University of Chicago Presidential Search Committee
 
| President | Life | Tenure | 
|---|---|---|
| William Rainey Harper | 1856–1906 | 1891–1906 | 
| Harry Pratt Judson | 1849–1927 | 1906–1923 | 
| Ernest DeWitt Burton | 1856–1925 | 1923–1925 | 
| Max Mason | 1877–1961 | 1925–1928 | 
| Robert Hutchins | 1899–1977 | 1929–1951 | 
| Lawrence A. Kimpton | 1910–1977 | 1951–1960 | 
| George Wells Beadle | 1903–1989 | 1961–1968 | 
| Edward H. Levi | 1911–2000 | 1968–1975 | 
| John T. Wilson | 1914–1990 | 1975–1978 | 
| Hanna Holborn Gray | born 1930 | 1978–1993 | 
| Hugo F. Sonnenschein | born 1941 | 1993–2000 | 
| Don Michael Randel | born 1940 | 2000–2006 | 
| Robert J. Zimmer | born 1947 | 2006–present | 
Board of trustees
- Andrew M. Alper (A.B. 1980, M.B.A. 1981) – President of the New York City Economic Development Corporation
 - David G. Booth (M.B.A. 1971) – Chairman and CEO of Dimensional Fund Advisors
 - John H. Bryan – former Chairman and CEO of Sara Lee Corporation
 - Thomas A. Cole (J.D. 1975) – Chairman of the Executive Committee and Partner of Sidley Austin LLP, the sixth-largest law firm in the world
 - E. David Coolidge III – Vice Chairman of William Blair & Company, LLC
 - Jon Corzine (M.B.A. 1973) – Governor of New Jersey
 - James S. Crown – President of Henry Crown and Company
 - Katharine Darrow (A.B. 1965) – former Senior Vice President of The New York Times Company
 - Erroll B. Davis, Jr. (M.B.A. 1967) – Chancellor of the University of Georgia
 - Jamie Dimon – President and COO of JPMorgan Chase & Co.
 - Strachan Donnelley – President of the Center for Humans and Nature
 - Craig J. Duchossois – CEO of Duchossois Industries
 - James S. Frank – President and CEO of Wheels, Inc.
 - Jack W. Fuller – former president of the Tribune Company
 - Eric J. Gleacher (M.B.A. 1967) – Chairman of Gleacher & Co.
 - Stanford J. Goldblatt (Lab 1954, X. 1958) – partner of Winston & Strawn
 - Mary Louise Gorno (M.B.A. 1976) – Vice President and Global Account Director of A.T. Kearney
 - Kathryn C. Gould (M.B.A. 1978) – founder and General Partner of Foundation Capital
 - Sanford J. Grossman (A.B. 1973, A.M. 1974, Ph.D. 1975) – Chairman of Quantitative Financial Strategies, Inc.
 - King W. Harris – Chairman of Harris Holdings, Inc.
 - Kenneth M. Jacobs (A.B. 1980) – CEO of Lazard North America and Deputy Chairman and Managing Director of Lazard LLC
 - Valerie Jarrett – Managing Director and Executive Vice President of the Habitat Company
 - Karen L. Katen (A.B. 1970, M.B.A. 1974) – Executive Vice President of Pfizer, Incorporated and President of Pfizer Global Pharmaceuticals
 - Dennis J. Keller (M.B.A. 1968) – Chairman of DeVry Inc
 - Arthur L. Kelly (M.B.A. 1964) – Managing Partner of KEL Enterprises, L.P.
 - James M. Kilts, Jr. (M.B.A. 1974) – Chairman, President, and CEO of Gillette Company
 - Michael J. Klingensmith (A.B. 1975, M.B.A. 1976) – Executive Vice President of Time Inc.
 - Michael L. Klowden (A.B. 1967) – President and CEO of Milken Institute
 - Sherry Lansing (Lab 1962) – CEO of the Sherry Lansing Foundation
 - John Martin (S.M. 1975, Ph.D. 1978) – President and CEO of Gilead Sciences
 - Walter E. Massey – President of Morehouse College until 2007
 - Peter W. May (A.B. 1964, M.B.A. 1965) – President and COO of Triarc Companies, Inc.
 - John W. McCarter, Jr. – President and CEO of the Field Museum
 - Joseph Neubauer (M.B.A. 1965) – Chairman and CEO of Aramark
 - Emily Nicklin (A.B. 1975, J.D. 1977) – Partner of Kirkland & Ellis
 - Harvey B. Plotnick (A.B. 1963) – President of Paradigm Holdings Inc.
 - Thomas J. Pritzker (M.B.A. 1976, J.D. 1976) – Chairman and CEO of Hyatt Corporation
 - George A. Ranney, Jr. (J.D. 1966) – President and CEO of Chicago Metropolis 2020
 - John W. Rogers, Jr. (Lab 1976) – Chairman and CEO of Ariel Capital Management
 - Andrew M. Rosenfield (J.D. 1978) – President and CEO of Leaf Group LLC
 - Steven G. Rothmeier (M.B.A. 1972) – Chairman and CEO of Great Northern Capital
 - Richard P. Strubel – Vice Chairman of UNext, Inc.
 - Byron D. Trott (A.B. 1981, M.B.A. 1982) – Vice Chairman of Goldman Sachs
 - Marshall I. Wais, Jr. (A.B. 1963) – CEO of Marwais International LLC
 - Paula Wolff (A.M. 1969, Ph.D. 1972) – Senior Executive of Chicago Metropolis 2020
 - Paul G. Yovovich (A.B. 1974, M.B.A. 1975) – President of Lake Capital
 - Francis T.F. Yuen (A.B. 1975) – Deputy Chairman of PCCW Limited
 - Robert J. Zimmer – President of the University of Chicago
 
Notes
- ↑ Chicago School of literary criticism
 - ↑ MacArthur Fellow list of winners
 - ↑ Paul Sigler obituary
 
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