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Take a look at what some of our Honors students are up to - Click Here

 

       Fall 2008 Honors Institute Distinguished Speaker  
        Deborah Lipstadt on Wednesday, September 17th
  
Deborah Lipstadt

Deborah E. Lipstadt

Director, Rabbi Donald A. Tam Institute for Jewish Studies and
Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies

Rabbi Donald A. Tam Institute for Jewish Studies
204C Candler Library
550 Asbury Circle
Emory University
Atlanta, GA 30322

404-727-2298 (Office)
404-727-3297 (Fax)
dlipsta@emory.edu (Email)

Professor Deborah Lipstadt, of David Irving holocaust-denier fame, will be the Prentiss M. Brown distinguished lecturer on Wednesday, September 17, 2008.  She will likely talk about her role in the Irving trial, and the upsurge in respectability accorded to holocaust denial.  Her webpage at Emory is to be found at:  http://www.religion.emory.edu/faculty/lipstadt.html

Her blog, subtitled Holocaust denial/contemporary anti-semitism/free speech/politically correct idiocies is found at:
http://lipstadt.blogspot.com/
In her blog, and in her work, she deals with Islamic holocaust denial, contemporary anti-Semitism, a British academic boycott of Israel, campus issues, Danish cartoons, and the Turkish genocide

Deborah E. Lipstadt, Director, Rabbi Donald A. Tam Institute for Jewish Studies and Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies (1993). Dr. Lipstadt's book HISTORY ON TRIAL: MY DAY IN COURT WITH DAVID IRVING [Ecco/HarperCollins, 2005] is the story of her libel trial in London against David Irving who sued her for calling him a Holocaust denier and right wing extremist. The book has been described as a “fascinating and meritorious work of legal – and moral – history.” [Kirkus, November 2004]. It was ranked by the editors at Amazon.com as number four on its list of top ten history books of 2005. The Daily Telegraph ( London) declared that the trial had “done for the new century what the Nuremberg tribunals or the Eichmann trial did for earlier generations.” The Times ( London) described it as “history has had its day in court and scored a crushing victory.” The judge found David Irving to be a Holocaust denier, a falsifier of history, a racist, an antisemite, and a liar. Her legal battle with Irving lasted approximately six years. According to the New York Times, the trial “put an end to the pretense that Mr. Irving is anything but a self-promoting apologist for Hitler.” In July 2001 the Court of Appeal resoundingly rejected Irving’s attempt to appeal the judgment against him.

Lipstadt represented President George W. Bush as a member of the official American delegation to the 60 th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. As an historical consultant to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, she helped design the section of the Museum dedicated to the American Response to the Holocaust. President Clinton appointed her to two consecutive terms on the United States Holocaust Memorial Council. From 1996 through 1999 she served as a member of the United States State Department Advisory Committee on Religious Freedom Abroad. In this capacity she, together with a small group of leaders and scholars, advised Secretary of State Madeline Albright on matters of religious persecution abroad.

Dr. Lipstadt has also written DENYING THE HOLOCAUST: THE GROWING ASSAULT ON TRUTH AND MEMORY (Free Press/Macmillan, 1993), the first full length study of those who deny the Holocaust. The book has been translated into German and Japanese. She has also written BEYOND BELIEF: THE AMERICAN PRESS AND THE COMING OF THE HOLOCAUST (Free Press/Macmillan, 1986, 1993). The book, an examination of how the American press covered the news of the persecution of European Jewry between the years 1933 and 1945, addresses the question "what did the American public know and when did they know it?"

She has taught at University of Washington, UCLA and Occidental College in Los Angeles. In Spring 2006 she was a Visiting Professor at the Gregorian Pontifical University in Rome. She received her B.A. from City College of New York and her M.A. and Ph.D. from Brandeis University. Professor Lipstadt is frequently called upon by the media to comment on matters of Jewish interest. She has appeared on the BBC, CNN, CBS's Sixty Minutes, NBC's Today Show, ABC's Good Morning America, National Public Radio's Fresh Air, PBS's Charlie Rose Show, and is a frequent contributor to and is widely quoted in a variety of newspapers including the Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Cleveland Plain Dealer, Atlanta Constitution, Baltimore Sun, New York Times, Time, Newsweek, London Times, London Daily Telegraph, and Chicago Tribune. She declined an appearance on C-Span BookTv because of their intention to “balance” her presentation with one by David Irving.

She has received numerous teaching awards including Emory’s student government association’s award for being the teacher most likely to motivate students to learn about new and unfamiliar topics and the Emory Williams award, for her courses on modern Jewish and Holocaust studies. Given to Emory’s outstanding teachers, the award is based on nominations by alumni of the professor who has had the greatest impact on them. She has received Honorary Doctorates from Yeshiva University, Bar Ilan University, and Baltimore Hebrew University. The Forward named her number two on its list of the “Forward Fifty”: the fifty top Jewish news makers for the year 2000. She is the 2005 winner of the Al Chernin Award given by the Jewish Council for Public Affairs to the person who best exemplifies protection of the First Amendment. Previous recipients include Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Alan Dershowitz, and Stu Eisenstat.

Lipstadt had a web log [blog] which is available at Lipstadt.blogspot.com.

Beyond Belief

 

2008 Elkin Isaac Speaker - Carl Hiaasen

   The Elkin Isaac Research Symposium Committee is pleased to announce that Carl Hiaasen, Miami Herald columnist and three-time Pulitzer prize nominee, will be this year's keynote speaker. Hiaasen's columns have long been scathing indictments of the lack of control over the development and management of the south Florida environment and its limited resources and that cynicism is even more unbridled in his novels.

As a prelude to requesting support from Academic Affairs, we are seeking expressions of interest for a coterie developed around Carl Hiaasen's earliest novel, "Tourist Season." We will provide a "course pack" of selected columns so that participants are more able to understand how his columns and satire influence his works of fiction. Hiaasen will offer the keynote address at the Elkin Isaac Research Symposium in April and we are working to include a discussion of this book with him and coterie participants, as well as students, as a part of his visit.

Several reviews follow:

"A vacationing Shriner disappears, the only clue to his demise --- his fez awash on a Miami beach. The director of the Chamber of Commerce dies with a toy rubber alligator in his throat. It's the height of South Florida's tourist season and the Orange Bowl is nigh. The Chamber of Commerce is panicked as more tourists vanish. Will Brian Keyes, former reporter turned PI, be able to stop the eco-terrorist carnage by crocodile? We are introduced to Hiaasen's singularly twisted and rollicking sense of humor in this, the first of Hiaasen's South Florida fiendishly funny thrillers." --- Reviewed by Roz Shea © Copyright 1996-2008, Bookreporter.com. All rights reserved.

"Wonderful...lively... fun...a remarkable example of what talented writers are doing these days with the mystery novel". - Tony Hillerman, The New York Times Book Review

"A dark, funny book full of irony and spice. I loved it!"-- Robert B. Parker

Hiaasen's website: http://www.carlhiaasen.com/


New: ** Fall 2007 Prentiss M. Brown Distinguished Lecture**

This year, the Prentiss M. Brown Distinguished lecturer is Kwame Anthony Appiah.  Professor Appiah is the Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University.

Professor Appiah is the Chair of the Board of the American Council of Learned Societies and also the President of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association.

He will speak in Towsley Hall, on September 20th, on topics related to his 2007 book: Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of  Strangers.

A description of some of professor Appiah's remarkable range of accomplishments may be found at his website: http://www.appiah.net/.  We expect the evening with him to be a truly remarkable one.

 

Naming of the Honors Institute - Prentiss M. Brown

Honors Center Renovations


** FALL 2008 COURSE DESCRIPTIONS & SCHEDULE - Click Here
 

Traveling Seminar: Fall of 2006, a group of PMB students traveled to Nova Scotia with Associate Director Dean McCurdy, to learn first hand about his extensive field research on mudflat animals and endangered turtles. The group met with renowned scientists who study whales.  Students also discussed Canada-US environmental policy with these experts.  Click here for more information about the trip.
 

** Prentiss M. Brown Honors Spring 2007 Common Reading **

The Brown Honors Common Reading for Spring 2007 is "The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature by Steven Pinker.  Pinker will be here on Campus, Thursday, April 26 for a lecture in Goodrich Chapel at 7:00pm.

Steven Pinker

"The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature"

7:00 pm, Thursday, April 26, 2007
Goodrich Chapel

This year, the Elkin Isaac Research Symposium
Joseph S. Calvaruso Keynote Address will be presented by noted scholar and author Steven Pinker.

In choosing him as one of the world’s 100 Most Influential People, in 2004, TIME magazine postulated that “every half-century . . . an eminent Harvard psychologist crystallizes an intellectual era. . . . [Steven Pinker] seems poised to keep its tradition alive.” One of the world’s leading experts on language and the mind, and a founding scholar in the field of evolutionary psychology, Steven Pinker asks audacious questions about the true nature of our humanity, and then boldly sets out to answer them. Pinker simultaneously enlightens and confounds academia and the public alike with his revolutionary understanding of the interconnectedness of language, instinct, consciousness, emotions, and neurology.

Pinker is the author of the New York Times bestseller and Pulitzer Prize finalist The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature. His earlier bestsellers include the Pulitzer finalist How the Mind Works; his classic, The Language Instinct; and the book popularizing his own research, Words and Rules: The Ingredients of Language. Pinker’s next book, The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature, is already enjoying brisk sales on Amazon.com, five months before its release in September. Pinker has written countless academic articles and frequently contributes to a variety of mainstream publications including the New York Times, Nature, Atlantic Monthly, Slate, and TIME.

Appointed Harvard University’s Johnstone Family Professor of Psychology in 2003, Pinker previously served on the faculties of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University. He is also a fellow of several scholarly societies, including the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Pinker has received numerous awards, including the Troland Research Prize from the National Academy of Sciences and five prizes from the American Psychological Association. In addition to this recognition for his research, he has won a number of teaching prizes, is included in the Esquire Register of Outstanding Men and Women, and was named among the Newsweek 100 Americans for the 21st Century.

A native of Montreal, Pinker is a graduate of McGill University and holds a doctorate in psychology from Harvard.


 Prentiss M. Brown Honors Fall Common Listening 2006

The honors common experience for the fall of 2006 will feature two recordings and visits by two of the most innovative and in demand drummers and composers on the jazz scene today Gerald Cleaver's Adjust (Fresh Sounds-New Talent) and Matt Wilson's Going Once, Going Twice (Palmetto Records). Led by next year's Prentiss M. Brown Distinguished Honors Professor, Dr. Andrew Bishop, the two recordings will be examined through compare and contrast to exhibit the wide array of technical and expressive qualities available in today's jazz idiom. Both Cleaver and Wilson currently reside in New York City but have ties to the upper Midwest and will visit the Albion campus for a lecture demonstration in the fall.  These two artists will be here on the Albion College campus to perform on Monday, September 11th and on Wednesday, October 11th in Norris 101.

Gerald Cleaver is a versatile drummer and composer originally from Detroit, Michigan and now based in Brooklyn, New York. His recording Adjust (Fresh Sound New Talent)—featuring Andrew Bishop, Mat Maneri, Craig Taborn, Ben Monder, and Reid Anderson—received a “debut record of the year” nomination from the Jazz Journalists’ Association. He has performed with Muhal Richard Abrams, David Berkman, Tim Berne, Kenny Burrell, Marilyn Crispell, Marty Ehrlich, Ellery Eskelin, Tommy Flanagan, Charles Gayle, Mark Helias, Hank Jones, John Lindberg, Kevin Mahogany, Roscoe Mitchell, Andrea Parkins, Jacky Terrasson, Henry Threadgill, Mark Turner, Mathew Shipp, Rodney Whitaker, Reggie Workman, and many others.

Great Issues in Honors Student Newsletter - Fall 2004

Prentiss M. Brown Honors Fall Common Reading
Our Brown Honors Common Reading for this fall was
"The Great Mortality: An Intimate History of the Black Death, the Most Devastating Plague of All Time" by John Kelly.

Kelly was here on Campus, Thursday, September 22 for a lecture in Goodrich Chapel at 7:00pm.

So begins, in almost fairy-tale fashion, a contemporary account of the worst natural disaster in European History - what we call the Black Death, and what the generation who lived through it called la moria grandissima: "the great mortality."

The Great Mortality is John Kelly's compelling narrative account of the medieval plague, from its beginnings on the desolate, windswept steppes of Central Asia to its journey through the teeming cities of Europe.

The Great Mortality also looks at new theories about the cause of the plague and takes into account why some scientists and historians believe that the Black Death was an outbreak not of bubonic plague, but of another infectious illness - perhaps anthrax of a disease like Ebola.

John Kelly, who holds a graduate degree in European history, is the author and coauthor of ten books on science, medicine, and human behavior, including Three on the Edge, which Publishers Weekly called the work of "an expert storyteller." He lives in New York city.

www.thegreatmortality.com
 

Prentiss M. Brown Honors Spring Common Reading

This past spring our Brown Honors Common Reading was "On Human Nature"  by E. O. Wilson - 1988.  Wilson was here on campus on April 21, 2005 for a lecture in Goodrich Chapel.  

About the book itself he says: "To address human behavior systematically is to make a potential topic of every corridor in the labyrinth of the human mind, and hence to consider not just the social sciences but the humanities, including philosophy and the process of scientific discovery itself. Consequently, 'On Human Nature' is not a work of science; it is a work about science, and about how far natural sciences can penetrate into human behavior before they will be transformed into something new." "On Human Nature" covers aggression, sex, altruism and religion as well as heredity, development and emergent behavior brilliantly.

 

Course Descriptions for Fall 2005 - Click Here
Course Descriptions for Spring 2005 
Click Here

Course Descriptions for Fall 2004 click here



Student Theses writers and their Titles
    2005 - click here
                                                                             2004 - click here
                                                                             2003 -
click here

Great Issues in Honors Newsletter - Spring 2004
                                                     Fall 2003

Honors Common Reading – Gloria Steinem spent a day on Campus
                                         Newsletter Article
                                         Honors student w/Steinem

Cultural Trip - Mamma Mia

Eurchre Tournament

Honors Council

Honors Coffee Hours – Featuring Honors Alums Who Have Returned to Campus

Interesting things being created in our Great Issues in Fine Arts Classes

Great Issues in Fine Arts with Lynne Chylito and Bille Wickre: Two Class Projects
  The Exquisite Corpse
  Monster Hybrids in Clay
 

Let us know where you are and what you are doing, we are always interested in hearing about our Honors Alumni.  Send your information to rkreger@albion.edu
 

 

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