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PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in the Department of History at Columbia University. Gootenberg is an internationally-recognized authority on Latin American history, global commodities studies, and a pioneerscholar in
PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | NINA EIDSHEIM | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Nina Sun Eidsheim studied vocal performance, composition, and philosophy at the University of Agder (Norway) and The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus (Denmark) before pursing MFA in Music at the California Institute of the Arts. She completed her Ph.D. in critical studies/experimental practices program at the University of California, San Diego. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of theHEYMANCENTER.ORG
Moved Permanently. The document has moved here. BY TYPE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT COLUMBIA Browse listings of all those affiliated with the Heyman Center, sorted by affiliation. Categories include, visiting speakers, faculty, staffand Board members.
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in the Department of History at Columbia University. Gootenberg is an internationally-recognized authority on Latin American history, global commodities studies, and a pioneerscholar in
PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | NINA EIDSHEIM | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Nina Sun Eidsheim studied vocal performance, composition, and philosophy at the University of Agder (Norway) and The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus (Denmark) before pursing MFA in Music at the California Institute of the Arts. She completed her Ph.D. in critical studies/experimental practices program at the University of California, San Diego. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of theHEYMANCENTER.ORG
Moved Permanently. The document has moved here. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | ASHISH RAJADHYAKSHA | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Ashish Rajadhyaksha is a film and cultural theorist. He is the co-author of the Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema and of the book titled Indian Cinema in the Time of Celluloid: From Bollywood to the Emergency.He co-curated (with Geeta Kapur) the show Bombay/Mumbai 1992-2001, part of the Tate Modern’s Century City: Art and Culture in the Modern Metropolis (2001). PEOPLE | VIJAY IYER | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Vijay Iyer's wide-ranging creative work and research has spanned the arts, the humanities, and the sciences. An active pianist, recording artist, bandleader, composer, improviser, and scholar, he has has released twenty-three albums of his original music on ECM Records, ACT Records, Sunnyside Records, Savoy Music, Pi Recordings, Artist House, and Asian Improv Records. PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | MARILYN NONKEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Marilyn Nonken is one of the most celebrated champions of the modern repertoire of her generation, known for performances that explore transcendent virtuosity and extremes of musical expression. Upon her New York debut, she was heralded as "a determined protector of important music" (New York Times). She is recognized as"one of the greatest interpreters of new music" (American Record Guide). PEOPLE | RUSTY JONES | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Rusty Jones joined the Department in 2010, after completing his Ph.D. at the University of Oklahoma the same year. He wrote his dissertation on virtue and happiness in Plato’s Euthydemus and has since continued working primarily on Plato’s epistemology and ethics, but regularly returns to Aristotle as a secondary interest.BY SEMESTER
Rachel Adams is a writer and Professor of English and American Studies at Columbia University. She is the author of numerous academic articles and book reviews, as well as three books: Raising Henry: A Memoir of Motherhood, Disability, and Discovery (Yale University Press, 2013), which won the Delta Kappa Gamma Educators' Award; Sideshow U.S.A.: Freaks and the American Cultural Imagination and EVENTS | CONTEMPORARY POPULISM AND GLOBALIZATION | THE Event Date: Tuesday, April 24, 2018 6:15pm | Event Description: the last decade has seen the emergence of a form of politics that has frequently been called ‘populism’. some of these movements are of the left, many are of the right. many of them are against globalization, some are for it (as inindia and turkey). professors milanovic, patnaik, and reddy will both seek to clarify some of BY TYPE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT COLUMBIA Browse listings of all those affiliated with the Heyman Center, sorted by affiliation. Categories include, visiting speakers, faculty, staffand Board members.
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | NINA EIDSHEIM | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Nina Sun Eidsheim studied vocal performance, composition, and philosophy at the University of Agder (Norway) and The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus (Denmark) before pursing MFA in Music at the California Institute of the Arts. She completed her Ph.D. in critical studies/experimental practices program at the University of California, San Diego. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of theHEYMANCENTER.ORG
Moved Permanently. The document has moved here. BY TYPE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT COLUMBIA Browse listings of all those affiliated with the Heyman Center, sorted by affiliation. Categories include, visiting speakers, faculty, staffand Board members.
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | NINA EIDSHEIM | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Nina Sun Eidsheim studied vocal performance, composition, and philosophy at the University of Agder (Norway) and The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus (Denmark) before pursing MFA in Music at the California Institute of the Arts. She completed her Ph.D. in critical studies/experimental practices program at the University of California, San Diego. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of theHEYMANCENTER.ORG
Moved Permanently. The document has moved here. PEOPLE | RON SUSKIND | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Ron Suskind has written some of America’s most important works of nonfiction, framing national debates while exploring the complexities of human experience. Ron’s latest work, Life, Animated, A Story of Sidekicks, Heroes and Autism, chronicles his family’s twenty year struggle with their youngest son’s autism. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | ASHISH RAJADHYAKSHA | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Ashish Rajadhyaksha is a film and cultural theorist. He is the co-author of the Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema and of the book titled Indian Cinema in the Time of Celluloid: From Bollywood to the Emergency.He co-curated (with Geeta Kapur) the show Bombay/Mumbai 1992-2001, part of the Tate Modern’s Century City: Art and Culture in the Modern Metropolis (2001). PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | WILLIAM MILLS TODD III | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR Narrative and cultural studies; Russian, English, and French literature of the eighteenth to twentieth centuries; Russian fiction and social history; literary sociology, semiotics, Pushkin andDostoevsky.
PEOPLE | JAMES ELI ADAMS | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE S.B., Literature and Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1977); B.A., Oxford (Rhodes Scholar, 1979); Ph.D., Cornell (1987). James Eli Adams came to Columbia in 2009 from Cornell; he previously taught at Indiana University and the University of Rochester. He writes on a wide range of Victorian literature and culture, but he is best known for his work on gender and sexuality in PEOPLE | RUSTY JONES | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Rusty Jones joined the Department in 2010, after completing his Ph.D. at the University of Oklahoma the same year. He wrote his dissertation on virtue and happiness in Plato’s Euthydemus and has since continued working primarily on Plato’s epistemology and ethics, but regularly returns to Aristotle as a secondary interest.HEYMANCENTER.ORG
Moved Permanently. The document has moved here. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ANNA GRIMSHAW | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Anna Grimshaw was trained as an anthropologist at the University of Cambridge. She carried out her doctoral research with communities of Buddhist nuns in the Himalayas. For almost a decade, she worked as a public scholar outside the academy. Most notably, she served as assistant and editor to the Caribbean writer and historian C.L.R.James.
PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | JEAN COHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Jean Cohen (Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1979) is the Nell and Herbert M. Singer Professor of Political Theory and Contemporary Civilization in the Department of Political Science. PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | GILLIAN WYLIE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Gillian Wylie did her MA and PhD at the University of Aberdeen in the fields of Politics and International Relations. She has been working in TCD since 2001. Her primary research interest lies in the area of human trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation in the context of globalisation. She is also interested in questions of gender as they shape war and peace. PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PASSAGES RELATED TO FRIENDSHIP IN MENCIUS Passages related to Friendship in Mencius Attitudes toward Self and Public Service 2B13: junzi and anxiety (see also 7B38; compare also to Analects 9:5) 3B3: serving in office without “boring holes” PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ANNA GRIMSHAW | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Anna Grimshaw was trained as an anthropologist at the University of Cambridge. She carried out her doctoral research with communities of Buddhist nuns in the Himalayas. For almost a decade, she worked as a public scholar outside the academy. Most notably, she served as assistant and editor to the Caribbean writer and historian C.L.R.James.
PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | JEAN COHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Jean Cohen (Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1979) is the Nell and Herbert M. Singer Professor of Political Theory and Contemporary Civilization in the Department of Political Science. PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | GILLIAN WYLIE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Gillian Wylie did her MA and PhD at the University of Aberdeen in the fields of Politics and International Relations. She has been working in TCD since 2001. Her primary research interest lies in the area of human trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation in the context of globalisation. She is also interested in questions of gender as they shape war and peace. PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PASSAGES RELATED TO FRIENDSHIP IN MENCIUS Passages related to Friendship in Mencius Attitudes toward Self and Public Service 2B13: junzi and anxiety (see also 7B38; compare also to Analects 9:5) 3B3: serving in office without “boring holes”FELLOWSHIPS
The TLRH and the SoF/HCH annually award fellowships to allow at least one member from each of our respective communities to take up residence (normally, for a period of four to six weeks, excluding the months of June, July, and August) at the other’s institution. Tenured and tenure-track faculty in the arts, humanities, andhumanistic social
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | DIANA ALLAN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Diana Allan is a British anthropologist and a fellow at the Society for the Humanities at Cornell University. She received the MEMO prize for her book: Refugees of Revolution: Experiences of Exile. She completed her doctorate in anthropology at Harvard University in 2007, and was a junior fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows from2008-2012.
PEOPLE | GEORGE E. LEWIS | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE George E. Lewis is the Edwin H. Case Professor of American Music at Columbia University. A Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy, Lewis’s other honors include a MacArthur Fellowship (2002), a Guggenheim Fellowship (2015), a United States Artists Walker Fellowship (2011), an Alpert Award in the Arts (1999), and fellowships from PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | ARNAUD ORAIN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Arnaud Orain is professor of economics at the University of Paris 8 (France) and was Davis Fellow of the History Department of Princeton University in 2015-2016. He specializes in the history of economic thought of the French Enlightenment, with a particular emphasis on anti-physiocracy on the one hand, and the links between religion (jansenism), literature and economics, on the other hand. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | NINA EIDSHEIM | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Nina Sun Eidsheim studied vocal performance, composition, and philosophy at the University of Agder (Norway) and The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus (Denmark) before pursing MFA in Music at the California Institute of the Arts. She completed her Ph.D. in critical studies/experimental practices program at the University of California, San Diego. PEOPLE | KATHARINA PISTOR | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Katharina Pistor is the Michael I. Sovern Professor of Law at Columbia Law School and Director of the Law School’s Center on Global Legal Transformation. She obtained her law degree from Freiburg University in 1988 and qualified for legal practice in 1992 after clerking for the Hamburg Court of Appeals. She obtained a Masters in Law from the University of London in 1989; a Masters in Public HEYMANCENTER.ORGWEB VIEW CHCI Health and Medical Humanities Network Summer Institute “ Health Beyond Borders ” Draft Program. Sponsored by Columbia Global Centers| Paris
FELLOWSHIPS
The TLRH and the SoF/HCH annually award fellowships to allow at least one member from each of our respective communities to take up residence (normally, for a period of four to six weeks, excluding the months of June, July, and August) at the other’s institution. Tenured and tenure-track faculty in the arts, humanities, andhumanistic social
BY TYPE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT COLUMBIA Browse listings of all those affiliated with the Heyman Center, sorted by affiliation. Categories include, visiting speakers, faculty, staffand Board members.
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in the Department of History at Columbia University. Gootenberg is an internationally-recognized authority on Latin American history, global commodities studies, and a pioneerscholar in
PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | STEPHANIE SPRAY | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Stephanie Spray is a filmmaker, phonographer and anthropologist whose work explores and exploits the confluence of social aesthetics and art in everyday life. Stephanie is currently a PhD candidate and Teaching Fellow in the Sensory Ethnography Laboratory, housed in the Anthropology Department at Harvard University; has a secondary field in Critical Media Practice; and is a fellow at the FilmFELLOWSHIPS
The TLRH and the SoF/HCH annually award fellowships to allow at least one member from each of our respective communities to take up residence (normally, for a period of four to six weeks, excluding the months of June, July, and August) at the other’s institution. Tenured and tenure-track faculty in the arts, humanities, andhumanistic social
BY TYPE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT COLUMBIA Browse listings of all those affiliated with the Heyman Center, sorted by affiliation. Categories include, visiting speakers, faculty, staffand Board members.
PEOPLE | CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Charles K. Armstrong. Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences. Columbia University. Professor Armstrong’s is the author of Tyranny of the Weak: North Korea and the World, 1950–1990 (Cornell University Press). He is also author of the Modern East Asia volume for the Wiley-Blackwell series Concise Historyof the
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | JOHN HAFFENDEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE John Haffenden. John Haffenden is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield, Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of English Studies, University of London, and a Fellow of the British Academy. His publications include a biography of the American poet John Berryman; editions of the works of William Empson PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in the Department of History at Columbia University. Gootenberg is an internationally-recognized authority on Latin American history, global commodities studies, and a pioneerscholar in
PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | STEPHANIE SPRAY | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Stephanie Spray is a filmmaker, phonographer and anthropologist whose work explores and exploits the confluence of social aesthetics and art in everyday life. Stephanie is currently a PhD candidate and Teaching Fellow in the Sensory Ethnography Laboratory, housed in the Anthropology Department at Harvard University; has a secondary field in Critical Media Practice; and is a fellow at the Film PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | RON SUSKIND | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Ron Suskind has written some of America’s most important works of nonfiction, framing national debates while exploring the complexities of human experience. Ron’s latest work, Life, Animated, A Story of Sidekicks, Heroes and Autism, chronicles his family’s twenty year struggle with their youngest son’s autism. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | ASHISH RAJADHYAKSHA | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Ashish Rajadhyaksha is a film and cultural theorist. He is the co-author of the Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema and of the book titled Indian Cinema in the Time of Celluloid: From Bollywood to the Emergency.He co-curated (with Geeta Kapur) the show Bombay/Mumbai 1992-2001, part of the Tate Modern’s Century City: Art and Culture in the Modern Metropolis (2001). PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | JAMES ELI ADAMS | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE S.B., Literature and Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1977); B.A., Oxford (Rhodes Scholar, 1979); Ph.D., Cornell (1987). James Eli Adams came to Columbia in 2009 from Cornell; he previously taught at Indiana University and the University of Rochester. He writes on a wide range of Victorian literature and culture, but he is best known for his work on gender and sexuality in PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | RUSTY JONES | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Rusty Jones joined the Department in 2010, after completing his Ph.D. at the University of Oklahoma the same year. He wrote his dissertation on virtue and happiness in Plato’s Euthydemus and has since continued working primarily on Plato’s epistemology and ethics, but regularly returns to Aristotle as a secondary interest.HEYMANCENTER.ORG
Moved Permanently. The document has moved here. PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ANNA GRIMSHAW | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Anna Grimshaw was trained as an anthropologist at the University of Cambridge. She carried out her doctoral research with communities of Buddhist nuns in the Himalayas. For almost a decade, she worked as a public scholar outside the academy. Most notably, she served as assistant and editor to the Caribbean writer and historian C.L.R.James.
PEOPLE | JEAN COHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Jean Cohen (Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1979) is the Nell and Herbert M. Singer Professor of Political Theory and Contemporary Civilization in the Department of Political Science. PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | GILLIAN WYLIE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Gillian Wylie did her MA and PhD at the University of Aberdeen in the fields of Politics and International Relations. She has been working in TCD since 2001. Her primary research interest lies in the area of human trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation in the context of globalisation. She is also interested in questions of gender as they shape war and peace. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PASSAGES RELATED TO FRIENDSHIP IN MENCIUS Passages related to Friendship in Mencius Attitudes toward Self and Public Service 2B13: junzi and anxiety (see also 7B38; compare also to Analects 9:5) 3B3: serving in office without “boring holes” PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ANNA GRIMSHAW | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Anna Grimshaw was trained as an anthropologist at the University of Cambridge. She carried out her doctoral research with communities of Buddhist nuns in the Himalayas. For almost a decade, she worked as a public scholar outside the academy. Most notably, she served as assistant and editor to the Caribbean writer and historian C.L.R.James.
PEOPLE | JEAN COHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Jean Cohen (Ph.D., New School for Social Research, 1979) is the Nell and Herbert M. Singer Professor of Political Theory and Contemporary Civilization in the Department of Political Science. PEOPLE | MICHAEL CIURARU | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Michael Ciuraru was born in Queens, New York into a Roma family. His upbringing has exposed him to interactions with various Roma communities—from villages in Romania to cities in France and throughout the United States—that were struggling to survive on the outskirts of society. These experiences have made him question how to find solutions to help Roma develop and have access to education. PEOPLE | MEIKE HOPP | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Meike Hopp is a project assistant in the research department at Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte in Munich. Her dissertation, “Art Dealing Under National Socialism: Adolf Weinmüller in Munich and Vienna,” was published in 2012. Her projects have also included, "More than Receptive? Women at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich from 1813-1945," and "The Art Dealer Adolf Weinmüller, and PEOPLE | GILLIAN WYLIE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Gillian Wylie did her MA and PhD at the University of Aberdeen in the fields of Politics and International Relations. She has been working in TCD since 2001. Her primary research interest lies in the area of human trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation in the context of globalisation. She is also interested in questions of gender as they shape war and peace. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PASSAGES RELATED TO FRIENDSHIP IN MENCIUS Passages related to Friendship in Mencius Attitudes toward Self and Public Service 2B13: junzi and anxiety (see also 7B38; compare also to Analects 9:5) 3B3: serving in office without “boring holes”FELLOWSHIPS
The TLRH and the SoF/HCH annually award fellowships to allow at least one member from each of our respective communities to take up residence (normally, for a period of four to six weeks, excluding the months of June, July, and August) at the other’s institution. Tenured and tenure-track faculty in the arts, humanities, andhumanistic social
PEOPLE | RON SUSKIND | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Ron Suskind has written some of America’s most important works of nonfiction, framing national debates while exploring the complexities of human experience. Ron’s latest work, Life, Animated, A Story of Sidekicks, Heroes and Autism, chronicles his family’s twenty year struggle with their youngest son’s autism. PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | MELANIE NEWTON | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Associate Professor. University of Toronto. Melanie Newton received her doctorate in Modern History from Oxford University in 2001. She specializes in the social and cultural history of the Caribbean and the history of slavery, gender and emancipation in the Atlantic World. Recent publications include the preface to Jerome S. Handler's The PEOPLE | JAMES ELI ADAMS | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE S.B., Literature and Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1977); B.A., Oxford (Rhodes Scholar, 1979); Ph.D., Cornell (1987). James Eli Adams came to Columbia in 2009 from Cornell; he previously taught at Indiana University and the University of Rochester. He writes on a wide range of Victorian literature and culture, but he is best known for his work on gender and sexuality in PEOPLE | DIANA ALLAN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Diana Allan is a British anthropologist and a fellow at the Society for the Humanities at Cornell University. She received the MEMO prize for her book: Refugees of Revolution: Experiences of Exile. She completed her doctorate in anthropology at Harvard University in 2007, and was a junior fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows from2008-2012.
PEOPLE | NINA EIDSHEIM | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Nina Sun Eidsheim studied vocal performance, composition, and philosophy at the University of Agder (Norway) and The Royal Academy of Music, Aarhus (Denmark) before pursing MFA in Music at the California Institute of the Arts. She completed her Ph.D. in critical studies/experimental practices program at the University of California, San Diego. PEOPLE | ARNAUD ORAIN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Arnaud Orain is professor of economics at the University of Paris 8 (France) and was Davis Fellow of the History Department of Princeton University in 2015-2016. He specializes in the history of economic thought of the French Enlightenment, with a particular emphasis on anti-physiocracy on the one hand, and the links between religion (jansenism), literature and economics, on the other hand. PEOPLE | JOAN LA BARBARA | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Joan La Barbara, composer, performer, sound artist and actor is renowned for developing a unique vocabulary of experimental and extended vocal techniques (multiphonics, circular singing, ululation, and glottal clicks, her “signature sounds”) influencing generations of other composers and singers. La Barbara serves on the composition faculty at New York University.FELLOWSHIPS
The TLRH and the SoF/HCH annually award fellowships to allow at least one member from each of our respective communities to take up residence (normally, for a period of four to six weeks, excluding the months of June, July, and August) at the other’s institution. Tenured and tenure-track faculty in the arts, humanities, andhumanistic social
BY TYPE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT COLUMBIA Browse listings of all those affiliated with the Heyman Center, sorted by affiliation. Categories include, visiting speakers, faculty, staffand Board members.
PEOPLE | CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Charles K. Armstrong. Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences. Columbia University. Professor Armstrong’s is the author of Tyranny of the Weak: North Korea and the World, 1950–1990 (Cornell University Press). He is also author of the Modern East Asia volume for the Wiley-Blackwell series Concise Historyof the
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | JOHN HAFFENDEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE John Haffenden. John Haffenden is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield, Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of English Studies, University of London, and a Fellow of the British Academy. His publications include a biography of the American poet John Berryman; editions of the works of William Empson PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in the Department of History at Columbia University. Gootenberg is an internationally-recognized authority on Latin American history, global commodities studies, and a pioneerscholar in
PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | STEPHANIE SPRAY | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Stephanie Spray is a filmmaker, phonographer and anthropologist whose work explores and exploits the confluence of social aesthetics and art in everyday life. Stephanie is currently a PhD candidate and Teaching Fellow in the Sensory Ethnography Laboratory, housed in the Anthropology Department at Harvard University; has a secondary field in Critical Media Practice; and is a fellow at the Film PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of theFELLOWSHIPS
The TLRH and the SoF/HCH annually award fellowships to allow at least one member from each of our respective communities to take up residence (normally, for a period of four to six weeks, excluding the months of June, July, and August) at the other’s institution. Tenured and tenure-track faculty in the arts, humanities, andhumanistic social
BY TYPE | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT COLUMBIA Browse listings of all those affiliated with the Heyman Center, sorted by affiliation. Categories include, visiting speakers, faculty, staffand Board members.
PEOPLE | CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Charles K. Armstrong. Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences. Columbia University. Professor Armstrong’s is the author of Tyranny of the Weak: North Korea and the World, 1950–1990 (Cornell University Press). He is also author of the Modern East Asia volume for the Wiley-Blackwell series Concise Historyof the
PEOPLE | MAX HAYWARD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Public Humanities Fellow Max Hayward is a PhD student in Philosophy at Columbia University and the Public Humanities Fellow at the Heyman Center for the Humanities. In his dissertation, he hopes to present a distinctive way of understanding the importance of methodological considerations in ethical inquiry and decision-making, especially as regards disagreements. PEOPLE | JOHN HAFFENDEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE John Haffenden. John Haffenden is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield, Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of English Studies, University of London, and a Fellow of the British Academy. His publications include a biography of the American poet John Berryman; editions of the works of William Empson PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | PAUL GOOTENBERG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Paul Gootenberg, a former Rhodes scholar, is SUNY Distinguished Professor of History and Sociology at Stony Brook University. He is currently a Visiting Fellow in the Department of History at Columbia University. Gootenberg is an internationally-recognized authority on Latin American history, global commodities studies, and a pioneerscholar in
PEOPLE | BLAKE LEYH | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Blake Leyh is a composer, sound designer, music producer, and music supervisor who lives in New York City. Born in New York but raised in England until age fifteen, Leyh began his musical explorations at the age of ten, playing accordion and guitar and composing songs with a street theater troupe in London. PEOPLE | STEPHANIE SPRAY | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Stephanie Spray is a filmmaker, phonographer and anthropologist whose work explores and exploits the confluence of social aesthetics and art in everyday life. Stephanie is currently a PhD candidate and Teaching Fellow in the Sensory Ethnography Laboratory, housed in the Anthropology Department at Harvard University; has a secondary field in Critical Media Practice; and is a fellow at the Film PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | IAN HACKING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Ian Hacking is one of the world's leading scholars in the fields of philosophy and history of science. His work spans the philosophy of science, the philosophy of language, the theory of probability and statistical inference, and the socio-historical examination of the rise and fall of disciplines and theories. PEOPLE | CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Charles K. Armstrong. Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences. Columbia University. Professor Armstrong’s is the author of Tyranny of the Weak: North Korea and the World, 1950–1990 (Cornell University Press). He is also author of the Modern East Asia volume for the Wiley-Blackwell series Concise Historyof the
PEOPLE | RON SUSKIND | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Ron Suskind has written some of America’s most important works of nonfiction, framing national debates while exploring the complexities of human experience. Ron’s latest work, Life, Animated, A Story of Sidekicks, Heroes and Autism, chronicles his family’s twenty year struggle with their youngest son’s autism. PEOPLE | KUAN-HSING CHEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Kuan-Hsing Chen is a professor in the Graduate Institute for Social Research and Cultural Studies, and also the coordinator of the Center for Asia-Pacific/ Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University. He has held visiting professorships at universities in Korea, China, Japan, Singapore and the U.S. PEOPLE | ROB KING | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES Rob King is a film historian with interests in American cinema, popular culture, and social history. Much of his work has been on comedy. His award-winning book, The Fun Factory: The Keystone Film Company and the Emergence of Mass Culture (University of California Press, 2009), examined the role Keystone’s filmmakers played in developing new styles of slapstick comedy for moviegoers of the PEOPLE | JOHN HAFFENDEN | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE John Haffenden. John Haffenden is Emeritus Professor of English Literature at the University of Sheffield, Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of English Studies, University of London, and a Fellow of the British Academy. His publications include a biography of the American poet John Berryman; editions of the works of William Empson PEOPLE | ELLIOTT YOUNG | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Elliott Young is professor of Latin American and Borderlands history at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon. In 2003, he co-founded the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas. His most recent book Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas, the Coolie Era to WWII (University of North Carolina Press, 2014) is a transnational history exploring the construction PEOPLE | ASHISH RAJADHYAKSHA | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Ashish Rajadhyaksha is a film and cultural theorist. He is the co-author of the Encyclopaedia of Indian Cinema and of the book titled Indian Cinema in the Time of Celluloid: From Bollywood to the Emergency.He co-curated (with Geeta Kapur) the show Bombay/Mumbai 1992-2001, part of the Tate Modern’s Century City: Art and Culture in the Modern Metropolis (2001). PEOPLE | BRIAN FITZGERALD | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Brian FitzGerald currently teaches at The College of Saint Mary Magdalen. He received both his Master of Studies and his Doctor of Philosophy from Oxford in Medieval Studies and History, respectively. Additionally, he holds degrees from Fordham and Princeton. Prior to pursuing his doctoral studies, he taught for six years at a private Catholic high school in New York. PEOPLE | RUSTY JONES | THE HEYMAN CENTER FOR THE Rusty Jones joined the Department in 2010, after completing his Ph.D. at the University of Oklahoma the same year. He wrote his dissertation on virtue and happiness in Plato’s Euthydemus and has since continued working primarily on Plato’s epistemology and ethics, but regularly returns to Aristotle as a secondary interest. The HEYMAN CENTER for the Humanities at Columbia University* Home
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CRISES OF DEMOCRACY CURRICULUM LAUNCHED FREE ONLINE DEMOCRACY CURRICULUM AVAILABLE TO STUDENTS, RESEARCHERS, NGOS AND POLICY MAKERSORIGINAL CONTENT
"READING IN THE DUGOUT" BY SENIOR SCHOLAR DEIRDRE DAVID THE HUMANITIES FROM HOME WE ARE HAPPY TO SHARE WITH YOU A DATABASE OF ONLINE RESOURCES AND LIVE-STREAMED HUMANITIES EVENTS. NYC HUMANITIES CALENDAR THE NYC HUMANITIES CALENDAR AGGREGATES EVENTS IN THE CITY, AND WE WELCOME YOU TO SUBMIT YOUR EVENTS! * We are focusing on virtual events as of now! NEW BOOKS AT THE HEYMAN CENTER NEW PODCAST EPISODES WILL BE RELEASED EVERY FRIDAY IN MAY! SUBSCRIBEVIA APPLE PODCASTS.
UPCOMING ONLINE EVENTS "RETHINKING DEMOCRACY IN AN AGE OF PANDEMIC" ONLINE SERIES RUNNING FROM 29 APRIL - 27 MAY * In partnership with The Trinity Long Room Hub UPCOMING ONLINE CONFERENCE FROM PUBLIC HUMANITIES AND MEDICAL HUMANITIES INITIATIVES AT SOF/HEYMAN CARE FOR THE POLIS CONTINUES THURSDAY, 21 MAY AT 3PM * An on-going online conference on cities, health and thehumanities.
CRISES OF DEMOCRACY CURRICULUM LAUNCHED FREE ONLINE DEMOCRACY CURRICULUM AVAILABLE TO STUDENTS, RESEARCHERS, NGOS AND POLICY MAKERSORIGINAL CONTENT
"READING IN THE DUGOUT" BY SENIOR SCHOLAR DEIRDRE DAVID THE HUMANITIES FROM HOME WE ARE HAPPY TO SHARE WITH YOU A DATABASE OF ONLINE RESOURCES AND LIVE-STREAMED HUMANITIES EVENTS. NYC HUMANITIES CALENDAR THE NYC HUMANITIES CALENDAR AGGREGATES EVENTS IN THE CITY, AND WE WELCOME YOU TO SUBMIT YOUR EVENTS! * We are focusing on virtual events as of now! NEW BOOKS AT THE HEYMAN CENTER NEW PODCAST EPISODES WILL BE RELEASED EVERY FRIDAY IN MAY! SUBSCRIBEVIA APPLE PODCASTS.
UPCOMING ONLINE EVENTS "RETHINKING DEMOCRACY IN AN AGE OF PANDEMIC" ONLINE SERIES RUNNING FROM 29 APRIL - 27 MAY * In partnership with The Trinity Long Room Hub UPCOMING ONLINE CONFERENCE FROM PUBLIC HUMANITIES AND MEDICAL HUMANITIES INITIATIVES AT SOF/HEYMAN CARE FOR THE POLIS CONTINUES THURSDAY, 21 MAY AT 3PM * An on-going online conference on cities, health and thehumanities.
CRISES OF DEMOCRACY CURRICULUM LAUNCHED FREE ONLINE DEMOCRACY CURRICULUM AVAILABLE TO STUDENTS, RESEARCHERS, NGOS AND POLICY MAKERS VISIT THE HEYMAN CENTEREVENT VIDEOS
VIEW OUR UPCOMING EVENTS _May 27, 2020_ DEMOCRACY WITHOUT A PUBLIC SPHERE _May 27, 2020_ BUILDING PUBLICS: HUMANITIES COMBATING ISOLATION: WALKING, MAPPING, AND REIMAGINING THE ENVIRONMENT _May 28, 2020_ CARE FOR THE POLIS: URBAN INFRASTRUCTURES OF VIOLENCE _June 3, 2020_ BUILDING PUBLICS: HUMANITIES COMBATING ISOLATION: MULTILINGUAL YOUTH AS CURATORS _June 4, 2020_ CARE FOR THE POLIS: EXPANDING ECOLOGIES OF CARE _June 10, 2020_ BUILDING PUBLICS: HUMANITIES COMBATING ISOLATION: NEW PEDAGOGIES IN JUSTICE _June 11, 2020_ CARE FOR THE POLIS: TOXIC BODIES IN PLACE _June 17, 2020_ BUILDING PUBLICS: HUMANITIES COMBATING ISOLATION: NEW PEDAGOGIES IN CLIMATE _June 18, 2020_ CARE FOR THE POLIS: ETHICS OF CARE AND SPACE Stay in touch to get the latest updates and news on the Heyman Center* Flickr
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