Faculty Honors, Awards, Publications, and
Other Activities
The announcements below are drawn from faculty submissions to
the Office
of Public Affairs and Publications (pubaff@gc.cuny.edu) and by
no means
reflect the sum total of the activities and awards of Graduate
Center
doctoral faculty. Readers are also invited to view faculty member
entries on the Graduate Center doctoral program websites.
Fall 2009
Peter Beinart (Adj. Assoc. Prof., Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, Political Science) was interviewed about Afghanistan on CNN’s American Morning on October 8, 2009. A transcript of the interview is available: http://amfix.blogs.cnn.com/2009/10/08/is-afghanistan-another-vietnam
Joshua Brown (Adj. Prof., American Social History Project / Center for Media and Learning, History) recently lectured on “Augustus Saint-Gaudens’s New York” at a Metropolitan Museum of Art symposium on the artist’s work. Brown also delivered “Catching His Eye: The Sporting Male Pictorial Press in the Gilded Age,” the annual James Russell Wiggins Lecture on the History of the Book in American Culture, at the American Antiquarian Society. Brown was a guest panelist for “Interpreting the American Landscape” at the Newberry Library’s Picturing America School Collaboration Conference in Chicago.
Steve Cahn (Dist. Prof., GC, Philosophy, Urban Education) was honored with the publication of A Teacher’s Life: Essays for Steven M. Cahn (Lexington Press, 2009), a collection of thirteen essays by his colleagues and former students, presented on the occasion of his twenty-fifth year as professor of philosophy at CUNY. GC alumni Robert H. Talisse (Philosophy, 2001), associate professor of philosophy at Vanderbilt University, and Maureen Eckert (Philosophy, 2004) assistant professor of philosophy at University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, served as co-editors. The chapters focus on topics that have been central to Cahn’s philosophical work, such as the teaching of philosophy, the responsibilities of philosophy professors, the nature of happiness, and the concept of the good life.
Marilyn Gittell (Prof., GC, Political Science, Liberal Studies; Director, Howard Samuels Center) contributed “Perspectives on the Economic Status of Women” to the October 2009 issue of American Behavioral Scientist. In August 2009 the Ford Foundation published “Community Collaborations: Promoting Community Organizing,” an executive summary of research conducted by Gittell and Professor Charles Price and Barbara Ferman.
Marnia Lazreg (Prof., Hunter, Sociology) published Questioning the Veil: Open Letters to Muslim Women (Princeton University Press, 2009) which was reviewed in The Economist (September 5–11, 2009) and in Toronto’s National Post (September 12, 2009). In June 2009 she lectured on the “strategic role of torture in counter-insurgency wars” at the School of Social Science at Abdel Hamid Ibn Badis University in Algeria. She spoke on “Rethinking Development: The Case of Women in Algeria” at a symposium on African Women and the Challenge of Development, sponsored by the Centre de Recherche en Anthropologie Sociale et Culturelle. In May 2009, Lazreg delivered a keynote address on “Sciences Sociales et Géopolitique” at a symposium in Oran, Algeria, organized by the Direction Générale de la Recherche Scientifique et du Développement Technologique; she also was interviewed on television (Canal Algérie), and on “Berber Radio.”
Gertrud Lenzer (Prof., Brooklyn, Sociology), director of the Children’s Studies Center at Brooklyn College, with research associate Joseph Grochowalski, produced a report in April 2009 for the New York Life Foundation, entitled Childhood and Adolescent Bereavement. Lenzer also published the Proceedings of the Third Child Policy Forum of New York: Implementation and Monitoring of the Optional Protocol to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Sale of Children, Child Prostitution, and Child Pornography (OPSC) as well as the second issue of New Horizons, an annual publication highlighting the work and progress of the Children’s Studies Center. In June 2009,Lenzer convened the panel for the breakout session entitled “Incorporating the CRC into Curricula,”an event sponsored by the Campaign for U.S. Ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child at the National Symposium on the Convention on the Rights of the Child held in Washington D.C. As the founding Chair of the ASA Section on Children and Youth, Lenzer was invited to address the section members on two occasions at the Annual Meetings of the ASA held in August 2009. Lenzer was featured in the summer 2009 issue of Child and Youth News, the newsletter of the Children and Youth section of the American Sociological Association (ASA).
Rose-Carol Washton Long (Prof., GC, Art History) contributed her essay “Brücke and German Expressionism: Reception Reconsidered” to Brücke: The Birth of Expressionism in Dresden and Berlin, 1905–1913 (Neue Galerie, 2009). With Maria Makela, she co-edited Of ‘Truths Impossible to Put into Words’: Max Beckmann Contextualized (Peter Lang, 2008). For this volume, she contributed the introduction as well as the essay “Ambivalence: Personal and Political: Beckmann’s Print Portfolios 1919–1924.”
Katherine Manthorne (Prof., GC, Art History) curated the summer 2009 exhibition “Home on the Hudson: Women and Men Painting Landscapes, 1825–1875,” and organized an accompanying symposium at Boscobel House in Garrison, New York.
Leith Mullings (Dist. Prof., GC, Anthropology) is president-elect of the American Anthropological Association. The position encompasses a two-year term as president-elect followed by a two-year term as president. Mullings forthcoming volume is New Social Movements in the African Diaspora: Challenging Global Apartheid (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
Alexei Myasnikov (Adj. Prof., McGill, Canada, Mathematics), along with Olga Kharlampovich, contributed the article “Equations and Algorithmic Problems in Groups” to Publicações mathematias (IMPA, 2008).
Manfred Philipp (Prof., Lehman, Biochemistry, Biology, Chemistry), Song-Yu Yang (Biochemistry, 1984; Adj. Prof., Head, Laboratory for Medical Chemistry, NYS Institute for Basic Research, Biology), and Xue-Ying He (Biochemistry, 1991) have analyzed a genetic mutation with a strong connection to developmental disability in humans. Their findings, which were produced in collaboration with colleagues from other institutions including the College of Staten Island, were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The scientists found that mutations to gene HSD17B10, which is required for normal brain development, can slow the activity of an enzyme HSD10 that processes many types of steroids and steroid modulators in the human brain. Their discovery opens a new approach to the prevention and treatment of developmental disability.
Bruce Saylor (Prof., Queens, Music) was the recipient of an ASCAPLUS award from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, which recognizes composers for their original musical works in the classical field and their recent performances. Saylor has been honored with this award annually since the early 1970s. In December Saylor will travel to Tblisi, Georgia, to hear multiple performances of the theater piece “Falling Bodies,” which centers around an imagined conversation between Galileo and Primo Levi, and for which Saylor composed the score. The piece was workshopped at An Appalachian Summer Festival in Boone, NC, and has been presented in Miami, New York, and Capri, Italy, in an Italian translation.
Pam Sheingorn (Prof. Emerita, Baruch, History, Theatre) was honored in October 2009 at a Princeton University symposium, Liminal Spaces: A Symposium in Honor of Pamela Sheingorn. The event featured the interdisciplinary, theoretically engaged scholarship that has been a hallmark of her work. The papers highlighted works that explore the spaces “in between”—between text, image, reader, and viewer; performance and spectator; and medieval and modern theatre. The event was hosted by the Index of Christian Art and funded by the ICA and the City University of New York.
Susan L. Woodward (Prof., GC, Political Science), a political adviser on Balkan, East European, and post-Soviet affairs, was nominated by the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and appointed by the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) to a four-year term on the 24-member UN Committee of Experts on Public Administration (CEPA), beginning in January 2010. CEPA is responsible for supporting the work of ECOSOC on the promotion and development of public administration and governance among member states, in connection with the UN Millennium Development Goals.
Song-Yu Yang (Biochemistry, 1984; Adj. Prof., Head, Laboratory for Medical Chemistry, NYS Institute for Basic Research, Biology), Manfred Philipp (Biochemistry, Biology, Chemistry, Lehman College, GC), and Xue-Ying He (Biochemistry, 1991) have analyzed a genetic mutation with a strong connection to developmental disability in humans. Their findings, which were produced in collaboration with colleagues from other institutions including the College of Staten Island, were published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The scientists found that mutations to gene HSD17B10, which is required for normal brain development, can slow the activity of an enzyme HSD10 that processes many types of steroids and steroid modulators in the human brain. Their discovery opens a new approach to the prevention and treatment of developmental disability.
August 2009
Stanley Aronowitz (Sociology and Urban Education, Distinguished Professor, GC) delivered the commencement speech for the January 2009 commencement exercises at the University of New Haven where he was also awarded an honorary doctor of humane letters. (posted 8/09)
Paul Attewell (Sociology and Urban Education, GC) is a 2009–10 fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. (posted 8/09)
Beth Baron (History, GC/City; Co-director of Middle East and Middle Eastern American Center) has begun a five-year term as editor of the International Journal of Middle East Studies. (posted 8/09)
Marvin Carlson (Theatre, GC, Distinguished Professor) was honored by his students with the publication of Changing the Subject: A Festschrift for Marvin Carlson, edited by Joseph Roach (University of Michigan Press, 2009). (posted 8/09)
Clare Carroll (Comparative Literature, Queens) published, with Andrew Hadfield, David Damrosch, et al. "The Early Modern Period." Vol. 1. 4th ed. In Longman Anthology of British Literature. New York: Longman, 2009. (posted 8/26/09)
Mary Ann Caws (French, English, and Comparative Literature, GC, Distinguished Professor) has been elected a member of the 2009 class of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (posted 8/09)
Michelle Fine (Psychology and Urban Education, GC, Distinguished Professor) was named a 2008 American Educational Research Foundation Inaugural Fellow in recognition of her outstanding accomplishment in education research. (posted 8/09)
Marilyn Gittell (Political Science, GC; Director, Howard Samuels Center) spoke on a panel on community organizations collaborating for social justice at the Council on Foundations annual meeting in Atlanta in May 2009.In June, The Ford Foundation published an Executive Summary of an evaluation of Ford Foundation’s Community Organizing Initiative, which was conducted by a team of researchers led by Professor Gittell. (posted 8/09)
Marilyn Hacker (French, GC/City) won the 2009 PEN Award for Poetry in Translation and the 2008 Robert Fagles Translation Prize for the bilingual edition Marie Etienne, King of a Hundred Horsemen (Roi des cent cavaliers) which was published by Farrar Strauss Giroux in 2008. (posted 8/09)
Anne Humpherys (English, Lehman) was an associate editor for The Dictionary of Nineteenth-century Journalism (The British Library, 2009), a large-scale reference work that covers the 19th century journalism in England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. She also published "The Three of Them: The Scene of Divorce in the 19th-century Novel," in Karl Leydecker, ed., *After Intimacy* ( Peter Lang, 2008): 113-134; and "Putting Women in the Boat: The Idler and Jerome K. Jerome," in Laurel Brake and Marysa deMoor, eds., *The Lure of Illutration in the Nineteenth Century: Picture and Press* (Palgrave, 2009). (posted 8/26/09)
Andrei Jitianu (Biochemistry, Chemistry, Lehman) published, with Lisa C. Klein, “Sol-Gel Hybrids for Electronic, Applications: Hermetic Coatings for Microelectronics, and Energy Storage,” a chapter in Lhadi Merhari, ed. Hybrid Nanocomposites for Nanotechnology: Electronic, Optical, Magnetic and Biomedical Applications, pp. 429-456 LOC: Springer, 2009. (posted 8/26/09)
Charles Kadushin (Psychology, Sociology, GC, emeritus) was honored with the Marshall Sklare Award for distinguished professional achievement from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. (posted 8/09)
Thomas G. Karis (Political Science, GC, emeritus) received an honorary doctorate of humane letters from the University of South Africa in Pretoria in recognition of his scholarship on South Africa. (posted 8/09)
Philip Kasinitz (Sociology, GC/Hunter) and John H. Mollenkopf (Political Science, Sociology, GC, Distinguished Professor; Director, Center for Urban Research) co-authored Inheriting the City: The Children of Immigrants Come of Age (Russell Sage Foundation; Harvard University Press, 2008) which won the 2009 Thomas & Znaniecki Award for best book of the year from the International Migration Section of the American Sociological Association. (posted 8/09)
Mahesh K. Lakshman (Chemistry, GC/City): The cover of Organic and Bimolecular Chemistry, the Royal Society of Chemistry’s magazine, featured a paper by Mahesh K. Kakshman and Josh Frank about their groundbreaking research: “A simple method for C-6 modification of guanine nucleosides.” (posted 8/09)
Setha Low (Anthropology, Environmental Psychology, Geography, Women’s Studies, GC) led Researching the Built Environment: Spatial Methods and Public Practices, one of the “Collaborative Ventures” summer workshops held in June 2009 at the Center for the Advanced Study of Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. (posted 8/09)
David S. Reynolds (English, GC, Distinguished Professor) is the author of Waking Giant: America in the Age of Jackson (Harper/Harper Collins, 2009), which was named as one of New York Times’s 100 Notable Books of 2008 and as one of The Washington Post’s Best Books of 2008. (posted 8/09)
Susan Saegert (Environmental Psychology, GC) received the 2009 Committee on Socioeconomic Status Award for Distinguished Leadership at the American Psychological Association’s annual convention, held in Toronto. (posted 8/09)
Brian Schwartz (Physics, GC) directs Science & the Arts at the Graduate Center, which hosted the May event “Artists and Science Writers—Finding Common Ground” and was reviewed by Curtis Brainard of The Columbia Journalism Review who declared it “a fascinating exploration about how journalists, a playwright, a visual artist, and a dance choreographer are trying to better understand, communicate, and ‘humanize’ science. (posted 8/09)”
Pamela Sheingorn (Theatre, GC/Baruch, emeritus) will be honored by a one-day interdisciplinary, symposium, Liminal Spaces, hosted by the Index of Christian Art at Princeton University, which will highlight work that explores “in-between” spaces, those areas between text/image/reader/viewer, performance/spectator, and medieval/modern. The conference, which was organized by Elina Gertsman and Jill Stevenson, and co-sponsored by theGraduate Center, will be held on October 30, 2009, at Princeton University. Full program and registration details are available through the “Conferences” link on the Index of Christian Art Web site at: http://ica.Princeton.edu. (posted 8/09)
John Torpey (Sociology, GC) has his essay "Alexis de Tocqueville" published in a special issue of Journal of Classical Sociology, with contributions by Bryan S. Turner, Stephen Mennell, Stephen Kalberg, Richard Swedberg, et al. Vol. 9:1 (February 2009). (posted 8/26/09)
Deborah J. Walder (Psychology, Brooklyn) published with Mittal, V., Trotman, H., McMillan, A.L., and Walker, E.F. (2008), "Neurocognition and conversion to psychosis in adolescents at high risk," Schizophrenia Research 101 (1-3): 161-68; and, with Mittal, V.A., Sacazawa, M., Willhite, R., and Walker, E.F. (2008), "Prenatal exposure to viral infection and conversion among adolescents at high risk for psychotic disorders,"Schizophrenia Research 99 (1-3): 375-76. (posted 8/26/09)
Thomas G. Weiss (Presidential Professor of Political Science at the GC and director of the Bunche Institute): Bunche Institute Book in UN Spotlight. The United Nations Intellectual History Project, based at the Graduate Center’s Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies, has over the last decade scrutinized the UN’s sixty-five-year history to identify ideas that have proven crucial to improving the quality of life on the planet. As Washington resumes a leadership role in the world organization, successful ideas point the way to the future. They are recorded in UN Ideas That Changed the World (Indiana University Press, 2009), the project’s capstone volume in a series of seventeen books, which has introduction foreword by former UN secretary-general and Nobel laureate Kofi Annan. The book will be launched at the United Nations on September 14, 2009. Participants will include the three co-authors and project co-directors, Sir Richard Jolly, Dr. Louis Emmerij, and Thomas G. Weiss (Presidential Professor of Political Science at the GC and director of the Bunche Institute); UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon; UNDP Administrator Helen Clark, former prime minister of New Zealand; and Columbia University Professor José Antonio Ocampo, former UN under-secretary-general for economic and social affairs. (posted 8/09)
May 2009
Mimi Abramovitz (Social Welfare, Bertha Capen Reynolds Professor, Hunter), a correspondent for Women’s eNews, wrote two commentaries for the site: Female Workers Can Jolt Economy; Look at Japan (2/9/09) and Women Need to Know Their New Jobless Benefits (3/24/09). She has also spoken at several recent events. She presented "The Fair Hearing: Keeping Women on Welfare in College," on March 24, 2009, at the Symposium on Women, Welfare Reform, and Access to Higher Education, Wolfe Institute, Brooklyn College. Dr. Abramovitz was also a panelist for “Eliminating Gender Bias in the Safety Net,” April 2, 2009, at a forum on Women's Economic Equality: The Next Frontier in Women's Rights, held by Legal Momentum (formerly the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund). She also participated on a panel on “The Economics Of Identity: How Poverty Is Gendered and Raced,” April 7, 2009, held by New York University Wagner School of Public Policy and the Silver School of Social Work at New York University. (posted 5/09)
Paul Attewell (Sociology, Urban Education, GC) and David Lavin (Sociology, Lehman) received the 2009 Outstanding Book Award from the American Educational Research Association for Passing the Torch: Does Higher Education for the Disadvantaged Pay Off Across the Generations? (Russell Sage Foundation). This is the second major award that Attewell and Lavin have received for their landmark study—they were also co-recipients of the prestigious Grawemeyer Award for 2008 in the category of education. Their research revealed that the benefits of providing disadvantaged students, particularly women, with wider access to higher education are startling when measured over the course of a lifetime. The authors found that over a thirty-year period, surveyed women admitted to City University of New York in the early 1970s ultimately achieved a seventy percent college graduation rate, earned an annual average of $7,525 more than they otherwise would have, and passed the benefits of their educational experience on to their children. For more information, visit http://www.gc.cuny.edu/press_information/current_releases/2007/june/Ed_access.htm. (posted 5/09)
Mary Ann Caws (French, English, Comparative Literature, GC, Distinguished Professor) has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Election to the Academy is considered one of the highest honors in the United States. In the past, the Academy has elected as fellows and foreign honorary members the finest minds and most influential leaders from each generation, including George Washington and Benjamin Franklin in the eighteenth century, Daniel Webster and Ralph Waldo Emerson in the nineteenth, and Albert Einstein and Winston Churchill in the twentieth. Caws has written or edited more than sixty books on a wide variety of topics in twentieth-century avant-garde literature and art, including surrealism, the poets René Char and André Breton, Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury group, and artists Robert Motherwell, Joseph Cornell, and Pablo Picasso. (posted 5/09)
Cynthia Fuchs Epstein (Sociology. GC, Distinguished Professor) is president of the American Sociological Association. She will chair a social science panel of the European Research Commission, a committee of the EU. Additionally, she spoke at a conference on women’s movements at the University of Bretagne Occidental, on April 3, 2009. A journal based there, Amnis: Revue de Civilisation Contemporaine de l‘Université de Bretagne Occidentale, has just published her article, “The Focus of Feminism: Challenging the Myths About the U.S. Women’s Movement.” Finally, Dr. Epstein was the keynote speaker at the international “After the J.D.” conference at Harvard University Law School, May 1-2, 2009. (posted 5/09)
David Harvey (Anthropology, Earth and Environmental Sciences, History, GC. Distinguished Professor) is one of the twenty most frequently-cited authors in academia, according to a list published by Times Higher Education. The list also includes Michel Foucault, Sigmund Freud, and Karl Marx. (posted 5/09)
Kevin Murphy (Art History, GC) was awarded a Chester Dale Fellowship by the Metropolitan Museum of Art for 2009-10. He will be writing a book on Lafayette’s place in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century debates on French and American monuments to republican revolution. (posted 5/09
Setsuko Matsunaga Nishi (Sociology, Brooklyn, Emeritus) has received an honor from the Japanese government. For her lifelong contributions to the promotion of civil rights, sociological study, and the well-being of Japanese-Americans, she was awarded the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon. Among her many accomplishments, Dr. Nishi delivered more than 350 speeches in the Midwest during World War II to prepare communities for the resettlement of Japanese Americans from incarceration camps. She is also cofounder of the Asian American Federation. (posted 5/09
Jonathan Pieslak (Music, City) received attention from the New York Post and WNYC (May 21, 2009) for his new book, Sound Targets: American Soldiers and Music in the Iraq War (Indiana University Press, 2009). The book discusses the music-listening habits of American soldiers stationed in Iraq. (posted 5/09)
Antoni Piza (Director of the Foundation for Iberian Music, Barry S. Brook Center for Music Research and Documentation, GC) received the 2007 Norman Neuerburg Award for outstanding writing in early California history from the Historical Society of Southern California. The prize was for his edited volume, J.B. Sancho: Pioneer Composer of California (Palma de Mallorca: Universitat de les Illes Balears, 2007). Juan Bautista Sancho (1772 or 1776–1830), the book’s subject, brought some of the first samples of eighteenth-century European music to California, including sacred plain chant, sacred polyphony, and opera excerpts and instrumental arrangements with basso continuo. Sancho also co-wrote a curious Interrogatorio, reporting on the conditions of the natives, their social customs, their local flora, and even their music. (posted 5/09)
Gregory Rabassa (Comparative Literature, Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian Literatures and Languages, Queens. Distinguished Professor) received the Thornton Wilder Prize for Translation from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. The award grants $20,000 to a practitioner, scholar, or patron who has made a significant contribution to the art of literary translation. Rabassa has translated the work of many Latin American authors into English, and he is perhaps best known for his translation of Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s One Hundred Years of Solitude. (posted 5/09)
Donald Robotham (Anthropology, GC) spoke at the Public Forum on the Carribbean Agenda for the Summit of the Americas in New Kingston, Jamaica, on March 25. The purpose of the forum was to formulate clear regional positions for the fifth Summit of the Americas, which was held in Trinidad, April 17-19. (posted 5/09)
Brian Schwartz (Vice President for Research and Sponsored Programs, Physics, GC) received the 2009 Andrew W. Gemant Award from the American Institute of Physics. The citation honors Schwartz for “ingenious creativity in engaging the public with the history and cultural aspects of physics and for inventing ways to celebrate physics through such varied vehicles as plays, musicals, exhibitions, street fairs, cabaret, posters, and operas.” Dr. Schwartz has been making science accessible to younger students with the help of a $600,000 National Science Foundation grant, entitled “Science as Performance, a Proactive Strategy to Communicate and Educate Through Theatre, Music and Dance.” (See http://web.gc.cuny.edu/sciart.) The Gemant award carries a $5,000 cash prize, an invitation to deliver a public lecture, and a $3,000 grant to an academic institution selected by the winner to advance the public communication of physics. Previous winners include Stephen Hawking, Alan Lightman, and Nobel Laureate Steven Weinberg. (posted 5/09)
Sharon Zukin (Sociology, Brooklyn, Broeklundian Professor) was interviewed on Channel 2 for a story about consumers’ changing attitudes, April 23, 2009. (posted 5/09)
March 2009
Richard Alba (Sociology, GC, Distinguished Professor) received the 2009 Merit Award from the Eastern Sociological Society, the largest of the regional associations of sociologists. Professor Alba served the Eastern Sociological Society as President from 1997–98 and also in various capacities from presenter to committee member.His lifetime academic contributions to sociology place him among the most distinguished scholars in the profession. He has published numerous books and articles and garnered prestigious grants. His ideas have advanced the thinking and research in the areas of international migration, race, and ethnicity and he has influenced a generation of sociologists. (posted 5/09)
Meena Alexander (English, Hunter and GC, Distinguished Professor) was named a 2008 Guggenheim Fellow in Poetry. During her months of travel and writing she also gave readings. In October she read her new poetry at the Camargo Foundation in Cassis, France. In December in India, she read at Delhi’s Jamia Millia Islamia University, at the University of Allahabad, and at the Chennai Poetry Festival. She also read at the PEN All-India Center, Bombay. In February she gave a reading at Barnard Women Poets, New York. In March she will give a keynote presentation and reading at the University of Zaragoza, Spain at the conference on Ethics and Trauma in Contemporary Narratives. (posted 3/09)
Paul Attewell (Sociology and Urban Education, GC) and David Lavin (Educational Psychology and Sociology, GC) were named co-recipients of the prestigious Grawemeyer Award for 2008 in the category of Education. (See article in 365 Fifth, February 2009 issue.)
Juan Battle (Sociology, GC) is the 2009 Fulbright Distinguished Chair of Gender Studies at the University of Klagenfurt, Austria, and will present a series of lectures in academic venues and participate in workshops in the Interfaculty Research Network on "Culture and Conflict." (posted 5/09)
Mark Blasius (Political Science, LaGuardia and GC, emeritus) received a Fulbright Senior Specialist Award to serve as Visiting Professor in the Center for International Studies of the University of the Philippines, Diliman during the spring 2008 semester. While there, he was developing the component of a new global studies program about the politics of gender and sexuality, as well as teaching it. (posted 5/09)
Raquel Chang-Rodríguez (Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian Literatures and Languages, CCNY-GC, Distinguished Professor) has been elected Académica Correspondiente of the Peruvian Academy of the Spanish Language in recognition of her distinguished contributions to studying the literature and culture of Peru. She published the following book chapters: La Florida del Inca: vínculos novohispanos y proyección americana.” Nuevas lecturas de “La Florida del Inca.” Ed. Carmen de Mora y Antonio Garrido Aranda. Madrid/Frankfurt: Iberoamericana/Vervuert: 2008, pp. 67–82; and “Diálogos poéticos transatlánticos.” Ed. Pedro Ruiz Pérez. Cánones críticos en la poesía de los Siglos de Oro. Madrid: Academia del Hispanismo, 2008, pp. 291–309. She was invited to participate in an international congress sponsored by the University of Würzburg (24–27 September, 2009) Würzburg, Germany) on Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, where she presented a paper on “Vida y azar en la Relación de la descendencia de Garci Pérez de Vargas (1596).” Professor Chang-Rodríguez delivered the keynote speech on “Seeing and Believing in Colonial Spanish America” at the 4th Annual Graduate Student Symposium on Hispanic Literature, Penn State University, 24 October 2008, and offered invited lectures at the University of Athens, Greece, and at the CCNY Center for Worker Education in the context of the Distinguished Professor, Distinguished Lecturer, and Named Chair Lecture Series. The Mex-Am Cultural Foundation Inc. awarded Professor Chang-Rodríguez a grant to promote Mexican literature and culture. She was recently elected to the presidency of the “Centro de Estudios Literarios Latinoamericanos Antonio Cornejo Polar,” in Lima, Peru. (posted 5/09)
Patricia Clough (Sociology, Queens) has been named president-elect of the Cultural Studies Association and co-chair of the Marxist section of the American Sociological Association. (posted 5/09)
Mitchell Cohen (Political Science, GC and Baruch) was interviewed on WCBS TV Newson February 20, 2009, to discuss the recent Israeli elections; he gave a talk on “Richard Wagner and Politics” at the New York Institute for the Humanities on February 6, 2009; and a guest lecture on “The American President” at the University of Rouen, France, on January 7. Professor Cohen'sarticle “Moral Burdens: Iraq and the Ghosts of 1956” appeared in World Affairs (Winter 2009), and his essay "The Other George (Lichtheim on Imperialism)" in Dissent (Winter 2009). He wrote on “Obama's Urgent Need for Success” in The Huffington Post on January 25, 2009. Professor Cohen was also invited to join the “Comité Scientifique” in organizing an international Fall 2009 colloquium on the work of Lucien Goldmann, the Romanian-French philosopher of culture, at the University of Caen, France. (posted 5/09)
Cynthia Fuchs Epstein (Sociology, GC, Distinguished Professor) gave the keynote address in October at the Espana En El Discurso de la Postmodernidad conference at the University of Seville, Spain. (posted 5/09)
Frances Degen Horowitz (Psychology, GC, and President Emerita), with Dona J. Matthews and Rena F. Subotnik, co-edited The Development of Giftedness and Talent Across the Life Span” (American Psychological Association, 2009); she also wrote the introductory chapter, “Introduction: A Developmental Understanding of Giftedness and Talent,” and co-wrote the concluding chapter “A Developmental Perspective on Giftedness and Talent: Implications for Research, Policy, and Practice,” with her co-editors. (posted 5/09)
Philip Kasinitz (Sociology, Hunter/GC) and John H. Mollenkopf (Political Science, Sociology, GC, Distinguished Professor; Director, Center for Urban Research) won the 2009 Mirra Komarovsky Award from the Eastern Sociological Society (ESS) for their book, Inheriting the City: The Children of Immigrants Come of Age (Russell Sage/Harvard University Press, 2008), which they co-authored with Mary C. Waters (Harvard) and Jennifer Holdaway (SSRC). The prize will be presented at the annual meeting of ESS on March 21, 2009, in Baltimore. One of the members of the awards committee described the book as "a valentine to New York City," and all were impressed with its comparative design, multiple methods, and clear prose. (posted 5/09)
Hugo M. Kaufmann (European Union Studies Center and Economics) was guest speaker on January 27, 2008, at the Seton Hall Law School’s European Union Law seminar. He spoke on “The Euro at Ten: Political and Economic Issues.” (posted 5/09)
Susan Kleiman (Nursing Science, Lehman and GC) received the 2008 Book of the Year Award from the American Journal of Nursing, the world’s oldest and largest-circulation nursing journal, for her book Human Centered Nursing: The Foundation of Quality Care. Prof. Kleiman has worked in the nursing field for thirty years and joined the Lehman faculty in 2001. She has written widely on the topic of humanistic nursing and developed the Humanistic Teaching Method, through which her students learn to apply ethically grounded principles in their scholarship. Prof. Kleiman founded the International Institute for Human Centered Caring, which publishes courses of study, articles, and other materials that explain aspects of this approach to nursing care as well as its implementation. She received her B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. degrees from Adelphi University. (posted 5/09)
Kathleen D. McCarthy (History, GC, and Director, Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society) gave the keynote address at “The State of Philanthropy in Africa” conference held in conjunction with the 8th international meeting of the International Society for Third Sector Research at the University of Barcelona, Spain, in July 2008.
Loraine K. Obler (Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, GC, Distinguished Professor) was awarded a Visiting Scholar position to the European Masters in Clinical Linguistics program at Potsdam University in Germany in summer 2008 and a Fulbright Senior Specialist award to Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan, Israel, this winter. (posted 5/09)
Paul Ritterband (Sociology, GC, emeritus), former director of the Center for Jewish Studies, received the 2008 Marshal Sklare Award from the Association for the Social Scientific Study of Jewry at the December, 2008 meeting of the Association for Jewish Studies in Washington, D.C. He was honored for his wide-ranging research on topics related to Jewish family, fertility, intermarriage, Jewish education, employment, migration, philanthropy, and Jewish ethnic and religious identity. Ritterband is currently affiliated with the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the Center for the Study of the United States at Haifa University in Israel. (posted 5/09)
William Shank (Mina Rees
Library, emeritus) and Liv I. Shank, Foreign
Language Institute (adjunct, retired), were the subjects of a
chapter in Audun Tjomsland's En personlig reise i Amerika
fra Kennedy til Obama [A personal journey in America from
Kennedy till Obama] published in Oslo in 2008. The chapter is
titled "Liv Ingebjørg og Bill Shank: – Ikke
i 1960-årene, men nå!" [Not in the 1960s, but
now!] (posted 5/09)
January 2009
Jock Young (Sociology, Criminal Justice, John Jay, Distinguished Professor) gave a series of six lectures during a recent visit to Argentina. He was the introductory plenary speaker at the international seminar on Rethinking the Role of the State in Crime Pevention hosted by the Federal Secretariat of Public Safety; addressed a meeting of the Social Cabinet of the Province of Santa Fe on policies of social inclusion in the field of crime control; gave talks at the law departments of the Universities of Buenos Airies and Rosario on his recent book The Vertigo of Late Modernity; and delivered an account of his research on multiagency crime prevention to the UN Development Programme on local initiatives in this area and a talk to the alumni of the British Government's Chevening Scholarship Programme at the Ambassadors's residence in Buenos Airies. He had productive meetings with the National Director of Criminal Policy and the director of the UN Programme in terms of future research on crime and social exclusion. (posted 1-09)
December 2008
Yiannis Andreopoulos (Engineering, GC and City, Michael Pope Professor of Energy Research), together with alumni Savvas Xanthos (Mechanical Engineering, 2004), Juan Agui (Mechanical Engineering, 1998), and Minwei Gong (Mechanical Engineering 2006), won the prestigious Charles Sharpe Beecher Prize awarded to the best paper on aerospace by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in Great Britain. The research paper describes the development of a new experimental technique to measure vorticity in turbulent flows--a quantity characterizing the amount of rotation or spinning in air which is responsible for disturbing airplane flights or causing transport of pollutants in the atmosphere. The prize was bestowed on Prof. Andreopoulos on October 20, 2008, in London, during the annual meeting of the Institution. (posted 12-08)
Talal Asad (Anthropology, GC, Distinguished Professor) lectured on "Thinking About Religion, Belief, and Politics" at Princeton University on December 4, 2008. The talk was part of the Inaugural Danforth Lecture Series. Asad, a scholar of vast interdisciplinary reach and influence, has written critically important reflections on the shaping of religion and secularism in the modern West, especially as those constructs were formed through encounters with Islam. His books include On Suicide Bombing (Columbia University Press, 2007), Formations of the Secular (Stanford University Press, 2003), and Genealogies of Religion (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993).
Paul Attewell (Sociology and Urban Education, GC) and David Lavin (Educational Psychology and Sociology, GC) were named co-recipients of the prestigious Grawemeyer Award for 2008 in the category of Education. Professors Attewell and Lavin will share the $200,000 prize that comes with the award, which recognizes a landmark study they co-authored showing the long-term benefits of providing disadvantaged women with access to higher education. Given by the University of Louisville, the Grawemeyer Award honors accomplishments that “help make the world a better place” in the fields of education, political science, music composition, religion, and psychology. It was established in 1984 by University of Louisville alumnus and philanthropist H. Charles Grawemeyer. The complete findings were reported as a book, Passing the Torch: Does Higher Education for the Disadvantaged Pay Off Across the Generations? published by the Russell Sage Foundation in April 2007. The authors were assisted in the research by recent doctoral graduates Thurston Domina and Tania Levy. Further information can be found at: http://www.gc.cuny.edu/press_information/current_releases/2007/june/Ed_access.htm.
Bernard E. Brown (Political Science, GC; Emeritus) presented his latest book, Tout ce que vous avez toujours voulu savoir sur les élections américaines (Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About American Elections) (Paris: Editions Autrement, 2008) to a symposium on the book at a leading French political research think tank (Centre d’Etudes de la Vie Politique Française—CEVIPOF) in September 2008. Attended by about thirty researchers and specialists, the symposium was chaired by the Director, Pascal Perrineau; the discussant was the distinguished political scientist and commentator, Olivier Duhamel. Professor Brown was also interviewed about the book, or talked about the American elections, on five radio networks (France Culture, France Inter, Radio Europe I, Radio Suisse Romande, and Radio France Catholique), and on three television programs (France 24); gave talks about the book in Reims (attended by four hundred people) and various French bookstores; and was interviewed for a blog posted on the site of Le Monde Affaires. The book was reviewed in Le Monde under the heading, “Le livre du jour” (the book of the day). He participated as well in a forum on the American elections at the Sorbonne. Amazon France listed his book upon publication as its number one best seller in the category of “enjeux politiques” (political issues) where it remained for several months; it continued to be listed in the top ten after the elections.
Mary Ann Caws (English, French, Comparative Literature, GC, Distinguished Professor) published “Picasso’s Weeping Woman,” Art Quarterly (U.K.) (Winter, 2008) and two books: Provencal Cooking: Savoring the Simple Life in France (Pegasus Books, 2008) and Salvador Dali (Critical Lives: London: Reaktion Books, 2008). The book on Provencal cooking had a two-page spread in WWD Scoop (11/24/2008). She also published, with Susan Greenberg Fisher, Jennifer R. Gross, and Patricia Leighten, Picasso and the Allure of Language (Yale University Art Gallery, 2009); and on January 29, 2009, she will have a public conversation in the Yale Art Gallery with the Picasso biographer John Richardson to celebrate the book. Other upcoming talks include “LittératureMonde Manifesto: Tradition, Translation, and Trip,” University of Southern Florida, Tallahassee, February 16, 2009; and “Teaching Bloomsbury,” Duke University, February 28, 2009. (posted 1-09)
L. Poundie Burstein (Music, Hunter), a Graduate Center alumnus, was awarded the Society for Music Theory's Outstanding Publication Award for his recent article “The Off-Tonic Return in Beethoven's Op. 58 and Other Works,” in Music Analysis (2005).
Cynthia Fuchs Epstein (Sociology, GC, Distinguished Professor) gave the keynote address in October at the Espana En El Discurso de la Postmodernidad conference at the University of Seville in Spain. She also gave several papers in 2008: “Issue Entrepreneurs, Charisma: Charismatic Moments and the Shaping of Pro Bono Law in Large Firms” at the University of Buffalo Law School; “The Intersection of History and Biography in a Woman’s Sociological Career” at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association; and “Culture and Stratification” at a Harvard mini-conference on cultural sociology.
Latif Jiji (Engineering/Mechanical, City College, Herbert M. Kayser Professor) received the national 2008 Ralph Coats Roe Award from the American Society for Engineering Division, which offers a $10,000 stipend annually to an exemplary teacher who brings distinction to the profession.
William Kornblum (Sociology, GC) was awarded the 2008–09 Robin L. Williams, Jr. Lectureship for the Eastern Sociological Society (ESS). Professor Kornblum has spent more than thirty years at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, traversing the line between academia and the world of public policy and applying his sociological insights to community and labor issues. He has spent years studying parts of New York, from its parks to its waterways, on behalf of the city’s planners. He has done the same for the U.S. Department of the Interior and the US Department of Education. Some of this research has focused on land use patterns, while other projects focus on the human/technology interface, particularly the Internet among kids. Since 1997, he has chaired the board of the Grand Central Neighborhood Agency, an agency serving the homeless in midtown Manhattan. Kornblum’s multi-faceted work uses sociology to tackle urban problems and has influenced hundreds of his students to become similarly engaged in their communities. For his work in these varied areas, he was recently awarded the 2005 Distinguished Career Award for the Practice of Sociology by the American Sociological Association.
Michael Meagher (Urban Education, Brooklyn) presented a paper, “Mathematics Instruction in High Needs NYC Middle Schools,” in July at the Thirtieth Annual Meeting of the North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education and Thirty-Third Meeting of the International Group for Psychology of Mathematics Education in Morelia, Mexico. In September, he presented “A Trinomial Factoring Investigation with Pre-Service Teachers” at the Ninth International Technology and Its Integration in Mathematics Education Conference in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Stephen Pekar (Earth and Environmental Sciences, Queens) was one of twenty-six scientists chosen by the Ocean Drilling Program to participate in an oceanic research expedition to Antarctica in 2009. In fall 2008, he led an Antarctica expedition, entitled “The Offshore New Harbor Seismic and Gravity Survey,” funded by the National Science Foundation and endorsed by the International Polar Year. Also, the ONH Project is part of ANDRILL, a multinational collaboration that aims to recover stratigraphic records from the Antarctic margin using drilling technology. The goal of this year’s expedition was to seismically image the Greenhouse to Icehouse World transition (45–25 million years ago) sediments that lie offshore of East Antarctica to determine the geological history of this region and to find the optimal site to drill these sediments. During this transition period Earth was significantly warmer than today and Antarctica contained an oscillating, advancing and retreating ice sheet and vegetation along the coastline. Additionally CO2 in the atmosphere was as high during this period as that predicted for this century, making it a great analogue for what may happen in our near future.
David S. Reynolds (English, GC, Distinguished Professor) received a very favorable review by Jay Wink for his new book, Waking Giant: America in the Age of Jackson (Harper/ HarperCollins, 2008), in the New York Times Book Review, Sunday, October 26, 2008; and another favorable review in the New York Times on November 3, 2008, by John Steel Gordon.
Bruce Saylor (Music, Queens) won a 2008–09 ASCAPLUS Award from the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers. Awards are granted by an independent panel and are based upon the unique prestige value of each writer’s catalog of original compositions, as well as recent performances in areas not surveyed by the Society. Professor Saylor is also an alumnus of the doctoral program in music at the Graduate Center.
Anna Schwartz (Economics, GC, Emerita) was cited in an article, “Tearing into the Fed and Treasury Plans,” by Jack Willoughby in Barron’s on October 27 for her criticism of the U.S. government’s bailout plan. With Nobel laureate Milton Friedman she coauthored A Monetary History of the United States: 1867-1960 (Princeton, 1971). Since 1941 she has worked as an economist for the National Bureau of Economic Research at its Graduate Center office. She is a past president of the Western Economic Association.
Vidette Todaro-Franceschi (Nursing Science, Hunter) has been accepted as a Visiting Scholar at the Hastings Center for Bioethical Research in 2009, where she will be exploring health professional codes of ethics as they relate to professional education. She was also invited to participate in the 20th Anniversary Oxford Roundtable on Ethics: The Convolution of Contemporary Values, to be held March 2009 at Oxford University, United Kingdom. Invitations are limited to thirty-five to forty scholars from around the world. Invitees are determined based on several criteria, among which are nominations by earlier attendees, their presentations and publications, the courses they teach, and their professional involvement in a relevant area of interest. Past presenters/participants include many noteworthy individuals, among them, Chancellor Goldstein and Chancellor King (SUNY). While a delegate there, she will be presenting a peer-reviewed paper entitled: "Healthy Aging, Unhealthy Dying: Talk about Convolution of Contemporary Values!" She will be bringing a guest to attend this renowned affair: Alsacia Pasci, doctoral student in nursing science, who is also a nursing faculty member at Lehman College.
November 2008
Ervand Abrahamian (History, Baruch; Distinguished Professor) published A History of Modern Iran (Cambridge University Press, 2008); and “Who’s in Charge?” (in Iran), London Review of Books, November 6, 2008.
Mimi Abramovitz (Social Welfare, Hunter) was interviewed by KPFK radio ( Los Angeles) on October 3, 2008, for a program called "Dissecting the VP Debate” on Uprising Radio.
Zaghloul
Ahmed (Physical Therapy, Staten Island) received
$307,000 from the New York State Department of Health,
Wadsworth Center Spinal Cord Injury Research Board (CART
Research Grant) for his research looking at the combined
effects of magnetic stimulation and acrobatic exercise
in spinal cord injury using the mouse model.
Harriet Alonso (History, City) was invited to present on a seminar on “Building a Feminist-Pacifist Peace Movement: The early years” at the international seminar in “Mujeres y Paz. Teoría y Prácticas de una Cultura de Paz” at the University of Granada, Spain, in November. Professor Alonso is Chair, Department of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, The City College Center for Worker Education.
Christa Altenstetter (Political Science, GC and Queens) was a speaker at a meeting of the Northern Regional Health Authority in Porto, Portugal, on June 30, 2008. In her presentation she discussed how to implement a communication strategy designed to improve the effectiveness of healthcare reform on primary health care in the region. In addition, she presented initial findings on access to medical technologies—which are part of her current research project Bridging International and National Regulatory Policymaking on Medical Technologies: A Comparison of the European Union, Japan, and the United States of America—at the regional meeting of IPSA Research Committee 25 Comparative Health Policy within the International Political Science Association in The Hague, in early November, 2008.
Ronnie
Ancona (Classics, Hunter) was quoted in the
Washington Post concerning the College Board's plans
to cancel or cut down Advanced Placement exams in Italian,
French, Latin, and computer science after next year;
and in the Staten Island Advance about Latin’s
undergoing a resurgence among students in NYC. Her
forthcoming publications include: "Horace and
The Odes," an introduction
to The Odes of Horace (Johns Hopkins University Press,
2008); and (as coauthor), Horace:
A Legamus Transitional Reader (Bolchazy-Carducci, 2008).
Talal Asad (Anthropology, GC; Distinguished Professor)
gave the David Schneider Annual Lecture at the annual
meeting of the Society for Cultural Anthropology, American
Anthropological Association, in May 2008. He also gave
the Joseph Astman Distinguished Scholar Lecture at Hofstra
University in October 2007.
Simon Baatz (History, John Jay) gave the Lawrence J. Gutter Literary Lecture at North Shore Congregation Israel in Glencoe, Illinois in November 2008. His lecture was on the subject of his most recent book, For the Thrill of It: Leopold, Loeb and the Murder that Shocked Chicago (Harper Collins, 2008).
David J.
Bearison (Psychology and Educational Psychology,
GC) has been named a fellow and visiting scholar at the
Hastings Center, a prominent think tank that promotes
discussion of ethical issues in medicine and the life
sciences.
Randolph
L. Braham (Sociology, GC; Distinguished Professor
Emeritus and Director, Rosenthal Institute for Holocaust
Studies) was awarded the Abraham Lincoln Award by the
American Hungarian Foundation in September, 2008. This
award recognizes outstanding and eminent contributions
of persons of Hungarian background and ancestry who have
contributed to American life through their scholarly
work, artistic achievement, commerce, and the sciences,
and who have enhanced human understanding.
Patricia Clough (Sociology, Queens) has been named President Elect of the Cultural Studies Association and Co-Chair of the Marxist Section of the American Sociological Association.
Mitchell
Cohen (Political Science, Baruch), in June,
presented papers at Princeton’s Institute for Advanced
Studies and at the University of Leipzig, Germany. Recent
publications include "Gandhi's Burden and Ours," Dissent (Summer 2008), and "To the Dresden Barricades: The
Genesis of Richard Wagner's Political Ideas" in
Cambridge Companion to Wagner (Cambridge University Press,
2008).
Forrest
D. Colburn (Political Science, Lehman), in July
2008, lectured on the application of game theory to the
study of politics at the Adolfo Ibáñez
University in Santiago, Chile, and presented his most
recent book, Varieties of Liberalism
in Central America, in El Salvador and Guatemala.
John Patrick Diggins (History, GC, Distinguished Professor) published “The Decline of Presidential Ethics” in The Chronicle Review (November 7, 2008).
Cynthia Fuchs Epstein (Sociology, GC, Distinguished Professor) gave the keynote address, “Gender Regimes and Knowledge Politics,” at a conference Espana En El Discurso de la Postmodernidad, University of Seville, Spain, in October 2008. She also presented several papers in 2008: in August, “The Intersection of History and Biography in a Woman’s Sociological Career” at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, and “Culture and Stratification” at a miniconference on Cultural Sociology at Harvard University; and in April: “Issues Entrepreneurs , Charisma: Charismatic Moments and the Shaping of Pro Bono Law in Large Firms,” at a conference on Private Lawyers and the Public Interest: The Evolving Role of Pro Bono in the Legal Profession, University of Buffalo Law School.
Beverly Falk (Urban Education, City) published Teaching the Way Children Learn (Teachers College Press, 2009). As an invited speaker, she gave a talk entitled "Teaching the Way Children Learn: Challenges for Urban Schools and Schooling,” in October 2008 at the Edward Zigler Center in Child Development and Social Policy, Yale University. She was also the graduation speaker for the Teacher Education Program, Brandeis University, in July, 2008. Her talk was entitled "The Power of Questions: Teacher Learning through Research."
Michael Grossman (Business, Economics, GC), with co-authors Shin-Yi Chou and Inas Rashad, published “Fast-Food Restaurant Advertising on Television and Its Influence on Childhood Obesity,” Journal of Law and Economics 51:4 (November 2008): 599–618. Research for the paper was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDKD) awarded to the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). The three authors are affiliated with NBER.
Frances Degen Horowitz (Psychology, GC), President Emerita of the Graduate Center, co-edited a book The Development of Giftedness and Talent Across the Life Span (forthcoming with APA Books, January 2009). It was noted in an article “'Gifted' Label Said to Miss Dynamic Nature of Talent” by Christina A. Samuels in Education Week (October 15, 2008). This prompted an hour-long on-line chat with Dr. Horowitz and fellow editors on November 19, 2008.
Matt Huenerfauth (Computer Science, Queens), whose research
focuses on the design of computer technology for those
challenged in their hearing or with low levels of written-language
literacy, spoke at a Fall 2008 CUNY Psycholinguistics
Supper on the topic of “A linguistically motivated
model for speed and pausing in animations of American
Sign Language.”
Latif Jiji (Engineering/Mechanical, City, Herbert M. Kayser Professor) received the national 2008 Ralph Coats Roe Award from the American Society for Engineering Division, which offers a $10,000 stipend annually to an exemplary teacher who brings distinction to the profession.
Maria Knikou (Biology, Physical
Therapy, Staten Island) won a $1,500,000 grant from the
New York State Department of Health, Wadsworth Center
Spinal Cord Injury Research Board (CART Research Grant)
for her research investigating the mechanisms underlying
recovery after step training in spinal cord injury.
David Lavin (Educational Psychology and Sociology, GC) and Paul Attewell (Sociology and Urban Education, GC) were named co-recipients of the prestigious Grawemeyer Award for 2008 in the category of Education. Professors Attewell and Lavin will share the $200,000 prize that comes with the award, which recognizes a landmark study they co-authored showing the long-term benefits of providing disadvantaged women with access to higher education. Given by the University of Louisville, the Grawemeyer Award honors accomplishments that “help make the world a better place” in the fields of education, political science, music composition, religion, and psychology. It was established in 1984 by University of Louisville alumnus and philanthropist H. Charles Grawemeyer. The complete findings were reported as a book, Passing the Torch: Does Higher Education for the Disadvantaged Pay Off Across the Generations? published by the Russell Sage Foundation in April 2007. The authors were assisted in the research by recent doctoral graduates Thurston Domina and Tania Levy. Further information can be found at: http://www.gc.cuny.edu/press_information/current_releases/2007/june/Ed_access.htm.
Margaret Lunney (Nursing Science, Staten Island) published three articles in 2008, one in the Online Journal of Issues in Nursing and two in the International Journal of Nursing Terminologies and Classifications. In October, she gave the Keynote Address at a International conference in Switzerland.At the end of November 2008 she presented four papers at the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association (NANDA) International conference in Maimi, Florida.
Michael Meagher (Urban Education, Brooklyn) made the following presentations: in July, 2008, with A. Brantlinger, “Mathematics instruction in high needs NYC middle schools,” at the Thirtieth Annual Meeting of the North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education and Thirty-Third Meeting of the International Group for Psychology of Mathematics Education, Morelia, Mexico; and in September, 2008, with A. Koca and M.T. Edwards, the paper “A trinomial factoring investigation with pre-service teacher,” at the Ninth International Technology and its Integration in Mathematics Education Conference, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Cheryl Merzel (Public Health, Lehman) received a $6,000 PSC-CUNY 39 Research Award for a study on “Assessing Measures of Community Capacity for Health Promotion.” The study is a systematic review and synthesis of the multidisciplinary literature in order to identify existing methods for measuring community capacity, assess the scope and quality of these methods, and identify promising approaches for measuring community capacity that can be used in designing and evaluating public health programs.
June Nash (Anthropology, City; Distinguished Professor
Emerita) gave a keynote address at the Conferencia Magisterial
at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City in September,
2008, and gave a keynote speech at the University of
Buenos Aires, in an event honoring the memory of Esther
Hermitte, a social anthropologist who remained in Argentina
during the years of military rule.
Donna M. Nickitas (Nursing Science, Hunter), in May, 2008, was promoted to Professor of Nursing Science and was named editor of Nursing Economics, Journal for Health Care Leaders. She co-authored ,with Mary Ann Hogan, Reviews and Rationales: Nursing Leadership, Management, and Delegation (Prentice Hall Health, 2008); and she was appointed as a member to the Service-Learning Task Force, Sigma Theta Tau International Nursing Honor Society.
Loraine K. Obler (Linguistics, and Speech–Language–Hearing Sciences, GC, Distinguished Professor) was a visiting scholarat the European Masters in Clinical Linguistics programat Potsdam University from May through July, 2008.
Susan Opotow (Criminal Justice, Psychology/Social Personality,
John Jay) was awarded the Morton Deutsch Conflict Resolution
Award by the Society for the Study of Peace, Conflict,
and Violence (Division 48 of APA) at the 2008 American
Psychological Association Convention.
Eugenia
Paulicelli (Comparative Literature and Women's
Studies, Queens) published "Mapping the world: The
political geography of dress in Cesare Vecellio's costume
books,” The Italianist 28 (2008) and "Poetica
e Politica dello spazio nella scrittura di Clara Sereni,” Athanor 11 (2007–08). In Fall 2008 she presented papers
at conferences on fashion held at New York University’s
Galatin School and at University of Stockholm, Sweden.
Sophia
Perdikaris (Anthropology, Booklyn), an alumna
of the Graduate Center, was the keynote speaker at the
September 2008 Graduate Center Student Orientation. Read
more under Alumni Notes.
Antoni
Pizà (Director
of the Foundation for Iberian Music, Barry S. Brook Center
for Music Research and Documentation, GC), spoke in September
at the world premiere of Anna Cazurra’s Hesperia,
a work commissioned by the Foundation. The concert was
held at the Instituto Cervantes of New York and was broadcast
live on WQXR. He also spoke at the Barbican Centre, London, on the music of Manuel Falla and Maurice Ravel at the pre-concert lecture of the BBC Symphony Orchestra on October 24 2008.
Rishi S.
Raj (Engineering/Mechanical, City), Chair of
the Faculty Senate, was a guest of honor at the GND Engineering
College, in Punjab, India. He spoke about increasing
the efficiency of thermal power plants and was presented
with a special plaque for his contributions to the field
of energy and power generation. Professor Raj will help
the college establish a center directed towards searching
for alternative fuels, designing efficient power generation
systems, and generating a pollution-free environment.
Stanley Renshon (Political Science, Lehman) published “The Political Mind: A dangerous world” online in politico.com on November 4, 2008: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1108/15224.html.
David Reynolds (English, GC; Distinguished Professor)
was interviewed on the radio and had a book signing for
Waking Giant: American in the Age
of Jackson in early
fall, 2008. He also reviewed Phillip Dray's Capitol
Men in the New
York Times Book Review (Sunday, Sept. 28,
2008).
Diana Romero (Public Health, Hunter) received a five-year grant from the National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development (NIH) to conduct a mixed-methods research project entitled “Fertility and Disadvantage Among Low-Income Adults.” She also made several presentations at the annual American Public Health Association meeting in October featuring her research with the national Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing dataset, as well as the National Survey of Family Growth, on maternal and child health, and experience with social and economic hardship.
Margaret
Rosario (Psychology/Social Personality, City)
received the award for Distinguished Contribution to
Ethnic Minority Issues from APA's Division 44 (Society
for the Psychological Study of Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual
Issues).
Anna Schwartz (GC, National Bureau of Economic Research–NBER, adjunct professor emerita) was cited in an article, “Tearing into the Fed and Treasury Plans,” by Jack Willoughby in Barron’s on October 27, 2008, for her criticism of the U.S. government’s bailout plan. With Nobel laureate Milton Friedman she coauthored A Monetary History of the United States: 1867–1960 (Princeton, 1971). Since 1941 she has worked as an economist for the National Bureau of Economic Research (which has had offices at the Graduate Center since 1999) and is a past president of the Western Economic Association.
Arthur
K. Spears (Anthropology, Linguistics, City), in
his capacity as president of the Society for Pidgin and
Creole Linguistics (SPCL), presented a paper on "Haitian
Creole and Education in Haiti" at SPCL’s joint
meeting with the Society for Caribbean Linguistics in
Cayenne, French Guiana, in August 2008; and “Journal
d'informations," the public affairs TV program of
Réseau France Outre-Mer, Groupe France Télévisions,
interviewed him about Creole languages.
Vidette
Todaro-Franceschi (Nursing Science, Hunter), presented four papers in October 2008, one on compassion fatigue, and another on end of life care at the 3rd European Federation of Critical Care Nurses/27th Aniarti Congress, in Florence, Italy; and two papers on innovative teaching-learning strategies at the inaugural conference for the Global Alliance on Nursing Education and Scholarship held in Toronto, Canada. An invited paper “Clarifying the Enigma of Energy, Philosophically Speaking,” based on previous seminal work, was published in Nursing Science Quarterly. Professor Todaro-Franceschi also won a Hunter Schools of the Health Professions Seed Money
award to pursue research on end-of-life nursing
education. During the summer, she presented a paper at
the International Centre for Nursing Ethics conference,
Yale University, and her work was highlighted by the
American Association of Colleges of Nursing at the End-of-Life
Nursing Education Consortium 50th Celebration in Chicago.
Gloria
Waldman (Theatre, York, emerita), discussed her
discussed her forthcoming book on dramatist Papo Marquez,
which will be available Spring, 2009, and also organized
the panel "Charting Cultural Spaces: Anarchists,
dramatists, archivists—Luisa Capetillo, Papo Márquez,
Carmen Rivera, and Doña Angélica Meléndez" for
the 8th Conference of the Puerto Rican Studies Association,
Center for Advanced Studies of the Caribbean, in Old
San Juan in October.
John R.
Wallach (Political Science, Hunter) edited and
introduced a special issue of Journal
of Human Rights,
7:2 (April–June, 2008) entitled "Human Rights
in Conflict: Interdisciplinary Perspectives." The
articles grew out a 2006 NEH Summer Institute for College
and University Teachers held at the Graduate Center and
directed by Professor Wallach.
Jock Young (Sociology, Criminal Justice, John Jay; Distinguished
Professor) was plenary speaker at the Conference on Crime,
Culture, and Conflict, University of the South Bank,
London, in March 2008, and spoke about “The Distorting
Lens of Criminology”; he also spoke at the annual
meeting of the British Society of Criminology in July
2008. This year he published articles on moral panics,
the political economy of punishment, cultural criminology,
and the responses to 9/11.
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September 2008
Mimi Abramovitz (Social Welfare, Hunter
College School of Social Work), in September, was interviewed
on TV and radio about the Palin candidacy, was quoted
in the Houston Chronicle about double standards being
applied in response to the situations of unwed mothers,
was quoted in the Jerusalem Post regarding the impact
of the financial meltdown on human services in NYC, and
wrote a commentary on Wall Street and women for Women's
Enews.
Meena Alexander (English, Women’s Studies CP)
has been named a 2008 Fellow of the Guggenheim Foundation.
She will spend the fall at the Camargo Foundation in
Cassis, France, working on a new book of poems. On June
22, she read in Italy, at the Parma Poetry festival;
and on June 23, at the Florence Poetry Festival. “Flesh
Rose,” a cycle of her poems based on drawings by
children from Darfur, is published in the International
Literary Quarterly (www.interlitq.org ).
Jerry W. Carlson (French, Film Studies CP) produced
twelve episodes of the nationally distributed television
series Canapé, a monthly half-hour program covering
French cultural events in New York and around the U.S.
co-produced by CUNYTV and the French Cultural Services.
(See www.cuny.tv.) Professor Carlson received a 2007
Emmy nomination for his work as producer.
Raquel Chang-Rodríguez (Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian
Literatures and Languages) published “Poetry and
Prose Literature,“ a chapter in Vol. 1 of Guide
to Documentary Sources for Andean Studies (National Gallery
of Art/University of Oklahoma Press, 2008). She presided
over a session at the II International Colloquium on
Manuel González Prada: Challenging the Liberal
Tradition, hosted by Johns Hopkins University and Loyola
College; and in April, she taught a seminar on colonial
poetry at the Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales,
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas,
Madrid, Spain. She recently was elected to the Executive
Board of the Instituto Internacional de Literatura Iberoamericana,
the leading professional organization promoting Latin
American literature and culture.
Michelle Fine (Psychology, Urban Education) received
a 2007 Distinguished Service Award from the Society for
the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI). The
award honors individuals who have demonstrated enthusiasm,
dedication, and an enduring commitment to SPSSI.
Ofelia García (Urban Education) co-wrote a report
for Teachers College Campaign for Educational Equity
(Columbia University), titled “From English Language
Learners to Emergent Bilinguals,“ on how to deal
with ELLs, create programming for them, and related issues.
Her co-authors were colleague Jo Anne Kleifgen and doctoral
student Lorraine Falchi. This report will be included
in a toolkit that the New York City Department of Education
will distribute to every school in the city.
Michael Grossman (Business, Economics) was awarded the
2008 Victor R. Fuchs Award for lifetime contributions
to the field of health economics. The award was presented
at Duke University during the second biennial conference
of the American Society of Health Economists (ASHE),
which took place June 22–25, 2008. ASHE is a newly
formed professional organization dedicated to promoting
excellence in health economics research in the United
States.
William P. Kelly (English), President of The Graduate
Center, published a review of two books related to Theodore
Dreiser in the May 30, 2008, issue of the Times Literary
Supplement of London: The Genius, edited by Clare Virginia
Eby, is the 1911 draft of a novel that Dreiser subsequently
revised, and A Picture and a Criticism of Life: New Letters:
Volume One, edited by Donald Pizer, which is a collection
of Dreiser’s correspondence.
Robert E. Lipsey (Economics; emeritus), in May 2008,
took part in a workshop and gave a paper at the Center
for International Comparisons of Prices, Production,
and Income at the University of Pennsylvania; lectured
on “Measuring the Location of Production in a World
of Intangible Productive Assets, FDI, and Intrafirm Trade “at
the 2008 World Congress on National Accounts and Economic
Performance Measures for Nations, in Arlington, Virginia;
and with co-author Fredrik Sjöholm, presented a
paper on “Foreign Takeovers and Employment in Indonesian
Manufacturing “at the conference on Comparative
Analysis of Enterprise Data, Central European University,
Budapest, Hungary.
Stephen Pekar (Earth and Environmental Sciences, Queens) gave four talks in summer 2008 at the Scientific Committee for Antarctic Research in St. Petersburg, Russia; at the International Geological Congress in Oslo, Norway; and at Cambridge University in the U.K. He was one of twenty-six scientists chosen by the Ocean Drilling Program to participate in an oceanic research expedition to Antarctica in 2009.
Antoni Pizà (Music) spoke about Gaspar Melchor
de Jovellanos and Spanish musical thought during the
Enlightenment at the cultural center Can Marquès
in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, on May 22, 2008.
Gregory Rabassa (Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian Literatures
and Languages, Comparative Literature) received the Lifetime
Contribution Award of the Brazilian Studies Association
of America at their March meeting in New Orleans. On
May 2 he participated in the conference on the life and
works of Padre António Vieira at the University
of Massachusetts—Dartmouth, and was given the honorary
degree of Doctor of Humane Letters. On May 21 in New
York, the Brazilian Government conferred upon him the
rank of Comendador in the Order of Rio Branco.
Stanley Renshon (Political Science) published “The
political mind: The c o n science of a candidate“ online
in The Politico on July 31, 2008. See www.politico.com/news/stories/0708/12184.html.
Tracey A. Revenson (Social-Personality Psychology, GC) presented two papers at the 10th International Congress of Behavioral Medicine in Tokyo, Japan, in August 2008: “Fear of recurrence trajectories among breast cancer survivors” and “Benefit-finding, religious coping, and psychological distress among USA and UK breast cancer survivors.” Revenson is the deputy executive officer for psychology at the Graduate Center, CUNY.
Deborah J. Walder (Psychology), along with co-authors
V. Mittal, H. Trotman, A.L. McMillan and E.F. Walker,
published “Neurocognition and conversion to psychosis
in adolescents at high-risk,“ (2008) Schizophrenia
Research 101 (1–3). She has also received a 2008
Young Investigator Award ($60,000) from the National
Alliance for Research in Schizophrenia and Depression
(NARSAD) for the project "Diffusion tensor imaging
and structural MRI abnormalities in adolescents at-risk
for depression: The role of early life stress and 5-HTTLPR." She
is P.I. of the project.
Margaret Wallace (Biochemistry, Criminal Justice) was
invited to speak at the Fourth Annual Conference of the
Korean Academy of Scientific Criminal Investigation,
Chungnam National University, Deajeon, South Korea, on
June 12. Her presentation, "Forensic Science: The
Interface between Science and the Law," discussed
the role of forensic biology in human identification
and genotyping of botanical and entomological samples.
She was appointed foreign editor of the Journal of the
Korean Academy of Scientific Criminal Investigation by
the President of the Academy.
Zahra Zakeri (Biochemistry, Biology) received an "Ambassador
of Science" Award at the Seventh Annual Meeting
of the International Cell Death Society, which addressed "Targeting
Cell Death Pathways for Human Diseases." The meeting
took place June 6–9 in Shanghai, China. Zakeri
was recognized for her contributions in building international
coalitions, connecting scientists of many nations, and
building opportunities for women and junior scientists.
(Dr. H. Robert Horvitz, recipient of the 2002 Nobel Prize
in Physiology or Medicine, was honored at the same meeting.)
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May 2008
Jerry W. Carlson (French, Film Studies)
delivered a keynote address titled "The Role of Cultural
Television in Promoting Reading" at the Santo Domingo
International Book Fair in April in the Dominican Republic.
At The City College, in February, he served as a moderator
of the David Dortort Lecture in the Dramatic Arts delivered
by filmmaker Arthur Penn (Bonnie and Clyde).
Marc Edelman (Anthropology) presented
a paper on "Rooted Cosmopolitans in Transnational Agrarian
Movements" at a workshop on "Agrarian Questions: Lineages
and Prospects" held May 1-3, 2008, at the School of Oriental
and African Studies, University of London.
David Gerstner (Theatre, Film Studies
CP) has published the following: "Changement de bord:
l'amitie cinematique de Marcel Duchamp et Charles Demuth." Marcel
Duchamp et l'érotisme. Ed. and trans., Marc
Décimo. France: les presses du réel, 2008,
115-26; "Queer Internationale: Pedagogy and Modes of
Cultural Production in the Twenty-First Century." 21st-Century
Gay Culture. Ed., David Powell. Cambridge Scholars
Publishing, 2008, 85-94; "De Profundis: A Love Letter
from the Inside Man." The Spike Lee Reader. Ed.,
Paula J. Massood. Temple University Press, 243-53, 2008; "Queer
Turns: The Cinematic Friendship of Marcel Duchamp and
Charles Demuth." Marcel Duchamp and Eroticism. Ed.,
Marc Décimo. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2007,
105-15; "Ricordi! Peter Wells, Memories of a Queer Land." New
Zealand Filmmakers. Eds., Ian Conrich and Stuart
Murray. Wayne State University Press, 2007, 121-33; "Can't
Take My Eyes Off of You: Andy Warhol Records/Is New York." City
That Never Sleeps. Ed., Murray Pomerance. Rutgers
University Press, 2007, 90-101.
Marilyn Gittell (Political Science)
led a discussion on Citizen Participation at MIT's Community
Innovators Lab in February as part of CoLab's series
of talks titled "Learning Circles." In March she gave
a lecture at the Annenberg School at USC on "Communication,
the Media, Advocacy Groups." In April she spoke at a
conference held at the Ford Foundation and organized
by the Howard Samuels Center titled "Expanding Inclusion
in Higher Education." She gave testimony before the New
York City Council about the continuing gender gap in
earnings and employment, and presented a paper on the
report of the Howard Samuels Center titled "The Economic
Status of Working Women in New York State" at the Annual
Urban Affairs Association meeting in Baltimore.
Patricia Mainardi (Art History) was
appointed the 2008 Van Gogh Professor at the University
of Amsterdam and the Van Gogh Museum, where she gave
a series of lectures and seminars on "Word and Image" at
both the museum and the university in April. Her keynote
address at the Van Gogh Museum was titled "Illustration,
Caricature, Comics." She gave a lecture titled "The Invention
of Comics" at the Museum der Moderne in Salzburg, in
connection with the exhibition "Kino and Comics." She
also gave the keynote address, "Looking Forward to the
Nineteenth Century," at the Morgan Library celebration
of the inaugural publication of the journal Van Gogh
Studies. She recently published book and exhibition
reviews in the Journal of Modern History and 19th-Century
Art Worldwide.
Pyong Gap Min (Sociology) was interviewed
on CUNY-TV's City Talks in March. The subject was his
new book Ethnic Solidarity for Economic Survival:
Korean Greengrocers in New York City (Russell Sage
Foundation, 2008).
Antoni Pizà (Music) spoke at
Antoni Gaudí's La Pedrera (Fundació Caixa
Catalunya) in Barcelona on Baltasar Samper and the musical
exile after the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) on April
22. He also lectured on April 24 at the Universitat Autònoma
de Barcelona on new directions on American musicology.
Peter Roman (Political Science) won
a PSC-CUNY Research Award for $6,000 for the academic
year 2008-09, to study the Committees for the Defense
of the Revolution and the Federation of Cuban Women in
Cuba.
Gloria Waldman (Theatre, Emerita) is
completing the manuscript, Papo Márquez: Obrero
de la cultura ( Terranova Editores, Puerto Rico, 2008),
an anthology of the plays, poetry and fiction of the
Puerto Rican popular theatre dramatist and actor, author
of the controversial 1980s work, Esquizofrenia Puertorricensis. In
October she will present the book at the 8th Conference
of the Puerto Rican Studies Association at the Center
for Advanced Studies of the Caribbean in Old San Juan.
She will also organize the panel, "Charting Cultural
Spaces: Anarchists, dramatists, archivists—Luisa
Capetillo, Papo Marquez, Carmen Rivera, and Doña
Angélica Meléndez." Ph.D. theatre student
Jason Ramirez will participate in this panel discussing
the playwright who is the subject of his dissertation,
award-winning Carmen Rivera ("Carmen Rivera: Nuyorican
Playwright Reclaims La Lupe and Celia Cruz").
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April 2008
Meena Alexander (English) has a new
book of poetry Quickly Changing River (TriQuarterly
Books/ Northwestern University Press, 2008). She gave
a reading at the Associated Writing Programs conference
in New York City as part of the CUNY Gala reading and
participated in a panel of Asian American women poets
entitled "Mother Tongue" in January. She read from her
work at East Stroudsberg University and at New York University's
Asian Pacific American Center in February. In March she
read in Venice, at the triennial conference of the European
Association for Commonwealth Literatures, "Try Freedom:
Rewriting Rights Through Postcolonial Cultures." She
will also take part in a plenary session entitled "Writing
Through Cultures of Terror." In June she will read from
her new book at the Poetry Festival in Parma, Italy.
Alexander has been named a 2008 Fellow of the John Simon
Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.
Ronnie Ancona (Classics) lectured on
Catullus at the Bryn Mawr College Classics Colloquium
in February (see http://www.brynmawr.edu/classics/posters2008/ancona.html)
and will also present this work at Temple University
in April. Her comments on teaching Catullus from the
beginning stages of Latin through the Ph.D. level appeared
in the October 2007 edition of ELitterae, an eNewsletter
for Latin teachers. A wiki has been established for her
Catullus textbook at: http://writingpassion.pbwiki.com/.
She currently edits the new advanced-level Latin textbook
series, Bolchazy-Carducci Latin Readers, concise
scholarly introductions to Latin authors, genres, and
topics; the first volume will be appear later this year.
She presented a paper for a panel on Catullus at an American
Philological Association meeting in Chicago.
Howard Chernick (Economics) published
an op-ed piece titled "Cleaning Up This Mess Won't Be
Pretty." See the website www.theglobeandmail.com.
Mitchell Cohen (Political Science)
has contributed to an international symposium on "1968" in
the Spring issue of Dissent Magazine. He delivered the
Gold Foundation Distinguished Lecture in Jewish Studies
at the University of California at Santa Cruz on March
10; his topic was "Israel, Anti-Semitism, and the Left." He
also lectured on this theme at the Taube Center of Stanford
University on March 11. His essay titled "Auto-Emancipation
et Anti-Semitism" appeared in the French journal "Controverses:
Revue d'idees" in February 2008. It appeared earlier
in English in Jewish Social Studies and in Italian
in the monthly publication Reset. Professor
Cohen was interviewed in February by Reset about the
call to boycott Israel at the Turin and Paris bookfairs;
see http://www.resetdoc.org/EN/Mitchell-cohen-interview.php.
Michelle Fine (Psychology, Urban Education)
has received a number of honors and awards. The Adolescent
Girls Taskforce of the National Institute of Drugs and
Alcohol has named her its first Featured Scientist. She
received the fifth annual Social Justice Action Award
at the Winter Roundtable on Cross-Cultural Psychology
and Education at Teachers College, Columbia University.
And she was presented with the Willystine Goodsell Award
from Research on Women and Education at the American
Educational Research Association annual meetings in New
York.
Joyce Gelb (Political Science) is co-editor
of the electronic journal of contemporary japanese
studies at http://www.japanesestudies.org.uk.
Hugo Kaufmann (Economics, European
Union Studies Center) was invited to give a lecture at
the Columbia University—SIPA seminar series on
business and business cultures in the European Union.
The title of his lecture, given in October 2007, was "Convergence!
What Convergence? Vive la Différence!" He gave
another invited lecture at the international law weekend
of the American Foreign Law Association's October 2007
session on "The European Community at 50: Successes,
Setbacks and New Challenges." The title of the presentation
was "Euro, Euro Ueber Alles."
Marnia Lazreg (Sociology) published Torture
and the Twilight of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad with
Princeton University Press in December 2007. She gave
talks about it at Maison Française, Columbia
University, and the Roberta Buffett Center for International
and Comparative Society, Northwestern University, Evanston,
in February; the Institute for Middle East Studies,
Elliott Center for International Affairs, George Washington
University, Washington DC; the International Human
Rights Center at the Graduate Center, and the Left
Forum Conference, in March. She has also been interviewed
by nineteen radio stations across the nation, including
the Maryknoll syndicated network.
Katherine Manthorne (Art History) published
the essay "John Sloan, Moving Pictures, and Celtic Spirits" in Seeing
the City: John Sloan's New York (Delaware Art Museum/Yale
University Press, 2007), the catalogue for an exhibition
that took place at the Delaware Art Museum from October
20, 2007, to January 20, 2008. The exhibition is in Pennsylvania
until April 27, Chicago until September 14, and will
end in North Carolina on January 4, 2009.
Peter Ranis (Political Science; Emeritus)
reviewed The Politics of Labor Reform in Latin America:
Between Flexibility and Rights by Maria
Lorena Cook in Perspectives on Politics (APSA),
Vol. 6, No. 1 (March, 2008); and The Politics of
the Past in an Argentine Working-Class Neighborhood by
Lindsay DuBois in American Ethnologist, Vol.
33, No. 3 (August, 2006). He was interviewed by Pacifica
Radio Station KPFA (San Francisco) on the "Against the
Grain" program concerning "U.S. Workers Under Siege," on
December 4, 2007.
Stanley Renshon (Political Science)
published "McCain's Dilemma: Rebel or Leader" in The
Politico on March 3, 2008 (http://www.politico.com).
His column is titled "The Political Mind."
Liat Seiger (Speech-Language-Hearing
Sciences) published chapters in the following books: Language
and Communication: Disorders in Children, 6th edition, edited
by D.K. Bernstein and E. Tiegerman-Farber (Pearson Education,
2008), with Diana Almodovar; The Handbook of Child
Language Disorders edited by R. Schwartz (Psychology
Press, 2008); Early Childhood Special Education,
0 to 8 Years (Merrill, 2007), with Deena Bernstein.
Stephen Steinberg (Sociology) published Race
Relations: A Critique (Stanford University Press,
September 2007). The book was featured in the "Research & Books" column
of the Chronicle of Higher Education in November
2007.
Deborah Walder (Psychology) published "Neurocognition
and Conversion to Psychosis in Adolescents at High Risk",
along with V. Mittal, H. Trotman, A.L. McMillan, and
E.F. Walker, in Schizophrenia Research.
Henry Wasser (Sociology; Emeritus)
and Solidelle Fortier published Higher Education
in Europe and the United States of America: A Diverse
Collection of Essays (University Press of America,
2007). Wasser is executive director of the CUNY Academy
for Humanities and Sciences.
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February 2008
Mimi Abramovitz (Social Welfare) delivered
a keynote address titled "Welfare Reform: Race, Class,
and Gender Matter!" at the University of Bielefeld in
Germany in November. She presented a paper titled "History
of Low-Income Women's Activism Since 1900" at the Academics
and Activism Conference organized by the Women's Studies
Certificate Program at the Graduate Center in November.
She was the keynote speaker at the 90th Anniversary Dinner
of the University of Minnesota School of Social Work
in October; her talk was titled "The Welfare State: A
Battlefield for Human Rights."
Ammiel Alcalay (Comparative Literature,
English) has been informed that his translation of Shimon
Ballas' Outcast (City Lights) was selected as
an Editor's Choice—Best of 2007 by ALA Booklist.
Jerry W. Carlson (French, Film Studies
CP) delivered a lecture on "New Forms of Audiovisual
Production in the Global City: Cable and Independent
Film in New York" at the Universidad Nacional de Colombia
in Bogota in October. He conducted at set of public Q&A
sessions with French filmmakers after their works were
screened at the French Institute Alliance Francaise as
part of the Police Paris New York Film Festival. In
November he visited the Houston Polish Film Festival
to tape two interviews with director Krzysztof Zanussi
for telecast on CUNY-TV.
Mitchell Cohen (Political Science)
gave one of the keynote lectures at an international
colloquium on "Compassion" at the Venice International
University, co-sponsored by the Nexus Institute for European
Culture of the University of Tilburg (The Netherlands)
in October. He spoke on "Compassion and Politics in Wagner's Parsifal."
Forrest D. Colburn (Political Science)
published "Rethinking the 'Third World': Talking with
Lakhdar Brahimi," in the World Policy Journal (Summer
2007). In the past academic year, Professor Colburn gave
invited lectures in Venezuela, Peru, Costa Rica, and
Nicaragua.
Joyce Gelb (Political Science) was
a participant in the European Consortium for Political
Research in Pisa Italy in September, where she presented
a paper on anti-feminist politics in Japan and the U.S.
In November she was a participant in the Salzburg Global
Seminar for Session 447, "Breaking the Glass Ceiling:
Women in Politics and Business in Salzburg Austria," with
representatives from over 21 nations. She was a visiting
scholar in Taiwan, researching issues related to women
and political representation. She also lectured at Tsinghua
and National Taiwan Universities, on a trip was sponsored
by the Taiwan Economic and Cultural Office in New York.
John L. Hammond (Sociology) lectured
on human rights education at the Catholic University
of Angola in Luanda, and at the Lusiadas University in
Lobito.
Barbara L. Hampton (Music) presented
a paper, "Rappin' Ga: Hiplife and Some Myths of Globalization," and
chaired a panel on "Urbanism and Music" at the annual
conference of the Society for Ethnomusicology (SEM),
hosted by the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She presented
the keynote address, "Engaged Ethnomusicology: Debates,
Prospects and Positionings," at the joint conference
of the Mid-Atlantic Folklore Association (American Folklore
Society) and the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of SEM, hosted
by the College of William and Mary and the Colonial Williamsburg
Foundation. Along with performers, she authored text
and provided translations for the liner notes of the
CD Congo Square. She received a Lifetime Achievement
Award from the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of the Society for
Ethnomusicology at its Silver Jubilee Conference; she
is one of only four people who has ever been given this
honor.
Hugo M. Kaufman (Economics) was invited
to give a lecture at Baruch College titled "International
Trends and Developments in the European Union" in a series
titled Market, Cultures and Regimes in September.
In October, he gave an invited lecture at the Institute
for the Study of Europe (SIPA) on "Business Cultures
in Europe: Convergence—What Convergence?—Viva
la Difference."
President William P. Kelly (English,
American Studies CP) wrote a review of the book James
Fenimore Cooper: The Early Years by Wayne Franklin,
which appeared in The Times Literary Supplement of
London in December 2007.
Candace McCoy (Criminal Justice) co-authored
a monograph titled "Unlocking America: Why and How to
Reduce America's Prison Population," which was published
by the JFA Institute, with the support of the Soros Foundation.
She participated in a presentation of the report, which
was broadcast nationwide on C-SPAN in December. One of
her co-authors was Todd Clear, Distinguished Professor
of Criminal Justice at John Jay College and the Graduate
Center.
Gerardo Piña-Rosales (Hispanic
and Luso-Brazilian Literatures and Languages) recently
gave the following lectures: "Escritores espanoles en
Estados Unidos"at the Meeting of the Asociacion de Academias
de la Lengua Espanola, Medellin, Colombia in October
2007; "La recepción de Miguel Delibes en Estados
Unidos" at Congreso Internacional sobre Miguel Delibes,
Valladolid in October 2007; and "Franz Kafka viendo llover
en Macondo" at the Symposium on Cien años
de soledad by García Marquez, Library of
Congreso, Washington, in December 2007. He was also invited
to participate in the Special Committee for the New
Grammar of the Spanish Languages and the Committee
for the Diccionario de Americanismos at the
Royal Academy of the Spanish Language, Madrid.
Antoni Pizà (Music) spoke on "Translating
Jacint Verdaguer into Words & Music" at a series of events
titled Film, Poetry, Art & Memory at New York
University in November.
Herbert Saltzstein (Psychology) traveled
to Brazil to plan a number of research projects at the
Federal University of Rio and the Federal University
of Pernambuco (Recife). He also gave a lecture at both
universities on research he conducted with his students.
Lía Schwartz (Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian
Literatures and Languages) has published the following
articles: "Genealogías del sueño en la
obra de Quevedo", Filología, XXIV–XXV,
2002–3 2007; "Fábula mitológica y
sátira: Menipo litigante de Bartolomé Leonardo
de Argensola", in Homenaje a Ana Maria Barrenechea,
coord. by Melchora Romanos et alii, Buenos Aires, EUDEBA,
2007 and "Entre dos siglos y dos continentes: los antiqui
auctores y las literaturas hispánicas" in
a special issue on Hispanisms and the Humanities, eds.
A. Egido and L. Schwartz, INSULA, 725, LXII,
2007. In November, as MacCall Lecturer for 2007, she
spoke at the University of Cambridge, UK, on the topic "Wit
and the Baroque Imaginary: Of Mazes, Metamorphoses and
Oneiric Prophecies" and in December, at the University
of Lille, France, on "El Buscón en el
contexto de la obra de Quevedo." In July 2007 she participated
at the XVI Congress of the AIH with a paper titled "Las Obras
de Xenophonte traducidas por Diego Gracián
(1552) en el Quijote, II, 34" and in September
2007, she was invited to speak at the colloquium Francisco
de Quevedo, in Torre de Juan Abad (Spain) on "Desde
La Torre: la invención de un "Theatro de la Historia"."
Arthur Spears (Anthropology, Linguistics)
was interviewed by Gil Noble on the WABC program Like
It Is in September. The subject was globalization
and its impact on people of color.
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