SLC Undergraduate Course Catalogue 2011-2012
Transcription
SLC Undergraduate Course Catalogue 2011-2012
Undergraduate Curriculum 2011 – 2012 Calendar FA L L 2 011 Saturday, August 27 Opening day New students arrive Sunday, August 28 Orientation Monday, August 29 Returning students arrive Registration for returning students Tuesday, August 30 through Thursday, September 1 Donning, first-choice interviews, and registration Friday, September 2 Students placed in first-choice courses Saturday, September 3 Donning and interviews for alternate registration Sunday, September 4 Students placed in alternate courses Monday, September 5 Classes begin Monday, October 17 and Tuesday, October 18 October Study Days Wednesday, November 23 through Sunday, November 27 Thanksgiving break Friday, December 16 Last day of classes Saturday, December 17 Residence halls close at 10 a.m. S P R I N G 2 012 Sunday, January 15 Students return Monday, January 16 Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday Tuesday, January 17 and Wednesday, January 18 Donning, interviews, and registration Tuesday, January 17 Yearlong classes resume Thursday, January 19 Students placed in first-choice courses Friday, January 20 Donning and interviews for alternate registration (no classes on Friday, January 20) Monday, January 23 Spring semester-long courses begin Saturday, March 17 through Sunday, April 1 Spring break Friday, May 11 Last day of classes Sunday, May 13 Residence halls close for non-seniors at 5 p.m. Friday, May 18 Commencement Residence halls close for seniors at 8 p.m. The Curriculum.................................... 3 Africana Studies................................... 3 Anthropology....................................... 4 Art History........................................... 8 Asian Studies ..................................... 12 Biology ............................................... 15 Chemistry........................................... 18 Computer Science ............................. 19 Dance ................................................. 22 Design Studies.................................... 26 Economics .......................................... 27 Environmental Studies ...................... 31 Ethnic and Diasporic Studies............. 33 Film History ....................................... 35 Filmmaking (See Visual Arts) ......... 131 French ................................................ 36 Geography.......................................... 40 German .............................................. 42 Global Studies.................................... 43 Greek.................................................. 43 Health, Science, and Society............. 44 History................................................ 45 International Studies ......................... 54 Italian................................................. 56 Japanese.............................................. 58 Latin................................................... 59 Latin American and Latino/a Studies........................................ 60 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies ................... 61 Literature............................................ 62 Mathematics ...................................... 73 Modern Languages and Literatures.... 75 Music.................................................. 76 Philosophy ......................................... 89 Physics................................................ 92 Politics................................................ 94 Pre-Health Program (see Science and Mathematics)........................... 112 Psychology.......................................... 98 Public Policy .................................... 106 Religion............................................ 107 Russian ............................................. 110 Science and Mathematics................ 112 Science, Technology, and Society ... 112 Social Science.................................. 113 Sociology.......................................... 113 Spanish............................................. 116 Theatre............................................. 118 Visual Arts ....................................... 131 Architectural Design Drawing Filmmaking New Media Painting Photography Printmaking Sculpture Visual Fundamentals Women’s Studies.............................. 142 Writing............................................. 142 Faculty .............................................. 153 THE CURRICULUM 3 The Curriculum T he Curriculum of the College as planned for 2011-2012 is described in the following pages. All courses are planned as full-year courses, except as otherwise indicated. Where possible, seminar descriptions include examples of areas of study in which a student could concentrate for the conference portion of the course. In a seminar course, each student not only pursues the main course material but also selects a related topic for concentrated study, often resulting in a major paper. In this way, each seminar becomes both a shared and an individual experience. Africana Studies Africana Studies embraces a number of scholarly disciplines and subjects at Sarah Lawrence College, including anthropology, architecture, art history, dance, economics, film, filmmaking, history, Islamic studies, law, literature, philosophy, politics, psychology, religion, sociology, theatre, and writing. Students will examine the experience of Africans and people of African descent in the diaspora, including Latin America, the Caribbean, North America, and beyond. Study includes the important cultural, economic, technological, political, and social intellectual interplay and exchanges of those peoples as they help make our world. Students will explore the literature of Africans and peoples of African descent in various languages, including Spanish, Portuguese, French, and English. The dynamics of immigration and community formation are vital in this field. Students will examine the art and architecture of Africa and the diaspora; their history, societies, and cultures; their economy and politics; the impact of Islam and the Middle East; the processes of slavery; the slave trade and colonialism; as well as postcolonial literature in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. The program also includes creative work in filmmaking, theatre, and writing. Courses offered this year in Africana Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. The Anthropology of Life Itself (p. 5), Robert R. Desjarlais Anthropology Field Methods in the Study of Language and Culture (p. 6), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Language and Race: Constructing the Self and Imagining the Other in the United States and Beyond (p. 5), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Language, Culture, and Performance (p. 4), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Political Language and Performance (p. 7), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Introduction to Anthropology: Debates, Controversies, and Re/visions (p. 4), Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology Making History of Non-Western Art History: Africa, Oceania, and the Americas (p. 10), Susan Kart Art History Arts of the African Continent (p. 9), Susan Kart Art History Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food (p. 31), Charles Zerner Environmental Studies, Persis Charles History Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development (p. 40), Joshua Muldavin Geography Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development (p. 41), Joshua Muldavin Geography Leisure and Danger (p. 52), Persis Charles History Sickness and Health in Africa (p. 50), Mary Dillard History Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back (p. 51), Mary Dillard History Gender, Education, and Opportunity in Africa (p. 53), Mary Dillard History First-Year Studies: “In the Tradition”: An Introduction to African American History and Black Cultural Renaissance (p. 46), Komozi Woodard History The Black Arts Renaissance & American Culture: Rethinking Urban and Ethnic History in America (p. 46), Komozi Woodard History African American Literature Survey (1789-2011) (p. 64), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature Creating New Blackness: The Expressions of the Harlem Renaissance (p. 72), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature 4 Anthropology Spoken Wor(l)ds: African American Poetry From Black Arts to Hip Hop (1960-2012) (p. 73), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature Conscience of the Nations: Classics of African Literature (p. 68), William Shullenberger Literature Slavery: A Literary History (p. 69), William Shullenberger Literature Reform and Revolution in the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa (p. 50), Hamid Rezai Politics Cinema and Society in the Middle East and North Africa (p. 51), Hamid Rezai Politics Collective Violence and Post-Conflict Reconciliation (p. 97), Elke Zuern Politics Rainbow Nation: Growing Up South African in the Apartheid and Post-Apartheid Eras (p. 100), Kim Ferguson Psychology Poverty in America: Integrating Theory, Research, Policy & Practice (p. 101), Kim Ferguson Psychology Beyond the Matrix of Race: Psychologies of Race and Ethnicity (p. 99), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Muslim Literature, Film, and Art (p. 110), Kristin Zahra Sands Religion Islam and the Muslim World (p. 108), Kristin Zahra Sands Religion Anthropology The study of anthropology traditionally covers four “fields”: sociocultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, biological anthropology and archaeology. At Sarah Lawrence College, we concentrate on sociocultural and linguistic anthropology. Behind almost every aspect of our lives is a cultural realm: a shared construction that shapes assumptions and determines much of how we perceive and relate to the world. Sociocultural anthropology is the study of that realm—its extent and its effects. As students learn to approach with an anthropological eye what they formerly might have taken for granted, they gain insight into how social forces govern the ways in which we relate to ourselves and each other: how we use words, how we define ourselves and others, how we make sense of our bodies—even how we feel emotions. Through examining the writings of anthropologists, viewing ethnographic films, and discussing these and other materials in seminar and conference sessions, students develop a comprehensive and multipatterned sense of the cultural dimensions of human lives. By studying the underpinnings of language, symbolic practices, race, gender, sexuality, policy and advocacy, medical systems, cities, modernity, or social organization across a range of Western and non-Western settings, they come to understand better how meaning is made. With seminar dynamics and content characteristic of graduate-level work, Sarah Lawrence’s anthropology courses take students in often unexpected and challenging directions. Introduction to Anthropology: Debates, Controversies, and Re/visions Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Open, Lecture—Fall The discipline of anthropology has housed a number of dramatic confrontations over the past several decades. Each of these debates, controversies, and re/visionary moments has made claims about—and has attempted to redefine—the appropriate theoretical and methodological parameters of the discipline. In this semester-long lecture, we will examine several of these more heated confrontations (including the Mead/Freeman debate, the Yanomami controversy, the Captain Cook debate, the Kalahari “San” debate, and responses to Turnbull’s contentious portrayal of the Mountain Ik) and use them as springboards for talking about anthropological practice and theory in more general terms. Through all of this, we will ask questions about the politics of representation, the ethics of fieldwork, and the authority of the anthropologist to speak “for a people.” Further, we will explore the relationship between theory, data, and explanation—and also consider how a single event can be interpreted in radically different ways. We will look to the publication of Malinowski’s diaries and Edward Said’s Orientalism as critical junctures in the discipline and will discuss the profound impact that feminist theory and scholarship has had on both ethnographic research and writing. Language, Culture, and Performance Aurora Donzelli Open, Lecture—Spring Language is such a ubiquitous and unavoidable component of our quotidian experience of the world that we are often inclined to take it for THE CURRICULUM 5 granted and to assume that it is just an external objective system of signs apt at enabling the transmission of information. The aim of this course is to encourage students to suspend what Edmund Husserl would call our “natural attitude” toward the way we engage with language in our everyday lives. By “bracketing” this naively taken for granted “natural standpoint,” we will be able to develop a deeper understanding of the multifaceted nature of human interaction and, hence, discover how humans constitute and, at the same time, are constituted by language. Through a series of readings, we will investigate language as a form of social action and discover the key role it plays in mediating emotions, transmitting aesthetic and cultural values, organizing cognition, structuring experience, reproducing social structures, enabling intersubjective recognition, as well as reproducing and challenging power relations. By looking closely at the unfolding of verbal and nonverbal interactions across a number of communities in the world, we will develop an understanding of the poetic and performative aspects of communication and gain critical insights into multiple intersections between language and culture. In addition to providing a discussion of the different theoretical and methodological approaches available for the analysis of the language-culture interface, the selected readings will cover topics such as bilingualism and codeswitching; the relation between language, sound, and images in performance; the creativity of verbal art and verbal duels; the performance of identity; the structure of narrative and storytelling, language hegemony, language ideologies, political communication; and the aesthetics of persuasion. Culture and Mental Illness Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Open, Lecture—Spring Does schizophrenia exist all over the world? Does depression look different in India than it does in the United States? Why was hysteria so widely diagnosed in England during the latter part of the 19th century, and why did this diagnosis seem to fade out of fashion? This semester-long lecture will explore the role played by culture in the experience, expression, definition, and treatment of mental illness. Together, we will explore mental illness as both a subjective (and yet culturally informed) experience and a social process. We will also examine the ways in which mental illness in the West has become both an object of knowledge and a site of intervention. We will consider the strengths and weaknesses of the DSM classification system and critically assess what it refers to as “culture-bound syndromes,” such as koro, zar spirit possession, latah, nervios, and susto. What makes these more “culture-bound” than, say, Borderline Personality Disorder or PTSD? Finally, we will learn about a number of culturally informed modes of therapy and look closely at the doctor/patient (or healer/ patient) encounter in a variety of settings. The Anthropology of Life Itself Robert R. Desjarlais Open—Fall “Life is ecstasy,” wrote Emerson. This course will explore the intrigues and problematics of such a statement. What is life? What is a life? How do human beings value the gist of life (or not) in particular situations? In this course, we will consider these fundamental questions through the prism of anthropological inquiry. By delving into what life means for people in distinct cultural settings, how they perceive and engage with it and live it amongst others, we will be able get a better handle on the many social, biological, historical, and political dimensions of constructs of life—and death. In particular, we will read a number of recent ethnographic and philosophical writings that take measure of the subject. We will consider bare life in zones of social abandonment in Brazil, ideas of well-being and existential dissatisfaction in Sierra Leone, the survival techniques of heroin addicts in San Francisco, the pull of suicide among Inuit youths, violence and memory in India, and generative fashioning in the Nepal Himalayas. Along the way, we will give thought to some key writings by important theorists of life, such as Benedict de Spinoza, Michel Foucault, Giorgio Agamben, and Gilles Deleuze. In so doing, the course will offer students an intensive introduction to the field of sociocultural anthropology. Language and Race: Constructing the Self and Imagining the Other in the United States and Beyond Aurora Donzelli Open—Fall “No, no, no, no. You gotta listen to the way people talk! You don't say "affirmative" or some 6 Anthropology crap like that. You say "no problemo.” […] And if you want to shine them on, it's “hasta la vista, baby.” In this famous exchange from the 1991 blockbuster, Terminator 2, the young hero of the film was teaching his cyborg friend (Arnold Schwarzenegger) how to speak like a “real person.” These famous lines epitomize what has become the rather common conversational practice of interspersing English with Spanish (or Spanish-sounding words). In a similar fashion, the rising celebrity of hip-hop culture among US urban youth contributed to popularize linguistic practices that were once considered to be a prerogative of the African American speech community. Standard American English has gradually incorporated lexical items and expressions traditionally belonging to linguistic minorities. But what is the semiotic and cultural logic underlying these habits? What are the implications of these conversational practices for the reproduction of certain cultural representations of historically Spanish-speaking populations in the United States? How does the appropriation of African American English into vernacular English by white, upper-middle-class American teenagers partake in the production of certain forms of youth identities? How can we interpret these forms of cultural mimicry and appropriation? How does language operate as an index of distance, solidarity, and power among social groups? How do social actors use language to craft a racialized representation of individual and collective “selves” in colonial and postcolonial contexts? This course explores the varied and sometimes surprising interconnections between language and race. The aim will be to show how language is a primary locus for the production of stereotypes, the performance of identity, the presentation of the self, and the reproduction (or the challenge) of social inequalities. We will scrutinize the role of linguistic ideologies in the colonial encounter, explore the interplay between language and the construction of hegemonic power, and examine the connection between communicative practices and the reproduction of racial discourse and racial stereotypes. Moving away from the idea that racism is a phenomenon of the past or a prerogative of conservatives and uneducated others, this course constitutes a reading (and, hopefully, an experiential) journey through the interplay between language and race. Performing Culture Deanna Barenboim Open—Spring This course takes up questions of cultural performance and how it intersects with the poetics and politics of ritual, heritage, and identity in Latin American, Latino/a, and indigenous contexts. Drawing upon a rich set of ethnographic examples, we will examine expressive culture in a variety of forms, including media, theatre, dance, music, storytelling, and art. In cultivating an anthropological sensibility of how culture is acted, enacted, and embodied, we will delve into topics such as authenticity, representation, ethnicity, globalization, migration, and social change. Course readings will thus challenge us to grapple with a range of issues central to contemporary anthropological understandings of aesthetic practice and experience. We will look at topics such as the negotiation of Bolivian national and indigenous identities through musical performance, the innovative use of video technology by Kayapó to stake territorial claims in Brazil, and the new ways in which “folkloric” dance is employed by transborder Maya migrant communities as a form of resistance and empowerment. For their conference work, students will have the opportunity to conduct original ethnographic fieldwork on the topic of cultural performance. Field Methods in the Study of Language and Culture Aurora Donzelli Intermediate—Fall The idea that language and culture are deeply interconnected seems almost commonsensical. But what are the actual mechanics of the interplay between these two key notions in the study of human experience? Linguistic anthropology offers an important contribution to the understanding of language as cultural practice, at the same time enhancing our awareness that language is a culturally loaded semiotic medium. This course will offer an overview of the rich scholarly tradition that examines the language/culture interface. We will discuss how social meanings and cultural values are constructed and reproduced through prosaic and unsensational conversational practices. We will learn how people’s ideas and beliefs about language(s) can be mapped onto people and have profound implications in the life of a social group. We will scrutinize key issues in the study of endangered languages and learn how field THE CURRICULUM 7 linguists compile grammars of unknown languages spoken by only a few surviving speakers. We will see how the grammar of the specific languages that we speak shapes how we view the world and discover how language mediates perceptions of time, space, form, and matter. We will explore forms of lived experience such as music concerts, story telling, and dance and discover the culturally specific ways through which people engage with the images and sounds of a performance. In so doing, we will explore different practical approaches to ethnographic and linguistic fieldwork. Special emphasis will be given to practicing and understanding the methodological specificities of linguistic anthropological work, which combines traditional ethnographic methods (such as interviewing and participant-observation) with the use of audio-visual recording and transcription of spontaneous interaction. This methodological training will provide students with a deeper appreciation of the potential of these different techniques for grasping the nuances of communicative interaction and will enhance their awareness of the importance of linguistic details for the understanding of broader sociocultural processes. Play: Psychological and Anthropological Perspectives Robert R. Desjarlais, Barbara Schecter Intermediate—Spring “For many years, the conviction has grown upon me that civilization arises and unfolds in and as play”—Huizinga, Homo Ludens Play is central to human experience—but what does it mean to play, and to what extent is play intrinsic to the human condition? In this course, we will consider play to be a central aspect of all imaginative life. We will look closely at the amazing complexity of human playworlds, both adult and child, and at the many aspects of our experiences through play. We will consider various domains of cultural life, such as ritual, theatre, improvisation, and storytelling—including the developmental origins in children of these modes of expression. Other topics will include therapeutic uses of play, the role of play in learning, play in virtual worlds, and the lifeworlds of competitive chess players. Throughout these inquiries, we will adopt an interdisciplinary perspective—charting the psychological, cultural, and social underpinnings of this imaginative realm. Students will be asked to choose a context in which to observe and/or participate in play with adults or children (such as at our Early Childhood Center or in another setting). Previous course work in psychology or anthropology is required. Ethnographic Research and Writing Robert R. Desjarlais Advanced—Year Javanese shadow theatre, Bedouin love poems, and American street-corner societies are but a few of the cultural realities about which anthropologists have effectively studied and written. This is no easy task, given the substantial difficulties involved in understanding—and portraying through writing—the concerns, activities, and logic of lives other than one’s own. Students in this course will similarly try their hands at ethnographic research and writing. In the fall semester, each student will be asked to undertake an ethnographic research project in order to investigate the features of a specific social world, such as a homeless shelter, a religious festival, or dorm life at a liberal arts college. In the spring, she or he will craft a fully realized piece of ethnographic writing that conveys something of the features and dynamics of that world in lively, accurate, and comprehensive terms. Along the way, and with the help of anthropological writings that are either exceptional or experimental in nature, we will collectively think through some of the most important questions inherent in ethnographic projects, such as the use of field notes, the interlacing of theory and data, the role of dialogue and the author’s voice in ethnographic prose, and the ethical and political responsibilities that come with any attempt to understand and portray the lives of others. Previous course work in anthropology required. Political Language and Performance Aurora Donzelli Advanced—Spring The involvement of humans with the world is essentially manifested in our being constantly engaged in performing actions, evaluating the potential results or regretting the actual outcomes of our own or other people’s deeds, assuming or disclaiming responsibility for the acts that we actually perform or imagine to perform, debating 8 Art History whether to act or refrain from action or act in a certain way or another. Language plays a key role in structuring and mediating humans’ political agency and moral reasoning. However, while language is often understood as a mere device for the transmission of information, the term “politics” often evokes in our minds large-scale processes involving local institutions, national governments, or international agencies. This course would like to challenge these traditional representations of both language and politics and provide an understanding of how the micropolitical usages of language lie at the heart of human sociality. Through a series of readings and practical exercises, we will see how the way that we say something is often just as (or even more) important than what we actually say. We will discover how language is inherently political and how politics entails an important performative and aesthetic component. Throughout the semester, we will explore how, in our everyday lives, we are often (although not always completely consciously) involved in subtle and complex political dynamics concerning our own and/or our interlocutors’ “identity” and footing. We will seek to understand how speakers construct credibility and assertiveness while communicating among themselves and how they manage issues of agreement, affiliation, and disalignment in the moral domain of everyday conversation and political speechmaking. At the same time, we will examine how political discourse—both in the United States and in more “exotic” contexts—constitutes a form of verbal art that entails different aesthetics of persuasion and reproduces different moral philosophies and cultural values. Students will be involved in conducting original research, either individually or in small groups, about the ethnography of everyday speech and political discourse in settings of their choice. Through selected readings on linguistic construction of identity and the presentation of the political self, political performances and audience reactions, stance-taking, the construction of credibility and assertiveness, evidence and responsibility, vernacular moral and political philosophies, indexicality, reported speech, and heteroglossia, students will achieve a deeper appreciation of how speakers use language, as well as other semiotic resources (i.e., space, nonverbal behavior, cosmetics, and clothing), to construct meaning. Previous course work in anthropology or permission of the instructor is required. Art History The art history curriculum at Sarah Lawrence Collegecovers a broad territory historically, culturally, and methodologically. Students interested in art theory, social art history, or material culture have considerable flexibility in designing a program of study and in choosing conference projects that link artistic, literary, historical, social, philosophical, and other interests. Courses often include field trips to major museums, auction houses, and art galleries in New York City and the broader regional area, as well as to relevant screenings, performances, and architectural sites. Many students have extended their classroom work in art history through internships at museums and galleries, at nonprofit arts organizations, or with studio artists; through their own studio projects; or through advanced-level senior thesis work. Sarah Lawrence students have gone on to graduate programs in art history at Columbia, Johns Hopkins, Northwestern, Bard, Williams, Yale, University of Chicago, Oxford University and University of London, among others. Many of their classmates have pursued museum and curatorial work at organizations such as the Guggenheim Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago; others have entered the art business by working at auction houses such as Sotheby’s or by starting their own galleries; and still others have entered such professions as nonprofit arts management and advocacy, media production, and publishing. Beauty, Bridges, Boxes, and Brutes: “Modern” Architecture From 1750 to 1960 Joseph C. Forte Open, Lecture—Fall This course aims to give, through slides and readings, a comprehensive and nuanced understanding of modern architectural practice and theory from its origins in Enlightenment notions of ideal beauty, type, form, and scientific function to its postwar iteration in the new Brutalism, based on truth to materials, concrete challenges, subconscious impulses, and a theory of the ugly. Along with major movements (Arts and Crafts, Technological Sublime, Art Nouveau, Bauhaus) and figures (William Morris, Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier), we will learn to read architecture and to read with architects in order to contextualize form and its urban, THE CURRICULUM 9 sociopolitical, and epistemological implications and to see how architecture gives form to context. Group conferences will focus on primary sources, dealing with beauty, the sublime, ornament, destruction, and totalizing reason in architectural theory. Two papers and an architectural notebook dedicated to class notes, readings, drawings, musings, etc. will be required. Arts of the Americas: The Continents Before Columbus and Cortés Susan Kart Open, Lecture—Fall Pre-Hispanic visual culture will be the focus of this class. We will cross on both Mesoamerica and the Andes. In Central America, our focus will be on the Olmec, Maya, and Aztec cultures; in the Andes, we will focus on the lowland Paracas, Nazca, and Moche, along with the highland Chavín, Wari, Tiahuanaco, and Inka city-states. Along with architecture, textiles, manuscripts, metallurgy, and sculpted works, we will consider primary sources and current debates in art history and archaeology. Early theorists of pre-Columbian art such as George Kubler, Junius Bird, Octavio Paz, Zelia Nuttall, Marilyn Bridges, and Tatiana Proskouriakoff will be discussed in conjunction with more recent scholarship by Anne Paul, Elizabeth Boone, and Dorie Reents, among many others. Among the themes we will discuss: questions of cultural patrimony, art historical methodology, archaeological theory, the politics of collecting and museum exhibitions, and relationships between art historical and anthropological modes of interpretation. To this end, the class will utilize the objects and libraries available at the major collections of pre-Columbian art in New York City: the Metropolitan Museum of Art and its Goldwater Library and the American Museum of Natural History and its library. Problems By Design: Studies in the Theory and Practice of Contemporary Architecture Joseph C. Forte Open, Lecture—Spring This course grounds analysis of contemporary architectural practice in theory and individual responses to evolving media and methods of design from 1960 to the present. The emphasis will be on North American, Asian, and European architectural practitioners, institutional and intellectual frameworks, and explorations of global urbanism as reflexive elements. A survey of attitudes in the immediate postwar period will be juxtaposed with post-9/11 issues. Readings will involve works in philosophy, theory, criticism, politics, and social analysis. Topics covered will touch on: careers of architects such as Aldo Rossi, Jean Nouvel, Coop Himmelb(l)au, Rem Koolhaas, Lebbeus Woods, Santiago Calatrava, Rural and Urban Studio, Future Systems, MVRDV, West 8, Zaha Hadid, Kenneth Yeang, Foreign Office; movements such as Rationalism, New Brutalism/Team 10, Situationalism, Postmodernism, Deconstructivism, New Urbanism/Townscape; design strategies such as blobs, dots and folds, fractal form, fractured landscapes, datatowns and metacities, ascetic aesthetic/minimalist consumption, megastructures, themed urbanism, transformational design grammars, economic and informational models for sustainable growth/ development/design. Three assignments will involve analytical and critical papers on new works—such as Diller and Scofidio’s High Line, Brian Tolle’s Irish Famine Museum, SANAA’s New Museum, and Frank Gehry’s Beekman Tower—or design problems inspired by various typologies and modernities. An artists’ notebook is an option for a final class project. Arts of the African Continent Susan Kart Open, Lecture—Spring “Africa” is a concept that was created during the colonial period. As such, our understanding of “African Art” is historically based on colonial models of documentation and knowledge collection. Once we understand this, we can engage more honestly with the diversity of cultures and arts on the continent. To understand this, we will read from a variety of art historical, anthropological, literary, and primary colonial sources, including Georg Schweinfurth, Joseph Conrad, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Johannes Fabian, Suzanne Blier, and Monica Visona—whose book, A History of Art in Africa, is used as the primary textbook for the course. We will also use the collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the American Museum of Natural History as extended classrooms. This affords the opportunity not only to view the original objects and thus learn about the craftsmanship, scale, materials, and provenance of the pieces but also to encourage students to use the museum resources. The course will have a 10 Art History thematic focus on issues pertaining to the interchange of cultural ideas and art, as manifested in religion and regional exchanges between peoples. I want to encourage students to think about the impact of Western religions (Christianity and Islam) on African societies and the objects that they produce, as well as on how cultures (and objects) are interrelated with their neighbors. In other words, the class strives to eliminate thinking of African peoples as concrete units in easily definable boxes—Sub-Saharan vs North African, Kongo vs. Fang, Traditional vs Contemporary—as cultural borders are much more fluid than we imagine them to be. Finally, the class will explore contemporary art movements, drawing attention to the arts produced in modern times and bringing students’ attention to the fact that their own generation in Africa is continually updating, redefining, and restructuring the art of their times. Making History of NonWestern Art History: Africa, Oceania, and the Americas Susan Kart Open—Year This class examines the creation of the field of non-Western art historically known as “AOA” or the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. When the conceit emerged, its purpose was to provide a means for classifying art of nonEuropean manufacture into an organized system that would allow for understandings of value, merit, and quality in comparison (but not on par) with European arts. The legacy of this strategy of “the West and the Rest” is seen today in museums, textbooks, galleries, and journals. Arts from the “AOA” regions will be examined from within their own cultural contexts, as well as within the European canons of art history. Art historical theories of art, value, display, the West, religion, colonialism, and conquest will be examined in conjunction with objects from around the world. We will focus on the “unmaking” of this unwieldy art historical category, and students will propose new strategies for examining material culture from global perspectives. Students will evaluate exhibitions of non-Western material in New York collections and will design their own “corrective” exhibition as a final class project. As the class is a service learning class in partnership with The Art Gallery at the Yonkers Riverfront Library, students will expand upon their classroom knowledge over the course of the year by directing curatorial, programming, and educational service learning opportunities at The Art Gallery and with Yonkers residents and highschool students. A possible travel component for a service learning/art exhibition project to Dakar Senegal in May 2012 is in the works for this class. Enrolled students will be kept up to date on this opportunity. Students must attend both a group interview and a personal interview with the instructor during registration week to be eligible for this class. Performance Art Judith Rodenbeck Open—Year “Let’s murder the moonlight!”—Filippo Tommaso Marinetti (1909) This course traces the history of “performance art,” a medium named in the 1960s but with roots in the avant-garde movements of the early 20th century. Distinct from theatre and emerging more often from the visual and musical arts, performance is a slippery object. Our explorations will be recursive. We will examine its history chronologically from Futurism and Dada to the happenings of the 1960s and up to present-day projects. Framing critical concepts—from ideas of the gesamtkunstwerk and synesthesia to the trennung der elemente of Berthold Brecht and from the “theater of cruelty” of Antonin Artaud to current formulations of performance, performativity, and the participatory—will guide a second pass, expanded to draw on examples from Wagner to Disney, from Stanislavski to Butler, and through the history of performance. We will also be considering formal issues, including questions concerning audience, the space/time of the event, the score, documentation, and the afterlives of performance. The Greeks and their Neighbors: The Hellenization of the Mediterranean From the Homeric Age to Augustus David Castriota Open—Fall Although the Romans come to mind most immediately as the people who absorbed and passed on the achievements of Greek civilization to the Western world, the transmission of Greek culture to Western posterity was a far more complex process involving various other peoples. Already during the early first millennium BC, THE CURRICULUM 11 Greek culture began to affect the neighboring peoples to the east, such as the Phrygians, Lydians, and Lycians, as well as the Greeks’ western neighbors in Italy: the Etruscans and Romans. In time, the Phoenicians and their western colony of Carthage and the western regions of the great Persian Empire would increasingly come to adopt many aspects of Greek material culture, art, and religion—even before the Asiatic conquests of Alexander the Great and his successors. It was this long and varied process that the Romans gradually inherited and fused into a pan-Mediterranean Greco-Roman Pax Romana, beginning with Augustus. The course will examine this process from the perspective of artistic monuments and literary or historical sources, as well. The Fall of the Roman Empire David Castriota Open—Fall The fall of the Roman Empire was not an event but a process, one that unfolded slowly over several centuries. This course will examine how Rome went from a period of unquestioned power and prosperity in the late second century AD into an era of economic, political, and military instability that resulted in a steady decline, punctuated by periodic revivals that ultimately failed. We will examine the evidence of literature, military, and political history and major artistic monuments. The course will focus on the root causes of this decline in Roman military and economic policy under relentless pressure from barbarian Europe and in competition with the neighboring Persian Empire. We will also consider the emergence of Christianity, not so much as a cause or symptom of decline but as the cultural process through which the Romans reinvented themselves one last time. “La Piu Grassa Minerva (Minerva in Her Fullness)” Theories of Art and Architecture From 1300 to 1600 Joseph C. Forte Open—Fall The nature of art has been described by the philosopher Richard Wollheim as “one of the most elusive of the traditional problems of human culture.” It has been defined as a vehicle for the expression or communication of emotions and ideas, a means of exploring and appreciating formal elements for their own sake, and as mimesis or representation. An inquiry into the various ways that artists, patrons, and, a new phenomenon, art critics, developed a comprehensive theory of something we now know as the fine arts and addressed this issue from a complex perspective of religious belief, prescientific concepts of nature, complicated theories of the self, and an increasing interest in classical aesthetics, rhetoric, and poetics. Readings will cover theories of subject matter and formal composition, ideas and words, works and their authors. Focus will be on the theory and practice of Alberti, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Titian; historical phenomena and movements such as theory and the craftman’s skill; visual poetics and humanism; neo-Platonism and the limits of mimesis; Aristotelian poetics and moral narrative; Reformation iconoclasm; Counter Reform orthodoxy; and Venetian inventive naturalism. A Paradox for Painters: Problems in Imitation, Expression, and Reflexivity in the 17th-Century European Painting Joseph C. Forte Open—Spring This class aims to integrate into a coherent historical narrative the diversity of aesthetic claims, national schools, religious professions, individual styles, and critical approaches that characterize painting in 17th-century Europe. The Italian grand manner of the 16th century—Michelangelo, Titian, etc.—provided a model and a paradox for painters of the following century. Had an apogee been reached, was invention now impossible? In short, how can artists proceed? Did the religious “reform” of the 16th century, the struggle to innovate or preserve the dogma of the Catholic Church, change the rules for painters and their patrons, clients, and institutions? The theory and practice of the “reform” of paintings by the Italian artists Caravaggio and the Carracci are only the first attempts to answer these questions. Next, we study the development of the Flemish school, best characterized by the complex literacy process, theatricality, and brilliant colorism of Rubens and the social and religious concerns that frame the Spanish school, represented by 12 Asian Studies Zubaran, Ribera, and Velazquez. We will deal with the development of realistic painting in Holland, its ideological and theological roots, and the careers of Rembrandt and Vermeer. Finally, we will finish with France—the crossroads of north and south—with naturalistic painters such as Georges de la Tour, classicists such as Nicolas Poussin, and debates between proponents of classical art or of sensuous painting, literary or visual models, theory or practice in picture theory and making. After introductory discussions of the artistic and cultural heritage of each geographical area or the theoretical frameworks of important masters' styles based on contemporary sources, we will intensely study a few representative works through the use of slides. Issues addressed may be chronology and development of styles; the effect of patronage on style and meaning in a work; and the effect on the arts of new religious, political, and social groups and institutions. Aesthetic issues will be raised: the disputed criteria for artistic excellence, contemplation vs. theatricality, epic vs. tragic, the natural vs. the perfect work, the frame vs. the individual object. Readings will range broadly, with particular attention to modern critical approaches applied to 17th-century works. Conference work will be encouraged on works of art in New York museums, art, architecture, and theory from 1400 to the present, including women's patronage of cultural activities. Writing Contemporary Art Judith Rodenbeck Advanced—Year This course takes as its object the varieties of text that are produced within the ambit of what philosopher Arthur Danto calls the “artworld.” We will be reading art works, criticism, history, memoirs—texts that can be literal, poetic, logical, experimental, encyclopedic or monosyllabic, “orate” or literate, open, imperative, ekphrastic. Authors range from Gertrude Stein to David Antin, from George Brecht to Mary Kelly, from Donald Judd to Rosalind Krauss. Exercises range from haiku to catalogue essay. Asian Studies Asian Studies is an interdisciplinary field grounded in current approaches to the varied regions of Asia. Seminars and lectures are offered on China, Japan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Indonesia. Courses explore Asian cultures, geographies, histories, societies, and religions. Visual and performing arts are included in the Asian Studies curriculum. Faculty, trained in languages of their areas, draw on extensive field experience in Asia. Their courses bridge humanities, social sciences, and global studies. Students are encouraged to consider studying in Asia during their junior year. The Office of International Programs assists students in locating appropriate opportunities. Recent Sarah Lawrence College students have participated in programs of study in India, China, and Japan. First-Year Studies: Cultures and Arts of India Sandra Robinson FYS The Indian subcontinent hosts many diverse cultures grounded in Hindu, Buddhist, Islamic, secular, and unassimilated traditions. This multifaceted course explores the diverse cultural traditions of India through the visual and performing arts and through exemplary literature. Fiction and poetic narratives are studied in conjunction with nonverbal arts, as we explore modes of Indian thought and expression. Aesthetic, religious, economic, and political aspects of South Asian arts are viewed in light of transcultural theories of production and consumption. We study Hindu temple sculpture, Moghul miniature painting, and Dalit theatre, with attention to aesthetic principles, religious sectarian histories, caste hierarchies, and systems of patronage. Our inquiries address these questions: How do arts of the 21st century both reflect and transform traditional myths and images? What social agendas have led to conventional distinctions between “classical” and “folk” arts, and why are such definitions now widely rejected? Why does the Indian canon regard cuisine and body decoration to be classical art forms? Which arts were historically available to women? How did British colonial values influence South Asian artists’ identities and selfrepresentations? Sources include the music of Ravi Shankar, films of Satyajit Ray and Mira Nair, and work of prominent photographers. The seminar culminates with readings from recent works of Salman Rushdie, Arundhati Roy, and other postcolonial writers who continue to inscribe images of India onto the global scene. THE CURRICULUM 13 Bitter Victories, Sweet Defeats Kevin Landdeck Open—Year This seminar is a sustained look at a major aspect of East Asian history in the first half of the 20th century: war. The course will not be “military history” in the sense of battles and campaigns but, instead, a look at war’s deep impact on politics, society, and culture in China and Japan from the 1890s to the 1950s, as governments and people prepared for war, waged it, propagandized for it, and rebuilt in its wake. For China, we will focus on the link between prolonged warfare and revolution. The Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-45) was preceded by decades of violent struggles among warlords and revolutionary parties and was followed by the PRC’s first major international conflict, the Korean War. The importance of these long years of warfare for the Chinese revolution cannot be overstated. We will ask how men were mobilized, how wars affected civilians, how revolutionary leaders and parties made use of warfare, why some Chinese collaborated with the Japanese, and why a regime whose flag was barely hoisted over Tiananmen Square decided to fight one of the world’s superpowers. For Japan, war was no less crucial but in different ways. To understand Japan’s disastrous imperial adventure and the effects of defeat, we will reverse the China rubric to look at the connections between aggressive militarism and the Meiji political “revolution” (1868), as well as later brushes with social revolution. The Nanjing Massacre (December 1937) will be dissected, as we attempt to understand the anatomy of that atrocity. Finally, we will look at the ramifications of defeat. How was “responsibility” for the war determined? Using scholarly studies, fiction, and the photographs of Shomei Tomatsu, we will ask what it meant to be an occupied country and what changes US occupation brought in its wake. We will confront the difficult issue of Japan as “victim” by discussing the atomic bombs—a singular event in world history—and their cultural effects in Japan. Personal Narratives Kevin Landdeck Open—Fall This course explores the realm of private life and individual identity as revealed in forms of autobiographical writings from modern China. Ranging from the late Qing dynasty (1644-1911) and into the Reform era (1980s), our investigations will cover an eclectic mix of “personal” literature: diaries, memoirs, oral testimony, autobiographies, third-party anthropological reconstructions of individuals, and (auto)biographical fiction. We will encounter late imperial petty scholars, young urban women and their mothers with bound feet, peasants, radical revolutionaries, intellectuals, Maoist Red Guards, and factory workers. In a purely historical sense, the readings provide opportunities to understand the past by working directly with different types of sources. Yet, these personal stories not only open up windows on the lives and times of their writers but also allow us to explore the intersection between the practice of writing and identity construction, which some theorists argue is one of the distinctive elements of modernity. We will ask ourselves how these authors present themselves: What are their selfconceptions and self-deceptions? Where does their sense of “self” come from, and how do they construct private selves through writing? Why are they writing and for whom? We should even dare to ask whether these categories of “private” and “self” are even relevant. The rapid and often traumatic changes of these decades will cause us to consider how these people understood and situated themselves in wider society and the events of their time and, thus, will open up questions about the imaginative constructions of national (or social) communities that are smuggled inside these “personal” stories. Empire to Nation Kevin Landdeck Open—Spring What did it mean to be a subject of the Qing dynasty in 1800 or a citizen of one of the modern Chinese Republics founded in the 20th century? What changed in the course of that century and a half? This course is a reading seminar in China’s fitful transition from the empire of the Manchu (Qing) dynasty (1644-1911) to the nation-state of the PRC (1949-present). The Qing dynasty was massive. From its height in the 18th century to the middle of the 20th, this continental power was remade into a member of the modern international community of nationstates. As we chart this process, recurring themes will be the changing nature of (state) sovereignty, relations with outsiders/foreigners, and the relationship of individuals to state power. We will examine the sinews of the Manchu dynasty’s domestic authority, including the balancing act between the emperor’s personal will and the 14 Asian Studies bureaucracy’s routinized power. Qing colonialism in Xinjiang will illuminate the multiethnic nature of its empire and its interactions with foreign “others.” Despite internal challenges, external relations were what brought fundamental challenges to the imperial state—particularly the corrosive interactions with another imperial power, the seafaring British. The role of translation (of Western philosophy and international law) will be our entry point for China’s slide into the modern international system of nation-states. The concept of race highlights how Chinese struggled with the definition of “nation” itself. From there, we will turn to the growth of a modern nationstate. Keeping in mind the distinction between rural and urban environments, the changing nature of power, the relationship between the state and individuals, and revolutionary political mobilization will be topics of particular interest. Chinese Philosophy: Tao, Mind, and Human Nature Ellen Neskar Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year The nature of human nature, the proper functioning of the mind, and the relationship of both to the Tao are central preoccupations of Chinese philosophy. In the first semester, we will explore these concerns through a careful reading of the foundational texts from the early Taoist and Confucian traditions. In the second semester, we will look at the ways in which later NeoTaoist and Neo-Confucian philosophers reevaluated the classics and created metaphysical systems to ground their understanding of perfectibility of all people. Our goals are twofold: First, we will pay close attention to each philosopher’s conceptions of the mind, emotions, human nature, thought, and knowledge. Second, we will examine the unfolding of the debates among the philosophers concerning the manner in which these conceptions relate to the Tao and shape the individual’s practice of self-cultivation. Philosophers and texts will include: Confucius, Lao-tzu, Mencius, Chuang-tzu, Hsun-tzu, Great Learning, Doctrine of the Mean, Kuo Hsiang, and Chu Hsi. Writing India: Transnational Narratives Sandra Robinson Sophomore and above—Fall The global visibility of South Asian writers has changed the face of contemporary English literature. Many writers from the Indian subcontinent continue to narrate tumultuous events that surrounded the 1947 partition of India and Pakistan with independence from British imperial rule. Their writings join utopian imaginings and legacies of the past with dystopias and thwarted aspirations of recent decades. More promising visions currently prevail. This seminar addresses themes of identity, fragmentation, hybridity, memory, and alienation that link South Asian literary production to contemporary writing from postcolonial cultures in Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Accounts of South Asian communal violence reflect urgencies resonant with those expressed in literatures of the Holocaust. The cultural space of India has been repeatedly transformed and redeployed according to varied cultural projects, political interests, and economic agendas. After briefly considering representations of India in travel chronicles of Chinese Buddhist pilgrims, Greek adventurers, and Turko-Persian conquerors, we explore modern constructions of India found in excerpts from Kipling, Forster, Orwell, and other writers of the British Raj. The central focus of the seminar is on India as remembered and imagined in selected works of writers, including Salman Rushdie, Vikram Seth and Arundhati Roy. We use interdisciplinary critical inquiry as we pursue a literature that shifts increasingly from narrating the nation to narrating its diasporic fragments in transnational contexts. Images of India: Text/Photo/ Film Sandra Robinson Sophomore and above—Spring This seminar examines the interface of colonial and postcolonial representations of India as imagined and imaged. Visual artists and writers from India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh are actively engaged in reinterpreting the British colonial impact on South Asia. Their work presents sensibilities of the colonized in counter-narration to images previously established during the regime of the Raj. Highlighting previously unexposed impressions, such works inevitably THE CURRICULUM 15 supplement, usually challenge, and frequently undermine traditional accounts underwritten by imperialist interests. Colonial discourse depicted peoples of the Indian subcontinent both in terms of degradation and in terms of the romance of empire, thereby rationalizing various economic, political, and psychological agendas. The external invention and deployment of the term “Indian” is emblematic of the epoch, with colonial designation presuming to reframe indigenous identity. Postcolonial writers and artists are consequently preoccupied with issues of identity formation. What does it mean to have been conceived of as an Indian? What historical claims are implicit in allegories of the nation? How do such claims inform events taking place today, given the resurgence of Hindu fundamentalism? For this inquiry, sources include works by prominent South Asian writers, photographers, and filmmakers. Other courses offered this year in Asian Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development (p. 41), Joshua Muldavin Geography Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development (p. 40), Joshua Muldavin Geography Japanese I (p. 58), Kuniko Katz Japanese Japanese II (p. 58), Miyabi Yamamoto Japanese Japanese III (p. 58), Cheiko Naka Japanese First-Year Studies: The Buddhist Philosophy of Emptiness (p. 107), T. Griffith Foulk Religion Buddhist Art and Architecture (p. 108), T. Griffith Foulk Religion Islam and the Muslim World (p. 108), Kristin Zahra Sands Religion Muslim Literature, Film, and Art (p. 110), Kristin Zahra Sands Religion Biology Biology is the study of life in its broadest sense, ranging from such topics as the role of trees in affecting global atmospheric carbon dioxide down to the molecular mechanisms switching genes on and off in human brain cells. It includes a tremendous variety of disciplines: molecular biology, immunology, histology, anatomy, physiology, developmental biology, behavior, evolution, ecology, and many others. Because Sarah Lawrence College faculty are broadly trained and frequently teach across the traditional disciplinary boundaries, students gain an integrated knowledge of living things—a view of the forest as well as the trees. General Biology I: Cellular and Molecular Biology Drew E. Cressman Open, Lecture—Fall Biology, the study of life on Earth, encompasses structures and forms ranging from the very minute to the very large. In order to grasp the complexities of life, we begin this study with the cellular and molecular forms and mechanisms that serve as the foundation for all living organisms. The initial part of the semester will introduce the fundamental molecules critical to the biochemistry of life processes. From there, we branch out to investigate the major ideas, structures, and concepts central to the biology of cells, genetics, and the chromosomal basis of inheritance. Finally, we conclude the semester by examining how these principles relate to the mechanisms of evolution. Throughout the semester, we will discuss the individuals responsible for major discoveries, as well as the experimental techniques and process by which such advances in biological understanding are made. Classes will be supplemented with weekly laboratory work. This course is designed to be followed in sequence by General Biology II: Organismal and Population Biology. General Biology II: Organismal and Population Biology Leah Olson Open, Lecture—Spring The number and diversity of living organisms on Earth is staggering—and so common that we often take their very existence for granted. Yet the nature of these organisms, their mechanisms of survival, and their modes of interaction with each other and with the environment form the basis of endless and fascinating study. This course serves as a fundamental introduction to the science of life—the broad field of biology. As such, we cover a wide variety of topics, ranging from the microscopic to the macroscopic and from the laboratory to the field. The course will be divided into three parts. The first portion of 16 Biology the year will focus on the biology of cells and the chromosomal basis of inheritance. We will then turn our attention to the mechanisms of evolution and biological diversity. Finally, we will conclude by examining organismal functions and ecology. In addition to the science involved, we will discuss the individuals responsible for major discoveries and the process of hypothesis formation, experimental design, and interpretation of results. Classes will be supplemented with weekly laboratory work. Marine Biology Raymond D. Clarke Open—Fall The ocean is the last of the great frontiers on Earth and is widely heralded as the source of our future energy and food resources. The ocean is believed to be the cradle of life and certainly supports a much greater variety of living things than the freshwater or terrestrial environments. What is the nature of life in the ocean? How does marine life capture and share the sun’s energy? Why are some areas of the ocean rich in life and others almost devoid of life? Can we farm the seas? These and other questions will be discussed in a systematic inquiry into marine biology. We will study the physical characteristics of each of the major zones of the ocean and then examine the kinds of marine organisms and the adaptations that suit them to their characteristic zones. This will lead to a discussion of our present use of the seas and our impact on the organisms that live there. With this knowledge, we will examine some of the exotic schemes proposed to harvest food and energy from the ocean and evaluate their probable effects on the ocean system. Classes will be supplemented by laboratory sessions and field trips. Conferences will be used to explain class material, to review the tests, and to discuss conference papers, which may be written on any basic or applied aspect of marine biology. Anatomy and Physiology Beth Ann Ditkoff Open—Fall Anatomy is the branch of science that explores the bodily structure of living organisms, while physiology is the study of the normal functions of these organisms. In this course, we will explore the human body in both health and disease. Focus will be placed on the major body units such as skin, skeletal, muscular, nervous, endocrine, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, urinary and reproductive systems. By emphasizing concepts rather than the memorization of facts, we will make associations between anatomical structures and their functions. The course will take a clinical approach to health and illness, with examples drawn from medical disciplines such as radiology, pathology, and surgery. A final conference paper is required at the conclusion of the course. The topic will be chosen by each student to emphasize the relevance of anatomy/ physiology to our understanding of the human body. Principles of Botany Kenneth G. Karol Open—Fall Understanding the biology of plants is fundamental to understanding the complex web of life on Earth and its evolutionary history. Nearly all other organisms, including humans, directly or indirectly rely on plants for their food and oxygen. Consequently, plants are essential to our existence; and by studying them in detail, we learn more about our own species and the world that we inhabit. This course is an introductory survey of botany. The first half of the course will examine aspects of plant anatomy, morphology, physiology, and development. The second half will cover plant genetics, reproduction, diversity, and evolution. In addition to covering many facets of plant biology, an introduction to bacteria and algae will also be presented. Weekly lectures and textbook readings will be supplemented with occasional laboratory sessions. Introduction to Genetics Drew E. Cressman Open—Spring At the biological core of all life on Earth is the gene. The unique combination of genes in each individual ultimately forms the basis for that person's physical appearance, metabolic capacity, thought processes, and behavior. Therefore, in order to understand how life develops and functions, it is critical to understand what genes are, how they work, and how they are passed on from parents to offspring. In this course, we will begin by investigating the theories of inheritance first put forth by Mendel and then progress to our current concepts of how genes are transmitted through individuals, families, and whole populations. We will also examine chromosome structure and the molecular functions of genes and DNA and how mutations in DNA can lead THE CURRICULUM 17 to physical abnormalities and diseases such as Down’s and Turner’s syndromes or hemophilia. Finally, we will discuss the role of genetics in influencing such complex phenotypes as behavior and intelligence. Classes will be supplemented with weekly laboratory work. Biology of Cancer Drew E. Cressman Intermediate—Fall Cancer is likely the most feared and notorious of human diseases, being devastating in both its scope and its prognosis. It has been described as an alien invader inside one’s own body, characterized by its insidious spread and devious ability to resist countermeasures. Cancer’s legendary status is rightfully earned, accounting for 13% of all human deaths worldwide and killing an estimated eight million people annually. In 1971, President Richard Nixon declared a “war on cancer” and, since then, more than $200 billion has been spent on cancer research. While clinical success has been modest, tremendous insights have been generated in understanding the cellular, molecular, and genetic mechanisms of this disease. In this course, we will explore the field of cancer biology, covering topics such as tumor viruses, cellular oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, cell immortalization, multistep tumorigenesis, cancer development and metastasis, and the treatment of cancer. In addition, we will discuss new advances in cancer research and draw from recent articles in the published literature. Ecology Raymond D. Clarke Intermediate—Spring Ecology is the science of the relationship of living things to their living and nonliving environments. While providing the underpinnings for environmentalism, ecology exists independently as a basic science. This course will introduce the student to the major concepts of ecology: the flow of energy and cycling of nutrients through ecosystems, the regulation of population size, the ways in which species are grouped together to form natural communities, and the factors that contribute to the stability of natural systems. In addition to the fundamental principles, we will explore the observational and experimental support for these ideas, both qualitative and quantitative. These methods and concepts will help students evaluate such current issues as biodiversity, global warming, food production, and energy use. Classes will be augmented by field trips. Virology Drew E. Cressman Advanced—Spring Viruses are some of the smallest biological entities found in nature—yet, at the same time, perhaps the most notorious. Having no independent metabolic activity of their own, they function as intracellular parasites, depending entirely on infecting and interacting with the cells of a host organism to produce new copies of themselves. The effects on the host organism can be catastrophic, leading to disease and death. HIV has killed more than 18 million people since its identification and has infected twice that number. Ebola, West Nile virus, herpes, and pox viruses—are all well-known viruses yet shrouded in fear and mystery. During the course of this semester, we will examine the biology of viruses, discussing their physical and genetic properties, their interaction with host cells, their ability to commandeer the cellular machinery for their own reproductive needs, the effects of viral infection on host cells, and finally how viruses and other subviral entities may have originated and evolved. In addition, we will examine how viruses have been portrayed in literature, with readings that include Laurie Garrett’s The Coming Plague and Richard Preston’s The Hot Zone. Topics in Cell Biology Leah Olson Advanced—Spring Cell biological pathways that define the basic metabolic processes of cells are currently understood to be responsible for cell aging and cell death; that is, the very processes that are essential for maintaining life—the breakdown and processing of food—are the pathways that eventually cause death. This understanding—that nutrient pathways are central in informing cellular decisions about life and death—recently led to the stunning experiment that showed that feeding mice large amounts of resveratrol, the ingredient in red wine thought to be responsible for the “French paradox,” could significantly extend the healthy lifespan of mice. What are these pathways? This course will explore these and related topics that are on the cutting edge of work in cell biology. The course will be conducted as a journal club; that is, students will be reading and making 18 Chemistry presentations from the primary literature on selected topics primarily centered on issues related to nutrient processing and cell senescence and aging. Topics covered will include: insulin receptor signaling, which functions to maintain levels of blood glucose, and how defects in those signaling pathways give rise to diabetes; other nutrient-sensing pathways in the cell; cell death, or apoptosis; oxygen-free radical production and its regulation; and fat metabolism. We will also be tying the mechanisms being studied at the cell level to issues related to the regulation of eating, obesity, aging, and other organismal-level functions. Chemistry Chemistry seeks to understand our physical world on an atomic level. This microscopic picture uses the elements of the periodic table as building blocks for a vast array of molecules, ranging from water to DNA. But some of the most fascinating aspects of chemistry involve chemical reactions, where molecules combine and transform—sometimes dramatically—to generate new molecules. Chemistry explores many areas of our physical world, ranging from our bodies and the air that we breathe to the many products of the human endeavor, including art and a plethora of consumer products. Students at Sarah Lawrence College may investigate these diverse areas of chemistry through a variety of courses: Atmospheric Chemistry, Environmental Chemistry, Nutrition, Photographic Chemistry, and Extraordinary Chemistry of Everyday Life, to name a few. In addition to these courses, the College routinely offers General, Organic, and Biochemistry to provide a foundation in the theories central to this discipline. Just as experimentation played a fundamental role in the formulation of the theories of chemistry, it plays an integral part in learning them. Therefore, laboratory experiments complement many of the seminar courses. First-Year Studies: Green Chemistry: An Environmental Revolution Colin D. Abernethy FYS Humanity’s knowledge and application of science and technology have significantly enhanced the quality of life for billions of people. New sources of affordable energy for the world’s everincreasing population, revolutionary pharmaceuticals used to treat once debilitating or killer diseases, synthetic fertilizers used to enhance crop yields, and advanced materials used to provide improved clothing and shelter have all contributed to rising living standards and longevity. These achievements, however, have come at a cost. The manufacture, use, and disposal of chemicals harmful to our environment threaten the long-term well-being of both humans and other species. Chemists have responded to these environmental concerns by developing “Green Chemistry,” a revolutionary philosophy and methodology designed to place human and environmental health at the heart of their endeavors. This course introduces students to the moral obligations of scientists to work for both the benefit of society and for the wider natural world. It guides students to an understanding of how the Twelve Principles of Green Chemistry can be applied to minimize health and environmental dangers posed by today’s agricultural, mining, manufacturing, and energy industries. General Chemistry I Colin D. Abernethy Open, Lecture—Fall Chemistry is the study of the properties, composition, and transformation of matter. It is central to the production of the materials required for modern life; for example, the synthesis of pharmaceuticals to treat disease, the manufacture of fertilizers and pesticides required to feed an ever-growing population, and the development of efficient and environmentally benign energy sources. This course provides an introduction to the fundamental concepts of modern chemistry. We will begin by examining the structure and properties of atoms, which are the building blocks of the elements—the simplest substances in the material world around us. We will then explore how atoms of different elements can bond with each other to form an infinite variety of more complex substances called compounds. This will lead us to an investigation of several classes of chemical reactions, the processes by which substances are transformed into new materials with different physical properties. Along the way, we will learn how and why the three states of matter (solids, liquids, and gases) differ from one another and how energy may be either produced or consumed by chemical THE CURRICULUM 19 reactions. In weekly laboratory sessions, we will perform experiments to illustrate and test the theories presented in the lecture part of the course. These experiments will also serve to develop practical skills in both synthetic and analytic chemical techniques. General Chemistry II Colin D. Abernethy Open, Lecture—Spring This course is a continuation of General Chemistry I. We will begin with a detailed study of both the physical and chemical properties of solutions. This will enable us to consider the factors that affect both the rates and the direction of chemical reactions. We will then investigate the properties of acids and bases and the role that electricity plays in chemistry. The course will conclude with introductions to nuclear chemistry and organic chemistry. Weekly laboratory sessions will allow us to demonstrate and test the theories described in the lecture segment of the course. Students must have completed General Chemistry I. Environmental Chemistry Mali Yin Open—Fall This course provides an introduction to basic concepts of chemistry and their application to current environmental issues. Topics include acid rain, ozone depletion, air pollution, global warming, and surface water and groundwater pollution. We will then consider how human activities such as transportation, energy production, and chemical industries influence the environment. Nutrition Mali Yin Open—Spring Nutrition is the sum of all interactions between us and the food we consume. The study of nutrition includes the nature and general role of nutrients in forming structural material, providing energy, and helping to regulate metabolism. How do food chemists synthesize the fat that can't be digested? Can this kind of fat satisfy our innate appetite for fats? Are there unwanted side effects and why? What constitutes a healthy diet? What are the consequences of severely restricted food intake seen in prevalent emotional disorders such as anorexia or bulimia? These and other questions will be discussed. We will discuss the effect of development, pregnancy, emotional state, and disease on nutritional requirements. We will also consider the effects of food production and processing on nutrition value and food safety. Organic Chemistry Mali Yin Intermediate—Year This yearlong course is a systematic study of the chemistry of carbon compounds. Introductory topics include bonding, structure, properties, reactions, nomenclature, stereochemistry, spectroscopy, and synthesis of organic compounds from a functional group approach. More advanced topics include reaction mechanisms, chemistry of aromatic compounds, carbonyl compounds, and biomolecules such as carbohydrates and amino acids. In the laboratory, students learn the basic techniques used in the synthesis, isolation, and identification of organic compounds. Prerequisite: General Chemistry or its equivalent. Computer Science What is computer science? Ask 100 computer scientists, and you will likely receive 100 different answers. One possible, fairly succinct, answer is that computer science is the study of algorithms: step-by-step procedures for accomplishing tasks formalized into very precise, atomic (indivisible) instructions. An algorithm should allow for a task to be accomplished by someone who or something that does not even understand the task. In other words, it is a recipe for an automated solution to a problem. Computers are tools for executing algorithms. (Not that long ago, “computer” referred to a person who computed!) What are the basic building blocks of algorithms? How do we go about finding algorithmic solutions to problems? What makes an efficient algorithm in terms of the resources (time, memory, energy) that it requires? What does the efficiency of algorithms say about major applications of computer science such as cryptology, databases, and artificial intelligence? Computer science courses at Sarah Lawrence College are aimed at answering questions such as these. Sarah Lawrence computer science students 20 Computer Science also investigate how the discipline intersects other fields of study, including mathematics, philosophy, biology, and physics. Privacy vs. Security on the Internet Michael Siff Open, Lecture—Spring The Internet was developed at the height of the Cold War as a way to maintain a robust communication system in the event of a nuclear attack. It is ironic, then, that the same technology may put us at risk of 21st century security threats such as electronic surveillance, aggregation and mining of personal information, and cyberterrorism. In this lecture, we contrast doomsday myths popularized by movies such as “War Games” with more mundane scenarios such as total disruption of electronic commerce. Along the way, we address questions such as: Does modern technology allow people to communicate secretly and anonymously? Can a few individuals disable the entire Internet? Can hackers launch missiles or uncover blueprints for nuclear power plants from remote computers on the other side of the world? We will also investigate other computer security issues, including spam, computer viruses, and identity theft. Meanwhile, with our reliance on Facebook, Twitter, cell phones, text messages, and electronic mail, have we unwittingly signed ourselves up to live in an Orwellian society? Or can other technologies keep “1984” at bay? Our goal is to investigate if and how society can strike a balance so as to achieve computer security without substantially curtailing rights to free speech and privacy. Along the way, we will introduce the science of networks and describe the underlying theories that make the Internet at once tremendously successful and so challenging to regulate. A substantial portion of the course will be devoted to introductory cryptology—the science (and art) of encoding and decoding information to enable private communication. We will conclude with a discussion of how cutting-edge technologies such as quantum cryptography and quantum computing may impact the privacy of electronic communications in the near future. Group conferences will include a mix of seminar-style debates over privacy rights (e.g., on the ethics of Wikileaks) and hands-on laboratories in which students will experiment with network simulators and code-making and code-breaking software. The Soul of the Machine Michael Siff Open—Fall The focus of this course is on the selection and interconnection of components used to create a computer. There are two essential categories of components in modern computers: the hardware (the physical medium of computation) and the software (the instructions executed by the computer). As technology becomes more complex, the distinction between hardware and software blurs. We will study why this happens, as well as why hardware designers need to be concerned about the way software designers write programs and vice versa. Along the way, we will learn how computers work from higher level programming languages, such as Java, Python and C, down to the basic zeroes and ones of machine code. Specific topics include Boolean logic, circuit design, computer arithmetic, assembly language, memory hierarchies, and, time permitting, mobile architectures. Students should have at least one semester of programming experience, preferably in C, C++, Java, or Python. Permission of the instructor is required. The Way of the Program Michael Siff Open—Fall This course is an introduction to computer science and the art of computer programming, using the elegant, yet easy-to-learn programming language Python. Students will learn the fundamental principles of problem solving with a computer while gaining the programming skills necessary for further study in the discipline. Throughout the course, we will emphasize the power of abstraction and the benefits of clearly written, well-structured programs. We will begin with basic procedural programming and work our way up to object-oriented concepts such as classes, methods, and inheritance. Along the way, we will explore fundamental concepts such as algorithms and their complexity, binary representations of analog data, digital logic, recursion and, time permitting, network communication. Other topics include introductory computer graphics, file processing, efficient storage and retrieval of data, and some principles of game design and implementation. Weekly laboratory sessions will reinforce the concepts covered in class through extensive hands-on practice at the computer. THE CURRICULUM 21 Objects and Algorithms for Interactive Media Matthew Parker Intermediate, Small seminar—Fall One of the primary challenges of learning objectoriented programming (OOP) is to find realworld applications that demonstrate how concepts such as encapsulation, subtype polymorphism, and inheritance empower a programmer or a team of programmers to develop sophisticated, robust software. This class will attempt to meet that challenge by exploring OOP as it applies to the implementation of digital games and interactive art. Students will learn the process of iterative design and its relationship to game and interface development through the creation of prototypes. Projects will be built in Processing, but the concepts discussed will be applicable to other object-oriented languages and digital formats. The class will focus on core programming techniques, data structures, and algorithms as they apply to game and installation development. A main goal will be for students to understand why object-oriented code can be powerful, dynamic, and easier to manage. We will also examine interactive programming concepts such as collision detection, level construction, the use of sprite sheets to animate characters, application flow, and basic ways to make game elements appear intelligent. Class discussions and guest speakers will help contextualize the power and potential of games and installations in our culture. Assignments will consist primarily of programming but will also include readings, presentations, and the critical evaluation of digital games. Permission of instructor required. Students should have at least one semester of programming experience, preferably in Processing, Java or C++. Software Design and Development Matthew Parker Intermediate, Small seminar—Spring Donald E. Knuth, one of the world’s most distinguished computer scientists, has said both that “computer programs are fun to write” and that “software is hard.” The goal of this course is to give students a taste of what it is like to design and develop real software. Knuth’s quotes illustrate two themes of this course that are not necessarily at odds: The challenge of writing good software should not offset the pleasure derived from writing it. Some of the main topics that we will cover include the power of abstraction, the separation of design from implementation, version control, the selection of development environments, the creative use of existing software libraries and tools, the benefits of a flexible approach, the role of maintaining good documentation, and how to write software in teams. No place is the adage "there is no substitute for experience” more relevant than in software engineering. With that in mind, this course is intended to be hands-on. Design and development techniques will be taught primarily by designing and developing a semester-long software project. Examples of project categories include (but are not limited to) digital games and mobile applications. Permission of the instructor is required. Students should have at least one semester of programming experience, preferably in Python, Processing, Java or C++. Information and the Arrow of Time Michael Siff, Kanwal Singh Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Spring What is information? What is entropy? How can the utterly reliable and predictable behavior of computers as we know them arise from subatomic particles governed by the wholly nondeterministic rules of quantum mechanics? Are quantum computers exponentially superior to their classical counterparts? Do the limits of classical computation apply to these machines? What are the philosophical implications of quantum computers; and, in particular, might they lend support to the many-worlds hypothesis? Will a practical quantum computer be built in the near future? If so, is it possible that these devices will demolish electronic privacy as we know it? This course will cover topics at the intersection of quantum physics and computer science, with an aim toward exploring how the fundamental laws of quantum mechanics impact the representation and manipulation of information on computers. Topics will include bits and qubits; the Nyquist limit; the basics of Shannon information theory; quantum computers and quantum cryptography; energy, entropy, and reversibility; the EPR paradox; and spooky action at a distance. This is a jointly taught seminar. Half the class will have conferences with Mr. Singh; half with Mr. Siff. Intermediate: Open to sophomores and above. 22 Dance Dance The Sarah Lawrence College Dance program presents undergraduate students with an inclusive curriculum that exposes them to vital aspects of dance through physical, creative, and analytical practices. Students are encouraged to study broadly, widen their definitions of dance and performance, and engage in explorations of form and function. Basic principles of functional anatomy are at the heart of the program, which offers classes in modern and postmodern contemporary styles, classical ballet, Yoga, Feldenkrais: Awareness Through Movement®, African dance, and belly dance. Composition, improvisation, contact improvisation, Labanotation, dance history, music for dancers, teaching conference, lighting design/stagecraft, and performance projects with visiting artists round out the program, which aims to develop the sensibility necessary for students to realize their own ideas and to internalize information. Each student creates an individual program and meets regularly with advisers to discuss overall objectives and progress. Students enroll in a yearlong series of coordinated component courses that make a Dance Third, which typically consists of 12 or more hours of in-class time that includes physical practice classes at least four times per week. In addition, all students taking a Dance Third will participate at least once each semester in movement training sessions to address their individual needs. These sessions will provide opportunities to address strength, flexibility, alignment, and coordination, as well as to set short- and long-term training goals. A variety of performing opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students are available in both informal and formal settings. Although projects with guest choreographers are frequent, it is the students’ own creative work that is the culmination of their dance experience at the College. In order to support the performance aspect of the program, all students are expected to participate in the production of concerts. Technical credit is required. We encourage the interplay between theatre, music, visual arts, and dance. Music Thirds and Theatre Thirds may take dance components, with the permission of the appropriate faculty. In the interest of protecting the well-being of our students, the Dance program reserves the right, at our discretion, to require any student to be evaluated by Health Services. Prospective and admitted students may only observe classes. First-Year Studies in Dance Peggy Gould FYS The Dance program encourages first-year students to study aspects of dance in an integrated and vital curriculum of technical movement practices, improvisation, and dance history. In technical practice, attention will be given to sharpening the student‘s awareness of space and time, use of energy, articulation of form through sensation, and understanding of functional anatomy. Improvisation classes provide students of all experience levels with opportunities to explore and generate movement from a variety of specific viewpoints. Vocabulary, strength, and awareness will be expanded through group and individual problem solving. In dance history, students will be introduced to the history of concert dance in he United States from the early 20th century to the present. The FirstYear Studies Third differs from the regular Dance Third in that students have an additional weekly forum in which to consider and develop critical perspectives on dance as an art form through reading, writing, discussion, and movement studies, building skills in each of those areas throughout the year. Emphasis is placed on developing the skills necessary for effective communication, independent research, and study. Dance Fundamentals Merceditas Mañago-Alexander Year This class is an introduction to the basic principles of contemporary and ballet practices. The fundamentals class will develop skills basic to all movement studies, such as dynamic alignment through coordination and integration of the neuro/skeletal/muscular system, strength, balance, and basic spatial and rhythmic awareness. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester only with permission of the instructor. THE CURRICULUM 23 Modern and Post-Modern Practice Emily Devine, Peter Kyle, Gwen Welliver In these classes, emphasis will be on the continued development of basic skills, energy use, strength, and control. Intermediate and advanced students will study more complex movement patterns, investigate somatic use, and concentrate on the demands of performance. At all levels, attention will be given to sharpening each student’s awareness of time and energy and to disciplining the body to move rhythmically, precisely, and in accordance with sound anatomical principles. Ballet Barbara Forbes Year At all levels, ballet studies will guide students in creative and expressive freedom by enhancing the qualities of ease, grace, musicality, and symmetry that define the form. To this end, we will explore alignment with an emphasis on anatomical principles and enlist the appropriate neuromuscular effort needed to dance with optimal integration of every aspect of the individual body, mind, and spirit. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester only with permission of the instructor. Dance Training Conference Liz Rodgers Year Students taking a Dance Third will confer with the instructor at least once per semester to address individual dance training issues. Overall progress, specific challenges, and short- and longterm goals may be addressed here. If applicable, students will learn supplemental exercises to be done independently, addressing factors such as strength, flexibility, kinesthetic awareness, and movement coordination. Dance Training Conference is required for all students taking a Dance Third. It is offered to support the work being done in movement practice classes, rehearsals, and performance projects. Improvisation Emily Devine, Peggy Gould, Kathy Westwater Merge your mind and body in the moment through dance improvisation. This invaluable creative mode will help you recognize, embody, and develop sensations and ideas in motion. Internal and external perceptions will be honed while looking at movement from many points of view—as an individual or in partnership with others. Beginning Improvisation is required for all students new to the Dance program. This class is an entry into the creative trajectory that later leads to composition and dance making. Improvisation A, B, C, and D are recommended for students who have already taken beginning improvisation and want to explore this form further. Improvisation: Embodied Awareness Barbara Forbes Year In Awareness Through Movement® (ATM) lessons, we can learn how to sense subtle differences and let go of habits of inhibition and expectation. We will translate the particular quality of ATM into the possibility of a more flexible self-image, exploring our ability to practice mindful spontaneity. The process of examining our patterns of moving, thinking, sensing, and feeling will allow the creation of innovative movement designs, spatial configurations, and dynamics—ultimately facilitating more creative and effective action in life. Contact Improvisation Kathy Westwater Year This course will examine the underlying principles of an improvisatory form predicated on two or more bodies coming into physical contact. Contact Improvisation, which emerged in the 1960s out of the Judson Experimental Dance Theater, combines aspects of social and theatrical dance, bodywork, gymnastics, and martial arts. We will explore movement practices that enhance our sensory awareness, with an emphasis on action and physical risktaking. Contemporary partnering skills, such as taking and giving weight and finding a common “center,” will provide a basis for further exploration. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester only with permission of the instructor. 24 Dance Composition A, B, and C Anatomy in Action Emily Devine, Dan Hurlin, Sara Rudner Peggy Gould Movement is the birthright of every human being. These components explore its expressive and communicative possibilities by introducing different strategies for making dances. Problems posed run the gamut from conceptually driven dance/theatre to structured movement improvisations. These approaches vary depending on faculty. Learn to mold kinetic vocabularies of your own choice and incorporate sound, objects, visual elements, and text to contextualize and identify your vision. Students will be asked to create and perform studies, direct one another, and share and discuss ideas and solutions with peers. Students are not required to make finished products but to involve themselves in the joy of creation. Beginning Improvisation is either a prerequisite or should be taken at the same time. Year How is it possible for humans to move in the multitude of ways that we do? Learn to develop your X-ray vision of the human being in motion in a course that combines movement practice, drawing, lecture, and problem solving. In this course, movement is the vehicle for exploration of our profoundly adaptable anatomy. In addition to making drawings as we study the entire musculoskeletal system, we will learn Irene Dowd’s “Spirals™,” a comprehensive warm-up/ cool-down for dancing that coordinates all joints and muscles through their fullest range of motion. Insights gained in this course can provide tremendous inspiration in the creative process. Introductory-level course. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester only with the permission of the instructor. Dance Making Anatomy Seminar Sara Rudner, Dan Hurlin, John A. Yannelli, William Catanzaro Year Individual choreographic projects will be designed and directed by students with special interest and experience in dance composition. Students and faculty will meet weekly to view works-in-progress and to discuss relevant artistic and practical problems. Whenever possible, the music for these projects, whether new or extant, will be performed live in concert. Dance Making students are encouraged to enroll in Lighting Design and Stagecraft for Dance. Prerequisites: Dance Composition, Music for Dancers, and permission of the instructor. Senior Seminar Sara Rudner Year This class is designed to support the creative and technical practices, as well as the practical concerns of students in their senior year. It will also serve as a forum for discussions of art practices in other media and the nature of the creative process. Choreographic projects will be presented and discussed in seminar and in conference. Peggy Gould Year This is an opportunity for advanced students who have completed Anatomy/Kinesiology to pursue their study of anatomy in greater depth. Each student will develop a specific project that will allow further exploration of functional anatomy. We will meet as a group on alternate weeks to discuss questions and share experiences. Advanced. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester only with the permission of the instructor. Yoga Patti Bradshaw Year This course offers students the opportunity to study the ancient art of Yoga. Classes emphasize the union of spirit, mind, and body through practices that include breathing techniques, vocalizations, and postures (asanas). By offering clear principles of biomechanical alignment and balance, the practice develops integrated strength and flexibility and helps dancers interweave technique and artistry. THE CURRICULUM 25 Feldenkrais: Awareness Through Movement® Barbara Forbes Year Moshe Feldenkrais believed that “rigidity, mental or physical, is contrary to the laws of life.” His system of somatic education develops awareness, flexibility, and coordination as students are verbally guided through precisely structured movement explorations. The lessons are done lying on the floor, sitting, or standing; and they gradually increase in range and complexity. Students are required to bring their full attention to their experience in order to develop their capacity for spontaneous, effortless action. Selfgenerated learning will release habitual patterns, offer new options, and enhance the integrated activity of the entire nervous system. African Dance Rujeko Dumbutshena Spring In this class, students will explore the fundamental aesthetic of African dance. There will be an emphasis on work to internalize the intricacies of African polyrhythm. Students will spend time exploring the cultural meaning and importance of grounding, strength, and stability, which are essential to the form. Learning African dance exposes students to the meaning of dance in African culture. This class also builds personal awareness, as it transcends cultural boundaries. Classes will be accompanied by live drumming. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester with permission of the instructor. Belly Dance Sarah Hassan Fall This course will examine the basic movements of Raqs Sharqi, otherwise known as Middle Eastern belly dance. We will blend traditional steps with elements of Tribal Fusion that take inspiration from flamenco, African, and North Indian classical dance. Emphasis will be on proper alignment, coiling, muscle isolation, and gaining strength in the core and arms. Particular attention will be paid to combining cabaret-style belly dance technique with slow, sinuous movements set to a variety of musical traditions from Balkan beatbox to Egyptian folk. Yoga postures will be used for ease of transition between movements and to demonstrate the use of the carriage in belly dance. Cultural context will be addressed in class, and short readings will be suggested but not required. Dance History Rose Anne Thom Year This is a course in the history of performance in the United States from the early 20th century to the present, as exemplified by the dancers, choreographers, and teachers who brought about notable changes in the art. The relationship of dance to the larger cultural environment will be discussed, with emphasis placed on the dance of our time. This course is designed to help the student relate his or her own work to the development of the art and to encourage creative critical perception. For all students beginning the Dance program. Open to any interested student. Music for Dancers William Catanzaro Year The objective of this course is to provide dance students with the tools to better understand relationships between music and dance. Students will expand their knowledge of musical elements, terminology, and procedures and learn the basics of rhythmic notation. Students will also learn how to scan musical scores with various degrees of complexity and explore the diverse rhythmic styles that have developed in response to different geographical, social, and philosophical conditions. This course will provide students with the opportunity to play percussion instruments. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester only with permission of the instructor. Labanotation/Repertory Rose Anne Thom Year This course will cover elementary and intermediate levels of Laban’s system of movement notation. Students will concentrate on correct observation and analysis of movement, writing facility, and the ability to read and perform authentic historical dance forms. Reconstruction and performance of a notated work from the modern dance or ballet repertoire will be the culmination of the second semester’s work. 26 Design Studies Teaching Conference Rose Anne Thom Year An inquiry into the ways in which dance might be taught in various settings and under various conditions, detailed study of kinesthetic, verbal, and creative factors in teaching will be presented and analyzed in terms of teaching objectives. Students will be placed as practice teachers, under supervision, in dance classes on campus and in community schools. For advanced and graduate students. Students may enter this yearlong course in the second semester only with permission of the instructor. Lighting Design and Stagecraft for Dance Beverly Emmons, Nicole Pearce Year The art of illuminating dance is the subject of this component. We will examine the theoretical and practical aspects of designing lights for dance. Students will create original lighting designs for Dance program concerts. Preference will be given to graduate students and seniors. Dance Meeting Dance Faculty Year This is a monthly gathering of all Dance Thirds in which we share ongoing student interests and invite guests to teach, perform, and inform. Topics have included dance injuries, dance therapy, kinesthetic awareness, nutrition, world dance forms, and presentations by New York City choreographers. Performance Project Patti Bradshaw, Barbara Bray Ketchum Fall Ms. Bradshaw will create a dance and visual-art event that is an ode to the mysterious and compelling nature of the natural world. It will be an imaging of the constant change that occurs in nature as everything under the sun comes into focus, evolves, and dissolves away. The working title of the project is “Songs of Despair, Songs of Bliss.” Students will build and work with puppets, objects, and costumes, as well as movement. The creative process will include structured improvisatory explorations, flanked by intervals of meditative practices that explore the movement in stillness and the stillness in movement. Attention will be paid to bringing out the unique abilities of each participant and to creating a multilayered experience for the performers and for the audience. Performance Project, Yvonne Rainer’s “Trio A” and “Chair Pillow” Pat Catterson Spring Yvonne Rainer’s classics of American postmodern dance, “Trio A” and “Chair Pillow,” will be taught by Pat Catterson and performed at Dia Beacon in May 2012. “Trio A” (1966) is an uninterrupted series of complex, challenging movements consisting of task-oriented actions. The dance emphasizes neutral performance and features no interaction with the audience. The dancer never makes eye contact with his/her observers. “Chair Pillow” (1969) is an investigation of minimalist dance aesthetic using two props (a chair and a pillow). Design Studies Design Studies at Sarah Lawrence is a crossdisciplinary initiative that offers a variety of analytical approaches to the cultural act of constructing environments, buildings, and aesthetic, yet functional, objects. Courses in architectural and art history and theory, computer design, environmental studies, physics, and sculpture allow students to investigate in course work and conference a wide range of perspectives and issues dealing with all facets of built design. These perspectives include theoretical explorations in history and criticism, formal approaches that engage sociopolitical issues, sustainable problem solving, and spatial exploration using design tools both digital and analog. Courses of study might include structural engineering in physics and projects on bridge design that reflect these structural principles in courses on virtual architecture and sculpture; the study of the architecture and politics of sustainability in class and conference work for art and architectural history and environmental studies; and sculpture and art history courses that engage issues of technology, expression, and transgression in the uses of the techniques and crafts of construction. When coordinated with participating faculty, programs of study offer an THE CURRICULUM 27 excellent preparation for further engagement in the fields of architecture, both theory and practice, digital and environmental design, and engineering. Courses offered this year in Design Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. Beauty, Bridges, Boxes, and Brutes: “Modern” Architecture From 1750 to 1960 (p. 8), Joseph C. Forte Art History “La Piu Grassa Minerva (Minerva in Her Fullness)” Theories of Art and Architecture From 1300 to 1600 (p. 11), Joseph C. Forte Art History Problems By Design: Studies in the Theory and Practice of Contemporary Architecture (p. 9), Joseph C. Forte Art History Performance Art (p. 10), Judith Rodenbeck Art History Writing Contemporary Art (p. 12), Judith Rodenbeck Art History Sustainable Development (p. 29), Marilyn Power Economics New Nature: Environmental Design in the 21st Century (p. 32), Charles Zerner Environmental Studies Introduction to Mechanics (General Physics Without Calculus) (p. 93), Scott Calvin Physics Buddhist Art and Architecture (p. 108), T. Griffith Foulk Religion Architecture Studio: Designing Built Form (p. 140), Tishan Hsu Visual Arts Things and Beyond (p. 140), Tishan Hsu Visual Arts Let’s Get Physical: Building an Interactive World (p. 134), Brian Jones Visual Arts Economics At Sarah Lawrence College, economics is not taught as a set of techniques for working in a static field but as an evolving discipline. In the liberal arts tradition, Sarah Lawrence students approach the study of economics by addressing issues in historical, political, and cultural context. They analyze and evaluate multiple schools of thought as they relate to actual situations, exploring such topics as globalization, growth and social policy, inequality, capitalism, and the environment from an economic perspective. Students who have focused on economics have gone on to be union organizers, joined the Peace Corps, interned with United Nations agencies, gone to law school, and entered graduate programs in public policy and international development. First-Year Studies: Political Economics of the Environment Marilyn Power FYS Is it possible to provide economic well-being to the world’s population without destroying the natural environment? Is sustainable development a possibility or a utopian dream? How do we determine how much pollution we are willing to live with? Why are toxic waste dumps overwhelmingly located in poor, frequently minority, communities? Whether through activities such as farming, mining, and fishing, through manufacturing processes that discharge wastes, or through the construction of communities and roadways, human economic activity profoundly affects the environment. The growing and contentious field of environmental economics attempts to analyze the environmental impact of economic activity and to propose policies aimed at balancing economic and environmental concerns. There is considerable debate, with some theorists putting great faith in the market’s ability to achieve good environmental outcomes, others advocating much more direct intervention in defense of the environment, and some questioning the desirability of economic growth as a goal. Underlying these differences are political economic questions of distribution of power and resources among classes and groups within the United States and across the globe. This course will explore the range of views, with an emphasis on understanding the assumptions underlying their disagreements and on the policy implications of those views. The concepts will be developed through an examination of ongoing policy debates on issues such as air pollution and global warming, the decimation of the world’s fish population, automobiles and the reliance on petrochemicals, and the possibility of sustainable development. 28 Economics Social Metrics: Introduction to Statistical Measurement and Structural Analysis in the Social Sciences Jamee K. Moudud Open, Lecture—Spring This course is designed for all students interested in the social sciences who wish to understand the methodology and techniques involved in the estimation of structural relationships between variables. It is designed for students who wish, both at Sarah Lawrence College and beyond, to be able to carry out empirical work in their particular field. After taking this course, students will be able to analyze questions such as the following: What effects do race, gender, and educational attainment have in the determination of wages? How does the female literacy rate affect the child mortality rate? How can one model the effect of economic growth on carbon dioxide emissions? What is the relationship among sociopolitical instability, inequality, and economic growth? How do geographic location and state spending affect average public-school teacher salaries? How do socioeconomic factors determine the crime rate in the United States? How can one model the US defense budget? In this class, we will study the application of statistical methods and techniques in order to: a) understand, analyze, and interpret a wide range of social phenomena such as those mentioned above, b) test hypotheses/theories regarding the possible links between variables, and c) make predictions about prospective changes in the economy. Social metrics is fundamentally a regression-based correlation methodology used to measure the overall strength, direction, and statistical significance between a “dependent” variable—the variable whose movement or change is to be explained—and one or more “independent” variables that will explain the movement or change in the dependent variable. Social metrics will require a detailed understanding of the mechanics, advantages, and limitations of the “classical” linear regression model. Thus, the first part of the course will cover the theoretical and applied statistical principles that underlie Ordinary Lest Squares (OLS) regression techniques. This part will cover the assumptions needed to obtain the Best Linear Unbiased Estimates of a regression equation, also known as the “BLUE” conditions. Particular emphasis will be placed on the assumptions regarding the distribution of a model’s error term and other BLUE conditions. We will also cover hypothesis testing, sample selection, and the critical role of the t- and F-statistic in determining the statistical significance of a social metric model and its associated slope or “b” parameters. The second part of the course will address the three main problems associated with the violation of a particular BLUE assumption: multicollinearity, autocorrelation, and heteroscedasticity. We will learn how to identify, address, and remedy each of these problems. In addition, we will take a similar approach to understanding and correcting model specification errors. The third part of the course will focus on the analysis of historical time-series models and the study of long-run trend relationships between variables. No prior background in economics or the social sciences is required, but a knowledge of basic statistics and high-school algebra is required. Introduction to Economic Theory and Policy Kim Christensen Open—Year Economics has a profound impact on all of our lives—from where we live and go to school to what we do for a living to how we dress to how we entertain ourselves. Economics is also crucially intertwined with the social and political issues—such as global warming, poverty, and discrimination—that we care about. This yearlong course introduces a variety of approaches to economics, including neoclassical, Keynesian, behavioralist, Marxian, and feminist, and encourages students to apply these contrasting perspectives to current economic problems. The course begins with a brief history of our capitalist economic system, emphasizing the roles played by slavery and by women’s unpaid labor. We then discuss the Industrial Revolution, which provides historical context for the rise of the market-based “neoclassical perspective.” We explore and critique several centrally important concepts in this approach, including price/profit-based resource allocation, efficiency and opportunity cost, supply and demand, and market equilibrium. Next, we examine the Great Depression (the context for the Keynesian Revolution) and explore Keynes’ insights into the instability of the financial system. We contrast the “disequilibrium” Keynesian perspective of Minsky and Leijonhufvud with the market-based Keynesian perspective found in standard economics textbooks and examine the strengths and THE CURRICULUM 29 weaknesses of each. We briefly examine the emerging behavioralist perspective, one that combines insights from psychology and economics, to determine to what extent this micro-based perspective provides a foundation for Keynes’ macroeconomic insights. We then explore the Marxian/political economy perspective, including the historical context for the development of this paradigm and the origins and dynamics of class societies. We examine the labor market from a Marxian perspective, emphasizing labor control, labor relations, and the impact of political power on market phenomena. We then discuss the feminist perspective on economics and examine how feminist insights can expand and enrich our economic analyses. Finally, using the insights gained from the various approaches, we analyze the recent financial crisis and the Great Recession, with a particular emphasis on public policy. Sustainable Development Marilyn Power Open—Spring The seventh of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals reads: “Ensure environmental sustainability.” Indeed, on the surface, sustainable development is a goal about which everyone could agree. Who would be for unsustainable development? In fact, there is no consensus on the meaning of the term. Some definitions emphasize the importance of preserving natural capital for future generations, while others aggregate all forms of capital together—arguing that our only obligation to the future is access to an equivalent standard of living. A related dispute is over the relationship between environmental sustainability and human well-being, as well as how the relationship may differ by gender, class, and other factors. This course will examine these differing views of sustainable development, both in theory and through the examination of specific development projects. Economists approach environmental questions through three differing theoretical schools: environmental economics, ecological economics, and political economics. These schools use differing techniques to value the environment, offer different understandings of what would be good environmental and economic outcomes, and advocate different policies to achieve sustainability. Underlying these differences are political economic questions of the distribution of power and resources, both globally and within specific countries. This course will explore the range of views, with an emphasis on understanding the assumptions underlying their disagreements and on the policy implications of these views. Topics will include the policies of the World Bank, sustainable agriculture, the controversial issue of resource privatization, and cases of specific commodities such as gold and cotton that illuminate the problems and complexities of sustainable development. The Political Economy of Global and Local Inequality: The Welfare State, Developmental State, and Poverty Jamee K. Moudud Intermediate—Year In the last few decades, there has been a dramatic increase in inequality at both the national and the international levels. While there is increasing acceptance of the importance of monitoring inequality (e.g., by the World Bank, UN Development Programme), there is far more disagreement about national and global inequality trends, what the fundamental determinants of inequality are, how inequality should be measured, what causes shifts in inequality, what impact it will have upon domestic and global politics and economic relations, and what policy responses are appropriate. This interdisciplinary course will consider a wide range of theoretical analyses to address these questions. At the international level, since states are embedded in an increasingly interwoven market system, we will discuss the issue of persistent market inequalities by analyzing different theories of market competition and their implications for international trade. This analysis of international competition will allow us to study the constraints within which individual states operate in order to promote domestic socioeconomic development policies. In the fall semester, the theoretical debates and their implications will be discussed; in the spring, we will analyze the concrete development experiences of a number of countries in order to consider the interactions between development, democracy, and economic inequality. In both semesters, we will discuss the relationship between the welfare state and the developmental state and how they have shaped the links between and among development, 30 Economics inequality, and poverty. Issues of taxation and industrial policies will be combined with analyses of state capacity building and the ways in which domestic and international power structures shape a state’s ability to bring about socioeconomic development. This seminar is designed for students who are interested in studying concrete problems in development along with the analytical/theoretical factors that underpin them. It requires no prior background in economics but does require some background in the social sciences. Money and Financial Crises: Theory, History, and Policy Jamee K. Moudud Intermediate—Fall In this seminar, we will analyze the nature of money and finance from a variety of theoretical perspectives—primarily the Marxian, postKeynesian, and neoclassical frameworks. The theoretical discussions will be related to the current and previous financial crises. Since the Reagan/Thatcher era of the early 1980s, the conventional wisdom is the doctrine of monetarism and the policy of laissez faire financial globalization, which is based on the theory of rational expectations and the efficient markets hypothesis. These policy proposals came into prominence on the heels of the global economic crisis that started in the late 1960s/early 1970s and the Third World Debt Crisis of the 1980s. We will critically analyze the monetarist doctrine by first studying the nature of money and debt from both the monetarist and alternative approaches. The goal of this part of the course is to analyze monetarist policies regarding the supposed ability of central banks to control the money supply so as to maintain the economy at its full-employment level of output. These policies are at the core of the so-called Washington Consensus (IMF and US Treasury Department) policies. With a laissez faire policy in place, according to this perspective, the economic system will not exhibit endogenous financial instability. This approach will be contrasted with rival ones in which radical uncertainty prevails and financial instability is endogenous and recurrent, while the central bank cannot control the money supply. We will study alternative theoretical analyses of business cycles and seek to situate all of these debates in the context of the history of economic thought on monetary issues. The second part of the course will be an analysis of the current financial crisis and situate it in a historical context. This part of the course will introduce students to the relatively new literature on monetary stocks and flows and their implications for the accumulation of debt. Finally, the third part of the course will focus on the policy responses of debt crises, as well as their effects. Here, we will focus on alternative policy proposals; in particular, monetary and fiscal policies. Some background in economics or social science and a strong interest in political economy are required. Smith, Marx, and Keynes Marilyn Power Intermediate—Fall John Maynard Keynes wrote, “The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back.” Since capitalism emerged as the dominant economic system in Europe and North America in the 18th century, theorists and policymakers have sought to understand the logic of this new way of organizing production and distribution. What determined the price of goods? The wages of labor? The profits to owners of capital? Would capitalism grow unceasingly, suffer from cycles, or inevitably decline into stagnation or collapse? Should the government actively regulate the economy, or should it play a minimal role and leave markets to determine outcomes without intervention? Should trade with other countries be regulated or free? What was the responsibility of the government with respect to the poor? Should they be assisted? Controlled? In the vigorous debates over these issues, continuing into the present, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes are frequently invoked as economic policy. A careful reading of these authors, however, shows that they were far more complex thinkers than the simplified versions of their ideas commonly circulated. This course will focus on the debates about value, distribution, economic dynamics, and the role of government through a careful reading of Smith, Marx, and Keynes in the original, followed by an examination of modern interpretations of their ideas. THE CURRICULUM 31 Another course offered this year in Economics is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. Imagining War (p. 64), Fredric Smoler Literature Environmental Studies Environmental Studies at Sarah Lawrence College is an engagement with human relationships to the environment through a variety of disciplines. Sarah Lawrence’s Environmental Studies program is a critical component of a liberal arts education; it is an intersection of knowledge-making and questions about the environment that are based in the humanities, the arts, and the social and natural sciences. Sarah Lawrence students seeking to expand their knowledge of environmental studies are encouraged to explore the interconnections between disciplinary perspectives, while developing areas of particular interest in greater depth. The Environmental Studies program seeks to develop students’ capacities for critical thought and analysis, applying theory to specific examples from Asia, Africa, and the Americas, and making comparisons across geographic regions and historical moments. Courses include environmental justice and politics, environmental history and economics, policy and development, property and the commons, environmental risk and the rhetoric of emerging threats, and cultural perspectives on nature, as well as courses in the natural sciences. Environmental Studies, in conjunction with the Science, Technology, and Society program, offers an annual, thematically focused colloquium entitled Intersections: Boundary Work in Science and Environmental Studies. This series brings advocates, scholars, writers, and filmmakers to the College, encouraging conversations across the disciplines among students, faculty, and guest speakers; access to new ideas; and lively exchanges. Students may participate in internships during the academic year or in rural and urban settings across the country and throughout the world during the summer. Gueststudy at Reed College, the Council on International Educational Exchange, the semester in environmental science at the Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole), or other programs are available to qualified Sarah Lawrence students. Vibrant connections across the faculty mean that students can craft distinctive competencies while building a broadly based knowledge of environmental issues, problems, policies, and possibilities. Questions of the Commons: Interrogating Property Charles Zerner Open—Fall Perhaps few issues are more contentious in the environmental arena than those surrounding struggles over rights to private, as well as common, property resources. What is property, and how is it made? Who makes property? How are property rights performed, publicized, and enforced? What is a commons, and what is common property? Debates over the “commons” implicate ideas of citizenship, community, the public good, justice, and governance. Controversies over public space and community gardens, genetic recombinant research and rights to the genome, North-South disputes over rights to biodiversity in the geographic South, as well as debates over property in the Middle East, form some of the hotly contested terrain of property rights and the commons, use and ownership. Property rights on a variety of scales, from the biomolecular to whole organs and organisms, from individual trees to whole ecosystems, are examined in varied geographic, biological, cultural, and historical contexts. This course is an introduction to ideas and cultures of property (private, public, and collective); debates, claims, and arguments over the commons; and the environmental and social consequences of different property regimes. Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food Charles Zerner, Persis Charles Open—Spring Beliefs about food, foodmaking, and food consumption are practices that have historically indexed, identified, and mapped the contours of self, community, and nation. This course analyzes food issues through the lenses of culture and history. Histories of particular foods, including sugar, potatoes, coffee, and chocolate, are examined in order to reveal their crucial roles in social change, identity, class formation and conflict, nationalism, and the promotion of slavery. How were potatoes, famine, and the enforcement of free-trade ideology linked in 19th-century Anglo-Irish relations? How have episodic food riots, greeting perceived shortages 32 Environmental Studies and injustices in distribution, led to the constitution of new forms of sociability? What accounts for the birth of restaurants? How has the coming of the recipe book affected gender roles and domesticity? And how has the arrival of abundance brought changes to the human body, ideas, and ideals of normality? The course explores relationships between ideas of “nature” and the “natural” and ideas of natural diets, “locavorisms,” the “wild,” the raw, and the cooked. Through the lens of cultural studies and cultural anthropology, food production and consumption are revealed as a symbolic medium whose “travels’ across continents, as well as into individual digestive systems, illuminate and map topographies of class, tastes, the forbidden, and the erotic. Food as a symbolic substance moves through fashion, contemporary art, and nutrition. How, for example, is the natural body imagined and modeled in the 21st century? Is it taboo to eat chocolate after yoga? What do the rules of kosher do? And how do food taboos in the natural food movement resonate with the rules of kosher in the Old Testament? New Nature: Environmental Design in the 21st Century Charles Zerner Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year This course investigates emerging technologies, philosophies, and practices of environmental design and management in the early 21st century from the level of regional landscapes to the level of cells. What are the values, visions, and assumptions that animate contemporary developments in environmental design? What forms of technological know-how and knowledge production practices enable these developments? What ethical, aesthetic, or political implications might these shifts in the making of environments, organs, and organisms entail? How might we begin to make informed judgments about emerging form(s) of nature, environmental design, and humanity? The course begins with an introduction to debates on the nature of nature and machines in America in the 18th century, grounding discussion through examining changing ideas of environment, ecosystems, and equilibriums. Post-World War II ideologies of design, command, and control of the environment, including nuclear power and developments in chemistry, are examined. We then turn to debates on nature, communities, and conservation from the 1970s through the late 1990s, from the era of “the green planet” and “rain-forest conservation.” Preoccupations with biowarfare, genetic engineering, and human enhancement in the post-September 11 era are key topics. We examine contemporary developments in environmental design in several domains, including landscape architecture; cyborg technology; simulation, mediation, and virtual environments; and biotechnology/ biowarfare. The work of bioartists and engineers, genetic engineers working for private industry and the government, as well as the work of environmental networks—including the Critical Art Ensemble, Rhizome, and the New Media Caucus—form part of this itinerary. Attitudes toward pollution are undergoing sea changes as landscape designers remediate toxic sites using natural processes and timescales. Industrial designers and environmental chemists are reconceptualizing the basis for resource extraction, processing, and manufacturing. On a micro level, molecular biologists and nanoengineers are creating emergent forms of tissues and organisms for purposes of medicine, as well as for waging war. On the battlefield, the nature of war is rapidly changing. Robotic armies under “human control” may be the armed forces of the future. Organisms and biochemical processes are being enlisted and drafted into military, as well as medical, service. At the same time, landscape architecture is being reconceptualized as the discipline charged with responsibility for “imagining and saving the earth.” A marvelous diversity of efforts at innovative sustainable uses of energy, water, and industrial design will be examined through texts, Web sites, films, and speakers from the ES/STS Colloquium Series. Where possible, field trips within the New York City/New York State area will be arranged. In New York City, for example, community gardens, rooftop agriculture and botanical gardens, waste treatment, and innovative urban installations may be visited. What will constitute our planetary home in a world of emerging, new nature(s)? What forms of energy, water, and toxic management are being imagined, designed, and implemented? How are engineers, artists, architects, and agronomists, as well as writers of science fiction and film, contributing to the formation of new nature and human relationships to the environment in the 21st century? Other courses offered this year in Environmental Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. THE CURRICULUM 33 The Anthropology of Life Itself (p. 5), Robert R. Desjarlais Anthropology Culture and Mental Illness (p. 5), Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology Introduction to Anthropology: Debates, Controversies, and Re/visions (p. 4), Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology Problems By Design: Studies in the Theory and Practice of Contemporary Architecture (p. 9), Joseph C. Forte Art History Marine Biology (p. 16), Raymond D. Clarke Biology Ecology (p. 17), Raymond D. Clarke Biology General Biology I: Cellular and Molecular Biology (p. 15), Drew E. Cressman Biology Biology of Cancer (p. 17), Drew E. Cressman Biology Introduction to Genetics (p. 16), Drew E. Cressman Biology Virology (p. 17), Drew E. Cressman Biology Principles of Botany (p. 16), Kenneth G. Karol Biology General Biology II: Organismal and Population Biology (p. 15), Leah Olson Biology First-Year Studies: Green Chemistry: An Environmental Revolution (p. 18), Colin D. Abernethy Chemistry General Chemistry I (p. 18), Colin D. Abernethy Chemistry General Chemistry II (p. 19), Colin D. Abernethy Chemistry Environmental Chemistry (p. 19), Mali Yin Chemistry Organic Chemistry (p. 19), Mali Yin Chemistry Nutrition (p. 19), Mali Yin Chemistry Information and the Arrow of Time (p. 21), Michael Siff Computer Science, Kanwal Singh Physics First-Year Studies: Political Economics of the Environment (p. 27), Marilyn Power Economics The Political Economy of Global and Local Inequality: The Welfare State, Developmental State, and Poverty (p. 29), Jamee K. Moudud Economics Sustainable Development (p. 29), Marilyn Power Economics Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development (p. 41), Joshua Muldavin Geography Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development (p. 40), Joshua Muldavin Geography Harvest: A Social History of Agriculture in Latin America (p. 53), Matilde Zimmermann History The Poetry of Earth: Imagination and Environment in English Renaissance Poetry (p. 67), William Shullenberger Literature Green Romanticism (p. 69), Fiona Wilson Literature First-Year Studies: Utopia (p. 62), Una Chung Literature Architecture Studio: Designing Built Form (p. 140), Tishan Hsu Visual Arts Ethnic and Diasporic Studies Ethnic Studies as an academic discipline lies at the intersection of several increasingly powerful developments in American thought and culture. First, interdisciplinary and comparative scholarship has become so prevalent as to represent a dominant intellectual norm. Second, the use of this new scholarly methodology to meet new academic needs and illuminate new subject matter has given rise to a plethora of discourses—women’s studies; Native American studies; African American studies; gay, lesbian, and transgender studies; and global studies. Third, and perhaps most important, there has been a growing recognition, both inside and outside academia, that American reality is incorrigibly and irremediably plural and that responsible research and pedagogy must account for and accommodate this fact. We define Ethnic Studies, loosely, as the study of the dynamics of racial and ethnic groups (also loosely conceived) who have been denied, at one time or another, full participation, and the full benefits of citizenship, in American society. We see these dynamics as fascinating in themselves, but we also feel that studying them illuminates the entire spectrum of humanistic inquiry and that a fruitful cross-fertilization will obtain between Ethnic Studies and the College’s well-established curricula in the humanities, the arts, the sciences, and the social sciences. 34 Ethnic and Diasporic Studies Courses offered this year in Ethnic and Diasporic Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. The Anthropology of Life Itself (p. 5), Robert R. Desjarlais Anthropology Field Methods in the Study of Language and Culture (p. 6), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Language and Race: Constructing the Self and Imagining the Other in the United States and Beyond (p. 5), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Language, Culture, and Performance (p. 4), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Political Language and Performance (p. 7), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Culture and Mental Illness (p. 5), Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology Introduction to Anthropology: Debates, Controversies, and Re/visions (p. 4), Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology Culture and Mental Illness (p. 5), Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology Making History of Non-Western Art History: Africa, Oceania, and the Americas (p. 10), Susan Kart Art History Arts of the Americas: The Continents Before Columbus and Cortés (p. 9), Susan Kart Art History Arts of the African Continent (p. 9), Susan Kart Art History Chinese Philosophy: Tao, Mind, and Human Nature (p. 14), Ellen Neskar Asian Studies First-Year Studies: Cultures and Arts of India (p. 12), Sandra Robinson Asian Studies Writing India: Transnational Narratives (p. 14), Sandra Robinson Asian Studies Images of India: Text/Photo/Film (p. 14), Sandra Robinson Asian Studies Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food (p. 31), Charles Zerner Environmental Studies, Persis Charles History Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development (p. 40), Joshua Muldavin Geography Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development (p. 41), Joshua Muldavin Geography Sickness and Health in Africa (p. 50), Mary Dillard History Public Stories, Private Lives: Methods of Oral History (p. 53), Mary Dillard History Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back (p. 51), Mary Dillard History Gender, Education, and Opportunity in Africa (p. 53), Mary Dillard History In/Migration: How Immigrants and Migrants Changed New York City From a Small Trading Post to an Emerging World Metropolis (p. 54), Rona Holub History First-Year Studies: The Sixties (p. 45), Priscilla Murolo History Imperial Russia: Power and Society (p. 49), Philip Swoboda History First-Year Studies: “In the Tradition”: An Introduction to African American History and Black Cultural Renaissance (p. 46), Komozi Woodard History The Black Arts Renaissance & American Culture: Rethinking Urban and Ethnic History in America (p. 46), Komozi Woodard History Global Intertextualities (p. 72), Bella Brodzki Literature Art of Power: Literature, Media, Theory (p. 70), Una Chung Literature African American Literature Survey (1789-2011) (p. 64), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature Creating New Blackness: The Expressions of the Harlem Renaissance (p. 72), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature Spoken Wor(l)ds: African American Poetry From Black Arts to Hip Hop (1960-2012) (p. 73), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature Conscience of the Nations: Classics of African Literature (p. 68), William Shullenberger Literature Slavery: A Literary History (p. 69), William Shullenberger Literature Reform and Revolution in the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa (p. 50), Hamid Rezai Politics Structure and Change in Life Historical Accounts (p. 100), Sean Akerman Psychology Home and Other Figments: Qualitative Approaches to Exile and Immigration (p. 100), Sean Akerman Psychology Bullies and Their Victims: Social and Physical Aggression in Childhood and Adolescence (p. 103), Carl Barenboim Psychology THE CURRICULUM 35 Poverty in America: Integrating Theory, Research, Policy & Practice (p. 101), Kim Ferguson Psychology Beyond the Matrix of Race: Psychologies of Race and Ethnicity (p. 99), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Studying Men and Masculinities (p. 103), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Children’s Health in a Multicultural Context (p. 105), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology From the Plantation to the Prison: Criminal Justice Policies (p. 106), Rima VeselyFlad Public Policy The Offensive Against Civil Rights: Crime Policy and Politics (p. 107), Rima VeselyFlad Public Policy Borges (p. 73), Maria Negroni Spanish Literature in Translation: Fantastic Gallery: 20th-Century Latin American Short Fiction (p. 65), Maria Negroni Spanish Film History Sarah Lawrence students approach film, first and foremost, as an art. The College’s film history courses take social, cultural, and historical contexts into account; but films themselves are the focus of study and discussion. Students seek artistic value equally in Hollywood films, art films, avant-garde films, and documentaries, with emphasis on understanding the intentions of filmmakers and appreciating their creativity. As a valuable part of a larger humanistic education in the arts, the study of film often includes exploration of connections to the other arts, such as painting and literature. Close association with the filmmaking and visual arts departments enables students working in these areas to apply their knowledge of film to creative projects. And within the discipline, the study of film gives students insight into stylistic techniques and how they shape meaning. Advanced courses in specific national genres, forms, movements and filmmakers—both Western and nonWestern—provide a superb background in the history of film and a basis for sound critical judgment. Students benefit from New York City’s enormously rich film environment, in which film series, lectures and festivals run on a nearly continuous basis. Cinema and Society Gilberto Perez Open, Lecture—Year All art is social—it is made for an audience, presented to a public—and a popular art such as the movies is perhaps more social than most. In this course, we will deal with the art of film in its nexus with society and in connection with social, cultural, and political issues. We will certainly not neglect the art of film—this is not a course in sociology, cultural studies, or political science—but we will consider the art in relation to the society in which it was made and to which it speaks. We will begin at the beginning of cinema at the turn of the 20th century and cover a wide range of movies from Hollywood and around the world—Europe, Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Latin America—up to the present time. This course will offer the student a comprehensive social history of the movies. We will be concerned both with socially conscious and politically engaged films and with films raising social issues less explicitly, maybe even unconsciously, but no less significantly. Melodramas and documentaries, comedies and crime films, national epics and portrayals of everyday life, works of searching realism and fantasies that represent dreams or fears, accounts of the past and allegories of the future, the grand and the subtle, the mainstream and the alternative—these are all within the scope of this course. We will examine not only the content but also the form of films, the techniques of expression, the conventions of representation, the modes of transaction with the audience—and the ways in which these carry social implications. Television History and Criticism Frank Tomasulo Open, Lecture—Fall This course is an examination of the television medium as an art form, sociocultural text, and industry. Emphasis will be on the development of formal/aesthetic elements, genres (sitcom, soap opera, talk show, drama, news, reality programming, etc.), themes, narrative patterns, and characters, as well as the depiction of gender, race, and class on network and cable channels. Relevant TV shows and episodes will be screened, analyzed, and discussed in the context of their historical and theoretical significance. The required textbooks are: Television: Critical 36 French Methods and Applications, 3rd edition, by Jeremy G. Butler, and Television: The Critical View, 7th edition, by Horace Newcomb. Television Criticism and Analysis Frank Tomasulo Open, Lecture—Spring This class will involve a close examination of important television shows and genres, as well as an in-depth investigation of the significant scholarly literature on the medium. Television will be studied through the lens of those classical and contemporary paradigms that have illuminated other art forms: realism, formalism, structuralism, semiotics, psychoanalysis, Marxism, feminism, deconstructionism, postmodernism, cultural studies, cognitive science, and phenomenology. Emphasis will be on selected televisual “texts” (shows) that represent various theoretical approaches to television as an art form, entertainment vehicle, information platform, cultural force, and industry. Relevant network and cable TV shows and episodes will be screened, analyzed, and critiqued in the context of their theoretical implications. Rhetoric of Film Gilberto Perez Intermediate—Year How movies move us, the different ways in which they engage and affect us, will be the subject of study. Rhetoric is the art of persuasion, the endeavor to influence others, the sway of attitude and belief, orientation and viewpoint. In this course, we will look into the various means of persuasion—emotional or logical, personal or social, and usually a combination of things—employed in the cinema from the silent era to the present day. We will focus on the transaction between movies and their audiences. We will inquire into where a movie is coming from, what position it takes and would have us share, what designs it has on us, and how it shapes our response. Much of our discussion will be devoted to the forms and techniques of film art but with emphasis on their effect on the spectator. Realism is often treated as a matter of content, but we will consider how it is also a matter of rhetoric: A shaky camera in the manner of a newsreel, for example, gives us the sense of being right there in the midst of things and serves to achieve what Roland Barthes called the “reality effect.” We will pay special attention to tropes and figures of film rhetoric, classical tropes (metaphor, synecdoche, metonymy, irony) and, specifically, cinematic figures such as the close-up, the reverse angle, cross-cutting, or camera movement. Identification will be a central concern. We will examine the way identification is always partial—partial both in the sense of incomplete and in the sense of biased—and how our identification with characters enters into a larger and often complex rhetorical play of identification. To give a simple example: In a love scene set by a river with trees in flower and birds singing, we identify with the lovers while they are identified with nature—and nature in our culture is generally identified with good things. But Carl Dreyer’s Day of Wrath takes place in 17th-century Denmark, a milieu in which religion was strict, witches were burned, and nature was identified with paganism and the devil; so young lovers by a river would not be seen in a positive light, and we are torn—this is part of the film’s rhetoric and its moral complexity—between our identifications and beliefs and those of another culture. In this course, we will study the workings of persuasion in a variety of films of different provenances and styles and with different motivations and intentions. Another course offered this year in Film History is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. The Cold War In History and Film (p. 49), Jefferson Adams History French Sarah Lawrence College offers six modern languages and their literatures. Students may take French, German, Italian, Japanese, Russian and Spanish from beginning to advanced levels that equally stress the development of communicative skills such as speaking, listening comprehension, reading, and writing, as well as the study of literature written in these languages in Europe, Africa, and the Americas. In addition to the regular seminar work with the language faculty, students will work closely with language assistants in individual or small-group meetings to practice their language skills and make further progress; language teaching is also supported by fully equipped computer labs, where students can use the Web, do computer exercises and enjoy THE CURRICULUM 37 audio facilities. Students of Spanish may also have the opportunity to make use of Community Partnerships. Some departments also offer literature courses in translation in which students are introduced to the various cultural and historical contexts of the modern languages at the College. In an attempt to encourage students to study more than one foreign language at the same time, Sarah Lawrence College offers sophomores, juniors, and seniors the option of taking a Language Third. This allows students to continue a language on a more advanced level while, at the same time, enrolling in a beginner’s class in a different language. Students taking a Language Third will earn 10 credits for the combined study of two languages of their choice at no extra cost. An excellent option offered by the Modern Languages and Literatures department is the Lecture Language Third. This interdisciplinary link affords students the great opportunity of meeting the lecture requirement while fully benefiting from studying the foreign language of their preference at any level of proficiency, also at no extra cost. Students taking this option are not required to do conference work in their language courses. Beginning French: Language and Culture Kirsten Ellicson, Liza Gabaston Open—Year An introduction to French, using the multimedia “Débuts” system (textbook/two-part workbook/ full-length movie, Le Chemin du retour), this class will allow students to develop an active command of the fundamentals of spoken and written French. In class and group conferences, emphasis will be placed on activities relating to students’ daily lives and to French and Francophone culture. The textbook integrates a French film with grammar study, exposing students to the spoken language from the very beginning of the course. Other materials may include French songs, cinema, newspaper articles, poems, and short stories. Group conferences replace individual conference meetings for this level, and a weekly conversation session with a French language assistant(e) is required. Attendance at the weekly French lunch table and French film screenings are both highly encouraged. Students who successfully completed a beginning and an intermediate level French course are eligible to study in Paris with Sarah Lawrence College during their junior year. This course will be taught by Kirsten Ellicson in the fall, and Liza Gabaston in the spring. Course conducted in French. Beginning French David Fieni Open—Year An introduction to French using the multimedia “Débuts” system (textbook/two-part workbook/ full-length movie, Le Chemin du retour), this class will allow students to develop an active command of the fundamentals of spoken and written French. In class and in group conferences, emphasis will be placed on activities relating to students’ daily lives and to French and Francophone culture. The textbook integrates a French film with grammar study, exposing students to the spoken language from the very beginning of the course. Other materials may include French songs, cinema, newspaper articles, poems, and short stories. Group conferences replace individual conference meetings for this level, and a weekly conversation session with a French language assistant(e) is required. Attendance at the weekly French lunch table and French film screenings are both highly encouraged. Students who have successfully completed a beginning and an intermediate-level French course are eligible to study in Paris with Sarah Lawrence College during their junior year. Course conducted in French. Advanced Beginning French: The Literary Prison Annelle Curulla Open—Year This yearlong course has two objectives: to provide a comprehensive grammar review to students with some prior knowledge of French and to apply that grammatical knowledge in a literary study of the prison. Approaching the prison as a narrative setting, formal device, and culturally charged symbol, we will examine its connection to changing concepts of selfhood, innocence and guilt, the relationship between the individual and the state, and the process of literary creation itself. The course will unfold in two phases: The first semester offers a fast-paced, systematic review of the fundamentals of French language; short essays and presentations will allow students to study literary and historical prisons and prisoners in poetry, drama, fiction, and memoirs from 1450 to 1800. In the spring, students will refine their linguistic and literary 38 French knowledge through the study of longer texts from the 19th to the 21st century. Authors for the year may include Villon, Corneille, Voltaire, Roland, Balzac, Hugo, Camus, Djebar, Bon. Individual conferences will allow students to pursue their interests in aesthetic, political, or social dimensions of literary prisons and prisoners or in any other area of French and Francophone literatures and cultures. In addition to conferences, students will attend a weekly conversation session with a French language assistant. Students are also strongly encouraged to attend the weekly French lunch table, as well as French film screenings. Students who successfully complete this course and an intermediate-level course may be eligible to study in Paris with Sarah Lawrence College during their junior year. Course conducted in French. Admission by placement test to be taken during interview week at the beginning of the fall semester. Intermediate French I: The Figure of the Artist in 19thand 20th-Century France Kirsten Ellicson, Liza Gabaston Intermediate—Year This course will offer a systematic review of French grammar and is designed to strengthen and deepen students’ mastery of grammatical structures and vocabulary. Students will develop their analytical and creative writing skills in French through essays and rewrites. The course will take as its thematic point de départ the literary representation of the figure of the artist (including the writer) in 19th- and 20th-century French texts. Authors, writing in a variety of genres, will be drawn from among the following: Chateaubriand, De Staël, Balzac, Nerval, Gautier, Baudelaire, the Goncourts, Huysmans, Zola, Rimbaud, Verlaine, Mallarmé, Colette, Apollinaire, and Breton. Critical and theoretical perspectives, as well as the viewing of art and film, will enrich our discussions and analyses. Intermediate I and II French courses are specially designed to help prepare students for studying in Paris with Sarah Lawrence College during their junior year. Course conducted in French. Admission by placement test to be taken during interview week at the beginning of the fall semester. Intermediate French I: French Identities from Jeanne D’Arc to Zidane Eric Leveau Intermediate—Year This course will offer a systematic review of French grammar and is designed to strengthen and deepen students’ mastery of grammatical structures and vocabulary. Students will also begin to use linguistic concepts as tools for developing their analytic writing. More than other countries, France’s identity was shaped by centuries of what is now perceived by the French as a historically coherent past. It is not surprising, then, that the 15th-century figure of Jeanne d’Arc is today the symbol of the extreme rightwing party of Le Pen, which has gained a significant influence in France in the last 30 years. This phenomenon can be seen, in part, as a reaction to the changing face of France’s society as exemplified by the French “Black-Blanc-Beur” soccer team, which Zidane led to victory in the 1998 World Cup. In this course, we will explore the complexities of today’s French identity or, rather, identities, following the most contemporary controversies that have shaken French society in the past 20 years while, at the same time, exploring historical influences and cultural paradigms at play in these “débats franco-français.” Thus, in addition to newspapers, online resources, recent movies, and songs, we will also study masterpieces of the past in literature and in the arts. Topics discussed will include, among others, school and laicism; “cuisine” and tradition; immigration, integration and urban ghettos; French love; individuals as citizens, etc. Authors studied will include Marie de France, Montaigne, Racine, Voltaire, Hugo, Flaubert, Proust, Colette, Duras, Césaire, Chamoiseau, Bouraoui. The Intermediate I and II French courses are specially designed to help prepare students for studying in Paris with Sarah Lawrence College during their junior year. Course conducted in French. Admission by placement test to be taken during interview week at the beginning of the fall semester or completion of Beginning French. THE CURRICULUM 39 Intermediate French II: Masters, Slaves, and “New Men”: Francophone Writing Against Empire David Fieni Intermediate—Year This course is designed for students who already have a strong understanding of the major aspects of French grammar and language but who wish to develop their vocabulary and their grasp of more complex aspects of the language. Students are expected to be able to read more complex texts easily and to express themselves more abstractly. A major part of the course will be devoted to the study and discussion of French or Francophone literary texts. The Intermediate I and II French courses are specially designed to help prepare students for studying in Paris with Sarah Lawrence College during their junior year. Course conducted in French. Admission by placement test or by completion of Intermediate French I. Just Balzac Angela Moger Intermediate, Advanced—Fall Despite a pious regard for Père Goriot and Eugénie Grandet and a poststructuralist obsession with “Sarrasine,” Balzac’s works remain largely unknown, particularly his many novellas. In this course, we will investigate several of the most compelling of these shorter tales, attempting to probe the connection between Balzac’s choice of the form and his ultimate preoccupations. Why did the consummate novelist turn frequently to the novella? Furthermore, we will try to uncover the narratological implications of Balzac’s plots and methodology, as his fictions seem to engage, quite self-consciously, issues crucial to current inquires into narrative. Thus, particular stories can be seen to offer not only a theory of gender and/or a theory of language but also a coherent and apparently deliberate set of reflections on matters ranging from the status of authorship and the “character” to the problem of “closure” and the problematic of desire as metaphor for both money and narrative. Finally, if, as Michael Wood says, “The very possibility of a meaning ruins a certain form of freedom…yet stories carry the disease of meaning,” we will examine how the Balzacian tale immunizes itself. Readings include Sarrasine, La Maison Nucingen, Adieu, and Albert Savarus. Advanced intermediate students with permission of the instructor. Love Stories From France Angela Moger Intermediate—Spring Many of the world’s greatest love stories come from France, the culture that codified the notion of romantic love that still holds the Western world “in thrall.” But whereas the works of La Fayette, of Rousseau, of Stendhal, and of Proust are well-known and widely read, more modest (in their dimensions) contributions on the subject remain somewhat “under the radar.” This course will be devoted to the examination of a number of these lesser known works that also interrogate the nature of that compelling version of human attachment and similarly provoke, through their narrative strategies, awareness that the romantic passion plot often lends itself to being read as allegory of fiction. Thus, Balzac’s small and remarkable story, La grande Brèteche, Mérimée’s Le vase étrusque, and Radiguet’s Le Diable au corps merit scrutiny, as do the more eccentric tales of the decadent writer Barbey D’Aurévilly (Le plus bel amour de Don Juan) and the novel written by the “primitive” artist Marguerite Audoux (Marie Claire). Conference work might include francophone writers whose works both extend and deviate from the tradition, such as the Moroccan Tahar Ben Jelloun and the Canadian Anne Hébert. Advanced French: The Quill and the Dress: French Women Writers in Early Modern France Eric Leveau Advanced—Fall This course will focus on all aspects of the strong influence that women exerted on literature and culture in France during the period from the Renaissance to the French Revolution. We’ll study the historical and social implications of the phenomenon of the “salon,” perceived as a space of freedom for women to redefine the literary landscape of their time. We’ll look at how women writers challenged their male colleagues at the heart of their esthetic and ideological dominance but also how intellectually independent women were, in return, perceived by society. We’ll focus on major subversive masterpieces written by women during the period, but we’ll also explore the vast implications of the idea of a feminine form of writing among male writers. In such a rich context of past debates and literary works, we’ll 40 Geography also try to bring into our discussion the contribution of recent feminist theory in order to foster a dialogue across the centuries. Authors studied will notably include: Mlle de Scudery, Corneille, Molière, Mme. de Sévigné, Mme de Lafayette, Mme. de Graffigny, Diderot, Mme. du Chatelet, Rousseau, Mme. Roland, Beaumarchais. Course conducted in French. Admission by placement test to be taken during interview week at the beginning of the fall semester or completion of Intermediate French II or higher. Another course offered this year in French is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. Literature in Translation: “Because We Know That Language Exists”: Roland Barthes and French Literature and Theory (1945-2011) (p. 69), Eric Leveau French Geography Geography is a fundamentally interdisciplinary field, often seen as straddling the natural and social sciences and increasingly drawing upon the arts and other forms of expression and representation. For these reasons, Sarah Lawrence College provides an exciting context, as the community is predisposed to welcome Geography’s breadth and interdisciplinary qualities. Geography courses are infused with the central questions of the discipline. What is the relationship between human beings and “nature”? How does globalization change spatial patterns of historical, political, economic, social, and cultural human activities? And how do these patterns provide avenues for understanding our contemporary world and pathways for the future? Two seminars are taught on a regular basis: Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development and The Geography of Contemporary China and Its Place in a Globalizing World Economy. In addition, a lecture course entitled, Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development, provides students an opportunity to investigate these issues and their connections both in lecture and in group conference activities that include debates and special presentations. As a discipline built on field study, students in Geography classes participate in field trips—most recently, for example, to farming communities in Pennsylvania but also to Manhattan’s Chinatown, where students engage aspects of Chinese culture in walks through the city that expose the heterogeneity of China through food, art, religion, and language while simultaneously clarifying the challenges facing recent immigrants and legacies of institutions imbued with racism carved into the built environment. That is one of the overarching goals of contemporary geography: to investigate the ways that landscape and place both reflect and reproduce the evolving relationship of humans to each other and to their environments. Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development Joshua Muldavin Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Fall We will begin this seminar by examining competing paradigms and approaches to understanding “development” and the “Third World.” We will set the stage by answering the question: What did the world look like 500 years ago? The purpose of this part of the course is to acquaint us with and to analyze the historical origins and evolution of a world political economy, of which the “Third World” is an intrinsic component. We will thus study the transition from feudalism to capitalism, the rise of merchant and finance capital, and the colonization of the world by European powers. We will analyze case studies of colonial “development” to understand the evolving meaning of this term. These case studies will help us assess the varied legacies of colonialism apparent in the emergence of new nations through the fitful and uneven process of decolonization that followed. In the next part of the course, we will look at the United Nations and the role some of its associated institutions have played in the post-World War II global political economy—one marked by persistent and intensifying socioeconomic inequalities, as well as frequent outbreaks of political violence across the globe. By examining the development institutions that have emerged and evolved since 1945, we will attempt to unravel the paradoxes of development in different eras. We will deconstruct the measures of development through a thematic exploration of population, resource use, poverty, access to food, the environment, agricultural productivity, and different development strategies adopted by “Third World” nation-states. We will then examine globalization and its relation to THE CURRICULUM 41 emergent international institutions and their policies; for example, the IMF, World Bank, and WTO. We will then turn to contemporary development debates and controversies; for example, the widespread land grabbing (by sovereign wealth funds, China, hedge funds, etc.) that increasingly finds space in the headlines. Throughout the course, our investigations of international institutions, transnational corporations, the role of the state, and civil society will provide the backdrop for the final focus of the class—the emergence of regional coalitions for self-reliance, environmental and social justice, and sustainable development. Our analysis of development in practice will draw upon case studies primarily from Africa but also from Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the United States. Conference work will be closely integrated with the themes of the course with a two-stage substantive research project. Project presentations will incorporate a range of formats, from traditional papers to multimedia visual productions. Where possible and feasible, you will be encouraged to do primary research during fall study days. Some experience in the social sciences is desired but not required. Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development Joshua Muldavin Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Fall Where does the food we eat come from? Why do some people have enough food to eat and others do not? Are there too many people for the world to feed? Who controls the world’s food? Will global food prices continue their recent rapid rise; and if so, what will be the consequences? What are the environmental impacts of our food production systems? How do answers to these questions differ by place or the person asking the question? How have they changed over time? This course will explore the following fundamental issue: the relationship between development and the environment, focusing in particular on agriculture and the production and consumption of food. The questions above often hinge on the contentious debate concerning population, natural resources, and the environment. Thus, we will begin by critically assessing the fundamental ideological positions and philosophical paradigms of “modernization,” as well as the critical counterpoints that lie at the heart of this debate. Within this context of competing sets of philosophical assumptions concerning the population-resource debate, we will investigate the concept of “poverty” and the making of the “Third World,” access to food, hunger, grain production and food aid, agricultural productivity (the green and gene revolutions), biofuels, the role of transnational corporations (TNCs), the international division of labor, migration, globalization and global commodity chains, and the different strategies adopted by nation-states to “develop” natural resources and agricultural production. Through a historical investigation of environmental change and the biogeography of plant domestication and dispersal, we will look at the creation of indigenous, subsistence, peasant, plantation, collective, and commercial forms of agriculture. We will analyze the physical environment and ecology that help shape but rarely determine the organization of resource use and agriculture. Rather, through the dialectical rise of various political-economic systems such as feudalism, slavery, mercantilism, colonialism, capitalism, and socialism, we will study how humans have transformed the world’s environments. We will follow with studies of specific issues: technological change in food production; commercialization and industrialization of agriculture and the decline of the family farm; food and public health, culture, and family; land grabbing and food security; the role of markets and transnational corporations in transforming the environment; and the global environmental changes stemming from modern agriculture, dams, deforestation, grassland destruction, desertification, biodiversity loss, and the interrelationship with climate change. Case studies of particular regions and issues will be drawn from Africa, Latin America, Asia, Europe, and the United States. The final part of the course examines the restructuring of the global economy and its relation to emergent international laws and institutions regulating trade, the environment, agriculture, resource extraction treaties, the changing role of the state, and competing conceptualizations of territoriality and control. We will end with discussions of emergent local, regional, and transnational coalitions for food self-reliance, alternative and community-supported agriculture, communitybased resource-management systems, sustainable development, and grassroots movements for social and environmental justice. Films, multimedia materials, and distinguished guest lectures will be interspersed throughout the course. One farm field trip is possible, if funding permits. The seminar participants may also take a 42 German leading role in a campus-wide event on “food and agriculture,” tentatively planned for the fall. Please mark your calendars when the dates are announced, as attendance for all of the above is required. Attendance and participation is also required at special guest lectures and film viewings in the Geography Lecture Series, held approximately twice per month in the evening from 6-8 pm. The Webboard is an important part of the course. Regular postings of assignments, as well as follow-up commentaries, will be made there. There will be in-class essays, debates, and small group discussions. Conferences will focus on in-depth analysis of course topics. You will be required to prepare a poster project on a topic of your choice, related to the course, which will be presented at the end of the semester in a special session. German As the official language of the Federal Republic of Germany, Austria, Liechtenstein, and portions of several other European countries—and with linguistic enclaves in the Americas and Africa—German is today the native tongue of close to 120 million people. For such advanced degree programs as art history, music history, philosophy, and European history, German is still a required language. And whether the motivation for study is business, culture, travel, friendship, or heritage, a knowledge of German can add inestimable depth to a student’s landscape of thought and feeling. Students should ideally plan to study German for at least two years. First- and secondyear German aim to teach students how to communicate in German and acquire grammatical competency through exercises that both demand accuracy and encourage free expression. While conference work in Beginning German consists of intensive grammar work with the German assistant (both group and individual conferences), intermediate-level students work on their cultural competency by reading German literature (fairly tales, novellas; poems) and working on class-, group-, or individual research projects (for example, writing a short story or screenplay in German; exploring German cities online; reading newspaper articles on current events). Advanced German is a cultural studies seminar. Students solidify their cultural competency by studying German history and culture from the late 18th century to the present. A special emphasis is placed on 20th-century German history and culture, including contemporary German literature and film. Many German students spend a semester or year in Germany. Beginning in 2012, students have the opportunity to take a 5-weeks long summer seminar in Berlin (6 credits). Students will take a seminar on German Cultural Studies with an emphasis on the history and culture of Berlin AND a class in Art/Architecture, Dance or German Language (taught at Neue Schule in Berlin). Beginning German Roland Dollinger, Nike Mizelle Open—Year This course concentrates on the study of grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation in order to secure the basic tools of the German language. Through grammar exercises in class, dialogues, and short compositions, students will learn the fundamental skills to speak, read, and write in German. This class will meet three times (90 minutes) per week: twice with Mr. Dollinger and once with Ms. Mizelle, who will also meet with students individually or in small groups for an extra conference. Course materials include the textbook, Neue Horizonte, along with a workbook and a graded German reader that will allow students to start reading in German after the first week. We will cover at least 12 chapters from the textbook—all of the basic grammar and vocabulary that students will need to know in order to advance to the next level. There will be short written tests at the end of each chapter. Students will also learn basic facts about Germany today. Intermediate German Roland Dollinger Intermediate—Year This course stresses speaking, reading, and writing German and a thorough review of German grammar. Its aim is to give students more fluency and to prepare them for a possible junior year in Germany. Readings in the fall will consist of fairy tales, short stories, poems, and three novellas by the Austrian writer Stefan Zweig. Students will give several oral presentations (on a fairy tale, on a German city, on a German artist or intellectual). In the spring semester, we will use Im Spiegel der Literatur, a collection of short stories written by some of the most famous German writers such as Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht. A solid grammar review, based on THE CURRICULUM 43 the book German Grammar in Review, will help students improve their speaking and writing skills. Regular conferences with Nike Mizelle will supplement class work. Advanced German: Contemporary German Literature Roland Dollinger, Nike Mizelle Advanced—Fall In the fall semester, we will read stories and novels written in Germany after 1989. Writers such as Daniel Kehlmann, Clemens Meyer, Bernhard Schlink, Judith Hermann, Monika Maron, W.G. Sebald, Maxim Biller, and others will introduce students to contemporary German culture. We will explore how German writers deal with the legacy of national socialism and the Holocaust, German reunification and the Stalinist past in the former East Germany, and a new “multicultural” Germany. Films and articles from the magazine Der Spiegel will enrich our discussions. This course consists of three equally important components: Students will have one seminar with Mr. Dollinger, who will discuss the class materials in German; one seminar with Ms. Mizelle, who will work with students collectively on various grammar and vocabulary issues; and one biweekly individual conference with Mr. Dollinger. Students must demonstrate advanced language skills during registration in order to be permitted into this class. Course conducted entirely in German. Advanced German: German “Classics” From Goethe to Brecht Roland Dollinger, Nike Mizelle Advanced—Spring In the spring semester, we will study some of the most famous works of German literature from the 18th to the 20th centuries, including Goethe’s Die Leiden des Jungen Werther, Kleist’s Das Erdbeben von Chile, Tieck’s Der Blonde Eckbert, Eichendorff’s Das Marmorbild, Storm’s Der Schimmelreiter, Thomas Mann’s Der Kleine Herr Friedemann, and Brecht’s Die Dreigroschenoper. Students will also become familiar with the major developments in Germany history. This course consists of three equally important components: Students will have one seminar with Mr. Dollinger, who will discuss the class materials in German; one seminar with Ms. Mizelle, who will work with students collectively on various grammar and vocabulary issues; and one biweekly individual conference with Mr. Dollinger. Students must demonstrate advanced language skills during registration in order to be permitted into this class. This course is conducted entirely in German. Global Studies Global processes, exchanges, and movements have remapped the contemporary world. Global Studies courses seek to provide a coherent critical framework with which to study such increasingly fluid cultural and national crossings. Global Studies faculty members, working in the disciplines of Asian Studies, history, and literature, have been engaged in rethinking previous assumptions about history and cartography. Their courses tend to reframe familiar histories, as well as to uncover unfamiliar routes of human interaction. These classes adopt interdisciplinary approaches that help bring to light historic concerns that otherwise might be rendered invisible. Examples of Global Studies offerings include courses on the intersection of cultures surrounding the Mediterranean; overlapping colonial and postcolonial histories of Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; linked Pacific Rim cultures, for example, shared histories among peoples from the western coast of the Americas, the Philippines, and Japan; intertwined histories and literatures of Africa and the Americas in light of the concept of a Black Atlantic; and homologous literatures and histories of native peoples from different geographic regions. For course descriptions, see Asian Studies, History, and Literature. Greek The Sarah Lawrence College Classics program emphasizes the study of the languages and literature of ancient Greece and Rome. Greek and Latin constitute an essential component of any humanistic education, enabling students to examine the foundations of Western culture and explore timeless questions concerning the nature of the world, the place of human beings in it, and the components of a life well lived. In studying the literature, history, philosophy, and society of the ancient Greeks and Romans, students come 44 Health, Science, and Society to appreciate them for themselves, examine the continuity between the ancient and modern worlds and, perhaps, discover “a place to stand”—an objective vantage point for assessing modern culture. In their first year of study, students acquire proficiency in vocabulary, grammar, and syntax, with the aim of reading accurately and with increasing insight. Selected passages of ancient works are read in the original languages almost immediately. Intermediate and advanced courses develop students’ critical and analytical abilities, while exploring ancient works in their literary, historical, and cultural context. Conference projects provide opportunities for specialized work in areas of interest in classical antiquity. Recent conference projects include close readings of Homer’s Iliad, Aristophanes’ Clouds, Pindar’s Odes, Plato’s Republic, Cicero’s de Amicitia, the poetry of Catullus, Virgil’s Aeneid, as well as studies of modern theories of myth, Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy in connection with the tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides, the social implications of Roman domestic architecture, and a comparison of Euripides’ Hippolytus with Racine’s Phèdre. Greek and Latin will be especially beneficial for students interested in related disciplines, including religion, philosophy, art history, archaeology, history, political science, English, comparative literature, and medieval studies, as well as education, law, medicine, and business. Greek and Latin can also prove valuable to all those who wish to enrich their imagination in the creative pursuits of writing, dance, music, visual arts, and acting. Beginning Greek Emily Katz Anhalt Open—Year This course provides an intensive introduction to Ancient Greek grammar, syntax, and vocabulary, with the aim of reading authentic excerpts of Ancient Greek poetry and prose as soon as possible. Students will also read and discuss several dialogues of Plato in English. During the spring semester, while continuing to refine their grammar and reading skills, students will read extended selections of Plato’s Apology in the original Greek. Ms. Anhalt will teach this course in the fall. The faculty for the spring is currently TBA. Intermediate Greek Samuel B. Seigle Intermediate—Year This course has two aims: to develop the student’s ability to read Greek intelligently and fluently and to give the student a general understanding of Greek history and literature. The authors to be read will be determined at the time of registration. Advanced Greek Samuel B. Seigle Advanced—Year This course has two aims: to extend the student’s ability to read classical Greek and to deepen the student’s appreciation of the literary traditions of the Greeks. The authors to be read will be determined at the time of registration. Another course offered this year in Greek is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. The Age of Caesar (p. 67), Emily Katz Anhalt Greek Health, Science, and Society Health, Science and Society is a cluster of undergraduate and graduate courses, programs, and events which addresses the meaning of health and illness, advocacy for health and health care, and structures of medical and scientific knowledge. Courses and events are multidisciplinary, bringing together perspectives from the humanities, creative arts, social sciences, and natural sciences. Undergraduate students who are interested in health, science, and society are encouraged to take courses from across the curriculum and to design interdisciplinary conference projects. Over the past 25 years, as health and disease have been examined from social, economic, political and historical perspectives, there has been an increased awareness of the ways in which definitions of disease are framed in relation to the values, social structures, and bases of knowledge of particular communities. Globalization has required us to understand health and disease as crucial international issues, and environmental health is increasingly seen to be a matter of policy that has significantly differential effects on THE CURRICULUM 45 different populations. Public talks and events are regularly scheduled, to bring together undergraduate and graduate faculty and students to consider these questions of health, medicine, and scientific knowledge from a broad variety of perspectives. This focus of study may be of interest to students interested in the health professions, including pre-med, nursing, or other professions such as physical therapy, allowing them to combine courses in the natural sciences with explorations of the social sciences, arts, and humanities. Similarly, students in the arts and humanities who are interested in health and illness may find that incorporating science and social science into their educational program enables them to achieve a greater depth of understanding and expression in their work. Health, Science and Society offers undergraduate students the unique opportunity to take advantage of Sarah Lawrence College’s nationally recognized graduate master’s programs in Human Genetics and Health Advocacy, both the first such graduate programs offered in the country. Events and programs are also coordinated with the graduate programs in Art of Teaching and Child Development, and in collaboration with the Child Development Institute. Courses offered this year in Health, Science, and Society are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. Biology of Cancer (p. 17), Drew E. Cressman Biology Sickness and Health in Africa (p. 50), Mary Dillard History Studying Men and Masculinities (p. 103), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Children’s Health in a Multicultural Context (p. 105), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Embodiment and Biological Knowledge: Public Engagement in Medicine and Science (p. 114), Sarah Wilcox Sociology Fictions of Embodiment (p. 145), Sayantani DasGupta Writing History The History curriculum covers the globe. Most courses focus on particular regions or nations, but offerings also include courses that transcend geographical boundaries to examine subjects such as African diasporas, Islamic radicalism, or European influences on US intellectual history. Some courses are surveys—of colonial Latin America, for example, or Europe since World War II. Others zero in on more specific topics, such as medieval Christianity, the Cuban revolution, urban poverty and public policy in the United States, or feminist movements and theories. While history seminars center on reading and discussion, many also train students in aspects of the historian’s craft, including archival research, historiographic analysis, and oral history. First-Year Studies: The Sixties Priscilla Murolo FYS According to our national mythology, social insurgencies of the 1960s originated in the United States and pitted radical youth against the American mainstream. The real story is much more complicated. Politically speaking, “the sixties” began in the late 1940s and extended well into the 1970s, the ferment was by no means confined to youth, and developments within the United States were following global patterns. Revolutionary movements and ideas reverberated from Asia and Africa to Europe and the Americas, and they mobilized people from virtually all walks of life. This course will situate US movements within their global contexts and will focus especially on movements inspired by revolutionary nationalism and its various permutations among activists addressing issues of colonialism, class, race, gender, and sexuality. Readings include historical documents, as well as scholarship; we will also make ample use of music and film. First-Year Studies: Gender and the Culture of War in US History, 1775-1975 Lyde Cullen Sizer FYS The course will look closely—and from several vantage points—at domestic and international wars in the history of the United States from the American Revolution to Vietnam. Instead of a classic political-history approach, we will study the ways in which war drew attention to, and often reshaped, daily life and core assumptions about manhood and masculinity, womanhood and femininity. Rather than focusing on leaders 46 History and decision makers alone, we will analyze the work and lives of other affected constituents: rank-and-file soldiers, war workers, cultural critics, and those left to juggle new responsibilities on the home front. This course will also consider other “wars”—in particular, over slavery—that are not usually so named and their effect on domestic and gender sensibilities. Texts will include history books, biographies, memoirs, letters, editorials, novels, and, when historically appropriate, photographs and films. This will be a writing-intensive course. First-Year Studies: “In the Tradition”: An Introduction to African American History and Black Cultural Renaissance Komozi Woodard FYS African American history is an important window into the history of the United States and the rise of the modern world. Using African American history, culture, and consciousness as the focus, this course will introduce students to American history and world history. Students will begin with classics such as The Souls of Black Folk and Up from Slavery, as well as Coming of Age in Mississippi and Down These Mean Streets. We will explore where writers such as St. Augustine, Aleksandr Pushkin, and Alexandre Dumas fit into the traditions of the African diaspora and Africana studies. The course will also examine major developments such as the Atlantic slave trade in the making of the modern world; comparative slavery and emancipation; the classic slave narratives; the Civil War and Reconstruction; the Great Migration and Harlem Renaissance; making race and nation in the United States, Brazil, and South Africa; the racial politics of New Deal citizenship; African Americans in the city; the rise of blues and jazz; women in the black revolt; civil rights and black power; and the black arts movement. The Black Arts Renaissance & American Culture: Rethinking Urban and Ethnic History in America Komozi Woodard Open, Lecture—Year The Black Arts Renaissance is an essential window into American cultural history. How did jazz become American classical music? Looking back one century, American culture was defined not in terms of our way of life but rather in terms of “refinement.” In line with that, Black America was defined not in terms of an American ethnic group but rather in terms of an inferior race. By 1903, Anglo-American authorities insisted that “no full-blooded Negro has ever been distinguished as a man of science, a poet, or an artist.” The lectures and films in this course examine the contours of US history and American studies to explore how, in one century, the value of Black America, blues, jazz, and hiphop culture was transformed from worthless to priceless. The triumph of the Black Arts Renaissance, jazz studies, and Africana studies was produced by an epic century of extraordinary American cultural revolution; and that cultural revolution embraced social and cultural transformations that also produced golden ages of Irish, Yiddish, Chicano, and Nuyorican Renaissance. In other words, this course introduces students to the rethinking of urban and ethnic history in America. The Contemporary Practice of International Law Mark R. Shulman Open, Lecture—Fall In a landscape pocked by genocide, wars of choice, piracy, and international terrorism, what good is international law? Can it mean anything without a global police force and a universal judiciary? Is “might makes right” the only law that works? Or is it true that “most states comply with most of their obligations most of the time”? These essential questions frame the contemporary practice of law across borders. This lecture provides an overview of international law—its substance, theory, and practice. It addresses a wide range of issues, including the bases and norms of international law, the law of war (jus ad bellum and jus in bello), human-rights claims, domestic implementation of international norms, treaty interpretation, and state formation/ succession. Readings will draw from two key texts: Murphy’s treatise, Principles of International Law, and International Law Stories edited by Noyes, Janis & Dickinson. These readings will be supplemented by articles and original sources such as conventions, cases, and statutes. THE CURRICULUM 47 Art and the Sacred in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages David Bernstein Open, Lecture—Spring No time in history saw a richer, more varied expression of sacred art than the European Middle Ages. And no other age has known as powerful, as all-embracing a religious institution as the medieval church. In this interdisciplinary lecture course, we will ask why the Christian church and the art made in its service took such extraordinarily varied forms in the 1,000-year period from the catacombs to Chartres, from the third century to the 13th. We will also ask why certain features of contemporary Christianity that are looked upon as quintessentially Catholic rather than Protestant were established not in the earliest years of the church but in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages: monasteries and nunneries, the cult of the Virgin, a celibate clergy, and a papal monarchy with virtually unlimited powers. Since Christianity is a religion not only for the here and now but for the afterlife, of special interest will be perplexing beliefs such as that we on earth might affect the fate of the dead in purgatory and, conversely, that some of the “very special dead” might assist the living or perhaps punish them. Perhaps the most distinguishing feature of the course will be studying these topics in visual, as well as in written, texts; for instance, in the architecture and decoration of early Christian and Romanesque churches and, at St. Denis and Chartres, in the birth of the uniquely Western style that we call Gothic. By also examining how sacred words were illuminated in manuscripts linked to Lindisfarne, Kells, and Charlemagne’s court, we will attempt to engage with a novel expression of spirituality in the Middle Ages: the book as icon. Near the end of our course, we will follow men and women from all over Europe on their pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela, stopping at such memorable French Romanesque churches as Vézelay, Conques, and Moissac. In New York museums, students will have opportunities to view chapels and cloisters brought from Europe, as well as sculptures, ivories, metalwork, stained glass, books, paintings, and tapestries that are among the world’s most precious treasures. Lectures will be devoted primarily to art; the weekly group conferences, to readings from the Middle Ages. The U.S. Constitution: Interpretation and History Jeffrey Miller Open, Lecture—Spring This lecture course examines how the structure of our government and the guarantees of our liberties have been shaped by history, political philosophy, and experience. We will study the Constitution, related documents, and Supreme Court decisions interpreting the Constitution. The course should be considered by students interested in American history, government, politics, and intellectual analysis. Lectures will combine presentations by the instructor, discussion, and Socratic dialogue to develop analytical skills. Grades will be based on openbook midterm and final exams in which students will be asked to write a Supreme Court opinion resolving a constitutional issue. The American Revolution and Its Legacy: From British to American Nationalism Eileen Ka-May Cheng Open—Year It may be comforting to know that historians agree that an American Revolution did indeed occur. Less comforting but more intriguing may be the realization that historians do not agree on when it commenced and when it ended, much less on the full meaning of what exactly took place beyond the mere facts of the Revolution. Certainly, the question was profound enough to move John Adams to ask, “What do we mean by the Revolution?” In the fall, we will examine the causes and character of the Revolution by studying the political, intellectual, social, and cultural dimensions of this event. In the spring, we will look at how Americans adapted the legacy of the Revolution to the social and political changes of the 19th century and at how that legacy at once divided and unified Americans in this period. How were both opponents and defenders of slavery able to appeal to the Revolution to legitimize their views? What was the relationship between the Revolution and the Civil War? Was the Civil War a “second American Revolution”? By looking at how Americans used the memory of the Revolution to define their identity, the course ultimately aims to achieve a better understanding of the basis for and nature of American nationalism. Some background in history is helpful but not required. 48 History “Mystic Chords of Memory”: Myth, Tradition, and the Making of American Nationalism Eileen Ka-May Cheng Open—Year Is history just a memory of memories? The course will explore this question by looking at how Americans have remembered and mythologized important events and individuals in the nation’s history. One of the best-known such myths is the story of George Washington and the cherry tree. On being questioned by his father about who chopped down the cherry tree, Washington confessed that he had done it, telling his father, “I cannot tell a lie.” Ironically, however, this story was itself a fabrication. We must also not forget “Honest Abe,” where the theme of “honesty” recurs. Why have such myths been so important to the American national identity? For example, was Washington’s purported truthfulness a way of creating a sense of transparency and a bond of trust between the people and their democratically elected government? The course will address such questions by looking at the construction and function of tradition and myth, as well as the relationship between myth and tradition in American culture from the colonial period to World War II. We will examine some of the specific myths and traditions that Americans invented, beginning with the story of Pocahontas and John Smith and ending with the image of World War II as “The Good War.” The course will pay special attention to the mythologization of the American Revolution and the “Founding Fathers” and the myth of the self-made man, examining how figures such as George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Andrew Jackson, and Abraham Lincoln both contributed to and embodied these myths. We will consider how and why myths about these events and individuals were created and the extent to which they corresponded to social reality. The course will study how these myths both unified and divided Americans, as different groups used the same myths for conflicting social purposes. And finally, we will examine what these myths revealed about how Americans defined the nation’s identity. Was the United States a nation bound by “mystic chords of memory,” as Lincoln so poetically claimed, or were Americans ultimately a “present-minded people,” defined by their rejection of the past? More precisely, did Americans view the very notion of tradition as an impediment to the unlimited possibilities for growth and the actualization of their “manifest destiny”? The Idea of a Balance of Power Fredric Smoler Open—Year In this course, we will examine the idea of a balance of power—one of the key terms in the disciplines of international relations, strategic theory, and history—and also some instances in diplomatic and military history that will allow us to assess some versions of the theory. In its purest and most optimistic version, a balance of power is imagined to be a self-adjusting system of military alliances, one in which a balance of power keeps the peace by preventing any one state from accumulating so great a relative military advantage that war may seem a rational course of action. In a slightly less optimistic form, a balance of power can mean a distribution of power among states sufficient to prevent any one major power from seriously threatening the fundamental interests of another. In significantly less optimistic versions, the pursuit of a balance of power is imagined to be as likely to provoke wars as to prevent them, and a very equal balance of power may simply insure that a war will be peculiarly protracted and destructive. The First World War is sometimes imagined to be a war both caused and protracted by balance-of-power policies, while the Second World War is often imagined as the horrific result of insufficient attention to the maintenance of a dissuasive balance of power. The phrase dates to at least 1701, was memorably expressed in an essay of Hume’s (Of the Balance of Power) in 1752, is clearly imagined to exert pressure on political actors as early as Thucydides’ The Peloponnesian War, and is sometimes considered one of the core theories of international relations. We shall look at different versions of the theory and at some of the history that the theories attempt to explain, particularly the outbreak and prevention of wars, some sequences of diplomatic history, and arms races. Romantic Europe Philip Swoboda Open—Year Between the 1790s and the middle of the 19th century, European culture was largely shaped by the broad current of thought and feeling that we THE CURRICULUM 49 know as “romanticism.” This course will examine the rise of the romantic sensibility in the decades between the 1760s and 1800 and survey diverse manifestations of romanticism in thought, literature, and art during the subsequent halfcentury. We will give particular attention to the complex relations between romanticism and the three most portentous historical developments of its era: the French Revolution, the birth of industrial society in Britain, and the rise of national consciousness among Germans, Italians, and other European peoples. Readings will include prose fiction by Goethe, E. T. A. Hoffmann, and Walter Scott; poetry by Wordsworth, Shelley, Hölderlin, and Mickiewicz; works on religion, ethics, and the philosophy of history; and political treatises by the pioneers of modern conservativism, liberalism, and socialism. Imperial Russia: Power and Society Philip Swoboda Open, Sophomore and above—Year Imperial Russia was the creation of Peter the Great (1672–1725). It was he who decided to impose on the backward country over which he ruled the modernizing reforms that would enable Russia to occupy a respected place among the European Great Powers. To provide himself with collaborators in realizing this vision of Russian greatness, he created a new cultural elite of landed noblemen educated on Western lines. It was this new elite, called into being by Peter and fostered by the empresses and tsars who succeeded him, whose offspring were responsible for 19th-century Russia’s stupendous achievements in the realms of literature, art, music, and science. Over the course of the two centuries between 1700 and 1900, Russia’s educated elite grew increasingly restive under the tutelage of the autocratic state, and some of its members eventually set about overthrowing the rule of the tsars by revolutionary means—a goal they achieved in 1917. The hypothesis to be considered in this course is that the tremendous flowering of cultural creativity for which 19thcentury Russia is remembered was directly the product of the difficult relationship between the modernizing state and the Westernized elite that it had brought into being—between what Russians called “the power” (vlast) and “educated society” (obshchestvo). To explore this hypothesis, we will examine from a number of different angles the evolution of the Russian state, Russian society, and Russian culture in the 18th and 19th centuries. We will look at court politics, institutional and legal history, economic developments, and the system of serfdom that sustained the elite’s material position and social status until 1861. We will discuss government decrees, poems, novels, publicism, paintings, and operas. In the second half of the spring semester, we will trace the history of the Russian revolutionary movement and investigate how and why the Imperial regime abruptly collapsed in 1917. Open to first-year students with permission of the instructor. The Cold War In History and Film Jefferson Adams Open—Fall The half-century conflict that, following the end of World War II, developed between the United States and the Soviet Union—along with their respective allies—manifested itself in many different spheres of life. This course will explore the integral role that film played on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Following an introductory survey of the leading events of the Cold War, we will examine a series of major films (mostly in chronological order), focusing on the context in which they were made and the larger historical themes that they contain. Various genres—such as the rubble film, the thaw film, the Czech new wave, the spy film, the musical, and animation—will also be represented. A sampling of the syllabus includes The Murderers Are Among Us, The Cranes Are Flying, On the Waterfront, Man of Marble, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, and Goodbye Lenin! A short written assessment is required after each of the weekly screenings, and supplementary readings will be assigned, as well, to aid our discussions. For conference, students are encouraged to investigate the work of an individual director during this era, the depiction of a specific Cold War event or issue in several films, or the national cinemas of countries—particularly in the East block. France and Germany in the 20th Century Jefferson Adams Open—Fall “If France were married to a country," one historian astutely observed, “it would be to Germany.” Bitter adversaries during the First World War and yet, today, intimate partners 50 History within the European Union, France and Germany have indeed sustained one of the most complex and intriguing relationships during the past century. This course will examine the development of that relationship, looking carefully at economic, political, and social conditions in both countries. As they each experienced a remarkable cultural efflorescence (albeit under quite different circumstances), we will also investigate the role played by various writers and artists. The class assignments will be varied, relying not only on historical accounts but also on memoirs, biographies, novels, and films. A few of the main topics include: the legacy of the First World War; the rise of totalitarian movements; the impact of the Second World War on ordinary citizens of both countries; the significance of leaders such as Philippe Pétain, Charles de Gaulle, Adolf Hitler, and Konrad Adenauer; the construction of a larger European community after 1945; and the impact of Germany’s reunification in 1990. For conference projects, students may select a historical figure or problem from either country; topics that embrace both France and Germany are especially encouraged. Sickness and Health in Africa Mary Dillard Open—Fall Depending on the level of his or her resources, a sick person in Africa potentially has access to a variety of options for treatment. How illness is perceived becomes a crucial determinant in how people seek care. Despite the array of treatment options, the state of public health in most African countries has become woefully inadequate. While the reasons for this decline in health status are related to questions of the international political economy, they can also be traced historically. This class studies the history of health, healing, and medical practices in Africa in order to identify the social, historic, and economic factors that influence how therapeutic systems in Africa have changed over time. We will investigate a range of topics, including the place of traditional healers in providing care, the impact of the AIDS pandemic on overall public health, and the role of globalization in changing the structure of health-care delivery in most African countries. Reform and Revolution in the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa Hamid Rezai Open—Fall There is no doubt that, in today’s age of information, states are not the only important players in the national and global political arena. Since their emergence in 18th-century England, social movements have played an increasingly crucial role in political and social developments. They have impacted the political decision making of almost every country in the Middle East, from the constitutional revolution in Turkey and Iran in the early 20th century to the nationalist movements in the Arab world in the 1950s and ’60s and to the recent waves of popular uprising in Tunisia, Egypt, and Libya. Despite the vitality and complexity of these movements in authoritarian contexts, many analysts and observers have assumed until recently that public collective actions and popular protests are predominantly specific to liberal democracies. This course challenges this assumption by examining numerous powerful protest movements in the contemporary Middle East from the 20th century to the present, including those in Egypt, Algeria, Turkey, Tunisia, Libya, and Iran, and exploring the impact of people’s power on the course and direction of their respective societies. Examining the collective actions of students, women, youth, and ethnic and religious minorities as vital forces towards change and democratization, this course investigates the profound impact of social movements on political and institutional decision-making procedures in the region. We will read and discuss texts on social movements that have shaped the sociopolitical landscape of the modern Middle East and North Africa. We will evaluate from a comparative perspective the origins, trajectories, and outcomes of popular unrest throughout this strategically important and contentious region. In this course, we will ask and debate questions such as these: What important internal players, other than the state and political parties, competed for power in the social and political arenas of each country? What are the demographic and historical roots of these movements, and how did they rise and fall? Why did the tactics of movements differ at divergent localities and times, and why did some movements turn militant? And finally, what are the social, intellectual, and historical causes of the emergence and outcomes of popular unrest? THE CURRICULUM 51 Tudor England: Politics, Gender, and Religion. An Introductory Workshop in Doing History David Bernstein Open—Spring Sixteenth-century England experienced radical shifts in intellectual life, profound religious upheavals, and the first successful experiment in English history of a woman ruler. These developments, part of the broader European movements of Renaissance and Reformation, continue to shape our lives. To sharpen what is distinctive about England’s legacies, we will ask the following questions: How was the Renaissance humanist movement that began in Italy transformed by those debating how Tudor religion and society ought to be reformed? How did Luther’s insights and heroism shape the Reformation on the continent? Did Lutheranism take hold in England? The Bible in English: Since 2011 is the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible, shouldn’t we give credit to the scholar and reformer in Henry VIII’s reign—William Tyndale—who really deserves credit for the most influential book in the English language? In all these momentous changes, how important were the desires and deeds of individual Tudors: Henry VIII, his six wives, his three children—Edward, Mary, and Elizabeth? During the second part of the semester, Queen Elizabeth’s reign will be the focus. Of special import will be her decision, outrageous to contemporaries, to be known as The Virgin Queen. A question: Could it be that she was successful politically precisely because she turned what was deemed her greatest liability—her sex—into her greatest asset? Distinguished biographies and famous plays and films will be resources. Much of our reading will be in primary sources by Lorenzo Valla, Erasmus, Luther, William Tyndale, Thomas More, Thomas Cromwell, Queen Elizabeth. In a series of workshop sessions, we will try our hands at doing biography and history, as we help each other reconstruct out of primary sources a profound crisis confronting the young Elizabeth. Many of her advisors and many in her House of Commons and in her House of Lords were arrayed against her. Feeling deserted by those she thought supported her, she stood alone against hundreds of the most powerful men in the kingdom throughout a crisis in which that age’s anxieties about politics, gender, and religion overlapped. Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back Mary Dillard Open—Spring The continent of Africa has been variously described as the birthplace of humanity, the Motherland, a country, a continent, and a heart of darkness. All of these descriptions reflect representations of Africa, but how accurately do they reflect reality? This course analyzes the intellectual history of ideas about Africa and argues that some ideas have an enduring shelf life—even when they have been consistently proven to be inaccurate. We will critically interrogate historical and anthropological studies, travelers’ accounts, media representations, and films created by non-Africans. However, we will also examine the critical responses by African philosophers, novelists, academics, artists, and journalists who have attempted to address these images. Cinema and Society in the Middle East and North Africa Hamid Rezai Open—Spring As a pathway to modernity and an important part of intellectual life, cinema has been playing a crucial role in the sociopolitical and cultural development of the Middle East and North Africa since its emergence in the early 20th century. In the popular media and language of official politics, the voices of artists and filmmakers of this region have not received the attention they deserve. For decades, Algerian, Egyptian, Iranian, and Palestinian cinemas have been a major force reflecting on their countries’ and the region’s struggle against colonialism, authoritarianism, gender inequality, and poverty. In this course, we will read works on film theory and Middle Eastern and North African directors and their films. In addition to watching and discussing films, we will ask questions such as these: What role did cinema play in the formation of national and ethnic identities since its emergence in the early 20th century? How does film serve as a medium for transformation from a “traditional” society to a “modern” one? How do feminist directors use their films to negotiate women’s rights? How do filmmakers resist censorship by authoritarian and repressive regimes? And finally, what role does cinema play as an influential medium in the representation of this region within global culture? 52 History Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food Charles Zerner, Persis Charles Open—Spring Beliefs about food, foodmaking, and food consumption are practices that have historically indexed, identified, and mapped the contours of self, community, and nation. This course analyzes food issues through the lenses of culture and history. Histories of particular foods, including sugar, potatoes, coffee, and chocolate, are examined in order to reveal their crucial roles in social change, identity, class formation and conflict, nationalism, and the promotion of slavery. How were potatoes, famine, and the enforcement of free-trade ideology linked in 19th-century Anglo-Irish relations? How have episodic food riots, greeting perceived shortages and injustices in distribution, led to the constitution of new forms of sociability? What accounts for the birth of restaurants? How has the coming of the recipe book affected gender roles and domesticity? And how has the arrival of abundance brought changes to the human body, ideas, and ideals of normality? The course explores relationships between ideas of “nature” and the “natural” and ideas of natural diets, “locavorisms,” the “wild,” the raw, and the cooked. Through the lens of cultural studies and cultural anthropology, food production and consumption are revealed as a symbolic medium whose “travels’ across continents, as well as into individual digestive systems, illuminate and map topographies of class, tastes, the forbidden, and the erotic. Food as a symbolic substance moves through fashion, contemporary art, and nutrition. How, for example, is the natural body imagined and modeled in the 21st century? Is it taboo to eat chocolate after yoga? What do the rules of kosher do? And how do food taboos in the natural food movement resonate with the rules of kosher in the Old Testament? Revolution and Counterrevolution in Central America Matilde Zimmermann Open—Spring Until the 1970s, most Americans were only dimly aware of Central America—if anything, it might bring forth an association with earthquakes or “banana republics.” The victory of the Nicaraguan revolution in 1979 and then the eruption of guerrilla wars in El Salvador and Guatemala changed all that, bringing the active intervention of the US government, sparking the interest of a post-Vietnam generation of American youth, and putting new terms and faces on the front pages: Iran-Contra, Archbishop Oscar Romero, Sandino and the FSLN, the sanctuary movement, “low intensity warfare,” the annihilation of Mayan villages. This course examines the origins and dynamics of these revolutionary movements and the reasons for their success or failure. We will look at the revolutionaries’ ideologies, political and military strategies, class base, and the ethnic and gender composition of their leadership and ranks. To what extent was each side inspired by or dependent upon outside forces—Cuba and the Soviet Union in the case of the leftist guerrillas and the United States in the case of the counterrevolutionary armies and governments? What lessons can we draw from the fact that the leading revolutionary parties of the 1980s have all now abandoned armed struggle in favor of elections? In addition to historical monographs, we will make extensive use of primary sources—including revolutionary speeches, memoirs, songs, and manifestos, as well as declassified CIA and other US government documents. Leisure and Danger Persis Charles Intermediate—Year The interaction between work and play has taken various forms in history. Our project in this course will be to examine the changes and continuities in the idea of leisure. Beginning in early modern Europe, we will trace the concept up to the present—concentrating on Europe and America and reflecting on subjects such as travel and the pursuit of the exotic, theatricality, consumerism, luxury, and display. In the 19th century, leisure became democratized, and an anxious debate grew louder. What were the implications of making leisure available to masses of people? From romance novels to cheap liquor, from shopping to the cinema, new avenues of leisure aroused both fear and excitement. Moralists felt a need to police both public and private space and to reassert the primacy of work, thrift, and duty. We will study them and the various forms of accommodations and resistance that met their efforts. Class, ethnicity, gender, and geography all acted to structure people’s access to leisure. We will look at struggles over race, gender, and popular culture; the way certain THE CURRICULUM 53 groups became designated as providers of entertainment; or how certain locations were created as places of pleasure. To set the terms of the debate, we will begin with some 18th-century readings about the theatre and the market, the salon and the court. Readings will include work of Montesquieu, Flaubert, Wilde, Wharton, George Eliot, and Fitzgerald. In addition, we will read works of nonfiction that show how leisure helped to create new forms of subjectivity and interiority. Students will be encouraged to work on conference topics linking leisure to a variety of subjects such as childhood and education, the construction of racial identities, or the changing nature of parenthood as birth control became more and more widely available, to name just a few areas. Potentially, this course—through the study of complex oppositions such as need and desire, purpose and aimlessness, the necessary and gratuitous—can give us a sense of the dizzying questions about life’s very meaning that present themselves when we aim at a life of leisure. Gender, Education, and Opportunity in Africa Mary Dillard Intermediate—Spring In modern Africa, equity in education—whether in relation to gender, ethnicity, race, class, or religion—remains an important arena of social and political debate. As formal colonial rule ended on the African continent and more African nations gained independence, education became synonymous with modernity and a leading indicator of a country’s progress towards development. Gender has consistently played a powerful role in determining who would receive access to education. An awareness of the significance of both formal and informal education has been reflected within the realms of African politics, popular culture, literature, and film. This class studies the history of education in Africa, focusing on a wide variety of training, classroom experiences, and socialization practices. In particular, we will investigate the influence of gender in defining access to educational opportunity. We will begin by questioning prevailing constructs of gender and determine how relevant Western gender categories have historically been for African societies. By focusing several of our readings on countries as diverse as Nigeria, Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Zimbabwe, students will develop a broad overview of educational policy changes and practices throughout the African continent. Harvest: A Social History of Agriculture in Latin America Matilde Zimmermann Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Spring Two irrepressible conflicts run through the history of agriculture in Latin America: first, between the men and women who work the soil and those who own and control the land; and second, between, on the one hand, the growing of food and fiber for the farmers’ own use and trade and, on the other, the production of cash crops for export to a world market. This course looks at various forms of agricultural production that have had important impacts on Latin American history: pre-colonial agriculture in the Andes; plantation economies based on African slave labor in the Caribbean and Brazil; the introduction of European livestock and the development of huge ranches and haciendas in the colonial period; extractive industries (“plunder agriculture”) such as rubber and lumber; peasant production and how it has changed over time; modern agribusiness and its relationship to globalization and imperialism. We will look at the impact of these different forms of production on the environment and on rural cultural practices, including religion, family relations and popular art. We will study the relationship between the landowning classes and the state, especially in the 19th and 20th centuries, and the role of peasants and other rural workers in movements for national liberation and social revolution. Sources will include theoretical articles, historical monographs, and primary sources. Open to sophomores and above with some background in Latin American history, geography, or literature. Public Stories, Private Lives: Methods of Oral History Mary Dillard Advanced—Fall Oral history methodology has moved from a contested approach to studying history to an integral method of learning about the past. This is because oral histories allow us to gain an understanding of past events from a diverse array of vantage points. Methods of recording oral history also allow the possibility of bringing private stories into the public. In contrast, public history in the form of monuments, museums, and World Heritage Sites are consciously preserved in order to emphasize particular aspects of a national, regional, or local past that their 54 International Studies protectors deem to be important. Who owns this history? Is it Civil War reenactors, who dedicate their weekends to remembering that war? Is it the African Americans who return to West Africa in search of their African past or the West Africans who want to forget about their slave-trading past? What happens when the methods for interpreting public and oral histories combine? This course places particular attention on the importance of oral history in tracing memories of the past. We will discuss how Africanist and feminist scholars have used oral history to study the history of underrepresented groups. We will also investigate how methods of oral history and public history can be used in reconstructing the local history of our surrounding community (i.e., Yonkers, Bronxville, Westchester County). In/Migration: How Immigrants and Migrants Changed New York City From a Small Trading Post to an Emerging World Metropolis Rona Holub Advanced—Spring The question is: Who Created New York City? The answer is: slaves, immigrants, migrants—its people! This course traces the development of New York City beginning with its first inhabitants, the Lenape. It then follows its growth from a small trading post at the tip of Manhattan into a great commercial and cultural center. With special emphasis on the factors that push people out of one place and pull them into another, what they find when they arrive in their new environments, and how they struggle, negotiate, and figure out how to survive there—including how they exert power and how they deal with power exerted over them—we will explore the social, political, economic, and cultural history of the city through a wide range of readings that include primary source documents and historical scholarship. We will also experience the rhythms of this famous metropolis on its streets, as we attempt to understand the complex relationship between the city’s social history and its built environment through field trips (attendance required). The class focuses on those groups of migrants and immigrants who entered into and lived in the city from the early 1600s to the 1920s. Our historical explorations will provide an understanding of how and why New York City came to be what it is today and how, as a dynamic organism, it continues to change. Although the course covers a particular time period, students may do conference projects that cover years not specifically addressed in the course. Open to juniors, seniors and graduate students International Studies What kind of global society will evolve in the 21st century? Linked by worldwide organizations and communications, yet divided by histories and ethnic identities, people everywhere are involved in the process of re-evaluation and selfdefinition. To help students better understand the complex forces that will determine the shape of the 21st century, Sarah Lawrence College offers an interdisciplinary approach to International Studies. Broadly defined, International Studies include the dynamics of interstate relations; the interplay of cultural, ideological, economic, and religious factors; and the multifaceted structures of Asian, African, Latin American, Middle Eastern, and European societies. A variety of programs abroad further extends students’ curricular options in International Studies. The experience of overseas learning, valuable in itself, also encourages more vivid cultural insight and integration of different scholarly perspectives. The courses offered in International Studies are listed throughout the catalogue in disciplines as diverse as Anthropology, Art History, Asian Studies, Economics, Environmental Science, Geography, History, Literature, Politics, and Religion. Courses offered this year in International Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. Performing Culture (p. 6), Deanna Barenboim Anthropology The Anthropology of Life Itself (p. 5), Robert R. Desjarlais Anthropology Field Methods in the Study of Language and Culture (p. 6), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Language and Race: Constructing the Self and Imagining the Other in the United States and Beyond (p. 5), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Language, Culture, and Performance (p. 4), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology THE CURRICULUM 55 Political Language and Performance (p. 7), Aurora Donzelli Anthropology Making History of Non-Western Art History: Africa, Oceania, and the Americas (p. 10), Susan Kart Art History Arts of the African Continent (p. 9), Susan Kart Art History Arts of the Americas: The Continents Before Columbus and Cortés (p. 9), Susan Kart Art History Bitter Victories, Sweet Defeats (p. 13), Kevin Landdeck Asian Studies Empire to Nation (p. 13), Kevin Landdeck Asian Studies Chinese Philosophy: Tao, Mind, and Human Nature (p. 14), Ellen Neskar Asian Studies First-Year Studies: Cultures and Arts of India (p. 12), Sandra Robinson Asian Studies Writing India: Transnational Narratives (p. 14), Sandra Robinson Asian Studies Images of India: Text/Photo/Film (p. 14), Sandra Robinson Asian Studies Introduction to Economic Theory & Policy (p. 28), Kim Christensen Economics The Political Economy of Global and Local Inequality: The Welfare State, Developmental State, and Poverty (p. 29), Jamee K. Moudud Economics Money and Financial Crises: Theory, History, and Policy (p. 30), Jamee K. Moudud Economics First-Year Studies: Political Economics of the Environment (p. 27), Marilyn Power Economics Sustainable Development (p. 29), Marilyn Power Economics Smith, Marx, and Keynes (p. 30), Marilyn Power Economics Questions of the Commons: Interrogating Property (p. 31), Charles Zerner Environmental Studies Hunger and Excess: Histories, Politics, and Cultures of Food (p. 31), Charles Zerner Environmental Studies, Persis Charles History Literature in Translation: “Because We Know That Language Exists”: Roland Barthes and French Literature and Theory (1945-2011) (p. 69), Eric Leveau French Food, Agriculture, Environment, and Development (p. 41), Joshua Muldavin Geography Introduction to Development Studies: The Political Ecology of Development (p. 40), Joshua Muldavin Geography France and Germany in the 20th Century (p. 49), Jefferson Adams History The Cold War In History and Film (p. 49), Jefferson Adams History Leisure and Danger (p. 52), Persis Charles History Sickness and Health in Africa (p. 50), Mary Dillard History Public Stories, Private Lives: Methods of Oral History (p. 53), Mary Dillard History Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back (p. 51), Mary Dillard History Gender, Education, and Opportunity in Africa (p. 53), Mary Dillard History Ideas of Africa: Africa Writes Back (p. 51), Mary Dillard History Imperial Russia: Power and Society (p. 49), Philip Swoboda History First-Year Studies: “In the Tradition”: An Introduction to African American History and Black Cultural Renaissance (p. 46), Komozi Woodard History The Black Arts Renaissance & American Culture: Rethinking Urban and Ethnic History in America (p. 46), Komozi Woodard History Revolution and Counterrevolution in Central America (p. 52), Matilde Zimmermann History Harvest: A Social History of Agriculture in Latin America (p. 53), Matilde Zimmermann History First-Year Studies: Utopia (p. 62), Una Chung Literature Art of Power: Literature, Media, Theory (p. 70), Una Chung Literature Experiment and Scandal: The 18th-Century British Novel (p. 67), James Horowitz Literature African American Literature Survey (1789-2011) (p. 64), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature Creating New Blackness: The Expressions of the Harlem Renaissance (p. 72), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature Spoken Wor(l)ds: African American Poetry From Black Arts to Hip Hop (1960-2012) (p. 73), Alwin A. D. Jones Literature 56 Italian “Untied” Kingdom: British Literature Since 1945 (p. 68), Fiona Wilson Literature Conscience of the Nations: Classics of African Literature (p. 68), William Shullenberger Literature Imagining War (p. 64), Fredric Smoler Literature Reform and Revolution in the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa (p. 50), Hamid Rezai Politics Cinema and Society in the Middle East and North Africa (p. 51), Hamid Rezai Politics First-Year Studies: The American Polity (p. 95), Samuel Abrams Politics Looking at Leadership and Decision Making in the Political World (p. 96), Samuel Abrams Politics The Legitimacy of Modernity? Basic Texts in Social Theory (p. 95), David Peritz Politics Democracy and Diversity (p. 97), David Peritz Politics Collective Violence and Post-Conflict Reconciliation (p. 97), Elke Zuern Politics Rainbow Nation: Growing Up South African in the Apartheid and Post-Apartheid Eras (p. 100), Kim Ferguson Psychology Beyond the Matrix of Race: Psychologies of Race and Ethnicity (p. 99), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Studying Men and Masculinities (p. 103), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Children’s Health in a Multicultural Context (p. 105), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Ancient Israelite Epic (p. 108), Cameron C. Afzal Religion Jewish Mysticism From Antiquity to the Present (p. 110), Glenn Dynner Religion Jewish Life in Eastern Europe (p. 109), Glenn Dynner Religion Islam and the Muslim World (p. 108), Kristin Zahra Sands Religion Muslim Literature, Film, and Art (p. 110), Kristin Zahra Sands Religion Travel and Tourism: Economies of Pleasure, Profit, and Power (p. 115), Shahnaz Rouse Sociology From Republicanism to Authoritarianism: Re-Viewing the Spanish Civil War (p. 116), Shahnaz Rouse Sociology Literature in Translation: Fantastic Gallery: 20th-Century Latin American Short Fiction (p. 65), Maria Negroni Spanish Italian The study of Italian at Sarah Lawrence College offers the rigors of language study and the joys of immersion in one of the richest cultures of the West. The course of study consists of classroom, conference, and conversational components, all enhanced by the flexible academic structure of the College and proximity to New York. In the classroom, students learn Italian grammar, syntax, and phonology, using sources of everyday communication and literary texts. In conference sessions—especially helpful in customizing study to each student’s level of fluency—students pursue reading and writing related to topics that compel them. And in conversation meetings, students simply talk with native Italians about anything of common interest. Individual conference projects can be as creative and diverse as is appropriate for each student and can include interdisciplinary work in the Italian language. As in other disciplines, the resources of New York City enhance student experience: opera performances at the Metropolitan Opera (after preparatory readings from libretti), film series and lectures, museums, and internships related to conference work all offer ways to bring Italian to life. And for bringing students to Italy, Sarah Lawrence’s study program in Florence maintains the small scale and individual attention that is the mark of the College, providing an exceptional opportunity to combine a yearlong academic experience with the cultural immersion of a homestay living arrangement. The Italian Department periodically offers courses in Literature in Translation as part of the literature curriculum. Among these courses are Images of Heaven and Hell, The Grand Tour: A Literary Journey to Italy, and The Three Crowns: Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio. Beginning Italian Tristana Rorandelli, Stefania Benzoni Open—Year This course is for students with no previous knowledge of Italian. It aims at giving the student a complete foundation in the Italian language, with particular attention to the oral and written communication of everyday use and to all aspects of Italian culture. The course will be conducted in Italian (after the first couple of weeks) and will involve the study of all the basic structures of the language—phonological, grammatical, syntactical—with practice in conversation, reading, composition, and THE CURRICULUM 57 translation. In addition to the basic Italian textbook and an array of supplementary computer and Internet material, the course will include texts from prose fiction, poetry, journalistic prose, songs, films, recipe books, and the language of publicity. Conference work (in group) is largely based on reading and writing, and the use of the language is encouraged through games and creative composition. In addition to class and group conference, the course also has a conversation component in regular workshops with the language assistants. Supplementary activities such as opera and relevant exhibits in New York City are made available when possible. By the end of this yearlong course, students will attain a basic competence in all aspects of the language. This class will be taught by Ms. Rorandelli in the fall and Ms. Benzoni in the spring. Beginning Italian Judith P. Serafini-Sauli Open—Year This course is for students with no previous knowledge of Italian. It aims at giving the student a complete foundation in the Italian language, with particular attention to the oral and written communication of everyday use and to all aspects of Italian culture. The course will be conducted in Italian (after the first couple of weeks) and will involve the study of all the basic structures of the language—phonological, grammatical, syntactical—with practice in conversation, reading, composition, and translation. In addition to the basic Italian textbook and an array of supplementary computer and Internet material, the course will include texts from prose fiction, poetry, journalistic prose, songs, films, recipe books, and the language of publicity. Conference work (in group) is largely based on reading and writing, and the use of the language is encouraged through games and creative composition. In addition to class and group conference, the course also has a conversation component in regular workshops with the language assistants. Supplementary activities such as opera and relevant exhibits in New York City are made available when possible. By the end of this yearlong course, students will attain a basic competence in all aspects of the language. Intermediate Italian: Modern Italian Prose Judith P. Serafini-Sauli Intermediate—Year This course will constitute an in-depth review of Italian grammar and an introduction to modern Italian literature and culture. For each aspect of the grammar, we will use a text, short stories, poems, songs, films, newspaper articles, plays, and novels that will serve as a focus for aspects of Italian culture, as well as for elements of the language. Work on the Web is an integral part of the course for grammar exercises and research, as well as a source for audio, video, and film. Web activities will include topics such as planning a trip, writing a film review, creating a recipe, or describing a sports event. Writing assignments will include critical analysis of literary texts as they evolve from the weekly reading assignments of authors such as Calvino, Eco, Moravia, Pavese, Fo, and many others. Conference work will focus on an author, a genre, or a topic of particular interest to the student. All students attend conversation sections twice a week. Open to students with one year of college Italian or the equivalent. Advanced Italian: Fascism, World War II, and the Resistance in 20th-Century Italian Narrative and Cinema Tristana Rorandelli Advanced—Fall This course is intended for advanced students of Italian who want to better their comprehension of, as well as their oral and written skills in, the language. This will be achieved by reading literary works and watching films in the original language, producing written compositions, and also through in-class discussion of the material. The course examines the manner in which crucial historical events that occurred during the 20th century—specifically the rise and fall of fascism, World War II, and the Resistance—were represented within Italian literature and cinema of the time, as well as throughout the decades following the end of the war (up to the 1970s). Literary texts will include those authored by Ignazio Silone, Vasco Pratolini, Italo Calvino, Mario Carli, Renata Viganò, Carlo Cassola, Beppe Fenoglio, Elio Vittorini, Alberto Moravia and Carlo Mazzantini. Films will include fascist propaganda and documentaries (from the Istituto Luce’s archives), as well as films by Roberto 58 Japanese Rossellini (his fascist-era war trilogy, as well as his neo-realist films), Vittorio De Sica, Luigi Comencini, Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, Bernardo Bertolucci, Giuliano Montaldo, Ettore Scola, Luchino Visconti, Liliana Cavani, Pier Paolo Pasolini, and Federico Fellini. Conference topics may include the study of a particular author, literary text, or film that might be of interest to the student. Conversation classes will be held with the language assistants. Literary texts will be available for purchase; critical material will be available through e-reserve. Japanese Students may explore both Japanese language and Japanese literature at Sarah Lawrence College. In beginning and intermediate-level language courses, students master the basic skills in speaking, listening comprehension, reading comprehension, and writing. By the end of the first year, students should be able to use their skills to express themselves in a variety of situations and have reading comprehension of the hiragana, katakana, and approximately 150 kanji (Chinese characters). In the second year, students continue to broaden their knowledge of Japanese grammar, vocabulary, and kanji. Learning Japanese also involves developing an awareness of expressions without direct English equivalents, such as honorific and modest verbal forms. Through intensive practice both in class and with language assistants in smaller groups, students are given the opportunity to actively practice their skills and reinforce their understanding in ways that relate to their own experiences. Courses offered in Japanese literature include Modern Japanese Literature, Postwar Japanese Literature, and Representations of Ethnicity in Japanese Literature and Film. In these courses, students are introduced to a variety of Japanese literary texts in English translation. From Chikamatsu Monzaemon’s plays of love suicides, to the mysterious worlds created by Izumi Kyoka, to Ooka Shohei's depiction of a soldier's struggle to survive in the Philippines at the end of the Pacific War, to the existential fiction of Abe Kobo in the postwar period, students explore different authors' writings in terms of style as well as in relation to social and historical contexts. In addition to literature, courses include screenings of films (including dramas, anime, and documentaries) that are directly relevant to the literary texts and their themes. Such themes include the representation of social obligation (duty) versus emotional desire, the alienation of the modern self, Westernization, the experience of war and memory, and the search for meaningful existence in the postwar era. Japanese I Kuniko Katz Open—Year This course is for students with no previous knowledge of Japanese. Students will develop basic communicative skills in listening comprehension and speaking, as well as skills in reading and writing (katakana, hiragana, and basic kanji) in Japanese. While class time and weekly conference meetings will be devoted primarily to language practice, an understanding of Japanese grammar will also be emphasized as an important basis for continued language learning. Class work will be supplemented with weekly group conferences with the instructor. Students will also meet with a language assistant once a week, in small groups, for tutorials, a mandatory component of the course. Japanese II Miyabi Yamamoto Intermediate—Year This course is designed for students who have completed Japanese I (formerly Beginning Japanese) or its equivalent. Students will continue to develop their speaking, listening, reading, and writing skills, while expanding their vocabulary and knowledge of grammar. At the end of the course, students should be able to handle simple communicative tasks and situations effectively, understand simple daily conversations, write short essays, read simple essays, and discuss their content. Class work will be supplemented with weekly group conferences with the instructor. Students will also meet with a language assistant once a week, in small groups, for tutorials, a mandatory component of the course. Japanese III Cheiko Naka Advanced—Year This course is designed for students who have completed Japanese II or its equivalent. Students will continue to develop Japanese proficiency in aural and reading comprehension, in addition to THE CURRICULUM 59 speaking and writing skills. Activities include listening to and discussing television programs and films; writing and performing dialogues and speeches; reading essays, newspaper articles, and short stories; and writing a diary, letters, and short essays. Students will also meet weekly with a language assistant for tutorials, a mandatory component of the course. Latin Sarah Lawrence College’s Classics program emphasizes the study of the languages and literature of ancient Greece and Rome. Greek and Latin constitute an essential component of any humanistic education, enabling students to examine the foundations of Western culture and explore timeless questions concerning the nature of the world, the place of human beings in it, and the components of a life well lived. In studying the literature, history, philosophy, and society of the ancient Greeks and Romans, students come to appreciate them for themselves, examine the continuity between the ancient and modern worlds, and, perhaps, discover “a place to stand”—an objective vantage point for assessing modern culture. In their first year of study, students acquire proficiency in vocabulary, grammar and syntax, with the aim of reading accurately and with increasing insight. Selected passages of ancient works are read in the original languages almost immediately. Intermediate and advanced courses develop students’ critical and analytical abilities while exploring ancient works in their literary, historical, and cultural context. Conference projects provide opportunities for specialized work in areas of interest in classical antiquity. Recent conference projects include close readings of Homer’s Iliad, Aristophanes’ Clouds, Pindar’s Odes, Plato’s Republic, Cicero’s de Amicitia, the poetry of Catullus, and Virgil’s Aeneid, as well as studies of modern theories of myth, Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy in connection with the tragedies of Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, the social implications of Roman domestic architecture, and a comparison of Euripides’ Hippolytus with Racine’s Phèdre. Greek and Latin will be especially beneficial for students interested in related disciplines, including religion, philosophy, art history, archaeology, history, political science, English, comparative literature, and medieval studies, as well as education, law, medicine, and business. Greek and Latin can also prove valuable to all those who wish to enrich their imagination in the creative pursuits of writing, dance, music, visual arts, and acting. Beginning Latin Samuel B. Seigle Open—Year This course will introduce the student, as quickly as possible, to the reading of classical Latin literature. Selections by the poet Ovid will be read in the second semester. Intermediate Latin Emily Katz Anhalt Intermediate—Fall This course will explore the literature, history, and politics of the Late Roman Republic, with particular emphasis on the tumultuous years from the death of Sulla (78 BCE) to the death of Caesar (44 BCE). Closely examining works of Catullus, Lucretius, Cicero, Caesar, and Sallust, we will consider how the violent struggle for political power resulted in the demise of republican government and the centralization of authority in the hands of one individual. Class discussions and writing assignments will assess the relationship between intellectual views and political action during this critical moment in Western history. The course will be taught in conjunction with Literature: The Age of Caesar. Students will attend seminar meetings and, in addition, develop and refine their reading comprehension skills by reading selections of the seminar texts in Latin in their conference work. Reading assignments will be read in their entirety in English. Additional conference hours and grammar review will be included as necessary.This course will be taught in conjunction with Literature: The Age of Caesar. Students will attend seminar meetings and, in addition, develop and refine their reading comprehension skills by reading selections of the seminar texts in Latin in their conference work. Reading assignments will be read in their entirety in English. Additional conference hours and grammar review will be included, as necessary. Advanced Latin Emily Katz Anhalt Advanced—Fall This course will explore the literature, history, and politics of the Late Roman Republic, with particular emphasis on the tumultuous years from 60 Latin American and Latino/a Studies the death of Sulla (78 BCE) to the death of Caesar (44 BCE). Closely examining works of Catullus, Lucretius, Cicero, Caesar, and Sallust, we will consider how the violent struggle for political power resulted in the demise of republican government and the centralization of authority in the hands of one individual. Class discussions and writing assignments will assess the relationship between intellectual views and political action during this critical moment in Western history. The course will be taught in conjunction with Literature in Translation: The Age of Caesar. Students will attend seminar meetings and, in addition, develop and refine their reading comprehension skills by reading selections of the seminar texts in Latin for their conference work. Reading assignments will be read in their entirety in English. Additional conference hours and grammar review will be included, as necessary. resistance in the area also require broad inquiry into the often turbulent and violent realities of political economic forces. As this program is concerned with a broad set of border crossings, faculty in LALS are also committed to expanding educational experiences beyond Sarah Lawrence College. Accordingly, students are encouraged to study abroad through the Sarah Lawrence College in Cuba program, Sarah Lawrence-sponsored trips to Nicaragua and the US-Mexico border, or other programs in Latin America. Students will also have opportunities to explore the borderlands closer to Sarah Lawrence College, including Latino communities in New York City and Westchester County. Another course offered this year in Latin is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. Arts of the Americas: The Continents Before Columbus and Cortés (p. 9), Susan Kart Art History Making History of Non-Western Art History: Africa, Oceania, and the Americas (p. 10), Susan Kart Art History Cinema and Society (p. 35), Gilberto Perez Film History Revolution and Counterrevolution in Central America (p. 52), Matilde Zimmermann History Harvest: A Social History of Agriculture in Latin America (p. 53), Matilde Zimmermann History Intermediate Spanish III: “Calles y Plaza Antigua”: From the Country to the City in Hispanic Literature and Film (p. 117), Isabel de Sena Literature Ethnomusicology of the Americas: Music, Language, and Identity (p. 77), Jonathan King Music Latino Crossings (p. 114), Patrisia Macías Sociology Borges (p. 73), Maria Negroni Spanish Literature in Translation: Fantastic Gallery: 20th-Century Latin American Short Fiction (p. 65), Maria Negroni Spanish The Age of Caesar (p. 67), Emily Katz Anhalt Greek Latin American and Latino/a Studies This program in Latin American and Latino/a Studies (LALS) is devoted to the interdisciplinary investigation of Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino cultures, politics, and histories. Through a variety of disciplines, students will have opportunities to explore the vibrant cultural life of Latin American and Caribbean countries, as well as the experiences of the Latino communities in the United States. Course offerings will include language, literature, dance, film, music, art, and other cultural expressions as a way to familiarize the students with a world that is rich in imagination, powerful in social impact, and defiant of the stereotypes usually imposed upon it. Students will also interrogate the complex political dynamics involved in such processes as (post)colonialism, migration, revolution, social movements, citizenship, and the cultural politics of race, gender, sexuality, and class. The histories of conquest, colonialism, development, and Courses offered this year in Latin American and Latino/a Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. THE CURRICULUM 61 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies is an interdisciplinary field that engages questions extending across a number of areas of study. Sarah Lawrence College offers students the opportunity to explore a range of theories and issues concerning gender and sexuality across cultures, categories, and historical periods. This can be accomplished through seminar course work and discussion and/or individual conference research. destroying the very groups they are working to openly join. In this class, we will use these contradictions as a framework for studying the complex social roles that queers have occupied and the complex social worlds they have created at different times and places—shaped by different understandings of gender, race, class, ethnicity, and nationality—since the emergence of modern homosexual identities. We will also consider the implications of these contradictions for current LGBT political battles. Our sources will include histories, sociological and anthropological studies, the writings of scientists and political activists, legal cases, novels, and films. Perverts in Groups: The Social Life of Homosexuals Queer Theory: A History Julie Abraham Open—Fall Contradictory assumptions about the relation of homosexuals to groups have dominated accounts of modern LGBT life. In Western Europe and the United States from the late-19th century onwards, queers have been presented as profoundly isolated persons—burdened by the conviction that they are the only ones ever to have had such feelings when they first realize their deviant desires and are immediately separated by those desires from the families and cultures into which they were born. Yet, at the same time, these isolated individuals have been seen as inseparable from a worldwide network. By means of mysterious signs decipherable only by other group members, homosexuals were supposed to instantly recognize each other and to be committed, above all, to protecting their fellows and advancing their collective interests. Homosexuals were, then, denounced as persons who did not contribute to society; homosexuality was presented as, by definition, the hedonistic choice of reckless, self-indulgent individualism over sober, social good. Nevertheless, all homosexuals were implicated in a nefarious conspiracy, stealthily working through their web of connections to one another to take over the world—or at least whichever part of the world the commentator wished to defend: the political establishment of the United States or its art, theatre, or film industries, for example. Recent manifestations of these contradictory assumptions can be seen in the battles that have raged since the 1970s, when queers began seeking public recognition of their lives within existing social institutions from the military to marriage. LGBT persons have been attacked as threats (whether to unit cohesion or to the family), intent on Julie Abraham Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Fall Queer Theory emerged in the United States, in tandem with Queer Nation, at the beginning of the 1990s as the intellectual framework for a new round in ongoing contests over understandings of sexuality and gender in Western culture. “Queer” was presented as a radical break with homosexual, as well as heterosexual, pasts. Queer theorists and activists hoped to reconstruct lesbian and gay politics, intellectual life, and culture; renegotiate differences of gender, race, and class among lesbians and gay men; and establish new ways of thinking about sexuality, new understandings of sexual dissidence, and new relations among sexual dissidents. Nevertheless, Queer Theory had complex sources in the intellectual and political work that had gone before. And it has had, predictably, unpredictable effects on current intellectual and political projects. This class will make the history of Queer Theory the basis for an intensive study of contemporary intellectual and political work on sexuality and gender. We will also be addressing the fundamental questions raised by the career of Queer Theory, about the relations between political movements and intellectual movements, the politics of intellectual life, and the politics of the academy in the United States in particular, in this new millenium. (For students with a background in women’s, gender, or LGBT studies.) Courses offered this year in Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. 62 Literature The Greeks and their Neighbors: The Hellenization of the Mediterranean From the Homeric Age to Augustus (p. 10), David Castriota Art History Performance Art (p. 10), Judith Rodenbeck Art History Studying Men and Masculinities (p. 103), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology Beyond the Matrix of Race: Psychologies of Race and Ethnicity (p. 99), Linwood J. Lewis Psychology First-Year Studies: Outside Cinema: Contemporary Approaches to Video Art Production (p. 132), Robin Starbuck Visual Arts Literature Literature at Sarah Lawrence College is a disciplined and cross-disciplinary study founded on the belief that reflective attention to a variety of fictions can lead to deeper insight into the truths of self and society. Among the goals of the discipline: to strengthen critical skills; widen cultural literacy; refine writing, discussion, speaking, and research skills; and open students to engagement with the concerns of other disciplines—including history, philosophy, political science, psychology, religion, and anthropology—as they emerge within literature’s rich discourse. Curricular offerings include core American and European texts but range widely through world literature—African, Asian, and Latin American. Courses may be broadly organized around a historical period (for example, the Middle Ages or the 17th century), around a genre (comedy, autobiography, the novel), or may combine historical and generic concerns (ancient Greek theater, 20th-century American poetry). Some courses are devoted to the study of a single author, such as Chaucer or Virginia Woolf, or to a particular thematic or critical goal: examining ideas of culture since the Enlightenment, exploring postcolonial revisions to classics of the Western canon, or developing an inclusive approach to American literature that reads African American and Native American texts along with more traditional works. Throughout the literature curriculum, meeting with faculty members in regularly scheduled conferences allows students to individualize their course work, to combine it where appropriate with other disciplines, and to write with the deep understanding that can only result from intense, guided study. First-Year Studies: Self/Life/ Writing: Studies in Autobiography Bella Brodzki FYS How does a self—the most intimate and elusive of concepts—become a text? What is the relationship between living a life and writing about it? What assumptions might authors and readers not share about the ways experience is endowed with symbolic value? For modernists and postmodernists particularly obsessed by the problems of identity and self-expression, the study of autobiography is a fascinating enterprise. This course is intended to introduce students to the autobiographical mode in literature. We will examine a rich variety of “life stories,” including memoirs, letters, and diaries that span from medieval times through the 21st century. Special attention will be paid to the following patterns and themes: the complex interplay between “truth” and “fiction,” sincerity and artifice, memory and representation; the nature of confessional writing; the use of autobiography as cultural document; and the role of gender in both the writing and reading of autobiographies. Among the authors to be included are St. Augustine, Kempe, Rousseau, Franklin, Douglass, Brent, Stein, Kafka, Nabokov, Wright, de Beauvoir, Sartre, Hurston, and Kingston. Students will submit one piece of autobiographical writing at the beginning of the course and will write short, frequent papers on the readings throughout the year. First-Year Studies: Utopia Una Chung FYS “Utopia has always been a political issue, an unusual destiny for a literary form”—Fredric Jameson This course explores the idea of utopia in literature, beginning with St. Thomas More’s Utopia and moving through diverse works of science fiction, speculative fiction, and postcolonial literature. We will contextualize the notion of “utopia” within the tradition of Marxist critical theory, as well as investigate issues of race, gender, and sexuality as they have been articulated in recent decades. The primary focus THE CURRICULUM 63 of the course will be on 20th-century literature and the politics of the contemporary age—globalization, digital technologies, and environmental crisis. Literature, philosophy, and politics will each play a significant role in coursework. First-Year Studies: New Literature From Europe Eduardo Lago FYS Perhaps more than anything else, literature defines the identity of cultures and nations. At the same time, few cultural manifestations help to bring together peoples and cultures as powerfully as literature, which gives a special significance to the fact that only three percent of the books published in the United States are translations. In a world where technology has made borders obsolete in many ways, the lack of curiosity for the great literatures of the world is an alarming symptom of North America´s cultural isolation. Starting with Latin America, all continents have an astonishing wealth of literatures. Europe is just one of them. The seat of ancient civilizations and empires that conquered the rest of the world, the Europe of today is dramatically different from what it once was. After two world wars and the collapse of formidable utopias, contemporary European reality is extraordinarily elusive and complex. Forty languages are spoken in almost as many European countries nowadays, each of them representing a vibrant body of literature. In this course, we will study the literary manifestations of the new Europe, paying special attention to her youngest authors. In our aproach, we will focus on sociopolitical displacements such as the reshaping of the European identities, resulting from the influx of immigrants from all over the world, and the conflicts derived from the dream of a unity that coexists with the birth of a whole set of youthful countries that transcend the notion of nationality—ethnically, culturally, and linguistically. First-Year Studies: Declarations of Independence: American Literary Masterworks, American Art Nicolaus Mills FYS On July 4, 1845, Henry Thoreau began spending his days and nights at Walden Pond. His declaration of independence from the America in which he was living epitomizes a tradition that goes to the heart of American literature. Time and again, America’s best writers have adapted the values of the American Revolution to their own times. In rebelling against religious orthodoxy, slavery, a market economy, the relegation of women to second-class citizens—to name just a few of their targets—America’s prose writers have produced a tradition at odds with the country but consistent with the spirit of the Founding Fathers. Declarations of Independence will focus on this tradition in terms of a series of American literary masterworks that feature the writing of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Frederick Douglass, Mark Twain, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Willa Cather, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and J.D. Salinger. The course will look at the parallels between America’s writers and America’s painters from the mid-19th to the mid-20th century by closely following the contours of American history. Students will begin their conference work putting the classic American novel in perspective by looking at classic, 19th-century British fiction. First-Year Studies: Romanticism and Love Fiona Wilson FYS For Percy Shelley, passionate love is the bond that connects us “with every thing which exists”; for Jane Austen, on the other hand, a heroine may lose her heart but not her self-control. It is generally known that Romanticism assigned high value to the emotion of love, but “love” has always been understood in many different ways. This course explores the multiple meanings of love as embodied in the literature of the Romantic period (1780-1830) and its long 19thcentury afterglow. To what extent did Romantic attitudes toward desire reflect a reaction against Enlightenment rationality? How did the rise of the so-called companionate marriage change 64 Literature family life? Did the idealization of free love presage a new sexual politics—or simply reinforce the existing social order? Why did Romantic love so often emphasize cruelty and pain and impossible longing? We read poetry, fiction, drama, and polemical prose as a means of approaching such questions and of expanding our conversation, with works by Goethe, Blake, Coleridge, Austen, Keats, Byron, the Shelleys, Dickens, Brontë, Wilde, Stoppard, and others. African American Literature Survey (1789-2011) Alwin A. D. Jones Open, Lecture—Year This yearlong lecture will examine pivotal moments and texts in the history of African American letters, ranging from Olaudah Equiano’s Interesting Narrative (1789) to Saul Williams’s The Dead Emcee Scrolls (2006). Working our way through a variety of genres (elegy, drama, the captivity narrative, the slave narrative, the essay, public oratory, speeches, fiction, poetry, drama, polemical prose, autobiography, music, and film), we will explore a number of matters pertinent to literary studies in general, as well as those with specific implications for African American writing and writers. We will consider the circumstances of textual production and reception, ideas and ideologies of literary history and culture, aesthetics, authorship, and audience. We will focus our attention immediately on the emergence of African American writing under the regime of chattel slavery and the questions it poses about “race,” “authorship,” “subjectivity,” “self-mastery,” and “freedom.” We will consider the material and social conditions under which our selected texts were edited, published, marketed, and “authenticated.” Our ultimate aim is to situate our selections within the broadest possible contexts of their time and ours. We will also focus on the changing notions of racial identification in the 20th and 21st centuries, addressing how the wide array of genres shape and are shaped by pivotal cultural and political movements such as the “New Negro,” the Harlem Renaissance, Civil Rights, Black Arts/ Black Power, and Womanism, as well as current debates over matters such as hip hop, samesexuality, incarceration, and “premature death.” Also, we will examine how the texts deal with recent questions about Black identities and subjectivities that get funneled through notions of a postrace and/or postethnic (international) society. Some authors whom we might study include, but are not limited to, Thomas Jefferson, David Walker, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Wilson, Anna Julia Cooper, Charles Chesnutt, Booker T. Washington, Jean Toomer, W.E.B. Du Bois, Nella Larsen, Langston Hughes, Zora Neal Hurston, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, Lorraine Hansberry, Margaret Walker, Amiri Baraka, Huey Newton, Sonya Sanchez, Carolyn Rodgers, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and Audre Lorde. Imagining War Fredric Smoler Open, Lecture—Year War is one of the great themes in European literature. The greatest works of Greco-Roman antiquity are meditations on war; and as an organizing metaphor, war pervades our attempts to represent politics, economics, and sexuality. Efforts to comprehend war were the genesis of the disciplines of history and political science; and the disaster of the Peloponnesian War forms the critical, if concealed, background to the first great works of Western philosophy. We shall begin the first semester with readings from the Iliad, Thucydides, Plato, and Augustine. We shall go on to study the Aeneid, Machiavelli, Shakespeare’s Henriad (Richard II, Henry IV Part 1 and Part 2, Henry V), and Hobbes. In the second semester, we shall look at the origins of political economy, among other things a discipline that sought to transcend the military metaphor; at Marxism, which remilitarized political economy; at Byron’s mock epic, Don Juan; and at two 19th-century novelists, Stendhal and Tolstoy—one of whom concerned himself with war directly; the other used it as an organizing metaphor for erotic and economic life. We will conclude with a look at some 20thcentury literary, artistic, historical, and critical attempts to represent war with an allegedly unprecedented accuracy. This is an interdisciplinary course. Group conferences will usually be committed to works of modern scholarship, often by historians and social scientists. Both semesters’ reading lists are subject to revision. Who’s Afraid of James Joyce? Karen R. Lawrence Open, Lecture, Sophomore and above—Fall Joyce once boasted, “I’ve put in so many enigmas and puzzles that it will keep the professors busy THE CURRICULUM 65 for centuries arguing over what I meant, and that’s the only way of ensuring one's immortality.” With parallels to Hamlet, the Bible, and Homer’s Odyssey in his own Ulysses, Joyce attempts to rival the epic ambitions of the greatest writers in the Western tradition. No wonder that he is considered an icon of difficulty, arguably the greatest writer of the 20th century, an Irish writer of lasting international influence. In this course, we will confront Joyce’s reputation and social context, as well as his rich complexity—from the deceptively simple sentences of his short stories in Dubliners, to the evolving narrative of Stephen Hero in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, to his experiment in dramatic form in Exiles, to the odyssey of character and language in Ulysses, to the linguistic invention of a short section of Finnegans Wake: “I cannot express myself in English without enclosing myself in a tradition. I’m at the end of English.” In this course, we will tackle Joyce’s comic, epic, modernist, postmodernist, and semi- and postcolonial fictional experiments. Empire of Letters: Mapping the Arts and the World in the Age of Johnson James Horowitz Open, Lecture—Spring Although they were Victorian critics who dubbed the late 18th century the “Age of Johnson,” contemporaries of Samuel Johnson (1709-1784) would have recognized the justice of the term. Aside from compiling the first English dictionary of note, Johnson was a gifted and hugely influential critic, poet, political commentator, biographer, and novelist, as well as a legendarily pithy conversationalist and a master of the English sentence. His overbearing but strangely lovable personality was preserved for posterity by his friend and disciple James Boswell, who in 1791 published the greatest of all literary biographies, The Life of Johnson, which records (among much else) Johnson’s near-blindness, probable Tourette’s Syndrome, and selfless love of cats. Now, three years after the tercentenary of his birth and the flood of books commemorating it, Johnson remains perhaps the most familiar model of a vigorously independent public intellectual, even with (or perhaps because of) his many eccentricities and contradictions (his hatred of both slavery and the American Revolution, for instance). The age of Johnson, moreover, remains uniquely pertinent to students not only of cultural history but also of government and international relations, as it was his era (and, in part, his literary circle) that produced the contesting theories of empire and of cosmopolitanism, of trade and of liberty, with which we are still reckoning as global citizens. This course will reappraise Johnson’s legacy but will do so within a broad cultural survey of the Anglophone world across the second half of the 18th century. In addition to Johnson, Boswell, and other titans of Enlightenment prose—such as Edward Gibbon, David Hume, and Adam Smith—we will sample international writing on imperialism and the slave trade (Olaudah Equiano, the abolitionist poets), the French and American revolutions (Thomas Paine, Edmund Burke), and women’s rights (the bluestocking circle, Mary Wollstonecraft). We will read some novels (Horace Walpole, Oliver Goldsmith), dramas (Richard Brinsley Sheridan), oriental tales (William Beckford), and personal writing (Fanny Burney’s diary, Boswell’s shockingly candid London Journal), as well as pay attention to the emerging literature of Scotland and Ireland (James Macpherson, Maria Edgeworth), visual art (Sir Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Rowlandson), and the poetic innovations that laid the groundwork for Romanticism (Thomas Gray, William Collins, George Crabbe). We will also glance at Johnson’s reception and influence over the centuries; for instance, in the work of Virginia Woolf. Literature in Translation: Fantastic Gallery: 20thCentury Latin American Short Fiction Maria Negroni Open, Lecture—Spring Gothic stories, usually linked in people’s imagination to B-movies and best sellers of all times (Dracula, The Phantom of the Opera, The Golem, Frankenstein, Edgar A. Poe’s short stories, Carmilla, The Castle of Otranto, 20,000 Leagues under the Sea, The Portrait of Dorian Gray, Rapaccini’s Daughter, or Aliens) are all, despite their intense individuality, unending variations on a single subject—mainly the relation between sexuality (the body, the material), art, and Death. Accordingly, the scenarios where these Gothic sagas take place are solitary and archaic places: castles, rundown mansions, and the like. As if a sublime geography and scenery, subdued by awe and despair, were crucial for the display of emotions, that is for the apparition of the 66 Literature unconscious, the hidden otherness of “evil.” Gothic “monsters,” on the other hand, constitute a strange gallery of unwanted and/or orphaned characters—usually artists fixated on desire and sexual fears. In this course, we will explore, through literary texts and films, both the North American and European “classics.” Then, we will concentrate on the wonderful contributions of Latin American writers to the Gothic “canon,” while drawing a possible portrait of the artist/poet as a deprived child who obssessively yearns for the impossible and, in so doing, becomes an intruder into the sexual politics of the symbolic. In other words, we will use Gothic literature to discuss aesthetics—mainly, the relation between beauty and mourning, loss and desire, death and forbidden drives. Mandatory film screenings will be part of this course. Epic: From Gilgamesh to Paradise Lost William Shullenberger Open, Lecture—Spring The epic is a monumental literary form that is an index to the depth and richness of a culture and the ultimate test of a writer’s creative power. Encyclopedic in its inclusiveness, epic reflects a culture’s origins and projects its destiny, giving definitive form to its vital mythology and problematically asserting and questioning its formative values. This course will study the emergence and development of the epic genre from its archaic and oral origins through the English Renaissance. Our study will be organized around several central purposes. First, we will study the major structural, stylistic, and thematic features of each epic. Second, we will consider the cultural significance of the epic as the collective or heroic memory of a people. Third, we will examine how each poet or narrator implicates his own work of recording and narrating into the defining heroic actions and the cultural and historical themes of the text. Fourth, we will think about how the epic form changes shape under changing cultural and historical circumstances and measure how the influence of epic tradition becomes a resource for literary and cultural power. Texts for the lecture: Homer’s The Odyssey, Vergil’s The Aeneid, Dante’s The Inferno, Milton’s Paradise Lost; for group conferences: Gilgamesh, major narrative portions of Hebrew and Christian scripture. Imagining Modernity: Literature and Society Since Romanticism Daniel Kaiser Open—Year Modernity can be variously conceived (we now speak of Shakespeare’s period as the “early modern”); but for the purposes of this course, we will conceive of it beginning with Romanticism—when crucial concepts such as “literature” and “culture” took on roughly the meanings they still have for us today. We will study works that examine the questions of literary form, style, and genre and the social and political life from which these works emerge. It is hoped that the approach taken in this course will make it possible to explore relationships between literary forms of the period that are usually studied separately; for example, between lyric poetry and the novel, between 19th-century realistic fiction and modernist experimental fiction, and between imaginative or “creative” writing and theoretical and critical texts. Writers to be read include Blake, Emily Bronte, Dickens, Dostoevsky, Melville, Marx, Nietzsche, Wilde, Conrad, Yeats, Mann, Brecht, Benjamin, Adorno, Faulkner, Mailer, Thomas Pynchon, and Toni Morriison. English: History of a Language Ann Lauinger Open—Year What happened to English between Beowulf and Virginia Woolf? What’s happening to it now? The first semester of this course introduces students to some basic concepts in linguistics, tracing the evolution of pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar from Old English (Anglo-Saxon), through the Middle English of Chaucer and the Early Modern English of Shakespeare and the 18th century, to an English that we recognize—for all its variety—as our own. Second semester turns from the history of English and the study of language change over time to the varieties of contemporary English and a sociolinguistic approach to the ways language differs from one community of speakers to another. Among the topics for second semester are: pidgins and creoles, American Sign Language, language and gender, and African American English (Ebonics). This course is intended for anyone who loves language and THE CURRICULUM 67 literature; students may choose their conference work from a range of topics in either language or linguistics or both. The Age of Caesar Emily Katz Anhalt Open—Fall This course will explore the literature, history, and politics of the Late Roman Republic, with particular emphasis on the tumultuous years from the death of Sulla (78 BCE) to the death of Caesar (44 BCE). Closely examining works of Catullus, Lucretius, Cicero, Caesar, and Sallust, we will consider how the violent struggle for political power resulted in the demise of republican government and the centralization of authority in the hands of one individual. Class discussions and writing assignments will assess the relationship between intellectual views and political action during this critical moment in Western history. The course will be taught in translation. At the discretion of the instructor, qualified students may enroll in the course as Intermediate or Advanced Latin and read selected texts in the original Latin as part of their conference work. Romanticism to Modernism in Poetry Neil Arditi Open—Fall In the wake of the French Revolution, Wordsworth and Coleridge invented a new kind of autobiographical poem that largely internalized the myths that they inherited. We will trace the impact of their innovation on a sequence of poets from the second generation of Romantics to modernists such as T. S. Eliot, who loudly rejected their Romantic legacy. In doing so, we will attempt to make some sense (at least in relation to poetic tradition) of the terms “Romanticism” and “modernism.” But our most important goal will be to appreciate each poet’s—indeed, each poem’s—unique contribution to the language. Our understanding of literary influence and historical trends will emerge from our close, imaginative reading of texts. Authors will include: Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, P. B. Shelley, Keats, Whitman, Dickinson, Hardy, Yeats, and T. S. Eliot, among others. Experiment and Scandal: The 18th-Century British Novel James Horowitz Open—Fall The 18th century introduced the long, realist prose fictions that we now call novels. As often with emergent literary forms, the novel arrived with an unsavory reputation; and its early practitioners labored, usually unsuccessfully, to distinguish their work from ephemeral printed news, escapist prose romances, and pornography. It was not until the defining achievement of authors such as Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott, at the beginning of the next century, that the novel earned its status as polite and sometimes serious entertainment. This course looks at the difficult growth of the novel from its miscellaneous origins in the 17th century to the controversial experiments of the early 1700s and the eclectic masterpieces of Daniel Defoe, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, Laurence Sterne, and Austen. Other authors may include Aphra Behn, Eliza Haywood, John Cleland, Tobias Smollett, Matthew Lewis, Fanny Burney, and Maria Edgeworth. Everything we read will be arresting and restlessly experimental; much of it will also be bawdy, transgressive, and outrageously funny. Topics of conversation will include the rise of female authorship, the emergence of Gothic and courtship fiction, the relationship between the novel and other literary genres (lyric and epic poetry, life writing, allegory), novelists’ responses to topical controversies (slavery, the age of Revolution), and the meaning of realism. We shall also consider several films adapted from 18th-century fiction, perhaps including Tony Richardson’s 1963 Tom Jones and Michael Winterbottom’s 2006 Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story. The Poetry of Earth: Imagination and Environment in English Renaissance Poetry William Shullenberger Open—Fall One of John Keats’s sonnets begins, “The poetry of earth is never dead.” This course will step back from Keats to the writing of several of his great predecessors in the English Renaissance to reflect on how imagination shapes environment and environment shapes imagination in the early modern period. The late 16th and 17th centuries were a time of transition between traditional 68 Literature feudal society with its hierarchical ideas of order, of humanity, and of nature and emerging modernity with its secularizing humanism, its centralization of political and economic power, its development of increasingly dense and complex urban centers, and its commitments to the study and potential mastery of nature through empirical science. With early modernity come all the challenges to natural environment and its resources with which we are so familiar and by which we are so challenged: urban sprawl and environmental degradation, privatization of land, air and water pollution, deforestation and exhaustion of other resources, and diminishment of local species populations. We will study how several major writers register and respond to these tensions and these changes in what we might call their environmental vision, their imagination of nature: as wilderness, the “other” to civilization and its values, as chaos and threat, as liminal space of transformation, as pastoral retreat, as cultivatable human habitation and home. Class reading will include major works of Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser, John Milton, Andrew Marvell, and Margaret Cavendish. Conference work may entail more extended work in any of these writers or literary modes or other authors in the period who are engaged in theorizing and imagining nature and may include study in history, philosophy, geography, politics, or theory. Conscience of the Nations: Classics of African Literature William Shullenberger Open—Fall One way to think of literature is as the conscience of a people, reflecting on their origins, their values, their losses, and their possibilities. This course will study major representative texts in which sub-Saharan African writers have taken up the challenge of cultural formation and criticism. Part of what gives the best writing of modern Africa its aesthetic power is the political urgency of its task: the past still bears on the present, the future is yet to be written, and what writers have to say matters enough for their work to be considered dangerous. Political issues and aesthetic issues are thus inseparable in their work. Creative tensions in the writing between indigenous languages and European languages, between traditional forms of orature and storytelling and self-consciously “literary” forms, register all the pressures and conflicts of late colonial and postcolonial history. To discern the traditionalist sources of modern African writing, we will first read examples from epic, folk tales, and other forms of orature. Major fiction will be selected from the work of Tutuola, Achebe, Beti, Sembene, Ba, Head, Ngugi, La Guma, Dangaremgba, and Sarowiwa; drama from the work of Soyinka and Aidoo; poetry from the work of Senghor, Rabearivelo, Okigbo, Okot p’Bitek, Brutus, Mapanje and others. Conference work may entail more extended work in any of these writers or literary modes or in other major African or African American writers and movements, may be developed around a major theme or topic, and can include background study in history, philosophy, geography, politics, or theory. “Untied” Kingdom: British Literature Since 1945 Fiona Wilson Open—Fall British literature is often described in terms of tradition and continuity. This course takes a very different point of view and, looking at British writing since 1945, explores a literary culture marked by disruption, change, and remarkable variety. Through fiction, poetry, and drama written since 1945, we examine how the alleged consensus of the postwar period gradually gave way to challenging and provocative questions about the nature of Britishness itself. We consider the cultural effects of the dismantling of the once-powerful British empire and of Cold War politics, the Women’s Movement, the Troubles in Northern Ireland, Thatcherism, the rise of Scottish and Welsh nationalism, and the emergence of the modern, multicultural United Kingdom. Why are Sam Selvon’s Caribbean Londoners so lonely? What is Belfast confetti? What did it take to be a “top girl” in the 1980s? When did North Britain become devolved Scotland? These and other questions direct our conversation—with works by George Orwell, Philip Larkin, Jean Rhys, Jeanette Winterson, Seamus Heaney, Caryl Churchill, Tom Stoppard, Alisdair Gray, Hanif Kureishi, Zadie Smith, Ian McEwan, and others. THE CURRICULUM 69 Literature in Translation: “Because We Know That Language Exists”: Roland Barthes and French Literature and Theory (1945-2011) Eric Leveau Open—Spring Roland Barthes was at the crossroads of all the various literary and theoretical currents that defined post-World War II France. His work thus constitutes a wonderful introduction to the passionate debates that defined this period and still have repercutions today. We will put some of Barthes’ major works in the context of their theoretical influences (Marxism, linguistics) but will also revisit some literary masterpieces with which he was in constant dialogue. Also, from Writing Degree Zero (1953) to A Lover’s Discourse: Fragments (1977) and the posthumous Mourning Diary (2009), we’ll try to understand the evolution of Barthes’ writing, which progressively shows a preoccupation with language shared by poets and writers. We’ll thus try to assess Barthes’ position in today’s poststructuralist and postmodern France. Course taught in English, with the possibility of conducting conferences in French or English. Slavery: A Literary History William Shullenberger Open—Spring This course aims to provide a long view of literary representations and responses to slavery and the slave trade in the Americas from William Shakespeare to Toni Morrison and Edward P. Jones. Expressing the conflicted public conscience—and perhaps the collective unconscious—of a nation, literature registers vividly the human costs (and profits) and dehumanizing consequences of a social practice whose legacy still haunts and implicates us. We will study some of the major texts that stage the central crises in human relations, social institutions, and human identity provoked by slavery, considering in particular how these texts represent the perverse dynamics and identifications of the master-slave relationship; the systematic assaults on identity and community developed and practiced in slaveowning cultures; modes of resistance, survival, and subversion cultivated by slave communities and individuals to preserve their humanity and reclaim their liberty; and retrospective constructions of and meditations on slavery and its historical consequences. Since literary structure and style are not only representational but also a means of subversion, resistance, and reclamation, we will do a lot of close reading. Readings will be drawn from the works of William Shakespeare, Aime Cesaire, Aphra Behn, Olaudah Equiano, Mary Prince, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Mark Twain, Charles Chesnutt, William Faulkner, Toni Morrison, and Edward P. Jones. Conference work may entail more extended work in any of these writers or literary modes or in other writers engaged in the representation and interrogation of slavery, may be developed around a major theme or topic, and may include background study in history, philosophy, geography, politics, or theory. Green Romanticism Fiona Wilson Open—Spring The British Romantic movement, it has been said, produced the first “full-fledged ecological writers in the Western literary tradition.” To make this claim, however, is to provoke a host of volatile questions. What exactly did Romantics mean by “nature”? What were the aesthetic, scientific, and political implications of so-called Green Romanticism? Most provocatively, is modern environmental thought a continuation of Green Romanticism—or a necessary reaction against it? This course considers such issues through the prism of late 18th and early 19thcentury British literature, with additional forays into contemporary art and scientific writing, as well as German and American literature. Possible areas of discussion may include the following: leveling politics, landscape design, Romantic idealism, colonial exploration and exploitation, astronomy and the visionary imagination, “peasant poetry,” vegetarianism, the sex life of plants, breastfeeding, ballooning, deism, sublime longings, organic form, and the republic of nature—with works by Edmund Burke, William Gilpin, Dorothy and William Wordsworth, John Clare, Percy and Mary Shelley, Charlotte Smith, Charles Darwin, and John Keats, among others. Nine American Poets Neil Arditi Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year American poetry has multiple origins and a vast array of modes and variations. We will begin our readings for this course with Whitman and 70 Literature Dickinson, the two most influential 19th-century American poets, before turning our attention to at least seven modern American poets, including Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, T. S. Eliot, Hart Crane, Elizabeth Bishop, and John Ashbery. We will pay considerable attention to the different versions of modernism that emerge in 20th-century American poetry and to the complexity of intergenerational poetic influence. Our study of literary influence and affinity will be in the service, however, of our central task, which is to appreciate and articulate the unique qualities of each of the poets—and poems—that we encounter through close, imaginative readings and informed speculation. Art of Power: Literature, Media, Theory Una Chung Intermediate—Year This course brings together postcolonial theory, environmental studies, and critiques of digital media in order to take measure of what we are becoming today. The question of nature and culture will lead us into deeper explorations of embodiment, subjectivity, performativity, and potentiality. Genealogies of race, gender, and sexuality take divergent paths, often becoming radically altered by the encounter with emerging technologies and non-Western philosophies. We will mix theory with experimental writing, speculative fiction, electronic literature, film, and new-media art in order to investigate the intimate connection between aesthetics and politics, especially as it manifests in the contemporary world. Specifically, we will address the unique challenge of conceptualizing power that is self-reflexive and self-modulating (governmentality, control, network) rather than set apart and on high. The aesthetic rendering of such modes of power draw on diverse strategies and practices that include, but also go beyond, the politics of representation (especially nonrepresentational media, affective computing, and informational aesthetics). We will explore the multifarious ways in which artists make the art of power perceptible today. Modernism and Fiction Daniel Kaiser Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year This course will pick up the history of prose fiction roughly at the point at which the novel starts to become a self-conscious and problematic literary form in Flaubert, James, and Conrad. From these writers, we will proceed to the more radical and complex formal experiments of the great “high modernists” of fiction—Mann, Joyce, Proust, and Kafka. In the last part of the course, we will consider the question of what is now called “postmodernism,” both in fiction that continues the experimental tradition of modernism while breaking with some of its assumptions (Beckett and Pynchon) and in important recent theorizing about problems of narrative and representation. Throughout, we will pay close attention to the social and political meanings of both experimental narrative techniques and theories of fiction. Previous completion of at least one year of literature or philosophy is required. American Literature 1830-1929 Arnold Krupat Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year FALL SEMESTER: Beginning roughly in the 1830s, a number of American authors set out to “invent” American literature as a distinctively national literature rather than merely an English literature written elsewhere. Thoreau began his experiment living at Walden Pond exactly on the 4th of July. Walt Whitman, in his “Song of Myself,” refers to himself as “Walt Whitman, American.” And Emerson wrote about the “American Scholar.” It was also the case, however, that the country founded upon the proposition that “all men are created equal” had to deal with its Constitution’s provision that some men—slaves—were to count as only 3/5ths of a man, while others—Indians—were not to be counted at all. The land of liberty was also a land of slavery and colonial conquest. This course examines the invention of American literature from roughly the 1830s to 1890, the year Sioux Indians were massacred at Wounded Knee and the year when the Bureau of the Census announced the “closing” of the American frontier. In addition to those named above, our other authors include Frederick Douglass, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Emily Dickinson, William Apess, Herman Melville, Margaret Fuller, and Mark Twain. SPRING SEMESTER: The Closed Frontier to the Great Depression, 1890-1929: With the “closing” of the frontier in 1890, America had “manifested” its “destiny” from “sea to shining sea.” But as the century turned, America was a THE CURRICULUM 71 very different place from what it had been before. The years 1880-1924 were the great age of immigration; more than three million people from China, Southern and Eastern Europe, Scandinavia, and elsewhere arrived here. In those years, Americans were also still coming to terms with the implications of Darwin’s theories—only to discover the new intellectual challenges of relativity and psychoanalytic theory. If Thoreau, Emerson, and Whitman struggled to invent a distinctive literature for America, many of the writers of this period had to figure out just what America was before they could produce its literature. This question became even more complicated after 1917, when young Americans found themselves abroad—fighting in World War I. ongoing “invention of love,” that profound and profoundly problematic passion that has seemed for more than two thousand years of Western civilization to lie at the heart of human existence. Additional readings drawn from Homer, Plato, Catullus, Petrarch, Shakespeare, the Bible, the Roman de la Rose, and Arthurian romance will help us establish cultural contexts and provide some sense of both continuities and revisions in the literary imagining of love from antiquity through the Middle Ages to the Renaissance. Shakespeare and the Semiotics of Performance Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year The aim of this course is to have students produce a series of nonfiction essays that reflect Tom Wolfe’s belief that it is “possible to write journalism that would read like a novel.” The reading that we do is designed to serve the writing that we do, which will include but go beyond standard journalism. We will read a number of well-known nonfiction writers—among them Tom Wolfe, Joan Didion, John McPhee, and Henry Louis Gates—but this course is not a history of the nonfiction essay. Students will be given assignments with deadlines for drafts, rewrites, and final copy. The assignments are not “writing-class exercises” but the kinds of work any editor would give out. A warning: This is not a course in “creative nonfiction” or covert autobiography. The writer’s subject, not the writer, is our primary concern. Accurate reporting is a nonnegotiable starting and finishing point. The course will begin by emphasizing writing technique and, as we move on to longer assignments, will focus on the role research, interviews, and legwork play in completing a story. Students should bring a writing sample to the interview and should not be taking another writing course. Joseph Lauinger Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year The performance of a play is a complex cultural event that involves far more than the literary text upon which it is grounded. First, there is the theatre itself, a building of a certain shape and utility within a certain neighborhood of a certain city. On stage, we have actors and their training, gesture, staging, music, dance, costumes, possibly scenery and lighting. Offstage, we have the audience, its makeup, and its reactions; the people who run the theatre and the reasons why they do it; and finally the social milieu in which the theatre exists. In this course, we study all these elements as a system of signs that convey meaning (semiotics)—a world of meaning whose life span is a few hours but whose significances are ageless. The plays of Shakespeare are our texts. Reconstructing the performances of those plays in the England of Elizabeth I and James I is our starting place. Seeing how those plays have been approached and re-envisioned over the centuries is our journey. Tracing their elusive meanings—from within Shakespeare’s wooden O to their adaptation in contemporary film—is our work. Allegories of Love Ann Lauinger Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year This seminar centers on a reading of five great storytellers and poets: Vergil, Ovid, Dante, Chaucer, and Spenser. The powerful and complex fictions of these five contributed crucially to the The Nonfiction Essay: Writing the Literature of Fact, Journalism and Beyond Nicolaus Mills The Greco-Roman World: Its Origins, Crises, Turning Points, and Final Transformations Samuel B. Seigle Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year This course invites the serious student to penetrate the tides of time in order to uncover 72 Literature what really lies behind the making of ancient Greece and Rome from their earliest times to their final transformations. The aimed-for result is a more deeply informed understanding of their direct contribution to us; namely, the classical tradition that still shapes our thinking and exercises our imagination. The methodologies employed will be derived as much from the fields of anthropology and sociology as from those of political science, economics, archaeology, and religious studies. The particular topics pursued will be set through joint decision by class members and the teacher but anchored always in the reality of what these two gifted peoples experienced—or believed to be their experience. To further this goal, all conferences will be in small groups, and all papers will be written as joint productions rather than as individual conclusions. A model for this procedure will be established in the first two weeks of the fall semester through the class’s multidisciplinary reading, in translation, of important selections from Homer’s Iliad. Studies in the 19th-Century Novel Ilja Wachs Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year This course entails an intensive and close textual encounter with the novelistic worlds of the 19thcentury realist tradition. The first fictional tradition to accept social reality as the ultimate horizon for human striving, the 19th-century novels that we will study are all intensely critical of the severe limitations to human wholeness and meaning posed by the new social world they were confronting. At the same time that they accept the world as a setting and boundary for human life, they seek to find grounds for transcending its limitations. We will explore the tensions in these novelists’ works between accepting the world as given and seeking to transcend it. At the same time, we will try to understand why—in spite of a century and a half of great historical and cultural change—these novels continue to speak to the issues posed by the human condition with such beauty, depth, and wisdom. We will read in the works of such novelists as Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Balzac, Stendhal, Eliot, Austen, Dickens, Twain, and Goethe. Creating New Blackness: The Expressions of the Harlem Renaissance Alwin A. D. Jones Intermediate—Fall In this intermediate seminar, students will study various texts from writers and artists associated with The Harlem (or New Negro) Renaissance. This movement refers to the highly productive period of African American arts and letters occurring roughly between 1920 and 1935, although its chronological boundaries tend to shift depending on the literary historian's persuasion. This course will engage with that popular and largely taken-for-granted notion of an artistic movement of Black Americans identified exclusively with one district in New York City. Writers and artists whose work (photography, film, poetry, music, and works of fiction and nonfiction) we may engage include, but are not limited to, James Vander Zee, Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, Carl Van Vechten, Helene Johnson, Sterling Brown, Langston Hughes, Alain Locke, Zora Neale Hurston, James Weldon Johnson, Nella Larsen, Bessie Smith, Ma Rainey, Duke Ellington, and Paul Robeson. Using a range of critical essays as supplementary reading, we will begin by exploring how Harlem gets constructed as city myth and as work of art, while examining the place it occupied in the cultural imagination of the l920s and ’30s. Why was Harlem considered an exotic-erotic pleasure/tourist zone for some and, for others, the emblem of a utopian ethos of racial renewal and political progress? What were some of the generational tensions among the writers associated most popularly with the movement, as well as the economics of literary production? How were artists patronized and marketed to the American public/s, and what were the corresponding effects of the patronage system on black artistic production—and reception? Global Intertextualities Bella Brodzki Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Spring This course provides exposure to a wide array of contemporary global writing from sites as various as Turkey, Japan, the former Yugoslavia, France, Israel, Brazil, Canada, India, South Africa, Morocco, and the United States. Readings consist of literary texts written in the last decade, originally in English and in translation, though THE CURRICULUM 73 students able to read these texts in their original languages will be encouraged to do so. Primary attention will be directed to the particular stylistic, formal, and thematic features of the individual works, as we keep in mind the dynamic relation between local contexts and transnational space—the complex circuits by which languages and cultures circulate and exchange in a global economy. Thus, we will interrogate such notions as “cosmopolitan,” “world,” “global,” and “postcolonial” as modes of intertextuality and consider what “comparative literature” means today. Spoken Wor(l)ds: African American Poetry From Black Arts to Hip Hop (1960-2012) Alwin A. D. Jones Intermediate—Spring Spanning 1960 to the present (roughly from the Black Arts to the Hip Hop movements), this course will focus on contemporary African American poetry as represented in the writings and performances of writers, political figures, and musicians—including Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Nina Simone, John Coltrane, Stokely Carmichael, Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, Haki Madhabuti, Sonia Sanchez, Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison, June Jordan, Nikki Giovanni, Gil Scott Heron, Audre Lorde, Carolyn Rodgers, Askia Toure, Etheridge Knight, Amiri Baraka, The Last Poets, Rita Dove, Dick Gregory, Marvin Gaye, Anita Baker, Linton Kwesi Johnson, Queen Latifah, Sister Souljah, Sarah Jones, Ursula Rucker, Talib Kweli, Jessica Care Moore, Saul Williams, Staceyann Chin, Mos Def, JayZ, Tupac Shakur, Erykah Badu, J. Ivy, and others. We will examine these various genres of Black oral (and written) expressions, paying particular attention to the role that poetry played in creating Black aesthetics, it’s role in giving language to the politics of the moments, and the theories advanced by the poems and poets. We will also look at the role that the space(s) that informed the poems played in shaping its content, theme, and form, as well as wrestle with questions of form with regard to the poems on the stage (oral) and on the page (written). Other themes that we will query include questions regarding intergenerational dialogue and disconnect (within and between movements) and the notion of performing, constructing, reflecting, criticizing, and creating a Black aesthetic and politic within a particular movement or historical moment. In addition to completing two analytic/critical essays and leading class discussion at least once in the semester, students will be required to keep weekly creative and critical journal entries/responses inspired by the works we study, and create/direct (as a class) a final presentation of Black poetry that requires memorizing and performing two poems (one of which must be from a writer on the syllabus; the other may be their own work/ journal entry). This final presentation must be open to the Sarah Lawrence public. Borges Maria Negroni Advanced—Fall Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986) is, undoubtedly, one of the major figures of 20thcentury world literature. His stunning work includes poetry, fiction, and nonfiction and is imbued with philosophical thoughts and haunting ideas. Although he is usually perceived as an “intellectual” writer (who constantly proposes mathematical games and challenges to the mind), he really confronts the reader with crucial literary questions and defies all stereotypical understanding of what Latin American literature is or should be. Issues concerning language, reality and representation, dreams, memory and abstraction, science and art, to name just a few, appear in his work through the shape of unforgettable metaphors. The world as a huge and undecipherable library, an infinitesimal point in space (“aleph”) that contains in itself all times and all spaces, a book of sand that incessantly changes each time you read it are some of those images and will be forever identified with his name and work. We will explore such themes and obsessions in this course while trying to capture the traits of his unique “Borgesian” style. Mathematics Whether they had any interest in mathematics in high school, students often discover a new appreciation for the field at Sarah Lawrence College. In our courses—which reveal the inherent elegance of mathematics as a reflection of the world and how it works—abstract concepts literally come to life. That vitality further emerges as faculty members adapt course content to fit student needs, emphasizing the historical context and philosophical underpinnings behind 74 Mathematics ideas and theories. By practicing rigorous logic, creative problem solving and abstract thought in small seminar discussions, students cultivate habits of mind that they can apply to every interest. With well-developed, rational thinking and problem-solving skills, many students continue their studies in mathematics, computer science, philosophy, medicine, law, or business; others go into a range of careers in fields such as business, insurance, technology, defense, and industry. An Introduction to Statistical Methods and Analysis Daniel King Open, Lecture—Fall An introduction to the concepts, techniques, and reasoning that are central to the understanding of data, this lecture course focuses on the fundamental ideas of statistical analysis used to gain insight into diverse areas of human interest. The use, abuse, and misuse of statistics will be the central focus of the course. Topics of exploration will include the core statistical topics in the areas of experimental study design, sampling theory, data analysis, and statistical inference. Applications will be drawn from current events, business, psychology, politics, medicine, and other areas of the natural and social sciences. Statistical software will be introduced and used extensively in this course, but no prior experience with the software is assumed. This seminar is an invaluable course for anybody planning to pursue graduate work and/or research in the natural or social sciences. No college-level mathematical knowledge is required. Calculus I: The Study of Motion and Change Daniel King Open—Fall Our world is dominated by motion and change. The Earth spins on its axis, as it rotates around the Sun. Stock prices rise and fall. An apple, acting in accordance with the laws of physics, falls onto the head of a modern day Newton. Calculus is the intriguing branch of mathematics whose primary goal is the understanding of the laws governing motion and change. The sum of the calculus—its methods, tools, and ideas—is often cited as one of the greatest intellectual achievements of humanity. Though just a few hundred years old, the calculus has become an indispensable research tool in both the natural and the social sciences. Our study begins with the central concept of the calculus, the limit, and proceeds to explore the dual notions of differentiation and integration. Numerous applications of the theory will be examined. The minimum required preparation for successful study of the calculus is one year each of highschool algebra and geometry. The precalculus topics of trigonometry and analytic geometry will be developed as the need arises. For conference work, students may choose to undertake a deeper investigation of a single topic or application of the calculus or conduct a study in some other branch of mathematics. This seminar is intended for students interested in advanced study in mathematics or science, for students preparing for careers in the health sciences, and for any student wishing to broaden and enrich the life of the mind. Geometry Joseph W. Woolfson Open—Fall The purpose of this course is to explore various systems of geometry, as well as different approaches to these systems. A brief review of high-school geometry (including an exposition of logical objections to it) will be the starting point for branching out into other areas. Problem solving will play a central role in the development and exposition of much of the material in the course. Topics may be chosen from analytic, neutral, non-Euclidean (Lobechevskian and Riemannian), and incidence geometries. Calculus II Joseph W. Woolfson Open—Spring This course will build upon and continue to develop the study of the differential calculus as it was developed in Calculus I. It will include the definitions of antiderivatives and integrals (including the fundamental theorems of both integal and differential calculus). We will develop and study exponential, logarithmic, and inverse trigonometric functions. Much effort will be devoted to studying various techniques and applications (geometric and physical) of integration. As time permits, some elementary differential equations and basic infinite series may be included. Prerequisite: Calculus I THE CURRICULUM 75 Abstract Algebra Joseph W. Woolfson Intermediate—Fall This highly abstract course will be directed toward the axiomatic development of basic algebraic systems. Both mathematical and nonmathematical models will be used to illustrate these systems. Topics will be chosen from the theories of groups, rings, fields, and matrices. Although there are no prerequisites and no prior experience with the material is necessary, some mathematical sophistication is essential. Individual weekly conferences will be used to reinforce the class work when necessary and for independent study projects otherwise. Discrete Mathematics: Gateway to Advanced Mathematics Daniel King Intermediate—Spring There is a world of mathematics beyond what students learn in high-school algebra, geometry, and calculus courses. This seminar serves as an introduction to this realm of elegant mathematical ideas. With an explicit goal of improving students’ mathematical reasoning and problem-solving skills, this seminar provides the ultimate intellectual workout. Five important themes are interwoven in the course: logic, the nature of proof, combinatorial analysis, discrete structures, and mathematical philosophy. For conference work, students may choose to undertake a deeper investigation of a single topic or application of discrete mathematics or to conduct a study in some other branch of mathematics. This seminar is a must for students interested in advanced mathematical study and highly recommended for students with an interest in computer science, law, or philosophy. Some prior study of calculus is required. Multivariable Calculus Daniel King Intermediate—Spring The world and our lives are fundamentally multivariate. Tomorrow’s weather forecast is based on today’s solar wind velocity, heat transfer rates, pressure, and humidity levels, among other factors. The price to the consumer of a commercial flight is dependent partly on market demand, travel distance, cost of fuel, and governmental taxes. Multivariable calculus addresses the mathematics of functions such as these that depend on several variables. Specific topics to be addressed include vectors, partial derivatives, gradients, multiple integration, line and surface integrals, and their diverse applications. For conference work, students may choose to undertake a deeper investigation of a single topic or application of the calculus or to conduct a study in some other branch of mathematics. Prerequisite: Two semesters of collegelevel calculus. Number Theory Joseph W. Woolfson Intermediate—Spring This course is devoted to the study of the integers. Although the approach will be mainly axiomatic, consideration will be given to historical aspects of the subject. Special attention will be given to problem solving, both as a central device for exposing the development of the theory of the course and for its own sake. Topics will include divisibility properties of integers, prime numbers, modular arithmetic, Diophantine equations, and special-number theoretic functions. No prior experience with this material is necessary, although mathematical sophistication would be important. Modern Languages and Literatures At Sarah Lawrence College, we recognize that languages are fundamentally modes of being-inthe-world and uniquely reveal the way that we exist as human beings. Far from being a mechanical tool, language study encourages selfexamination and cross-cultural understanding, offering a vantage point from which to evaluate personal and cultural assumptions, prejudices, and certainties. Learning a new language is not about putting into another verbal system what you want or know how to say in your own language; it is about learning by listening and reading and by gaining the ability to think in fundamentally different ways. The College offers six modern and two classical languages and literatures. Students may take French, German, Italian, Japanese, Russian, and Spanish from beginning to advanced levels that equally stress the development of communicative skills such as speaking, listening comprehension, reading, and writing, as well as the study of literature written in these languages in Europe, 76 Music Africa, Asia, and the Americas. We also offer Ancient Greek and Latin at the beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels, emphasizing exploration of ancient texts in their original historical, political, artistic, and social contexts and encouraging assessment of ancient works on their own terms as a means of elucidating both timeless and contemporary human issues and concerns. The College is also actively seeking collaborations with other area institutions with the aim of broadening our offerings. Beginning in 2011-12, students will have the option of registering for courses in Chinese at Eugene Lang College at the New School for Social Research in New York City and transferring their credits to Sarah Lawrence College. As is the case for all seminars at Sarah Lawrence College, our language classes are capped at 15, and students have unparalleled opportunities to engage with the language in and out of class—including individual and group conferences, weekly meetings with language assistants in small groups, language clubs, and language tables. Our proximity to New York City offers terrific opportunities to encounter the cultures and languages that we teach—through lectures, exhibits, plays, films, operas, and many other cultural events that are readily available. Conference work in a language class provides an opportunity for students to pursue their own particular interest in the language. Student conference projects are exceptionally diverse, ranging from reading or translation, internships, or work on scholarly or creative writing to listening to music, watching films, or the extended study of grammar. In Ancient Greek and Latin courses, beginning students acquire in one year a solid foundation in grammar, syntax, and vocabulary. Equivalent to three courses at other colleges and universities, one year of Ancient Greek or Latin at Sarah Lawrence College empowers students to read ancient texts with precision and increasing facility. At the intermediate and advanced levels, students refine their linguistic abilities while analyzing specific ancient authors, genres, or periods—often in comparison to later artists, writers, theorists, or critics The interdisciplinary approach across the curriculum at Sarah Lawrence College also means that students can take their study of language to conference work for another class; for example, reading primary texts in the original Spanish for a class on Borges and math, studying Russian montage or 20th-century Japanese cinema for a class on film history, or performing German lieder or Italian opera in voice class or Molière in a theatre class. The language faculty also offer literature courses in translation, so that students can choose to combine literature study with conference work in the original languages. We also sponsor an annual journal of translation, Babel, which invites submissions from across the College. Finally, our open curriculum encourages students to plan a semester or an entire year abroad, and a large percentage of our students spend their junior year in non-English-speaking countries. In addition to our long-established programs in Florence, Catania, Paris, and Cuba, the College has recently initiated a study-abroad program in Barcelona. Starting in 2012, we will offer a number of new programs, including a program in Peru for students of Spanish and an exchange program with Tsuda College in Japan; 2012 will also mark the start of a summer course in German Studies and Dance in Berlin, as well as a summer course in translation in Buenos Aires. Our study-abroad programs are usually based on a concept of “full immersion,” including experiences such as study at the local university, homestays, and volunteer work in the country. We also send students to many non-Sarah Lawrence College programs all over the world. Music The Music program is structured to integrate theory and practice. Students select a combination of component courses that together constitute one full course (called a Music Third). A minimal Music Third includes four components: 1. Individual instruction (instrumental performance, composition, or voice), the central area of study around which the rest of the program is planned; 2. Theory and/or history (see requirements below); 3. A performance ensemble (see area requirements below); 4. Concert attendance/Music Tuesdays requirement (see below). The student, in consultation with the faculty, plans the music program best-suited to his or her needs and interests. Advanced students may, with faculty consent, elect to take two-thirds of their course study in music. THE CURRICULUM 77 Music, Circulation, and Appropriation Jonathan King Open—Spring This yearlong seminar may also be taken as a yearlong component in a Music Third. (Please see course description under the listing of full courses—seminars with conferences—that constitute one-third of a student’s total program.) This is one of the music history component courses required for all Advanced Theory students and is also open to students who have completed the theory sequence. Seminars and Lecture The following seminars and lecture with conferences are offered to the College community and constitute one-third of a student’s program. Ethnomusicology of the Americas: Music, Language & Identity may also be taken as a yearlong component in a Music Third. In the spring, Music, Circulation, and Appropriation may also be taken as a component in a Music Third. (See Components, below, for specific requirements.) Ethnomusicology of the Americas: Music, Language, and Identity Jonathan King Open—Year This course provides students with an introduction to ethnomusicology—the study of the interactive relationship between musical and cultural practices—through an examination of the diverse musical worlds of North America, Central America, South America, and the Caribbean. We will gain a highly specific knowledge of many musical traditions from Cuba, Puerto Rico, Trinidad, Brazil, Peru, Argentina, Mexico, Texas, the American Southwest and Northwest, Appalachia, and New York City. As we become familiar with these diverse musical practices, we will begin to use tools from linguistic and cultural anthropology to examine how music is a communicative process very much like language in some ways and quite different in others. As the year progresses, we will see how musical communication and expression—what some have called “musicking”—is used dynamically to generate and maintain social identities in complex and ever-changing contexts. While these musical styles are sophisticated and challenging, prior experience with “music theory” is absolutely not required for this course. No musical experience is necessary. Participation in Gamelan Angklung Chandra Buana (fall) is required for all students taking this course, though occasional exceptions may be granted by the instructor. Participation in African Percussion Ensemble Faso Foli (spring) is optional but encouraged. This course may also be taken as a yearlong component in a Music Third. “Non-Western” Western Musics in Europe and Asia Jonathan King Open, Lecture—Fall When we think of Western music, we often think of the masterpieces of Beethoven, Verdi, or Debussy—or of the overwhelming commercial power of pop, rock, or hip hop. Alongside and among performances of these well-known traditions is a wealth of lesser-known musical traditions across Europe and Western Asia. These traditions draw upon centuries of local traditions and focus the actions of contemporary musicians. In this course, we’ll examine representations of the “other” in Western classical and popular traditions; we’ll consider what else might be considered “Western” in such a context; and we’ll see and hear how these musics, across Europe and Asia, represent sophisticated forms of art, as well as complex modes of social behavior. Although it may be taken on its own, this course is intended to prepare students for the more advanced seminar, Music, Circulation, and Appropriation. Participation in Gamelan Angklung Chandra Buana (fall) is encouraged for all students taking this course. No musical experience is necessary. Components Individual Instruction Arranged by audition with the following members of the music faculty and affiliate artists: Clarinet—Igor Begelman Composition—Chester Biscardi, Patrick Muchmore, Daniel Wohl, John Yannelli Contrabass—Mark Helias Flute—Kelli Kathman Guitar—William Anderson (acoustic), Glenn Alexander (jazz/blues), Pedro Cortes (flamenco), Kermit Driscoll (jazz/blues bass) Harp—Kirsten Agresta Harpsichord—Carsten Schmidt Percussion—Matt Wilson (drum set) 78 Music Piano—Chester Biscardi, Don Friedman (jazz), Michael Longo (jazz), Martin Goldray, Bari Mort, Carsten Schmidt, Jean Wentworth Saxophone—Robert Magnuson Violin—Sungrai Sohn Viola—Daniel Panner Viols—Judith Davidoff Voice—Hilda Harris, Eddye Pierce-Young, Wayne Sanders, Thomas Young With the following members of the Cygnus Ensemble, where appropriate: Flute—Tara Helen O’Connor Oboe and English Horn—Robert Ingliss Violin—Calvin Wiersma Violoncello—Susannah Chapman Guitar, Banjo, and Mandolin—William Anderson, Oren Fader two contrasting works that demonstrate the student’s musical background and keyboard technique. Piano auditions enable the faculty to place the student with the appropriate teacher in either an individual piano lesson or in the Keyboard Lab, given his or her current level of preparation. Acoustic and Jazz Guitar Auditions and Placement The Guitar faculty encourages students to prepare two contrasting works that demonstrate the student’s musical background, guitar technique, and, for jazz and blues, improvisational ability. Guitar auditions enable the faculty to place the guitarist with the appropriate teacher in either an individual guitar lesson or in the Guitar Class. The director of the Music program will arrange all instrumental study with the affiliate artist faculty, who teach off campus. In all cases, individual instruction involves consultation with members of the faculty and/or the director of the Music program. Composition Lessons The student who is interested in individual instruction in composition must demonstrate an appropriate background. Lessons and Auditions Beginning lessons are offered only in voice and piano. A limited number of beginning acoustic guitar lessons are offered based on prior musical experience. All other instrumentalists are expected to demonstrate a level of proficiency on their instruments. In general, the Music faculty encourages students to prepare two excerpts from two contrasting works that demonstrate their musical background and technical abilities. Auditions for all instruments and voice, which are held at the beginning of the first week of classes, are for placement purposes only. Theory I, Theory II, and Advanced Theory, including their aural skills and historical studies corollaries, make up a required theory sequence that must be followed by all music students unless they prove their proficiency in a given area; entry level will be determined by a diagnostic exam, which will be administered immediately after the Music orientation meeting that takes place during the first day of registration. Vocal Auditions, Placement, and Juries The Voice faculty encourages students to prepare two contrasting works that demonstrate the student’s musical background and vocal technique. Vocal auditions enable the faculty to place the singer in the class most appropriate for his or her current level of vocal production. Students will be placed in either an individual voice lesson (two half-hour lessons per week) or in a studio class (there are four different studio classes, as well as the seminar Self Discovery Through Singing). Voice juries at the end of the year evaluate each student’s progress. Piano Auditions and Placement The Piano faculty encourages students to prepare Theory and Composition Program Theory I: Materials of Music Patrick Muchmore, Daniel Wohl In this introductory course, we will study elements of music such as pitch, rhythm, intensity, and timbre to see how they combine in various musical structures and how these structures communicate. Studies will include notation and ear training, as well as theoretical exercises, rudimentary analyses, and the study of repertoire from various eras of Western music. Hearing and Singing is taken concurrently with this course. This course is a prerequisite to the Theory II: Basic Tonal Theory and Composition and Advanced Theory sequence. This course will meet twice each week (two 1.5-hour sessions). THE CURRICULUM 79 Theory II: Basic Tonal Theory and Composition Patrick Muchmore As a skill-building course in the language of tonal music, this course covers diatonic harmony and voice leading, elementary counterpoint, and simple forms. Students will develop an understanding through part writing, analysis, and composition. Survey of Western Music is required for all students taking Theory II who have not had a similar history course. It is highly recommended, although not required, that students in this course also take Basic Aural Skills. The materials of this course are prerequisite to any Advanced Theory course; at least one Advanced Theory course is required after Theory II. With Advanced Theory, students are required to take either a year-long seminar or two semester-long seminars in music history, which include Beethoven (spring), Mozart and Beethoven: Music from 1720-1810 (fall); Debussy and the French School (spring); Jazz History; Structures of Music, Ethnomusicology of the Americas: Music, Language & Identity; and Music, Circulation, and Appropriation (spring). Advanced Theory: Advanced Tonal Theory and Composition Daniel Wohl This course will discuss the fundamentals of chromatic harmony and will build on diatonic skills established in Theory II. Students will learn tools in order to enhance their knowledge of chord progressions and musical form. They will also acquire knowledge of essential techniques, such as counterpoint, modulation, mixture, and basic 20th-century practices. This class will emphasize keyboard, writing, and listening skills, as well as score analysis. Advanced Theory: Beethoven Carsten Schmidt Spring Very few composers had a more profound influence on the course of Western history than Beethoven. After 200 years, many of his extraordinary works remain at the very core of the concert repertoire; and the way in which they blend formal design, compositional techniques, and emotional force continue to serve as a great source of inspiration for many musicians today. Already during his lifetime, Beethoven became a new model of what it actually meant to be a composer. This course will examine a broad range of his music, including selections from his piano sonatas and trios, string quartets, symphonies, opera, mass settings, and songs. Our main focus will be on detailed analysis. We will also consider Beethoven’s own sources of inspiration—not only the musical ones (such as Haydn, Mozart, J.S. and C.P.E. Bach, Handel, and French revolutionary music) but also some of the political, philosophical, and literary currents of his time. In addition to more general biographic literature, we will draw upon some recent writings on Beethoven’s economic, medical, and psychological circumstances. Successful completion of the first two years of theory (or equivalent background) is a requirement. This course may be taken as either an advanced theory or a music history component. Permission of the instructor is required. Advanced Theory: Jazz Theory and Harmony I Glenn Alexander This course will study the building blocks and concepts of jazz theory, harmony, and rhythm. This will include the study of the standard modes and scales, as well as the use of melodic and harmonic minor scales and their respective modals systems. It will include the study and application of diminished and augmented scales and their role in harmonic progression, particularly the diminished chord as a parental structure. An in-depth study will be given to harmony and harmonic progression through analysis and memorization of triads, extensions, and alterations, as well as substitute chords, reharmonization, and back cycling. We will look at polytonality and the superposition of various hybrid chords over different bass tones and other harmonic structures. We will study and apply all of the above to their characteristic and stylistic genres, including bebop, modal, and free and progressive jazz. The study of rhythm, which is possibly the single most-important aspect of jazz, will be a primary focus, as well. We will also use composition as a way to absorb and truly understand the concepts discussed. Theory II: Basic Tonal Theory and Composition is a prerequisite. 80 Music Advanced Theory: Jazz Theory and Harmony II Glenn Alexander Jazz Theory and Harmony II will be a continuation of Level I, with more in-depth study and application of the same concepts and an emphasis placed on the actual performance of the material. This class will also introduce new concepts in slash-chord harmony, superposition of pentatonics as both harmonic structures and scales for improvisation, back cycling on blues, rhythm changes and standards, extensive chord substitution, reharmonization, exploring Coltrane changes, etc. Advanced Theory: 20thCentury Theoretical Approaches: Post-Tonal and Rock Music Patrick Muchmore This course will be an examination of various theoretical approaches to music of the 20th century, including post-tonal, serial, textural, minimalist, and pop/rock music. Our primary text will be Joseph Strauss’ Introduction to Post-Tonal Theory; but we will also explore other relevant texts, including scores and recordings of the works themselves. This course will include study of the music of Schoenberg, Webern, Pink Floyd, Ligeti, Bartók, Reich, Radiohead, Nine Inch Nails, Corigliano, and Del Tredici, among others. Open to students who have successfully completed Theory II: Basic Tonal Theory and Composition. Advanced Theory: 20thCentury Theoretical Approaches II: Post-Tonal and Rock Music Patrick Muchmore This course is a direct follow-up to 20th-Century Theoretical Approaches I: Post-Tonal and Rock Music. In addition to a more thorough grounding in set theory and basic serialism, the first semester will also introduce advanced serial techniques, neo-Riemannian analysis, and basic transformation theory. The syllabus will include some of the same composers studied before, but there will be a particular emphasis on Elliott Carter, Milton Babbitt, and Ruth Crawford Seeger. Discussion will also cover more recent musical trends such as spectralism, eclecticism, and The New Complexity. The second semester will involve a more detailed look at rock, electronic, and hip-hop music and will cover artists such as Saul Williams, Animal Collective, and King Crimson. Hearing and Singing Gabriel Shuford This class focuses on developing fluency with the rudiments of music. It is the required aural corollary to Theory I: Materials of Music. As students begin to explore the fundamental concepts of written theory—reading notes on the staff, interpreting rhythm—Hearing and Singing works to translate these sights into sounds. The use of solfège helps in this process, as ear, mind, and voice begin to understand the relationship between the pitches of the scale. Rhythm drills help solidify a sense of rhythm and a familiarity with rhythm patterns. In-class chorale singing supports this process. All incoming students will take a diagnostic test to determine placement. This class fulfills the performance component of the Music program for those beginning students who are not ready to participate in other ensembles. Students who demonstrate proficiency for this subject may advance directly into Basic Aural Skills. Basic Aural Skills Gabriel Shuford Basic Aural Skills tackles written theory concepts from an aural perspective. We will develop the ability to sing and identify intervals and sonorities, perform and transcribe rhythm in simple and compound meters, sing melodies at sight, and dictate melodies and harmonic progressions—all of which add dimension and scope to written theory. Students who have completed Hearing and Singing or demonstrate the equivalent may take this course. During the course of their studies, all Music Thirds are required to take Basic Aural Skills. It is recommended, but not required, that this course be taken in conjunction with Theory II: Basic Tonal Theory and Composition. Intermediate Aural Skills Gabriel Shuford This class continues to develop the cooperation of ear, eye, and voice initiated in Hearing and Singing and Basic Aural Skills, with an emphasis placed on harmony. The harmonic language in this level of aural skills broadens to incorporate an increased variety of 7th chords, as well as THE CURRICULUM 81 chromatically altered harmonies (including Neapolitan, augmented 6th, secondary dominant, and other borrowed chords). Singing, dictations, and listening exercises of multipart and modulating music samples help realize this. Additionally, the study of rhythm will take on more challenging aspects, expanding to multiple parts. It is recommended, but not required, that this course be taken in conjunction with Advanced Theory: Advanced Tonal Theory and Composition and may be taken by any student who has completed the required theory sequence. Sight Reading for Instrumentalists Sungrai Sohn This course is open to all instrumentalists who are interested in developing techniques to improve their sight-reading skills. Groups from duets to quintets will be formed according to level. A sight-reading “performance” will be held at the end of each semester. This course meets once a week. 20th-Century Compositional Techniques Daniel Wohl This is a workshop in the art of composition with a focus on 20th-century techniques. We will discuss recent compositional techniques and philosophies, as well as issues in orchestration and notation. We will explore significant works by a wide variety of major 20th-century composers, such as Bartók, Berio, Cage, Carter, Debussy, Ligeti, and Stravinsky, as well as recent compositions by established and emerging composers across the world. These works will serve as models for original student compositions. It is expected that the students will develop a fluency in using either Finale or Sibelius. Students should have completed Theory I: Materials of Music or its equivalent. Music Technology Courses The Sarah Lawrence Electronic Music Studio is a state-of-the art facility dedicated to the instruction and development of electronic music composition. The studio contains the latest in digital audio hardware and software for synthesis, recording, and signal processing, along with a full complement of vintage analog synthesizers and tape machines. Students in music technology courses may also choose to evolve collaborative projects with students in the Film, Theatre and Dance programs. Studio for Electronic Music and Experimental Sound consists of the following four modules: Introduction to Electronic Music and Music Technology John A. Yannelli Fall This module is for beginners and is a prerequisite to the other modules. Areas covered in this course will include an introduction to the studio’s equipment, basic musical acoustics, principles of studio recording, signal processing, and an historical overview of the medium. Permission of the instructor is required. Digital Audio Workstations and MIDI John A. Yannelli Fall This module will focus on creating electronic music primarily using software-based digital audio workstations. Materials covered will include MIDI, ProTools, Digital Performer, Logic, Reason, Ableton Live, MaxMsp, and others. Class assignments will focus on composing individual works and/or creating music and designing sound for various media such as film, dance, and interactive performance art. Projects will be presented in class for discussion and critique. This course is open to students who have successfully completed the beginning module or its equivalent. Permission of the instructor is required. Analog and Digital Synthesis John A. Yannelli Spring This module deals exclusively with the Moog, Buchla, and Arp analog synthesizers, as well as a variety of MIDI instruments. Students will work on creative projects centered on the use of these instruments. Projects will be presented in class for discussion and critique. This course is open to students who have successfully completed the beginning module or its equivalent. Permission of the instructor is required. 82 Music Recording, Sequencing, and Mastering Electronic Music John A. Yannelli Spring This is the final module in the sequence and focuses on the production of electronic music from creation to the final mix. Students will have access to the full range of hardware and software and use these materials to evolve works of considerable complexity and range. This course is open to students who have successfully completed Introduction to Electronic Music and Music Technology and either Digital Audio Workstations and MIDI or Analog and Digital Synthesis. Permission of the instructor is required. Studio Composition and Music Technology John A. Yannelli Students work on individual projects involving aspects of music technology including, but not limited, to works for electro-acoustic instruments—live and/or prerecorded works involving interactive performance media, laptop ensembles, Disklavier, and improvised or through-composed works. This component is open to advanced students who have successfully completed Studio for Electronic Music and Experimental Sound and are at or beyond the Advanced Theory level. Open to a limited number of students; permission of the instructor is required. Music History Classes Survey of Western Music Chester Biscardi, Carsten Schmidt This course is a chronological survey of Western music from the Middle Ages to the present. It is designed to acquaint the student with significant compositions of the Western musical tradition, as well as to explore the cyclical nature of music that mirrors philosophical and theoretical ideas in Ancient Greece and how that cycle appears every 300 years: the ars nova of the 14th century, le nuove musiche of the 17th century, and the new music of the 20th century and beyond. The course involves participation in listening, reading, and discussion, including occasional quizzes about and/or written summaries of historical periods. This component is required for all students taking Theory II: Basic Tonal Theory and Composition and is also open to students who have completed the theory sequence. Beethoven Carsten Schmidt Spring This is one of the music history component courses required for all Advanced Theory students. Please see course description under Advanced Theory. Mozart and Beethoven: Music from 1720-1810 Jean Wentworth Fall The classical style especially manifested in the music of the “divine” Mozart is both complemented and sharply opposed by his younger contemporary, Beethoven—and their lives were scarcely more distant from each other than was the Enlightenment from the events of 1789 and the world of Napoleon. We will touch on the source of the classical manner in the reactions of minor figures such as Sammartini, Quantz, and the Bach sons to the learned style of J. S. Bach and then explore the operatic style that made Mozart possible. His mature works will then be set alongside both the more genteel early period and the combative and partly romantic middle style of Beethoven. Readings in cultural history will be joined by biographical and musicscore study. Some experience in music theory is necessary and general historical interest is desirable for enrollment in this course. This is one of the music history component courses required for all Advanced Theory students. Debussy and the French School Jean Wentworth Spring Debussy’s influence on today’s music is incalculable. He has been called the only “universal” French composer and is very likely also the greatest. This course will deal with the ambience of the Second Empire, from which he emerged, and with Debussy’s relationships to the impressionist, symbolist, and decadent aesthetics. Allowing for earlier influences, including the contradictory effects of Wagner, we will explore Debussy’s revolutionary musical language in detail, with many references to older and younger contemporaries such as Massenet, Saint-Saëns, Franck, Satie, Ravel, and the group known as Les Six. For approach and qualifications, see Mozart THE CURRICULUM 83 and Beethoven: Music from 1720 to 1810. This is one of the component courses required for all Advanced Theory students. exceptions may be granted by the instructor. Participation in African Percussion Ensemble Faso Foli (spring) is optional but encouraged. Jazz History Music, Circulation, and Appropriation Glenn Alexander Jazz music of all styles and periods will be listened to, analyzed, and discussed. Emphasis will be placed on instrumental styles and performance techniques that have evolved in the performance of jazz. Skills in listening to and enjoying some of the finer points of the music will be enhanced by the study of elements such as form, phrasing, instrumentation, instrumental technique, and style. Special emphasis will be placed on the development of modern jazz and its relationship to older styles. Some topics: Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, roots and development of the Big Band sound, Fletcher Henderson, Count Basie, Duke Ellington, lineage of pianists, horn players, evolution of the rhythm section, Art Tatum, Bud Powell, Bill Evans, Thelonius Monk, Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Charlie Parker, bebop, cool jazz, jazz of the 1960s and ’70s, fusion and jazz rock, jazz of the 1980s, and modern trends. The crossover of jazz into other styles of modern music, such as rock and R&B, will be discussed, as will the influence that modern concert music and world music has had on jazz styles. This is a two-semester class; however, it will be possible to enter in the second semester. This is one of the music history component courses required for all Advanced Theory students. Ethnomusicology of the Americas: Music, Language, and Identity Jonathan King Open—Year This yearlong seminar may also be taken as a yearlong component in a Music Third. (Please see the course description under the listing of full courses—seminars with conferences—that constitute one-third of a student’s total program.) This is one of the music history component courses required for all Advanced Theory students and is also open to students who have completed the theory sequence. No musical experience is necessary. Participation in Gamelan Angklung Chandra Buana (fall) is required for all students taking this course, though occasional Jonathan King Open—Spring What happens when one culture sings in the musical voice of another? Through close examination of musical performances, we’ll see how the effects of both (or more) cultures are present in the music itself. And in so doing, we’ll further critique what it means to be “Western,” “global,” and “modern.” We’ll examine theories of cultural creolization and media circulation and apply them to specific case studies of musical traditions in transformation. We’ll begin in the 19th century, when Hungarian musical traditions were being heard and imitated by the Romantics and early Moderns, and continue by examining how black and white folk traditions from the United States were assimilated and transformed in the early 20th century. We’ll see that musical cultural “flows” don’t always move in the same direction, as with traditions moving both toward and from guitar traditions of central Africa in the 1950s and ’60s. Later in the semester, we’ll closely examine how musical traditions can be manifested in certain physical objects, which can gain a life of their own; for example, what happens when one musical culture uses the instruments of another for its own purposes? We’ll ask how the socioeconomic implications of the circulation of other musical objects—records, CDs, and mp3s—are affecting the very meaning of those musics in the 21st century. This course continues to develop ideas explored in “NonWestern” Western Musics in Europe and Asia, although that class is not an official prerequisite. This course may also be taken as a component in a Music Third. Performance Ensembles and Classes All performance courses listed below are open to all members of the Sarah Lawrence community, with permission of the instructor. Ensemble Auditions Auditions for all ensembles will take place at the beginning of the first week of classes. Choral Ensembles include the following: 84 Music Women’s Vocal Ensemble Patrick Romano Repertoire may include both accompanied and a cappella works from the Renaissance to the present that were specifically composed for women’s chorus. The ensemble will perform winter and spring concerts. Students are required to attend either the Monday or the Wednesday rehearsal; they are welcome but not required to attend both. All students are welcome to become a member of this ensemble; auditions are not necessary. This class meets twice a week. Chamber Choir Patrick Romano Early madrigals and motets and contemporary works especially suited to a small number of voices will form the body of this group’s repertoire. The ensemble will perform winter and spring concerts. This class meets once a week. Audition required. Jazz Studies include the following ensembles and classes: The Blues Ensemble Glenn Alexander This performance ensemble is geared toward learning and performing various traditional, as well as hybrid, styles of blues music. The blues, like jazz, is purely an American art form. Students will learn and investigate Delta Blues—performing songs by Robert Johnson, Charlie Patton, Skip James, and others—as well as Texas Country Blues by originators such as Blind Lemon Jefferson and Chicago Blues, beginning with Big Bill Broonzy and moving up through Howlin’ Wolf and Buddy Guy. Students will also learn songs and stylings by Muddy Waters, Albert King, and B.B. King and how they influenced modern blues men such as Johnny Winter, Stevie Ray Vaughn, and pioneer rockers such as Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, and Jimi Hendrix. Audition required. Jazz Colloquium Glenn Alexander This ensemble will meet weekly to rehearse and perform a wide variety of modern jazz music and other related styles. Repertoire in the past has included works by composers Thelonius Monk, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, and Herbie Hancock, as well as some rock, Motown, and blues. All instruments are welcome. Audition required. This class meets once a week. Jazz Performance and Improvisation Workshop Glenn Alexander This class is intended for all instrumentalists and will provide a “hands-on” study of topics relating to the performance of jazz music. The class will meet as an ensemble, but the focus will not be on rehearsing repertoire and giving concerts. Instead, students will focus on improving jazz playing by applying the topic at hand directly to instruments; immediate feedback on the performance will be given. The workshop environment will allow students to experiment with new techniques as they develop their sound. Topics include jazz chord/scale theory; extensions of traditional tonal harmony; altered chords; modes; scales; improvising on chord changes; analyzing a chord progression or tune; analysis of form; performance and style study, including swing, Latin, jazz-rock, and ballade styles; and ensemble technique. The format can be adapted to varying instrumentation and levels of proficiency. Placement audition required. Jazz Vocal Ensemble Glenn Alexander No longer do vocalists need to share valuable time with those wanting to focus primarily on instrumental jazz and vice versa. This ensemble will be dedicated to providing a performanceoriented environment for the aspiring jazz vocalist. We will mostly concentrate on picking material from the standard jazz repertoire. Vocalists will have an opportunity to work on arrangements, interpretation, delivery, phrasing, and intonation in a realistic situation with a live rhythm section and soloists. They will learn how to work with, give direction to, and get what they need from the rhythm section. It will provide an environment to learn to hear forms and changes and also to work on vocal improvisation, if they so choose. This will not only give students an opportunity to work on singing solo or lead vocals but to work with other vocalists in singing backup or harmony vocals for and with each other. This will also serve as a great opportunity for instrumentalists to learn the true art of accompanying the jazz vocalist, which will prove THE CURRICULUM 85 to be a valuable experience in preparing for a career as a professional musician. Audition required. Vocal Studies include the following courses: Character Development for Singers Thomas Young Spring This course will ask the following questions: What does a singer need? How does a singer process information? How does a singer communicate the information that he or she has processed? How does a singer prepare? How does a singer select material? We will try to find the answers to these questions together, with the understanding that different solutions must necessarily be tailored to the individual performer. Enrollment is limited. Diction for Singers Jonathan Yates The course intends to discuss the basic rules of pronunciation and articulation for German, French, and Italian, as used in lyric diction. Language-specific aspects such as purity of open vs. closed vowels, formation of mixed vowels and diphthongs, treatment of single consonants (especially plosives), and consonant clusters will be studied through both spoken and written exercises using the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). Students will get a chance to experience the languages through analytical listening, as well as by being coached in song repertoire and recitatives. The course further intends to deepen the student’s understanding of the three languages by introducing basic aspects of grammar. This course is required for all Music Thirds in voice during their first year in the vocal program. Jazz Vocal Seminar Thomas Young Fall This course will be an exploration of the relationship between and among melody, harmony, rhythm, text, style and of how these elements can be combined and manipulated to create meaning and beauty. A significant level of vocal development will be expected and required. Audition required. Self-Discovery Through Singing Eddye Pierce-Young This course will develop the student’s knowledge and awareness of her or his vocal potential through experience in singing. Basic vocal technique will be explored, and individual vocal needs will be addressed. Repertoire will be chosen to enhance the strengths of each student, as well as to present vocal challenges. Seminar in Vocal Performance Thomas Allen Harris, Wayne Sanders Voice students will gain performance experience by singing repertoire selected in cooperation with the studio instructor. Students will become acquainted with a broader vocal literature perspective through singing in several languages and exploring several historical music periods. Interpretation, diction, and stage deportment will be stressed. During the course of their studies and with permission of their instructor, all Music Thirds in voice are required to take Seminar in Vocal Performance for two semesters. So This Is Opera? Wayne Sanders, Eddye Pierce-Young This is an introductory course in opera production. It is open to students enrolled in any performing art (Music, Dance, and Theatre Thirds), as well as to the college community at large. Repertoire will be selected from the standard traditional and contemporary operatic expression in English and Italian languages. There will be one production per year. Attendance is required for every session. Audition required. Studio Class Wayne Sanders, Eddye Pierce-Young, Thomas Young, Thomas Allen Harris This is a beginning course in basic vocal technique. The voice faculty strongly feels that classes in voice for the beginner are supportive and educationally sound ways of approaching individual vocal needs. World Music ensembles and courses include the following: 86 Music African Classics of the PostColonial Era Andrew Algire, Jonathan King Fall From highlife and jújù in Nigeria to soukous and makossa in Congo and Cameroon to the sounds of Manding music in Guinea and “Swinging Addis” in Ethiopia, the decades following World War II saw an explosion of musical creativity that blossomed across sub-Saharan Africa. Syncretic styles merging African aesthetics with European, Caribbean, and American influences and instruments resulted in vibrant new musical genres that harken back to traditional African sources, while exploring bold and original musical forms. As European powers formally withdrew from their former colonies, newly inspired African musicians took advantage of broadened artistic resources and created vital, contemporary musical expressions. This performance course will explore a wide range of African musical styles that emerged in the second half of the 20th century. We will undertake a broad musical history, considering prominent groups and individual musicians during this time period, and will perform tightly structured arrangements of some of their most effective and influential pieces. There will be some opportunities for genre-appropriate improvisation and soloing. A wide range of instruments will be welcome, including strings, horns, guitars, keyboards, drums, and various other percussion instruments. Basic facility on one’s musical instrument is expected, but prior experience with African musical aesthetics is not assumed nor required. Bluegrass Performance Ensemble Jonathan King Spring Bluegrass music is a 20th-century amalgam of popular and traditional music styles, emphasizing vocal performance and instrumental improvisation, that coalesced in the 1940s in the American Southeast. This ensemble will highlight through performance many of the influences and traditions that bluegrass comprises, including ballads, breakdowns, “brother duets,” gospel quartets, Irish-style medleys, “modal” instrumentals, “old-time” country, popular song, and rhythm and blues, among many possible others. Though experienced players will have plenty of opportunities to improvise, participants need not have played bluegrass before. The ensemble should include fiddle, five-string banjo, steel string acoustic guitar, mandolin, resophonic guitar (Dobro®), and upright (double) bass. Gamelan Angklung Chandra Buana Jonathan King, Nyoman Saptanyana Fall A gamelan angklung is a bronze orchestra that includes four-toned metallophones, gongs, drums, and flutes. Simple patterns played upon the instruments interlock and combine to form large structures of great complexity and beauty. The gamelan angklung that we will play was specially handcrafted in Bali for the College and was named Chandra Buana, or “Moon Earth,” at its dedication on April 16, 2000, in Reisinger Concert Hall. Any interested student may join; no previous experience with music is necessary. Participation in Gamelan Angklung Chandra Buana (fall) is required for all students taking Structures of Music and Structures of Power: Ethnomusicology of Africa, Asia, and the Middle East; occasional exceptions may be granted by the instructor. West African Percussion Ensemble Faso Foli Andrew Algire, Jonathan King Spring The African Percussion Ensemble Faso Foli performs music of West Africa on balafons (a type of xylophone) and djembe drums. “Faso Foli” is a Mande phrase that translates loosely as “playing to my father's home.” It refers to the West African origin of our djembes and balafons, which were built for the college in Guinea in 2006. Any interested student may join; no previous experience with music is necessary. Other ensembles and classes: Awareness Through Movement™ for Musicians Carsten Schmidt Spring This course will offer a selection from the thousands of Awareness-Through-Movement™ lessons developed by Moshe Feldenkrais. The lessons consist of verbal instructions for carefully designed movement sequences. These allow the THE CURRICULUM 87 students to better sense and feel themselves and thereby develop new and improved organizational patterns. These gentle movements are done in comfortable positions (lying, sitting, and standing), and many instrumentalists and singers have found them to be hugely helpful in developing greater ease, reducing unwanted tension and performance anxiety, and preventing injuries. Another benefit is the often increased capacity for learning and, perhaps most importantly, an increased enjoyment of music making and the creative process. Open to everyone. programs such as dance, theater, film, and performance art, as well as community outreach. Open to a limited number of students by audition. Baroque Ensemble Carsten Schmidt Carsten Schmidt Spring This performance ensemble focuses on music from roughly 1600 to 1750 and is open to both instrumentalists and singers by audition. Using modern instruments, we will explore the rich and diverse musical world of the Baroque. Our work will culminate in a joint concert with the Chamber Choir. Regular coachings will be supported by sessions exploring a variety of performance practice issues, such as ornamentation, notational conventions, continuo playing, and editions. Chamber Music Sungrai Sohn Various chamber groups—from quartets or quintets to violin and piano duos—are formed each year, depending on the number and variety of qualified instrumentalists who apply. There are weekly coaching sessions. Groups will have an opportunity to perform at the end of each semester in a chamber music concert. Chamber Music Improvisation John A. Yannelli This is an experimental performing ensemble that explores a variety of musical styles and techniques, including free improvisation, improvisational conducting, and various other chance-based methods. The ensemble is open to all instruments (acoustic and electric), voice, electronic synthesizers, and laptop computers. Students must be able to demonstrate a level of proficiency on their chosen instrument. Composer-performers, dancers, and actors are also welcome. Performance opportunities will include concerts, collaboration with other Conducting Jonathan Yates A course in the basics of conducting is available to qualified students and is taught on an individual conference basis. Completion of Advanced Theory is required. Permission of the instructor is required. Evolution of a Performance Spring This advanced seminar presents a unique resource designed to help students develop wellinformed and inspired performances. The content of this course will be carefully tailored to participants’ interests, needs, abilities, and chosen repertoire. It will include a combination of the following: textual criticism and possible creation of a performance edition; consideration of performance practices, drawing on historical documents and recent scholarship; study of historical instruments (with possible field trips to the Yale Collection of Musical Instruments); review of pertinent analytical techniques and writings; analytical, compositional, and eartraining assignments; readings that explore the cultural, artistic, and emotional worlds of the composers studied; in-class performances and coaching; and discussion of broader philosophical issues relating to authenticity in performance. This course is for accomplished and highly motivated performers who have a theory background commensurate with completion of at least the first semester of Advanced Theory: Advanced Tonal Theory and Composition. It is especially suitable for instrumentalists and singers who are preparing for a recital or performances of major chamber works. Permission of the instructor is required. Guitar Class William Anderson This course is for beginning guitar students by recommendation of the faculty. Guitar Ensemble William Anderson This class offers informal performance opportunities on a weekly basis as a way of 88 Music exploring guitar solo, duo, and ensemble repertoire. The course will seek to improve sightreading abilities and foster a thorough knowledge of the guitar literature. Recommended for students interested in classical guitar. Permission of the instructor is required. Keyboard Lab Gabriel Shuford This course is designed to accommodate beginning piano students who take the Keyboard Lab as the core of their Music Third or as part of a music “split” (e.g., a full lesson in voice with a half-lesson in piano). This instruction takes place in a group setting, with eight keyboard stations and one master station. Students will be introduced to elementary keyboard technique and simple piano pieces. Sarah Lawrence Orchestra Jonathan Yates The Sarah Lawrence Orchestra is open to all students, as well as to members of the College and Westchester communities. The Orchestra performs at least once each semester. Recent performances have included Stravinsky’s L’histoire du Soldat, with dancing and narration; Satie’s film score Entr’acte, performed live with a screening of the film; a concert version of Bernstein’s Candide; Mahler’s Symphony No. 1; and a concert performance of Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel. Sarah Lawrence String Orchestra Sungrai Sohn The Sarah Lawrence String Orchestra will meet one and a half hours once a week and will be open to Music Third students, as well as to other students who are interested in playing in a string orchestra. There will be one performance each semester; each performance will highlight a soloist from the orchestra. Auditions will be held at the beginning of each semester. Audition required. Senior Recital Music Faculty Spring This component offers students the opportunity to share with the larger SLC community the results of their sustained work in performance study. During the semester of their recital, students will receive additional coachings by their principal teachers. Audition required. Violin Master Class Sungrai Sohn Violin Master Class involves both playing and discussion. Each student is required to prepare a solo piece. An accompanist will be present before and during each class to rehearse and perform with students. Each master class is organized as a series of individual lessons that address recurrent performance problems, including discussions concerning technical and musical issues (basic and advanced), as well as performance practices. All students will receive copies of the works being performed. This class meets once a week. Required Concert Attendance/Music Tuesdays Component Concert Attendance/Music Tuesdays Requirement The Music faculty wants students to have access to a variety of musical experiences. Therefore, all Music Thirds are required to attend all Music Tuesday events and three Music programsponsored concerts on campus per semester, including concerts (the required number varies from semester to semester) presented by music faculty and outside professionals that are part of the Concert Series. Music Tuesdays consists of various programs, including student/faculty town meetings, concert presentations, guest artist lectures and performances, master classes, and collaborations with other departments and performing arts programs. Meetings, which take place in Reisinger Concert Hall on selected Tuesdays from 1:30-3:00 p.m., are open to the community. The schedule will be announced each semester. Residencies and Workshops The Cygnus Ensemble: Artists-in-Residence William Anderson, Susannah Chapman, Oren Fader, Robert Ingliss, Tara Helen O’Connor, Cal Wiersma The Cygnus Ensemble is a contemporary music ensemble in residence at the College. Along with presenting concerts of new music in the Concert THE CURRICULUM 89 Series, the members of the ensemble work individually with instrumental students and participate in readings of new works by student composers. Master Class Music Faculty, Guest Artists Master Class includes a series of concerts and instrumental and vocal seminars, as well as lecture/demonstration presentations of music history, world music, improvisation, jazz, composition, and music technology. Master Class takes place on Wednesdays from 12:30-1:30 p.m. in either Reisinger Concert Hall or Marshall Field House, Room 1. The classes are open to the College community. Music Workshop Jean Wentworth Approximately twice monthly, music workshops are held in which a student or student ensemble, with consent of the individual teacher, may participate as performer(s). The College community is welcome to attend. Since the only limitation is that the composition(s) should be well-prepared, these workshops serve as important opportunities for students at all levels to share their playing, singing, or composing work with others and to have a significant way to trace their own development. Music Courses not offered in 2011-2012 • Idea of a New Style • Jazz Composition and Arranging • Keyboard Literature • The Music of J. S. Bach • Music of Transcendent Experience • Orchestration • Structures of Music, Structures of Power: Ethnomusicology of Africa, Asia & the Middle East • Theoretical Foundations of Electronic Music Philosophy At Sarah Lawrence College, the study of philosophy retains a centrality, helping students synthesize their educational experience with the discipline’s many connections to other humanities and to social science. Through conference work, students also find numerous ways to connect the study of philosophy with their interests in the arts and natural sciences. Stressing the great tradition of classical and contemporary philosophy, the College offers three types of philosophy courses: those organized around thematic topics, such as Philosophy of Mind, Theories of Human Nature, and Ethics; those organized historically, such as Moral Philosophy from Plato to Nietzsche, The Making of the Modern Mind, and 20th-Century Philosophy; and those that study the “systems” of philosophers such as Kant, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein. Philosophy faculty use the latest technology in their teaching, including Web boards for posting course material and promoting discussion. Yearlong courses make extensive textual work possible, enabling students to establish in-depth relationships with the thought of the great philosophers and to “do philosophy” to some degree—particularly valuable to students preparing for graduate work in philosophy. Conference work often consists of students thinking through and writing on single philosophic and literary works, ranging from Greek tragedy, comedy, or epic to Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Machiavelli, Descartes, Shakespeare, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Hume, Kant, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, or Heidegger. First-Year Studies: Philosophy, Friend and Rival to Religion Abraham Anderson FYS Since its earliest days, philosophy has been characterized by its rivalry with religion. Philosophy begins from a desire to comprehend mysteries, while religion involves an acceptance of the mysterious. It’s no surprise, then, that philosophy has often criticized or even mocked religion, while religion has often been suspicious of philosophy. It is because their concerns are so close that philosophy and religion have often been rivals. Both seek ultimate reasons for acting and living and ultimate accounts of the nature of things. Yet the closeness of their concerns, which has sometimes brought them into conflict, has sometimes made them close allies. Philosophy has sought to draw on the energies, questions, and teachings of religion, and religion has sought the help of philosophy in explaining and defending its teachings—particularly when it had to defend them against philosophy itself. In this course, we shall study the tensions and alliances between philosophy and religion in order to gain a deeper understanding of both. We shall begin 90 Philosophy with the Theogony (account of the birth of the gods) of the Greek poet Hesiod. We shall then read the philosopher Heraclitus, who criticizes Hesiod, and the philosopher Parmenides, who seeks to provide an alternative to Hesiod’s theology. This will be followed by Aristophanes’ Clouds and Plato’s Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, and Phaedo to study both the charges of impiety against Socrates and Plato’s response to those charges. Depending on time and the interests of the class, we may also read Plato’s Phaedrus and Symposium. In the second semester, we shall inquire into the relation between the Bible and philosophy by reading the first 11 chapters of the Book of Genesis, the Book of Job, and the Books of Amos and Jonah. We shall study the Epicurean attack on religion by reading Lucretius’ On the Nature of Things. We shall then go on to Paul’s Letter to the Romans in the New Testament, followed by Augustine’s Confessions—in which Augustine shows us how Platonism and the ancient academic skeptics helped lead him to Christianity. If time permits, we shall read Averroes’ Decisive Treatise on the Relation Between Philosophy and Law, in which the medieval Arab philosopher Averroes argues that philosophy and religion can be friends that grasp the same truths at different levels. If we have time, and depending on the interests of the class, we may read other works such as Hume’s The Natural History of Religion and Kant’s humorous defense of religion in the Dreams of a Spirit Seer. First-Year Studies: Varieties of Intellectual Dissent Marina Vitkin FYS In this course, we will explore the question of what it means “to think differently” as a powerful approach to understanding the nature of human thought. To set the stage, we will begin with Mikhail Bulgakov’s The Master and Margarita, a novel in which religious and political worldviews clash as the Devil pays a visit to the Moscow of the 1930s. We will be led to consider the processes of grafting a framework of religious and philosophical thought, Christianity in our case, onto a pre-existing cultural worldview and, in the aftermath Bulgakov portrays, to tease out the logical issues of alternative modes of thinking from the political issues of standing up to power in the name of personal dignity or moral justice. For context, we will read relevant selections from the Old and the New Testaments. We will then turn to Plato’s Republic and, while aiming to grasp the text as a whole, will focus especially on the portrayal of Socrates. As a philosopher, Socrates both exemplifies and reflects on the fundamental incommensurability of his thought with those of his fellow citizens, as illustrated in the dialogue by the Allegory of the Cave and dramatized by Socrates’s trial-and-death sentence. Our next source will be a three-part play, Slings and Arrows, in which we will pay special attention to the challenges of bringing three of Shakespeare’s greatest tragedies to life in a vastly altered historical context—that of contemporary North America. In addition to watching the performance, we will read Hamlet, Macbeth, and King Lear, as well as Oedipus Rex and several texts of Freud. Thomas Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, our next work, argues that periods of radical intellectual divergence are built into the very structure of science as a cultural institution. The book will equip us with further conceptual tools for thinking about thought and the complexities of its operation in society. We will conclude the course with Eva Hoffman’s Lost in Translation: Life in a New Language, an autobiography that attends to the issues of thinking in incompatibly different ways from the perspective of someone brought up in one culture and then transplanted to another. When intellectual universes collide, when individuals with powerful alternatives to our modes of thinking appear in our midst, when an earlier worldview comes alive across historical discontinuities, when transitions to sweepingly novel conceptions constitute a normal part of an intellectual pursuit, when a subject of one cultural perspective translates herself into another—five works of different genres will provide us with rich and multifaceted material for a philosophical exploration of thinking in radically diverse ways. Moral Philosophy from Plato to Nietzsche Michael Davis Open, Lecture—Year Our age is suspicious of moral philosophy. We tend to assume that its central question—“What is the human good?”—however important, is not answerable. Yet, in our daily lives, we cannot help but take for granted that certain things are good and others are not. Relativists in theory but not in practice, we are at odds with ourselves. That we are troubled by this tension between what we think and what we do—we sense that it is bad to be divided against ourselves in this THE CURRICULUM 91 way—is a compelling reason to study the various answers that have been given to the question of the human good. We will turn to the books of some of the seminal thinkers of the tradition of Western philosophy in order to gain clarity about the fundamental moral alternatives—to discover the origins and implications of the underlying (and frequently hidden) principles of contemporary morality—with the naïve hope that we may be able to answer the question of the human good. Readings will include selections from Genesis, Sophocles, Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Shakespeare, Descartes, Locke, Swift, Rousseau, Kant, Hegel, Marx, and Nietzsche. Philosophical Roots of the Philosophy of Science Abraham Anderson Open—Year What is the philosophy of science—considered as a philosophical enterprise? The desire to understand science philosophically can mean strikingly different things, depending on the philosophical perspective from which that desire arises. Perhaps the three most influential positions in the philosophy of science over the last century have been those of the Vienna Circle, of Thomas Kuhn, and of Paul Feyerabend. But where were these thinkers “coming from,” philosophically speaking? The most important influence on the Vienna Circle is recognized to be Wittgenstein’s Tractatus, a work of general philosophy with teachings on ethics, aesthetics, and the meaning of life, as well as on the status of science. In order to understand what drives the Vienna Circle to see the nature of science as it does, we shall, therefore, read the Tractatus. The Tractatus, however, is a rather mysterious book that expresses its larger views partly by refusing to talk about them. In order to understand the Tractatus more fully, we shall read it, in turn, against the background of Schopenhauer’s World as Will and Idea, which is generally acknowledged to have been a primary influence on Wittgenstein when he wrote the Tractatus. Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions is, in large part, a criticism of the Vienna Circle. Behind that criticism lay, among other factors, Kuhn’s study of Wittgenstein’s late work, Philosophical Investigations. We shall explore this connection together and consider how much The Structure of Scientific Revolutions is a work in the spirit of Philosophical Investigations. Feyerabend’s Against Method continues and radicalizes Kuhn’s criticism of the Vienna Circle, yet with inflections remarkably unlike Kuhn’s. There are striking resemblances between Feyerabend’s skeptical perspectivism and that of Nietzsche in Beyond Good and Evil. We shall read the two works together and study the philosophical relationship between Feyerabend and Nietzsche. By studying some of the most significant currents in 20th-century philosophy of science against the broader matrix of 19th- and 20th-century philosophy generally, we will hope to gain a fuller understanding of both philosophy of science and that broader matrix itself. Philosophy and Friendship: Schelling and Hegel Marina Vitkin Open—Year This seminar will be devoted to the intellectual relationship between Schelling and Hegel, each of whom produced great works in the context of one of the most fertile epochs of philosophical creativity in the Western tradition. For a time, Schelling and Hegel were close friends and associates. Their dramatic parting of philosophical ways, seemingly accompanied by concealed but unmistakable notes of personal bitterness, will lead us to reflect on the complex connections between the vagaries of their friendship and the principled incompatibility of their essential philosophical commitments. To get at the core of the intellectual disagreement between the two thinkers, we will study Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit in the first semester and Schelling’s System of Transcendental Idealism and On Human Freedom in the second. We will also read texts that specifically address their conceptual divergence as understood by each thinker, including selections from Hegel’s Lectures on the History of Philosophy and from Schelling’s Berlin Lectures. Both the nature of friendship and the nature of philosophical truth will be the guiding themes of the course, and conference work will provide students with opportunities to explore these themes across a wide range of philosophical and literary works. Wittgenstein on Mind and Language Nancy Baker Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year Would it be possible to know anything if we grew up isolated from one another on desert islands? Would we be able to think? Would we have 92 Physics emotions? Would we be able to invent our own language? Would we have minds? The answers to these questions would be “yes” if a basic assumption of much of Western philosophy were true, viz. that human consciousness has its origins in the individual and only later becomes social and communicable with the learning of language. Some philosophers, such as Descartes, have gone so far as to claim that even the learning of language cannot make consciousness communicable; for we could never know, for example, whether we each see the same when we describe what we see as “red” or “blue,” or whether we feel the same when we describe ourselves as “happy” or “sad,” or even whether other people have minds at all. A major thinker of the 20th century, Ludwig Wittgenstein, has seriously undermined these assumptions concerning the nature of mind and language. His work has profound implications not only for philosophy but also for psychology and anthropology. In dealing with these issues, we will closely read Philosophical Investigations, a text unique in the history of philosophy for being “therapy” instead of “theory.” Mastering Wittgenstein’s technique of philosophizing will reveal to us our own conceptual confusions, as well as those of the Western philosophical tradition, and will give us the experience of dismantling or deconstructing what he calls the “pictures that hold us captive.” Readings will be from Descartes, Wittgenstein, and other 20thcentury philosophers. The Music of Philosophy: Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy Michael Davis Intermediate—Fall This course will be devoted to a careful reading of The Birth of Tragedy Out of the Spirit of Music. Nietzsche claims that tragedy, formed as a unique combination of Apollinian and Dionysian drives and in its connection to music, represent a more fundamental mode of being in the world than the tradition of rationalism that originates with Socrates, grows into the tradition of Western philosophy, and culminates in the optimism of modern science so powerful in his (and our) century. Nietzsche means to offer an alternative to reason understood in this way—a Dionysian philosophy, the image of which is a “musicmaking Socrates.” We will read this text—sometimes painfully slowly and carefully—with a view to understanding what it means for Nietzsche to seek the truth of tragedy in a book that, on the surface at least, seems to be an attack on truth seeking—what it means that he can speak the words, “This book should have sung and not spoken.” Ancient Philosophy (Plato) Michael Davis Intermediate—Spring This course will be devoted to a careful reading of a small number of texts from a major figure in ancient philosophy. The goal of the course is twofold. It is first designed to acquaint students with one of the seminal figures of our tradition in more than a superficial way. In doing that, it will force us to slow our usual pace of reading—to read almost painfully carefully—with a view to understanding the thinker as he wrote and as he understood himself and not as a stage in a historical development. The second part of the goal of the course is to introduce and encourage this kind of careful reading. The text will be Plato’s Alcibiades I. Physics Physics—the study of matter and energy, time and space, and their interactions and interconnections—is often regarded as the most fundamental of the natural sciences. An understanding of physics is essential for an understanding of many aspects of chemistry, which in turn provides a foundation for understanding a variety of biological processes. Physics also plays an important role in most branches of engineering, and the field of astronomy essentially is physics applied on the largest of scales. As science has progressed over the last century or so, the boundaries between the different scientific disciplines have become blurred, and new interdisciplinary fields such as chemical physics, biophysics, and engineering physics have arisen. For these reasons, and because of the excellent training in critical thinking and problem solving provided by the study of physics, this subject represents an indispensable gateway to the other natural sciences and a valuable component of a liberal arts education. THE CURRICULUM 93 Super Fast, Super Small, Super Cool Kanwal Singh Open, Lecture—Spring Technological advancements throughout the 20th century and into the 21st have given us access to realms of nature that are radically different from the everyday world that we inhabit. Specifically, we have learned that when objects approach the speed of light, when they are on the order of the size of an atom, and when temperatures are close to absolute zero, some pretty interesting phenomena arise that are not present in our slow, large, warm, everyday lives. Matter and energy behave in ways that blur the line between them and that challenge our understanding. In this course, we will lay down the general physical laws that govern these three realms. We’ll discuss how they differ from the laws that govern our everyday experiences and how the “super” realms connect to our own (if they do). We'll also use our understanding of the fundamentals to discuss areas of current research and new technological developments. These may include high-temperature superconductivity, nanotechnology, or other areas that the class wants to explore. Astronomy Scott Calvin Open—Year On the first night, we will look up and see the stars. By the last, we will know what makes them shine, how they came to be, and their ultimate fates. In between, we will survey the universe and humankind’s investigations of it from ancient navigation to modern cosmology. In addition to the stars themselves, we will learn about solarsystem objects such as planets, asteroids, moons, and comets; the comparative astronomy of different eras and cultures; the properties, lifetimes, and deaths of galaxies, quasars, and black holes; and theories and evidence concerning the origin, evolution, and fate of the universe. In addition to readings and examination of multimedia material, students will conduct astronomical observation and experiments—at first with an astrolabe, then with a simple telescope, and finally with the most powerful telescopes on and around the Earth. Emphasis will be placed on modes of scientific communication so that each student will keep a notebook, participate in debates, present posters, write papers, give oral presentations, and participate in the peer review process. In addition, students will experience famous astronomical debates through role-play. Conference projects may be dedicated to critically examining some topic in astronomy, conducting astronomical observation, or investigating the relationships between astronomy and other aspects of society and culture. Introduction to Mechanics (General Physics Without Calculus) Scott Calvin Open—Fall This course covers introductory classical mechanics, including dynamics, kinematics, momentum, energy, and gravity. Students considering careers in architecture or the health sciences, as well as those interested in physics for physics’ sake, should take either this course or Classical Mechanics (offered in alternate years). Emphasis will be placed on scientific skills, including problem solving, development of physical intuition, computational skills, scientific communication, use of technology, and development and execution of experiments. Seminars will incorporate discussion, exploratory, and problem-solving activities. In addition, the class will meet weekly to conduct laboratory work. Calculus is not required. This course or equivalent is required to take Introduction to Electromagnetism, Light, and Modern Physics (General Physics Without Calculus) in the spring. An optional course-within-a-course, preparing students for the MCAT, will be available for premed students and will count as part of their conference work. Playing With Light Kanwal Singh Open—Fall This course is an entirely laboratory-based exploration in optics. Students will be using mirrors, lenses, gratings, filters, and other optical equipment to explore the behavior of light. We will begin by investigating some simple rules that govern how light behaves at interfaces, such as reflective and refractive surfaces (i.e., mirrors and lenses), and then use this knowledge to build simple optical systems. We will also examine what happens when light is forced to travel through very tiny openings, exploiting its 94 Politics physical properties on a much smaller scale. Students will work in groups to explore a variety of phenomena and to build optical systems. Science Education: From Congress to the Classroom Kanwal Singh Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Fall This course tackles a variety of topics in science education. We’ll begin with a discussion of the history of science education in the United States, changes that were proposed and that actually took place following the 1983 publication of “A Nation At Risk,” and a comparison of science education requirements in the United States and in other industrialized countries. From this broad overview, we’ll move to discussions of policies that were put in place to improve US science education. Some questions that we will explore: What exactly were these policies meant to achieve? Whose education did they improve? How were they conceived? What incentives were put in place? Is it sensible or possible to have national policies, given the decentralized nature of our school system? Finally, we’ll talk about what actually happens in the classroom, especially in the early grades. We’ll discuss philosophical and practical reasons why science isn’t usually introduced until late elementary or even middle school. Again, some questions for students to explore are: How much science does one need to teach? What does science mean for very young students? What habits of mind do scientists employ? How do you teach these habits of mind? Is there specific content that everyone “should” know? Who decides what it is? How does policy make its way into the classroom? Students must have previously taken at least one science course at SLC. Introduction to Electromagnetism, Light, and Modern Physics (General Physics Without Calculus) Scott Calvin Intermediate—Spring This course covers topics from electromagnetism, optics, and special relativity to quantum mechanics. Emphasis will be placed on scientific skills, including problem solving, development of physical intuition, computational skills, scientific communication, use of technology, and development and execution of experiments. Seminars will incorporate discussion, exploratory, and problem-solving activities. In addition, the class will meet weekly to conduct laboratory work. Calculus is not a requirement for this course. An optional course-within-a-course, preparing students for the MCAT, will be available for premed students and will count as part of their conference work. Permission of the instructor is required. Students should have had at least one semester of physics (mechanics). Information and the Arrow of Time Michael Siff, Kanwal Singh Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Spring What is information? What is entropy? How can the utterly reliable and predictable behavior of computers as we know them arise from subatomic particles governed by the wholly nondeterministic rules of quantum mechanics? Are quantum computers exponentially superior to their classical counterparts? Do the limits of classical computation apply to these machines? What are the philosophical implications of quantum computers; and, in particular, might they lend support to the many-worlds hypothesis? Will a practical quantum computer be built in the near future? If so, is it possible that these devices will demolish electronic privacy as we know it? This course will cover topics at the intersection of quantum physics and computer science, with an aim toward exploring how the fundamental laws of quantum mechanics impact the representation and manipulation of information on computers. Topics will include bits and qubits; the Nyquist limit; the basics of Shannon information theory; quantum computers and quantum cryptography; energy, entropy, and reversibility; the EPR paradox; and spooky action at a distance. This is a jointly taught seminar. Half the class will have conferences with Mr. Singh; half with Mr. Siff. Intermediate: Open to sophomores and above. Politics The study of politics at Sarah Lawrence College encompasses past and present thinking, political and interdisciplinary influences, and theoretical and hands-on learning. The goal: a deep understanding of the political forces that shape society. Questions such as “How is power structured and exercised?” “What can be accomplished through well-ordered institutions?” THE CURRICULUM 95 and “How do conditions that produce freedom compare with those that contribute to tyranny?” serve as springboards for stimulating inquiry. Rather than limit ourselves to the main subdisciplines of political science, we create seminars around today’s issues—such as feminism, international justice, immigration, and poverty—and analyze these issues through the lens of past philosophies and events. We don’t stop at artificial boundaries. Our courses often draw from other disciplines or texts, especially when looking at complex situations. Because we see an important connection between political thought and political action, we encourage students to participate in service learning. This engagement helps them apply and augment their studies and leads many toward politically active roles in the United States and around the world. First-Year Studies: The American Polity Samuel Abrams FYS Political science is the systematic study of politics and political life, and this can and should be broadly defined. This course is an introductory study in American politics, specifically, and provides an explanation of how the American political process works. The class examines the basic principles of American politics, the problems of collective decision making, the purposes of government, the formal institutions of national government—Congress, the Supreme Court, the Presidency, and the bureaucracy—congressional and presidential elections, the role of the media, and the mobilization of citizens through political parties and interest groups. Our examination of these institutions and ideas will be interdisciplinary in nature and will present a number of the major general theories underlying the study of American government. This will thus give students the knowledge of the structure and operation of the institutions of the American political system and how their roles intersect, compete, and complement each other. Additionally, students will become familiar with the actors and the institutions within our federal government and those institutions affecting our federal government. From this investigation, students will gain an awareness of the role of citizens, interest groups, political parties, and politicians within the American political system. Moreover, they will better understand the role of politics and strategy in the operation and impact of the government. Taken collectively, the students will develop the ability to synthesize the material from the course to develop their own opinions regarding the proper role of the government in our society. We will be talking about politically charged and often divisive issues, including abortion, immigration, race relations, and homosexuality. This seminar will be an open, nonpartisan forum for discussion and debate. As such, this course will be driven by data, not dogma. We will use a variety of approaches based in logic and evidence to find answers to various puzzles about American policy, and we will treat this material as social scientists—not ideologues. Comfort with numbers and statistics is expected. The Legitimacy of Modernity? Basic Texts in Social Theory David Peritz Open, Lecture—Year Social theory is a distinctly modern tradition of discourse, centered on explaining social order in societies that are too large, fluid, and complex to rely on tradition or self-conscious political regulation alone. Instead, a series of theorists whose works gave rise to the modern social sciences explore the sources of social order in structures, many of which work “behind the backs” or independently from the intention of those whose interaction they integrate. The market economy, the legal and administrative state, the firm and the professions, highly differentiated political and civil cultures, a variety of disciplinary techniques inscribed in diverse mundane practices—one by one, these theorists labored to unmask the often hidden sources of social order. Moreover, this understanding of social order has evolved side-byside with evaluations ranging from those that view Western modernity as achieving the apex of human freedom and individuality to those that see it as insinuating a uniquely thorough and invidious system of domination. This class will introduce many of the foundational texts and authors in the social sciences, including Adam Smith, Alexis de Tocqueville, Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim, Max Weber, Sigmund Freud, Michel Foucault, Jurgen Habermas, and Frantz Fanon. In this way, it will also cover various schools of social explanation, including: Marxism, structuralism, poststructuralism, postcolonial studies, and feminism. The thread connecting these disparate authors and approaches will be 96 Politics the issue of the worth or legitimacy of Western modernity. Which of the institutions that structured the process of modernization are worth defending or reforming? Which should be rejected outright? Or should we reject them all and embrace a new, postmodern social epoch? In answering these questions in class and in group conferences, we will grapple both with classical texts and with the implications of different approaches for contemporary social analysis. Latin American Politics: Dynamics of State Formation, Reform, and Revolution Dominic Corva Open—Fall This course will focus on the dynamics of state formation and social conflict in Latin America in global, regional, and local contexts from colonialism to the present day. Empirically, this course will emphasize a comparative perspective of Latin American state formation as the outcome of endogenous and transnational power dynamics. This examination of the evidence will be informed by Latin American contributions to postcolonial theory, particularly as described by Argentinean Walter Mignolo. This will allow us to consider the state as a set of institutions that reflect and reinforce axes of economic, racial, and gendered domination in Latin America. Ethnographic case studies and documentary histories will be combined with a consideration of geopolitical intervention to construct a critical analysis of state formation as a historically contingent process for consolidating power in societies rather than, necessarily, a political technology for modernization and the provision of security. Major issues to be covered include endogenous political formation as an ongoing outcome of colonial and neocolonial economic processes, liberal and conservative approaches to indigenous politics, and gendered aspects of reform and revolution in Latin America. Special attention will be paid to the Mexican, Bolivian, and Cuban revolutions; bureaucratic authoritarianism, particularly in Chile; and the contemporary “Bolivarian revolution” in the region. Looking at Leadership and Decision Making in the Political World Samuel Abrams Intermediate—Year The president is the most prominent actor in the American government, and developing an understanding of how and why political leaders make the choices that they do is the goal of this course. Presidents must make countless decisions while in office and, as Edwards and Wayne explain, “Executive officials look to [the presidency] for direction, coordination, and general guidance in the implementation of policy…Congress looks to it for establishing priorities, exerting influence…the heads of foreign governments look to it for articulating positions, conducting diplomacy, and flexing muscle; the general public looks to it for…solving problems and exercising symbolic and moral leadership….” This course will examine and analyze the development and modern practice of presidential leadership in the United States by studying the evolution of the modern presidency, which includes the process of presidential selection and the structure of the presidency as an institution. The course will then reflect on the ways in which presidents make decisions and seek to shape foreign, economic, and domestic policy. This will be based on a variety of literatures, ranging from social psychology to organizational behavior. We will look at the psychology and character of presidents in this section of the course. Finally, the course will explore the relationship of the presidency with other major government institutions, organized interest groups, the press, and the public in a variety of forms; and we will examine the many political resources and constraints influencing the president’s ability to provide leadership in the US political system. The course will look at the behavior and choices made by presidents ranging from Washington to Obama and will analyze why some presidents have been more successful than others. The course will pay close attention to the actions and choices made by Bush and Obama over the past decade and take advantage of their recent personal writings to better understand their choices. We will try to situate those behaviors in a larger historical context. Open to juniors and seniors who have taken a psychology, sociology, or politics course. THE CURRICULUM 97 Democracy and Diversity David Peritz Intermediate—Year Does democracy work only in homogeneous societies? Only in such societies, it has long been maintained, can a people be sufficiently similar to form shared political understanding and projects. Absent considerable commonality—religious, linguistic, ethnic, racial—it is feared that democracy deteriorates into the tyranny of the majority or a war of all against all. But we are in the midst of a dramatic shift in which democratic societies are increasingly diverse and their citizens less willing to “forget” their many differences to melt into a dominant national culture. These developments raise some basic questions: Is it possible to achieve sufficient agreement on fundamental political issues in a diverse society to sustain democracy? Can the character of political community or the nation be reconceived and reformed? If not, is democracy doomed? Or might it be possible to reform democracy to render it compatible with conditions of deep diversity? If so, does the democratic claim to legitimacy also need to be transformed? This course will explore these questions in a number of ways. We will study exemplary historical statements of the ideal of democracy, drawing on traditional and contemporary works in political philosophy. We will also draw on contemporary work in sociology, anthropology, cultural and legal studies, and political science to examine the nature of social and cultural diversity, including religion, value, gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, and class. Finally, we will explore works that bring these themes together by attempting to (re) articulate the relevance of specific identities to political engagement and the general ideal of democracy in light of increased diversity. Specific themes to be considered include: race and democracy, the politics of recognition, and the ethics of identity. State, Social Movement, and Latin America’s “Left Turn”: A Critical Inquiry Dominic Corva Intermediate—Fall Starting with Venezuela in 1998, political parties described as “left-of-center” have captured a majority of the state apparatuses in South America and elsewhere in the region. What political characteristics do these countries have in common? How are they distinct from each other? And, most importantly, how are these commonalities and differences related to the emergence of new social movements in the region, such as the Zapatistas of Mexico, landless workers such as the MST in Brazil, and contemporary indigenous and women’s movements? Should this “move to the left” be defined in terms of state capture, or is state capture a response to such movements? And what does it have to do with economic globalization and its discontents? Laclau and Mouffe’s analysis of the relationship between “politics” and “the political,” in the context of transnational neoliberal hegemony, will inform this up-to-the-minute inquiry into one of the most significant political developments of our time. Special attention will be focused on Bolivian social and labor movements; the World Social Forum; factory expropriation by workers in Argentina; indigenous/ecological movements in Ecuador, Peru and Guatemala; and the petrodollar-financed “Bolivarian Revolution” in Venezuela and throughout the region. We will also seek to understand by way of comparison the lack of “regime change” in Colombia and Mexico, despite the widespread presence of similar political-economic circumstances and social movements. Previous coursework in Latin American studies is required. Collective Violence and PostConflict Reconciliation Elke Zuern Intermediate—Spring Are violence and violent struggle part of ordinary politics? The answer to this question has a profound impact upon the way that we view protest activity and the actions of states; it affects the way that we understand struggles for greater rights, struggles for power, and the resolution of those struggles. This course challenges the assumption that violence is simply the end of politics by investigating the uses of violence as an integral part of political processes from the repression of demonstrations to war and terrorism. We investigate central questions concerning the role of violence and its shortterm impact upon politics. What leads states to choose war or organizations to choose violent means to press their demands? Under what conditions will nonviolent movement tactics be most effective? Under what conditions do actors tend to move toward violence? Are states losing their relative monopoly on violence? These 98 Psychology questions are central not only to important theoretical and philosophical debates but, in the current political climate, increasingly to pressing policy discussions and crucial political and humanitarian choices. How we, both as individuals and as the United States, view violence and how we respond to it can have dramatic consequences for international relations, for states, and for their citizens around the world. We will also investigate a range of theoretical perspectives on the aftermath of collective violence from truth commissions and international criminal tribunals, to local courts and community-based justice mechanisms, and to the international politics of memory, forgetting, and apology. Prior coursework in the social sciences is required. Psychology Psychology—one of the largest programs at Sarah Lawrence College—offers students a broad array of courses at all levels, covering areas from experimental to social and developmental psychology. In small seminars, students read primary sources and explore issues through discussion and research, often making important connections between psychology and other fields. Using the College’s resources—including a new Child Study Lab and a computer psychology laboratory—students design and conduct experiments, analyze data, and post results. At the campus Early Childhood Center, students have the opportunity to explore firsthand the development of young children by carrying out fieldwork in classrooms for children ages two through six and/or by carrying out research in the Child Study Lab located in the same building. The lab has a room dedicated to conducting research, complete with one-way mirror and video and audio equipment. An adjacent room provides space and equipment for students to view and transcribe videotapes, as well as to analyze the outcome of their research projects. These facilities provide a range of opportunities for conference work in psychology. Fieldwork placements with organizations in New York City and Westchester County, as well as in the College’s own Early Childhood Center, expand the opportunities for students to combine their theoretical studies with direct experience beginning in their first year. Sarah Lawrence College prepares students well for graduate programs in psychology, education, or social work; some enter the College’s Art of Teaching program as undergraduates and receive a BA/ MSEd after only five years of study. First-Year Studies: Approaches to Child Development Charlotte L. Doyle FYS What are the worlds of children like? How can we come closer to understanding those worlds? In this class, we will use different modalities to cast light on them. One set of lenses is provided by psychological theory. Various psychologists (Piaget, Vygotsky, Freud, Erikson, Bowlby, Skinner, Bandura, Chess) have raised particular questions and suggested conceptual answers. We will read the theorists closely for their answers but also for their questions, asking which aspects of childhood each theory throws into focus. We will examine systematic studies carried out by developmental psychologists in areas such as the development of thinking, social understanding, language, gender and race awareness, friendship, and morality. We will take up the development of the brain and nervous system and consider the implications for important psychological questions. An important counterpoint to reading about children is direct observation. All students will do field work at the Early Childhood Center and make notes on what they observe. At times, we will draw on student observations to support or critique theoretical concepts. Fieldwork also will provide the basis for conference work. Ideally, conference projects will combine the interests of the student, some library reading, and some aspect of fieldwork observation. Among the projects students have designed in the past are exploring children’s friendships, observing what children say as they are painting, following a child as he is learning English as a second language, and writing a children’s book text. The world of childhood is magical. This course is for students who understand that the magic won’t disappear if we take a close, intellectually rigorous look. First-Year Studies: The Realities of Groups Gina Philogene FYS One of the most important aspects of our lives is the web of group affiliations in which we engage. Groups are an inescapable aspect of our THE CURRICULUM 99 existence. From the very beginning of one’s life, the idea of group pervades most dimensions of our existence—from family structures to nationstates. Not only is the individual defined on the basis of his or her group memberships, but he or she also learns most facets of socialization within the confinement of groups (e.g., school, committees, gangs, and work). The groups orient, guide, and shape individual perceptions, interpretations, and actions in the social world. While social psychology has maintained an individuo-centered approach to the analysis of groups, several classic studies have demonstrated that there is no individual who is not essentially and entirely a product of the various groups to which he or she belongs. This first-year seminar explores the defining characteristics of groups and the extent to which we are indeed shaped by our groups. We are concerned primarily with people’s thoughts and behavior as group members, both from within one’s own group as well as vis-à-vis other groups. To address this material, we will focus on three questions in particular: How and why do individuals come to form specific groups? What are the dynamics operating within the group, transforming it into a cohesive unit that is more than the sum of its parts? Which processes rule the interactions between groups, in particular the “us” versus “them” dimension? The first two questions will be the objects of discussion during the first semester. In the course of the second semester, we shall address the third question while also highlighting how the realities of groups get transformed in the cultural context of the Internet. The Talking Cure: The Restoration of Freedom Marvin Frankel Open, Lecture—Year Over the past century, the concepts of “wisdom” and “ignorance” have been replaced by “health” and “illness.” We consult psychologists and psychiatrists rather than philosophers in the hope of living “the good life.” Vanity has been replaced by status anxiety. We become cured rather than educated. The cure is presumably accomplished through a series of conversations between patient and doctor, but these are not ordinary conversations. Moreover, the relationship between psychologist and patient is vastly different from the typical relationship of physician and patient. Despite more than a century of practice, there remains little agreement among these practitioners of “health” regarding what the content of these conversations should be or the proper roles of doctor and patient. Consequently, the patient who sees a psychoanalyst has a very different kind of experience from a patient who seeks the help of a person-centered therapist or a behaviorally oriented psychotherapist. This course will examine the rules of conversation that govern various psychotherapeutic relationships and compare those rules with those that govern other kinds of relationships such as those between friends, teachers and students, and family members. If you’re phobic of self-criticism, this course is not for you. If you don’t know whether you are or aren’t, trust that this course is not for you. Finally, if you don’t think these last two sentences are funny, this course is most definitely not for you. Beyond the Matrix of Race: Psychologies of Race and Ethnicity Linwood J. Lewis Open, Lecture—Year Morpheus: The Matrix is everywhere. It is all around us....You can see it when you look out your window or when you turn on your television....It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth. Neo: What truth? Morpheus: That you are a slave, Neo....—The Matrix (1999) ….the Negro is a sort of seventh son, born with a veil and gifted with second-sight in this American world—a world which yields him no true self-consciousness but only lets him see himself through the revelation of the other world.—W.E.B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk (1903) The construct of race can be adaptive and healthy but can also lead to human misery through deception about our (hierarchical) relationship to each other. Racially organized hierarchies, such as The Matrix or DuBois’ veil metaphor, interfere with our ability to clearly perceive our relationships to each other as racial/ ethnic beings. In this lecture, we will examine the social construction of the matrix of race, social class, and ethnicity within a historical perspective and how these constructs implicitly and explicitly inform psychological inquiry. We 100 Psychology will examine the development of racial/ethnic identity in childhood and adolescence, as well as gendered and sexual aspects of race/ethnicity. In the spring, we will move toward a broader understanding of psychological aspects of prejudice, ethnic conflict, and immigration and how these themes are expressed within the United States and abroad. Structure and Change in Life Historical Accounts Sean Akerman Open—Year This course will introduce students to the theory and practice of narrative psychology by looking to a number of life historical accounts to consider questions about structure and change in life depiction. Through a close reading of psychoanalytic case studies, existential and phenomenological case studies, ethnographies written outside of one’s own culture, and contemporary study-of-lives work in psychology, students will inquire into the many ways to structure the life of another person in text. Course readings will also focus on autobiographical accounts, especially those dealing with major life change such as gender reassignment, madness, creativity, violence, illness, and the sublime. At stake are questions of power and ethics, the relationship between experience and writing, and the shifting genre of the life history on the boundary between the social sciences and the humanities. Beyond readings and class discussions, students will practice several forms of narrative writing and compose a life study, drawing upon the theoretical and methodological tools discussed in the course, to create a portrait of an individual of their choosing. Child and Adolescent Development Carl Barenboim Open—Year In this course, we will study the psychological growth of the child from birth through adolescence. In the process, we will read about some of the major theories that have shaped our thinking concerning children, including psychoanalytic (Freud and Erikson), behaviorist (Skinner), social learning (Bandura), and cognitive developmental (Piaget). A number of aspects of child development will be considered, including: the capabilities of the infant; the growth of language, thinking, and memory; various themes of parent-child relations, including attachment, separation, and different parenting styles; peer relations (friendships, the “rejected child”); sex role development; some of the “real world” challenges facing today's children and adolescents (e.g., “pushing” young children, divorce, and single-parent/blended families); and the modern study of childhood resilience in the face of difficult circumstances. Direct experience with children will be an integral part of this course, including fieldwork at the Early Childhood Center or other venues. Written observational diaries will be used as a way of integrating these direct experiences with seminar topics and conference readings. Home and Other Figments: Qualitative Approaches to Exile and Immigration Sean Akerman Open—Fall This course will introduce students to the major forms of qualitative research—discourse analysis, participatory action research, case studies, and grounded theory, among many others—by exploring psychological inquiries into the topics of exile and immigration. The unique experience of uprootedness provides an opportunity to ask questions about home, identity, and the transmission of the past and also provides the space to reflect upon the psychological methods used to understand such complexities. We will inquire into the relationships between epistemology and method, between language and experience, and between researchers and “participants.” Course readings will be drawn from classic and contemporary qualitative research on various diasporas, reflecting a critical eye toward how research may conceptualize, frame, and liberate exiles and immigrants. Rainbow Nation: Growing Up South African in the Apartheid and PostApartheid Eras Kim Ferguson Open—Fall “It was during those long and lonely years that my hunger for the freedom of my own people became a hunger for the freedom of all people, white and black. I knew as well as I knew THE CURRICULUM 101 anything that the oppressor must be liberated just as surely as the oppressed.”—Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom (1994) Poverty in America: Integrating Theory, Research, Policy & Practice “For it is the dawn that has come, as it has come for a thousand centuries, never failing. But when that dawn will come, of our emancipation, from the fear of bondage and the bondage of fear, why, that is a secret.”—Alan Paton, Cry, the Beloved Country (1948) Kim Ferguson How do the contexts in which we live influence our development? And how do these contexts influence the questions we ask about development and the ways in which we interpret our observations? In this course, we will answer these and other key questions about development through a discussion of human development in South Africa during and after the apartheid era from a cultural-ecological perspective. We will discuss how children’s cognitive, language, social and emotional development, as well as their mental and physical health, are influenced by the environment in which they live—which, during apartheid, was determined by the governmental classification of race. Key topics will include fear, racial stereotyping and discrimination, identity formation, crime and violence, and forgiveness and reconciliation. We will also take a broader view of these topics in discussing what human development in apartheid and postapartheid South Africa can tell us about human development in general. In thinking about human development in South African contexts, we will also discuss South African psychological research during and after apartheid, with a view toward understanding more broadly how psychological research can both influence and be influenced by public policy. How did researchers’ political affiliations, race, ethnicity, and culture affect the questions they asked, the measures they used, the ways in which they interpreted their data, and even whether and where they published their research findings? Readings will be drawn from both classic and contemporary research in psychology, human development, anthropology, sociology, and public health; memoirs and other first-hand accounts (including Nelson Mandela’s autobiography); and classic and contemporary South African literature. We will also view and analyze several classic and contemporary films, including The Power of One, Tsotsi, Catch a Fire, and Cry, the Beloved Country. Open—Fall One-fifth of all American children live in poverty. Why? And what can be done about it? In this course, we will take an ecological and psychobiological approach to poverty in America and its relationship to public policy, with a focus on child poverty. We will discuss how physical and psychosocial environments differ for poor and nonpoor children and their families in both rural and urban contexts, specifically rural Upstate New York and urban Yonkers. We will explore how these differences affect mental and physical health and motor, cognitive, language, and socioemotional development. We will also discuss individual and environmental protective factors that buffer some children from the adverse effects of poverty, as well as the impacts of public policy on poor children and their families—including recent welfare, health, and educational policy reforms in the United States. Topics will include environmental chaos, cumulative risk and its relationship to chronic stress, and unequal access to health-care services. This course will also serve as an introduction to the methodologies of community-based and participatory action research within the context of a service-learning course. Students will be expected to participate in a community partnership, addressing issues related to poverty, as part of their conference work. In addition, we will discuss the nature of these research and practice methodologies, and students will develop a proposal for community-based work in partnership with their community organization. A previous course in the social sciences is recommended. Language Development Barbara Schecter Open—Fall Learning language is a fundamental aspect of human experience that is reproduced from generation to generation all over the world. Yet, how similar are the processes of language development among people of different places and backgrounds? This course will explore the nature of language and its relation to thinking, meaning-making, and culture. We will begin with a look at the phenomena of first-language acquisition—naming, categorizing, conversation, 102 Psychology private speech, storytelling, metaphor—and how they constitute and express children’s experiences in their worlds. We will then consider topics such as language and gender, early literacy, second-language learning in the contexts of bilingualism, transitions from home to school, and immigration. Readings will be drawn from psychological studies, ethnographic accounts, and memoirs. Students will be encouraged to do fieldwork in settings where they can observe and record language, including in our Early Childhood Center, to investigate and document the processes that we will be studying or as the basis for conference projects. Life and Work: Biography, Autobiography, and Memoir in Psychology Elizabeth Johnston Open—Spring Psychology is a vast subject, with levels of analysis that vary from neural to cultural. This course is designed as a historical introduction to the expansive subject matter of the discipline through consideration of the life and work of a few famous, and sometimes infamous, psychologists. Some of the themes of the course are the nature of autobiographical memory and the selective representations of self that result, the enduring intellectual questions that hold psychologists’ attention, how the wider social and cultural context impacts on the reception of psychological work, and what makes psychological experiments compelling to a wider audience. The individual psychologists in whose lives and works we will immerse ourselves include the foundational pragmatist William James, the original depth psychologist Sigmund Freud, the romantic Russian Lev Vygotsky and his compatriot Alexander Luria, the true believers in behaviorism B. F. Skinner and John Watson, the charming Gestalt social psychologist Kurt Lewin, the efficient engineer of family life Lillian Gilbreth, the complex investigator of mother love Harry Harlow, and the progressive child psychologist Lois Barclay Murphy. Conference work will focus on the life and work of an individual psychologist. The Final Solution: Psychological Perspectives on Inhumanity Marvin Frankel Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year “I also want to speak very frankly about an extremely important subject. Among ourselves, we will discuss it openly; in public, however, we must never mention it…I mean the evacuation of Jews, the extermination of the Jewish people. This is something that is easy to talk about. ‘The Jewish people will be exterminated’ says every member of the party, ‘this is clear, this is in our program: the elimination, the extermination of the Jews: we will do this.’ And then they come to you—80 million good Germans—and each one has his ‘decent’ Jew. Naturally, all the rest are pigs, but this particular Jew is first-rate. Not one of those who talk this way has seen the bodies, not one has been on the spot. Most of you know what it is to see a pile of 100 or 500 or 1,000 bodies. To have stuck it out and, at the same time, barring exceptions caused by human weakness to have remained decent: this is what has made us tough…This is a glorious page in our history which never has and never will be written.”—Speech by SS Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler to a meeting of SS generals in Posen on October 4, 1943. What can psychology offer us by way of a perspective for understanding the Holocaust in particular and genocide in general? We will explore the following themes in some depth: What is the nature of the evolution of an outlook that required, in the name of moral goodness, the destruction of a culture and the violent murder of six million people? How did victims view their fate in a world that saw their extinction as a cleansing of humankind? What thoughts and values guided the few who overtly and covertly opposed the policy of genocide at great risk to their own lives? Has evolution created a “universal neural circuitry” that disposes human beings to perceive an opposition between “us and them”? If so, can education dissolve such oppositions? Under what kinds of social conditions does hatred yield pleasure? This course will not provide entirely satisfying answers. THE CURRICULUM 103 The Historical Evolution of Psychological Thought Gina Philogene Intermediate—Year This seminar aims at presenting the historical evolution of psychology as a distinct discipline, starting with Wundt in 1879 at Leipzig. Its short history notwithstanding, psychology has benefited from a long and rich past—tracing its roots, for the most part, in philosophy. As early as the fifth century BCE, Aristotle and other Greek scholars grappled with some of the same problems that concern psychologists today; namely, memory, learning, motivation, perception, dreams, and abnormal behavior. A discipline such as psychology does not develop in a vacuum. It is largely shaped by human personalities, institutions, and the societal context. Therefore, our critical analysis will focus on comprehending the cultural context from which ideas, concepts, and theories have emerged and evolved. This approach will provide a unifying framework for a thorough reexamination of the different systems of psychology in the United States. Social Development Carl Barenboim Intermediate—Fall Some of the most interesting and important pieces of knowledge that a child will ever learn are not taught in school. So it is with the child’s social world. Unlike “reading, writing, and ’rithmetic,” there is no “Social Thinking 101.” Further, by the time children reach school age, they have already spent years learning the “lessons of life” and affecting those around them. This course will explore the social world of the child from birth through adolescence, focusing on three main areas: parent-child relations, sexrole development, and moral development. Within parenting, we will examine such issues as different parenting “styles,” the long-term consequences of divorce, and the “hurrying” of children to achieve major milestones at everearlier ages. Within the topic of sex-role development, we will read about the role of powerful socialization forces, including the mass media, and the socialization pressures that children place on themselves and on each other. Within moral development, we will study the growth of moral emotions such as empathy, shame, and guilt and the role of gender and culture in shaping our sense of right and wrong. Conference work may include field placement at the Early Childhood Center or other venues, as interactions with real children will be encouraged. A prior course in psychology is required. Studying Men and Masculinities Linwood J. Lewis Intermediate—Fall Do men have an innate nature? How have changing social conditions affected the phenomenological experience of being a man? In this intermediate class, we will engage in a critical study of gender by examining the social construction of biological sex and the construction of categories/conceptions of “man” and “masculinity.” An interdisciplinary approach will inform our examination. We will read from anthropology, critical race theory, feminist theory, masculinity studies, psychology, public health, queer theory, and sexuality studies to create a contextualized understanding of men and masculinity. Major topic areas will include biological and social perspectives on males and gender; intersectionality; ethnic identities and masculinities; sexual orientation/desire and its relation to gender identity. Students with a background in psychology or other social sciences or LBGT studies will be given preference. Bullies and Their Victims: Social and Physical Aggression in Childhood and Adolescence Carl Barenboim Intermediate—Spring It can be the bane of our existence in childhood: the bully who simply will not leave us alone. Until fairly recently, the image that came to mind—in both the popular imagination and the world of psychological study—was that of a physically imposing and physically aggressive boy, someone who found the littlest, most defenseless boy to pick on. In recent years, however, that image has begun to change. Now we realize that the ability to harm a person’s social relationships and social “standing”—usually through the manipulation of others—can be every bit as devastating to the victim. And in this new world of social aggression, girls’ expertise has come to the fore. In this course, we will study the nature of bullies and victims in both the physical and social sense and the possible long-term consequences of such bullying for both the perpetrator and the picked-on. We will explore 104 Psychology recent evidence that bullying and victimization begin even in the preschool years, far earlier than previously thought; and we will examine some modern approaches used to break this vicious cycle such as peer programs and interpersonal problem solving. Conference work may include field placement at the Early Childhood Center or other venues, as interactions with real children will be encouraged. Previous course work in psychology is required. Play: Psychological and Anthropological Perspectives Robert R. Desjarlais, Barbara Schecter Intermediate—Spring “For many years, the conviction has grown upon me that civilization arises and unfolds in and as play”—Huizinga, Homo Ludens Play is central to human experience—but what does it mean to play, and to what extent is play intrinsic to the human condition? In this course, we will consider play to be a central aspect of all imaginative life. We will look closely at the amazing complexity of human playworlds, both adult and child, and at the many aspects of our experiences through play. We will consider various domains of cultural life, such as ritual, theatre, improvisation, and storytelling—including the developmental origins in children of these modes of expression. Other topics will include therapeutic uses of play, the role of play in learning, play in virtual worlds, and the lifeworlds of competitive chess players. Throughout these inquiries, we will adopt an interdisciplinary perspective—charting the psychological, cultural, and social underpinnings of this imaginative realm. Students will be asked to choose a context in which to observe and/or participate in play with adults or children (such as at our Early Childhood Center or in another setting). Previous course work in psychology or anthropology is required. Language Research Seminar Kim Ferguson Intermediate—Spring “The baby, assailed by eye, ear, nose, skin, and entrails at once, feels it all as one great blooming, buzzing confusion.” —William James (1890) The acquisition of our first language is “doubtless the greatest intellectual feat any of us is ever required to perform” (Bloomfield), yet this feat was essentially accomplished by the time we were three years old—and we likely have no memory of it. Furthermore, human language fundamentally influences human ecology, culture, and evolution. Thus, many contemporary researchers in the interdisciplinary field of psycholinguistics argue that our language abilities are a large part of what makes us uniquely human. Are we in fact the only species with true language? And how would we begin to answer this question? In this course, we will attempt to answer that and other key questions in the broad field of language development both through our discussions of current and contemporary research and theory and through the development of new research in this field. Current “hot” research topics include whether bilingual children have better control over what they pay attention to than monolingual children (attention and language), whether language influences thought, whether language acquisition is biologically programmed, and why children learn language better from an adult in-person than from the same adult on television. Over the course of the semester, you will have the opportunity to design an independent research project that investigates one of these key questions or another question of interest to you in the broad area of language development. In doing this, you will learn how to outline the rationale for a research project, develop an effective research methodology, collect data, analyze the data, interpret your results, and communicate your findings in a persuasive, yet objective, manner. This course thus serves as an introduction to research methods, with a specific focus on research methods in psycholinguistics, through your own research. Topics will include experimental research design, case studies, observational techniques, survey development, and hypothesis testing. To help you design and implement your own research, we will discuss your conference research projects in class throughout the semester; you will obtain feedback from your colleagues on your questions, methods, analyses of the data, and interpretation of the results. This project could include fieldwork at the Early Childhood Center or in another setting with children. Previous course work in psychology or permission of the instructor is required. THE CURRICULUM 105 Art & Visual Perception Elizabeth Johnston Intermediate—Spring “Seeing comes before words. The child looks and recognizes before it can speak.”—John Berger Psychologists have long been interested in measuring and explaining the phenomena of visual perception. In this course, we will study and reproduce some of the experimental investigations of seeing and the theoretical positions that they support. Our journey will begin with the myriad of visual illusions that have intrigued psychologists and physiologists since the late 19th century. We will engage in a hands-on exploration of these visual illusions and create our own versions of eye-and-brain tricking images. We will also identify their use in works of visual art from a range of periods. The next stop on our psychological travels will be the apparent motion effects that captured the attention of Gestalt psychologists. We will explore the connections between the distinctive theoretical approach of Gestalt psychology and the contemporaneous Bauhaus movement in art, design, and architecture. We will then move on to a consideration of the representation of visual space: In the company of contemporary psychologist Michael Morgan, we will ask how the three-dimensional world is represented in “the space between our ears.” In this section of the course, we will explore the artistic uses of three-dimensional stereoscopic and kinetic images. The spatial exploration section will give us the opportunity to study the artistic development and use of perspective in twodimensional images. Throughout our visual journey, we will seek connections between perceptual phenomena and what is known about the brain processing of visual information. This is a course for people who enjoy reflecting on why we see things as we do. It should hold particular interest for students of film and the visual arts who are curious about scientific explanations of the phenomena that they explore in their art. Children’s Health in a Multicultural Context Linwood J. Lewis Intermediate—Spring This course offers, within a cultural context, an overview of theoretical and research issues in the psychological study of health and illness in children. We will examine theoretical perspectives in the psychology of health, health cognition, illness prevention, stress, and coping with illness and highlight research, methods, and applied issues. This class is appropriate for those interested in a variety of health careers, including public health. Conference work can range from empirical research to bibliographic research in this area. A background in social sciences or education is recommended. Personality Development Jan Drucker Advanced—Fall A century ago, Sigmund Freud postulated a complex theory of the development of the person. While some aspects of his theory have come into question, many of the basic principles of psychoanalytic theory have become part of our common culture and worldview. This course will explore developmental and clinical concepts about how personality comes to be through reading and discussion of the work of key contributors to psychoanalytic developmental theory since Freud. We will trace the evolution of what Pine has called the “four psychologies of psychoanalysis”—drive, ego, object, and selfpsychologies—and consider the issues they raise about children’s development into individuals with unique personalities within broad, shared developmental patterns in a given culture. Readings will include the work of Anna Freud, Erik Erikson, Margaret Mahler, Daniel Stern, Steven Mitchell, Nancy Chodorow, and George Vaillant. Throughout the semester, we will return to fundamental themes such as the complex interaction of nature and nurture, the unanswered questions about the development of personal style, and the cultural dimensions of personality development. Fieldwork at the Early Childhood Center or other appropriate setting is required, although conference projects may center on aspects of that experience or not, depending on the individual student’s interest. For graduate students and for seniors with permission of the instructor. Theories of Development Barbara Schecter Advanced—Fall There’s nothing so practical as a good theory,” suggested Kurt Lewin almost 100 years ago. Since then, the competing theoretical models of Freud, Skinner, Piaget, Vygotsky, and others have shaped the field of developmental psychology and have been used by parents and educators to determine child-care practice and education. In 106 Public Policy this course, we will study the classic theories—psychoanalytic, behaviorist, and cognitive-developmental—as they were originally formulated and in light of subsequent critiques and revisions. We will also consider new directions in theorizing development, which respond to recent challenges from gender, cultural, and poststructuralist criticism. Questions we will consider include: Are there patterns in our emotional, thinking, or social lives that can be seen as universal, or are these always culturespecific? Can life experiences be conceptualized in a series of stages? How else can we understand change over time? We will use theoretical perspectives as lenses through which to view different aspects of experience—the origins of wishes and desires, early parent-child attachments, intersubjectivity in the emergence of self, symbolic and imaginative thinking, problem solving. For conference work, students will be encouraged to do fieldwork at the Early Childhood Center or in another setting with children, as one goal of the course is to bridge theory and practice. Advanced, for graduate students and seniors with permission of the instructor. Pathways of Development: Psychopathology and Other Challenges to the Developmental Process Jan Drucker Advanced—Spring This course addresses the multiple factors that play a role in shaping a child’s development, particularly as they may result in what we think of as psychopathology. Starting with a consideration of what the terms “normality” and “pathology” may refer to in our culture, we will read about and discuss a variety of situations that illustrate different interactions of inborn, environmental, and experiential influences on developing lives. For example, we will read theory and case material addressing congenital conditions such as deafness and life events such as acute trauma and abuse, as well as the range of less clear-cut circumstances and complex interactions of variables that have an impact on growth and adaptation in childhood and adolescence. In discussing readings drawn from clinical and developmental psychology, memoir, and research studies, we will examine a number of the current conversations and controversies about assessment, diagnosis/labeling, early intervention, use of psychoactive medications, and treatment modalities. Students will be required to engage in fieldwork at the Early Childhood Center or elsewhere and may choose whether to focus conference projects on aspects of that experience. For graduate students and seniors by permission of the instructor. Public Policy Sarah Lawrence College’s Public Policy program addresses the most pressing public policy issues of our time, including promoting peace, protecting the environment, providing education and health services, and safeguarding human and workers’ rights. Supported by the College’s Office of Community Partnerships, students partner with unions, community organizations, and legal groups in the New York City area as a required element of their course work, gaining direct experience that they can relate to theoretical issues. Students also participate in international fieldwork, including a labor research exchange in Cuba, a health-care worker conference in the Dominican Republic, a community organizing project to help establish a medical clinic for residents of the impoverished community of Lebrón in the Dominican Republic, and a study trip to the US/Mexico border area of El Paso/ Juarez. This combination of study and direct experience exposes students to various approaches to problems and builds an enduring commitment to activism in many forms. From the Plantation to the Prison: Criminal Justice Policies Rima Vesely-Flad Open—Fall Present-day criminal justice policies function on multiple levels in American society: as manifestations of theological and philosophical perspectives on race and punishment, as methods to consolidate political power, as engines of economic development in rural communities, and as intimidating forces in urban communities that perpetuate poverty and social isolation. The interlocking spheres of race, impoverishment, incarceration, and political representation have resulted in the largest prison system in the world. The United States, with less than five percent of the world’s population, now contains 25 percent of the world’s prison population. Sociologists, criminologists, philosophers, and community activists point to this phenomenon as indicative THE CURRICULUM 107 of a pervasive system stretching back to slavery and post-Civil War crime policies. This course will examine the historical antecedent of the present-day prison system and the multiple dimensions in which criminal justice policies impact particular communities today. The first half of the semester will focus on philosophies of punishment, theologies of race, and 19th-century economies of plantations, jails, and prisons. Over the second half of the semester, we will examine present-day patterns of punishment, specifically addressing the school-to-prison pipeline, juvenile life without parole, labor exploitation, and successful activist challenges to the pervasiveness of exploiting criminalized persons. Readings will primarily include sociological and politicalscience texts, as well as policy papers and personal stories. As an alternative to regular conference papers, students will participate in service-learning placements in court, jail, or prison contexts with organizations advocating with and on behalf of individuals with criminal convictions. The Offensive Against Civil Rights: Crime Policy and Politics Rima Vesely-Flad Open—Spring More than 2.3 million adults in the United States fill local jails, state correctional facilities, and federal prisons; nearly five million more are either on probation or on parole. The vast majority of people with felony convictions are denied the right to participate in the political process; they are furthermore barred from certain types of employment, designated housing units, and educational institutions. In short, despite the touted successes of the Civil Rights Movement, large swaths of US-born individuals lack the opportunity to fully participate in society. Legislation curtailing civil rights gains began to be enacted shortly after the passage of civil rights bills. Beginning in the early 1970s, legislators at the state and federal levels proposed harsh crime laws that, although seemingly race-neutral, disproportionately impacted impoverished African Americans and Latinos. As a consequence, policymakers have insidiously reversed the inclusion fought for by civil rights activists. This course will examine the period from the 1950s to the present day through the lens of crime policy and prison building. The first part of the course will focus on philosophical and historical literature on punishment, Jim Crow segregation, and the political offensive against civil rights activists, black nationalists, and antiVietnam War demonstrators. We will thereafter investigate the passage of punitive crime policies at state and federal levels, with close attention to political elections and the role of the media, the war on drugs, “supermax” facilities, zero-tolerance policing, and capital punishment. We will conclude with an analysis of barriers to civil rights in the areas of employment and disenfranchisement. Readings will primarily include sociological and political-science texts, as well as policy papers and personal stories. As an alternative to regular conference papers, students will participate in service-learning placements in court, jail, or prison contexts with organizations advocating with and on behalf of individuals with criminal convictions. Religion Religious traditions identify themselves with and draw sustenance from the texts that they hold sacred. In Sarah Lawrence College religion courses, these texts command and hold our attention. Whether studying Buddhism, early Christianity, or the origins of Islam, as students explore the sacred text of a particular religion, they gain insight into the social and historical context of its creation. Using critical, hermeneutical, and intellectual historical approaches, they enter into the writings in such depth as to touch what might be the foundation of that religion. In addition, work with contemporary texts (such as those by religious activists on the Internet) gives students insight into what most moves and motivates religious groups today. The College’s religion courses provide an important complement to courses in Asian studies and history. First-Year Studies: The Buddhist Philosophy of Emptiness T. Griffith Foulk FYS The concept of a “thing”—a distinct entity that exists in and of itself whether or not human beings attach a name to it—is nothing but a useful fiction. In the final analysis, there are no such things as “things.” This, in a nutshell, is the startling proposition advanced by the Buddhist doctrine of sunyata or “emptiness,” as the 108 Religion Sanskrit term is usually translated. Often misconstrued by critics as a form of nihilism (“nothing exists”), idealism (“it is all in the mind”), or skepticism (“we cannot know anything with certainty”), the emptiness doctrine is better interpreted as a radical critique of the fundamental conceptual categories that we habitually use to talk about and make sense of the world. This course has several specific aims. The first is to impart a clear, accurate understanding of the emptiness doctrine, as it developed in the context of Buddhist intellectual history and found expression in various genres of classical Buddhist literature. The second is to engage in serious criticism and debate concerning the “truth” of the doctrine: Is it merely an article of Buddhist faith, or does it also stand up to the standards of logical consistency and empirical verification that have been established in Western traditions of philosophy and science? The third aim of the course is to explore ways in which the emptiness doctrine, if taken seriously as a critique of the mechanisms and inherent limitations of human knowledge, might impact a variety of contemporary academic disciplines. More generally, the course is designed to help first-year students gain the kind of advanced analytical, research, and writing skills that will serve them well in whatever areas of academic study they may pursue in the future. Both in class and in conference work, students will be encouraged to apply the Buddhist doctrine of emptiness in creative ways to whatever fields in the humanities, social sciences, or sciences that interest them. Islam and the Muslim World Kristin Zahra Sands Open, Lecture—Year Within the maelstrom of current events, caricatures and apologetics too often supply shortcuts for understanding a world largely unknown to Americans—obscuring rather than informing people of the richness and variety of the traditions of Islam and Muslim cultures. This course will provide an introduction to these rich traditions by addressing the early history of Islam, its foundational texts, and the development of Sunni, Shi‘i and Sufi thought. In addition to studying the formative and classical periods of Islam, primarily located in the Middle East, we will look to the ways in which Islam spread throughout the world to regions such as subSaharan Africa, Southeast Asia, China, Europe, and the United States. Muslims in the Middle East now represent a mere 20% of Muslims worldwide; from jihadis to mystics to hip-hop artists, Muslims are not easily categorized. To address how being a Muslim is understood in specific contexts, we will study not only religious texts but also how Islam and Muslim practices are represented in autobiographies, fiction writing, films, music, and art. Buddhist Art and Architecture T. Griffith Foulk Open—Year From its beginnings as a loose-knit group of wandering ascetics in ancient India, Buddhism developed into a monastic religion that diversified and spread across Asia—producing great buildings and monuments of wood and stone and furnishing them with a rich array of paintings and sculptures. This course focuses on the Buddhist art and architecture of South, Central, and East Asia, seeking to understand and interpret it within the specific social, institutional, mythical, and ritual contexts in which it was produced and used. Thus, for example, when examining the ground plans and architectural features of Buddhist monasteries in different parts of Asia, we will also study the internal organization and operation of those institutions—reading the rules of individual and group discipline that regulated them and learning about the various religious practices and ceremonial observances that took place in them. The aim is to explore the complex connections that exist between architectural forms and social and religious functions and meanings. By the same token, when looking at works of Buddhist art, we will not only concern ourselves with matters of iconography, style, provenance, and dating but will also learn about the various iconic and non-iconic functions that Buddhist art has had in a wide range of cultic and social settings and will study the religious doctrines, ideology, mythology, and folklore that has informed its production and use at different times and places. Ancient Israelite Epic Cameron C. Afzal Open—Fall The Hebrew Bible has been called “The Great Code” of Western culture. At the foundation of this great work are the Five Books of Moses, the Torah. Its stories permeate our literature, our art—indeed, our sense of identity. Its ideas inform THE CURRICULUM 109 our laws and have given birth to our structure of state, our social movements, and our revolutions. The narrative itself embodies a great epic of liberation. What are these books? Who wrote them? Who preserved them? In order to answer these questions, we will closely read Torah itself and do so in the light of its ancient Near Eastern context. As such, we will also read the Babylonian creation story, as well as the Epic of Gilgamesh. Readings in Early Christianity: The Synoptic Gospels Cameron C. Afzal Open—Fall There is perhaps no one who has not heard the name of a seemingly obscure carpenter’s son executed by the Romans around the year 33 CE. Why? His friends and followers preserved the memory of his life and teaching—orally at first and then, after the destruction of the Jewish Temple in 70 CE, in written records that we have today in the New Testament. This class will focus on the Synoptic Gospels: Matthew, Mark, and Luke. Why were they written, what do they have to say, and how were they intended to be read? We will immerse ourselves in the religion of the Holy Land—that is, the various forms of Judaism—and the role of the dominant world empire of Rome. Our study will consist mainly of primary texts in the New Testament; but we will also have recourse to some Rabbinic materials, as well as the Dead Sea Scrolls. Jewish Life in Eastern Europe Glenn Dynner Open—Fall The Jews of Eastern Europe, constituting more than two-thirds of the world’s Jewish population by the end of the 18th century, created a veritable Jewish renaissance. The extensive autonomy granted them during the Middle Ages enabled the development of a flourishing religious society, with the Torah as its constitution. And although secularization began to make inroads by the second half of the 19th century, it often resulted in a potent synthesis of traditional and secular culture. This course poses a challenge to the reduction of Eastern European Jewry to an insular, persecuted minority popularized by plays such as Fiddler on the Roof. After exploring different facets of the vital rabbinical culture, we follow the rise of movements that clashed with and, at times, displaced normative Jewish practice. Such challenges included the hedonistic messianic movement of Jacob Frank, the popular mystical movement known as Hasidism, the secularoriented Jewish enlightenment (Haskalah), modern political ideologies such as Zionism and Jewish Socialism, and the emergence of a rich modern literature in Yiddish and Hebrew. Near the end of the course, we follow the emigration of more than two million Eastern European Jews to America following the pogroms of 1881-2 and attempt to confront the annihilation of more than four million Eastern European Jews during the Holocaust. Throughout, an effort will be made to appreciate the various ways that Jewish life was shaped by its non-Jewish Eastern European environment. The Holocaust Glenn Dynner Open—Spring The Holocaust raises fundamental questions about the nature of our civilization. How was it that a policy of genocide could be initiated and carried out in one of the most advanced and sophisticated countries of Europe? To what extent did residents of the countries in which mass murder occurred, especially in Eastern Europe, facilitate or obstruct this ghastly project? And finally, what were the various reactions of the various victims of this lethal assault by one of the great powers of Europe? In this course, we will attempt to explain how these events unfolded, beginning with the evolution of anti-Semitic ideology and violence. At the same time, we will attempt to go beyond the “mind of the Nazi” and confront the perspectives of victims and bystanders. How victims chose to live out their last years and respond to the impending catastrophe (through diary writing, poetry, mysticism, violence, hiding, etc.) is reflected in memoirs, literature, and sermons. The crucial but neglected phenomenon of bystanders—non-Jews who stood by while their neighbors were methodically annihilated—has been the subject of several important recent studies. We shall inevitably be compelled to make moral judgments, but these will be of value only if they are informed by a fuller understanding of the perspectives of various actors in this dark chapter of European history. 110 Russian Jewish Mysticism From Antiquity to the Present Glenn Dynner Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year This course traces the history of Jewish mysticism from late antiquity through modernity. After an overview of early Jewish mysticism from the biblical and rabbinic periods, as well as the mystical-based asceticism of medieval German pietists, we will concentrate on the medieval flowering of the erotically charged “Kabbalah” of Spain and Southern France—covering such topics as: God, evil, demonology, sin, death, sexuality, prayer, and magic. We will particularly focus on the biblical exegesis of The Zohar, the most central text of Jewish mysticism that, traditionally, one was forbidden to study until the age of 40. After tracing the further development of Kabbalah in 16th-century Safed (Land of Israel), we will study the mass eruption of the Kabbalah-based Messianic movement, which centered around Shabbetai Tzevi. We then begin our study of Hasidism, the movement of popular mysticism founded on the teachings the Ba’al Shem Tov (The Besht) in 18th-century Eastern Europe, which was forged into a mass movement by charismatic miracle workers called “Tzaddikim.” We will consider the vigorous opposition to Hasidism both by traditionalists and by proponents of the rationalistic, Enlightenment-based movement of social reform known as “maskilim.” We then consider Hasidism’s war against modernity, its unique response to the Holocaust, and its continued flourishing in tight-knit communities from Brooklyn to Jerusalem. Finally, we examine the revival of Kabbalah and Hasidism by modern, secularized Jews (and non-Jews) in search of spirituality and authenticity. Throughout this course, we will strive to appreciate the theoretical, literary, and experiential aspects of Jewish mysticism within its various historical contexts. Muslim Literature, Film, and Art Kristin Zahra Sands Intermediate—Year In current global circumstances, Islam is all too frequently represented solely in terms of political and militant ideologies. For those who wish to dig deeper, there are the rich and varied traditions of classical religious scholarship and jurisprudence. But to look at Islam through these lenses alone is to miss alternate sensibilities that are just as important in providing the material from which many Muslims construct their identities. In this course, we will be studying some of the distinctive themes and aesthetic traditions associated with Muslim cultures. When the contemporary Syrian poet Adonis speaks of a “Sufi aesthetic,” what does he mean? What is the dynamic underlying the text/image art movement named hurufiyya, after the medieval Islamic study of the occult properties of letters? In what ways do the religious elements of controversial novels such as Salman Rushdie’s Satanic Verses and Naguib Mafouz’s Children of the Alley—engage with long-standing traditions of story-telling? How is a theme such as the veil addressed in works that take into account Western responses as much as other symbolic histories? How is a medium such as film used to portray the role of religion in motivating or responding to acts of violence? Although most of the material that we will be studying will be from the contemporary period, premodern works will be used to illustrate the ways in which Muslim artistic and literary works have historically adapted themes, genre, and media from pre-Islamic and other cultures. Russian The goal of the Russian language classes at Sarah Lawrence College is to teach students to speak, comprehend, read, and write a fascinating language with a logic very different from that of English. Oral proficiency is the focus of the firstyear class, culminating in end-of-semester projects where students write and film skits in small groups. In the second-year course, reading is also emphasized—and we include short stories and poetry, as well as texts paired with films. Topics, texts, and authors covered in the advanced class vary widely, and student input is strongly encouraged; past syllabi have included works by authors such as Pushkin, Gogol, Tolstoy, Tsvetaeva, Bulgakov, and Pelevin, as well as films. Student work in class and conference is also supplemented by weekly meetings with the language assistant and by a variety of extracurricular activities, including a weekly Russian table, Russian opera at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City, and excursions to Brighton Beach, Brooklyn’s “Little Odessa.” Students of Russian are strongly encouraged to spend a semester or, ideally, a year abroad. Sarah Lawrence students regularly attend a THE CURRICULUM 111 variety of programs, including: Middlebury College’s School in Russia, with sites in Moscow, Irkutsk, and Yaroslavl; Bard College’s program at the Smolny Institute in St. Petersburg; the Moscow Art Theater School Semester through Connecticut College; ACTR in Moscow, St. Petersburg, or Vladimir; and CIEE. The Russian department also offers courses taught in translation as part of the literature curriculum. Recent literature courses include: The Literatures of Russian and African American Soul: Pushkin and Blackness, Serfs and Slaves, Black Americans and Red Russia; Dostoevsky and the West; The 19th-Century Russian Novel; and Intertextuality in the 20th-Century Russian Novel. Students of Russian also pursue their interest in Russia and Eastern Europe more generally in many other areas of the College. Conference work always may be directed toward the student’s field of interest; courses focusing either entirely or in part on Russia and/or Eastern Europe are regularly offered in a number of disciplines, including history, film history, dance history, and philosophy. Beginning Russian Melissa Frazier Open—Year At the end of this course, students will know the fundamentals of Russian grammar and will be able to use them to read, write, and, most especially, speak Russian on an elementary level. Successful language learning involves both creativity and a certain amount of rote learning; memorization gives the student the basis to then extrapolate, improvise, and have fun with the language. This course will lay equal emphasis on both. Our four hours of class each week will be spent actively using what we know in pair and group activities, dialogues, discussions, etc. Twice-weekly written homework, serving both to reinforce old and to introduce new material, will be required. At the end of each semester, we will formalize the principle of rigorous but creative communication that underlies all of our work through small-group video projects. Students are required to attend weekly conversation classes with the Russian assistant; attendance at Russian table is strongly encouraged. Intermediate Russian Melissa Frazier, Natalia Dizenko Intermediate—Year At the end of this course, students should feel that they have a fairly sophisticated grasp of Russian and the ability to communicate in Russian in any situation. After the first year of studying the language, students have learned the bulk of Russian grammar; this course will emphasize grammar review, vocabulary accumulation, and regular oral practice. Class time will center on the spoken language, and students will be expected to participate actively in discussions based on new vocabulary. Regular written homework will be required, along with weekly conversation classes with the Russian assistant; attendance at Russian table is strongly encouraged. Conference work will focus on the written language, and students will be asked to read short texts by the author(s) of their choice with the aim of appreciating a very different culture and/or literature while learning to read independently, accurately, and with as little recourse to the dictionary as possible. For students with one year of college Russian or the equivalent. This course will be taught by Ms. Frazier in the fall and by Ms. Dizenko in the spring. Advanced Russian: Ivan Vasil’evich Natalia Dizenko Advanced, Small seminar—Fall This course is intended for students who are beyond the second-year level. While we will continue some work with a textbook, our aim will be to move away from grammar and into active reading, writing, watching, and speaking in Russian. A large part of our course will center on reading Mikhail Bulgakov’s 1936 play, Ivan Vasil’evich, and watching the 1973 film adaptation, Ivan Vasil’evich meniaet professiiu; both play and film tell the story of a somewhat hapless scientist who succeeds in inventing a time machine. Other texts will include historical accounts, Sergei Eisenstein’s film Ivan the Terrible, Mikhail Zoshchenko’s short story Krizis, various films portraying the 1920s and the 1960s/70s, and a short excerpt from Ivan Voinovich’s Ivankiada. Over the course of the semester, we will learn a number of popular and folk songs, along with the basics of Russian word morphology. Weekly conversation classes with the Russian assistant will be required, and attendance at Russian table is strongly encouraged. For students with two years of college Russian or the equivalent. 112 Science and Mathematics Science and Mathematics Science is a dynamic process by which we seek to improve our understanding of ourselves and the world around us. We use the language and methods of science and mathematics on a daily basis. Science and mathematics nurture a special kind of creativity by enhancing our abilities to ask concise, meaningful questions and to design strategies to answer those questions. Such approaches teach us to think and work in new ways and to uncover and evaluate facts and place them in the context of modern society and everyday life. The division of Science and Mathematics offers classes in a variety of disciplines, including biology, chemistry, computer science, mathematics, and physics. Studies in each of these disciplines are offered at all levels, ranging from open courses to advanced seminars and individual laboratory research projects. Qualified students have the option of enrolling in a Science Third Program. In the Science Third, students register for the seminar component of two science/ mathematics courses simultaneously, comprising one-third of their curriculum. Because Science Third students will still be able to take two additional nonscience courses each semester, this option is an opportunity for well-prepared or advanced students to study multiple science courses without limiting their options in other disciplines. For more details and information, please contact the faculty group. Pre-Health Program Students interested in pursuing further studies in medicine or other health-related fields may take advantage of the Pre-Health program, which prepares students academically for medical school and assists in meeting the demands of admission to individual medical or graduate programs. Students supplement required courses in biology, chemistry, and physics with additional courses offered by the division as part of their preparation for the MCATs and postgraduate education. Conference work provides students with additional opportunities to organize original research projects, pursue independent learning, and critically examine professional literature—skills fundamental to future success in medical and graduate schools. Students in the program have significant contact with the prehealth adviser, as well as with other faculty members in the division, through conferences, course work, and independent research. Therefore, faculty members with a thorough and personal knowledge of the individual student write letters of recommendation. The pre-health adviser and faculty members also serve as resources for information regarding application procedures, research and volunteer opportunities within the community, structuring of class work, MCAT preparation, and practice interviews. See separate entries for specific course descriptions in Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Mathematics, and Physics. Science, Technology, and Society Science, technology, and society (STS) is a broad, cross-disciplinary field that aims to understand and influence how society shapes science and technology and how, in turn, science and technology shape society and the environment. At Sarah Lawrence College, STS approaches science in the context of the human experience and aims to focus not only on what scientists do but on their role in our society and in the history of our culture. Our students come from all walks of life—artists, musicians, those interested in politics and/or the environment, and pre-health—and our seminars function as places for the genuine interdisciplinary exchange of ideas. Whenever possible (especially in service-learning classes, where students do on-site placement), seminars focus on real-world problems that have science components. The goal of STS is to encourage students to investigate, analyze, and apply concepts and processes from the social sciences to enrich and expand their understanding of science and its role in the contemporary world—as well as in their own lives. Science, Technology, and Environmental Politics Astrid Schrader Open—Spring This course introduces students to methodologies and approaches in Science and Technology Studies as they pertain to the analysis of environmental problems. How do science, technology, and society interact to determine what counts as an environmental problem? How are possible responses to environmental crises THE CURRICULUM 113 shaped by technological development and assumptions about what counts as "nature"? We will study, for example, debates around climate change, genetically modified foods, biodiversity, invasive species, and indoor pollution and look at responses to environmental disasters such as Chernobyl, Bhopal, Hurricane Katrina, and the recent oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Questions include: How do regulatory institutions deal with uncertainties in science? Who is an expert and who contributes to environmental knowledge production? How do scientists measure biodiversity, and what counts as a species? What assumptions about the relationship between humans and the rest of nature motivate the genetic engineering of environmentally friendly pigs? How is environmental risk regulated in different countries? What is the relationship between science and politics in various approaches to environmental problems? We will compare debates over environmental issues as they are depicted in the popular media to how science studies scholars approach the same issues. Students will learn how attention to the details of scientific practices can shift questions about the meaning of scientific evidence and social responsibility and how interdisciplinary approaches to controversies over environmental problems may complicate the debates. Social Science The Social Science program is designed to enrich and systematize the understanding we have of our own experiences in relation to broader societal forces. The social sciences begin from the premise that no matter how much we might wish to, we can never detach ourselves entirely from the social institutions and processes that are the context for our individual thoughts and actions. Thus, the purpose of the Social Science curriculum is to contribute to our empowerment by helping us understand the many ways in which people’s lives—values, goals, relationships, and beliefs—are affected by and have an impact on the social world. Most important, we can learn to contextualize our experiences in relation to those of others whose personal, social, and cultural circumstances differ from our own. An ability to think critically about our social environment can enhance our experience of whatever else we may choose to study or do. In relation to the humanities the social sciences offer empirical and theoretical perspectives that complement those of history, philosophy, and religion. In relation to literature and the creative arts they provide a context for a fuller understanding of the works we study and create. In relation to the natural sciences they help us to analyze the economic, social, and political implications of modern technological advances and our complex interaction with the physical and biological environment. Finally, the social sciences disciplines give us access to the information and analytical tools we must have in order to evaluate and formulate alternative public policies and actively contribute to intellectual and public life. For full descriptions, see Anthropology; Economics; Environmental Studies; Politics; Public Policy; Science, Technology, and Society; and Sociology. Sociology Class, power, and inequality; law and society (including drugs, crime and “deviance”); race, ethnicity, and gender issues; and ways of seeing—these are among the topics addressed by Sarah Lawrence students and professors in sociology courses. Increasingly, social issues need to be and are examined in relationship to developments in global politics and economics. Students investigate the ways in which social structures and institutions affect individual experience and shape competing definitions of social situations, issues, and identities. Courses tend to emphasize the relationship between the qualitative and the quantitative, between theoretical and applied practice, and the complexities of social relations rather than relying on simplistic interpretations, while encouraging student research in diverse areas. Through reading, writing, and discussion, students are encouraged to develop a multidimensional and nuanced understanding of social forces. Many students in sociology have enriched their theoretical and empirical work through linking it thematically with study in other disciplines—and through fieldwork. The Sociological Imagination Patrisia Macías Open—Year C. Wright Mills wrote that the sociological imagination promises an understanding of “the interplay of [the individual] and society, of biography and history, of self and world.” It is a 114 Sociology way of thinking that enables us to make connections between our individual experiences and larger social realities located within particular periods in history. In this class, you will learn to develop your sociological imagination through an exploration of how society works, paying particular attention to the social, economic, and political forces that shape who we are and how we think. We will look closely at social, political, cultural, and economic transformations in contemporary US society from the postwar era to the present. Beginning with the 1950s, what were the major social forces operating within each decade? What was it like for women, workers, immigrants—in other words, ordinary people—living in their historical period? How did sociologists interpret such realities? How was their thinking influenced by the period and the society in which they lived? We will journey through the decades, covering major social issues for each period ranging from gender and family, race and social movements, labor and work to globalization and migration. To this end, students will read texts in sociology, anthropology, and history. By the end of the course, students should be able to identify how external social forces impact individual life chances, to question things regarded as natural or commonsense, and to draw connections between intimate experiences and larger social realities. Both Public and Private: The Social Construction of Family Life Shahnaz Rouse Open—Fall Many of us take for granted the dichotomy between public and private life. The former is frequently understood as abstract, distant, and a key site of power; the latter, as the site of warmth, intimacy, and emotional sustenance. In this seminar, we will critically examine the assumptions underlying such idealized distinctions between public and private domains. Through such revisioning, it is hoped that we will better understand the public and private dimensions of families, their complexity, and historical variability. In particular, our analysis will enable us to critically examine notions that posit nuclear, heterosexual families as necessarily “better” and/or as emblematic of progress. Through a variety of critical readings and familial narratives, we will look at the myriad ways in which personal and social reproduction occur, the relationship between families and shifting social relations, and gender and sexual relations as expressed in these familial forms and be attentive to shifting boundaries between private, family life and public institutions and practices. We will examine how relations of domination and subordination are produced through the institution of the “family” and how resistance is generated to such dominant relations and constructions. The course will conclude with public struggles to the nature and our understanding of families and assess their implications. While the readings in this course will focus specifically on families in the United States, students will have the option in their conference projects to look at families in other cultures and times. Latino Crossings Patrisia Macías Intermediate—Year This course examines the economic, political, cultural, and social linkages between the United States and Latin America and the migrations that have emerged from this historical relationship. The focus will be primarily on the respective experiences of “Latinos” within the United States from a comparative historical and transnational perspective. Latinos (or “Hispanics”) are not one people defined by a shared “culture,” nor do they have a singular historical relationship with the US nation-state, nor do all Latino groups have a common experience in the United States. Through readings and discussions of primary and secondary texts, this course examines the various histories of Mexicans/Chicanos, Puerto Ricans, Cubans, Dominicans, and other Latin American groups and the transformations of the United States in relation to them, with a special interest in exploring the meaningful analogies among these migrations and examining the intersections of race and citizenship. Embodiment and Biological Knowledge: Public Engagement in Medicine and Science Sarah Wilcox Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Fall In this course, we will explore when, why, and how biological ideas become salient to people’s identities and to political debates; whether and how closely popular conceptions of biology and the physical body match scientific and medical THE CURRICULUM 115 knowledge; and the variations in the extent to which biological knowledge is seen as relevant to particular conceptions of the self or social controversies over the body. Examples of topics that we may cover include: Why have vaccinations become controversial, and what understandings of the immune system underlie these controversies? What is the meaning of the “gay gene” to scientists, politicians, the public—and to lesbian, gay, or queer people themselves? How do hormones figure into our cultural understanding of gender and into people’s own gendered self-identities, particularly at times of hormonal change such as puberty, hysterectomy, or taking hormones as part of aligning the physical body with gender identity? How does the subjective nature of pain figure into controversies over contested illnesses such as fibromyalgia or repetitive strain syndrome? In sociology and anthropology, medical and scientific knowledge has often been described as alienating, distancing people from their direct embodied experiences. Yet, to be a body is also always to be in a social context, so that perception is simultaneously cultural and physical. While medical and scientific knowledge provide us with ideas about our bodies that we cannot directly experience (e.g., our genes), these ideas can be deeply embedded and socially powerful explanatory systems. Thus, scholars have also argued that, rather than alienating us from our selves and our bodies, medical knowledge is constitutive of bodies and selves. Biological ideas and terms also circulate freely, so that popular conceptions of biology or physiology and scientific knowledge may not map neatly onto each other. We will explore these themes of bodily association and dissociation, science as alienating or constitutive, and popularization and expertise through several domains of biological knowledge, embodiment, and public debate such as: contested illnesses and the subjectivity of pain, hormones and gendered selves, genes and the politics of sexuality, and the immune system and anti-vaccination movements. structures, and the physical environment. In this seminar, we will examine the material (social, political, and economic) and metaphorical (symbolic and representational) dimensions of spatial configurations in urban settings. In our analysis, we will address the historical and shifting connotations of urban space and urban life. Moving beyond the historical aspects of urbanization and its transformations, we will turn our attention to the (re)theorization of the very notion of spatial relations itself. Here, emphasis will be placed on representational practices and processes whereby social “space” is created, gendered, and revisioned. “Space” will no longer be seen simply as physical space but also in terms of the construction of meanings that affect our use of and relation to both physical and social settings. While economic factors will continue to be implicated and invoked in our analysis, we will move beyond the economic to extraeconomic categories and constructs such as notions of power, culture, and sexuality. The focus will also shift, as the semester proceeds, from macroanalyses to include an examination of everyday life. Through our exploration of these issues, we will attempt to gauge the practices and processes whereby social space is gendered, privatized, and sexualized and where distinctions are established between “inside” and “outside” domains and between public and private realms. Particular attention will be paid to attempts by scholars and activists to open up space both theoretically and concretely. Although the theoretical/conceptual questions examined lend themselves to an analysis of any city, our focus in the course will be largely, although not exclusively, on New York City. Students should feel free, however, to extend the analysis to other places that are of interest to them. This applies particularly to conference work. Changing Places: Social and Spatial Dimensions of Urbanization Advanced—Fall What are the reasons for travel, both historically and in the modern world? What factors draw individuals to travel singly and as members of collectivities? What sites draw the traveler and/or the tourist? What is the relationship between the (visited) site and the sight of the visitor? How is meaning of particular sites produced? How do these meanings differ, depending on the positionality of the traveler? What is the Shahnaz Rouse Intermediate—Spring The concept of space will provide the thematic underpinning and serve as the point of departure for this course. Space can be viewed in relation to the (human) body, social relations and social Travel and Tourism: Economies of Pleasure, Profit, and Power Shahnaz Rouse 116 Spanish relationship between the visitor and the local inhabitant? Can one be a traveler in one’s own home (site)? What is the relationship between travel and tourism and between pleasure and power in/through travel? How are race, gender, and class articulated in and through travel? These and other questions will be addressed in this course through an examination of commercial (visual and written) writings on travel and tourism; diaries, journals, and memoirs by travelers; and films and scholarly writings on travel and tourism. Our emphasis in this course will be an examination of tourism in a historical context. In particular, we will focus on the commodification of travel as an acquisition of social (and economic) currency and as a source/ site of power. Throughout, the relationship between material and physical bodies will remain a central focus of the course. Conference possibilities include analyses of your own travel experiences, examination of travel writings pertaining to specific places, and theoretical perspectives on travel and/or tourism. Other conference work possibilities include different forms of tourism such as ecotourism, heritage tourism, or sex tourism, as well as cyber travel. And while business, work, and myriad other forms of travel will not be a central concern in the seminar readings, students are free to explore these topics in their conference work. From Republicanism to Authoritarianism: ReViewing the Spanish Civil War Shahnaz Rouse Advanced—Spring The Spanish Civil War, one of the seminal events in the 20th century that inspired deep emotions on all sides, has remained until recently a largely forgotten moment in history. Bracketed between the First World War and the atrocities arising from fascism in Germany, its history was repressed within Spain by the success and longevity of Franco’s authoritarian state and insufficiently examined by academics elsewhere. In this course, we will take a close and deep look at this crucial event in world history. We will examine what led to the sweeping changes in Spain, focusing especially on the agrarian question and the peasantry; examine the flourishing of pluralism in the early years of the republic, the class and political contradictions and gendered and religious difference(s) that emerged; and analyze the processes and factors—local and international—that ultimately led to the supremacy of the forces of order and the rise of authoritarianism in Spain. Relying on analytical materials, literary texts, art, films, oral histories, and memoirs, we will attempt to understand how and why this period in Spain’s history was so inspiring for so many individual actors from other parts of Europe and even the United States and the role of grassroots activism of which many became a part. This study will also enable us to address issues of representation (both material and ideational). We will assess the role of (other) Western state powers in the affairs of Spain in an effort to think through the extent to which their actions contributed to the ultimate defeat of the republic. In conclusion, we will address the relevance of the Spanish Civil War to what followed in Europe, as well as its contemporary significance to our understanding of social and political movements, class struggles, and the nature of the state. Spanish Sarah Lawrence’s courses in Spanish cover grammar, literature, film, music and translation—all with the aim of making students more capable and confident in thinking, writing and expressing themselves in Spanish. Each of the yearlong courses integrates activities such as panel discussions, lectures and readings with classroom discussion and conference work to provide students with stimulating springboards for research and study. Beginning Spanish Maria Negroni Open—Year This course is designed to enable students with no previous exposure to Spanish to achieve essential communication skills, while providing the basic grammatical, lexical, and syntactical structures to do so effectively. From the start, oral interaction will be stressed in class and reinforced through pair or small-group activities. Students are required to meet with the instructor in small groups for one hour each week (small-group conference) and to attend a weekly conversation session with a language assistant. Course conducted in Spanish. Placement test is not required. Students should attend the scheduled orientation meetings during interview and registration week. THE CURRICULUM 117 Advanced Beginning Spanish: From Déjà Vu to Hablo Como Tú Mary Barnard Open—Year This course is designed for students who have had some Spanish before but have forgotten most of it. Grounded in a thorough overview of essential grammatical, lexical, and syntactical structures, students will work with short texts, videos, and songs by a broad array of authors and artists from both Spain and Latin America—ranging from Alfonsina Storni, Jorge Luis Borges, and Augusto Monterroso to Gloria Fuertes, Enrique Buenaventura, and Elena Garro, among others. The objective is to expose students to the diversity of the Spanish-speaking world and, as much as possible, to “real” rather than “textbook” language. Much of the work will be done online, so students should be prepared to use their laptops; class work will focus on communication, while grammar exercises will be integrated with the texts they are reading. Through role-play and guided group activities, students will gain increased language proficiency in Spanish. Weekly one-hour meetings with a language tutor are required, and students will have to attend some film screenings. Advanced beginning level. This course is taught entirely in Spanish. It is strongly recommended that interested students take the Spanish placement test in addition to interviewing with the instructor. Intermediate Spanish I: The Fiction of Language Priscilla Chen Intermediate—Year Augusto Monterroso’s microfiction, “Cuando despertó, el dinosaurio todavía seguía allí,” exemplifies the complexity of the Spanish language and grammar through a single sentence that can generate many interpretations. This course is designed to revise and emphasize the fundamental Spanish grammatical structures, using literary fiction as a frame to understand the craft of language and its richness. We will also pay special attention to oral communication, the use of new vocabulary, and writing formats to create a dynamic dialogue among grammar, literature, and culture to contextualize multiple meanings while increasing fluency in every aspect of language production. Intermediate I level. Intermediate Spanish II: Grammar and Composition Priscilla Chen Intermediate—Year This course is intended for students who have already mastered the basics of Spanish and wish to continue a more advanced study of the grammar and vocabulary and to develop a more complex level of oral and written discourse, emphasizing subjective expression. Written and oral skills will be strengthened by oral presentations, class participation, and frequent essays (which include film reviews), based on a broad array of materials related to contemporary Latin American and Iberian culture. We will attempt to cover various sources: short stories, poems, novels, films, music lyrics, newspaper articles, etc. For conference, students will have a chance to explore various aspects and topics of Hispanic culture and the arts. We will take advantage of our local resources such as museums, libraries, and theatre. Weekly conversation with a language assistant will be required. Intermediate II level, course conducted entirely in Spanish. Placement test recommended for students who have not taken Spanish at SLC. Intermediate Spanish III: “Calles y Plaza Antigua”: From the Country to the City in Hispanic Literature and Film Isabel de Sena Intermediate—Year Voracious, boundless, the den of unbridled lust and greed (La Celestina) or a heaven of opportunity, sometimes safety from prosecution and prejudice, the city is a polymorphous reality onto which we project our fantasies and desires (Atlantis, Eldorado, Axtlán). Feminized, it can be a courted or threatened citadel (traditional romances), the whore of Babylon, enticement and entrapment. It’s a seductive or frightening labyrinth (Borges, Sin noticias de Dios), the lettered city or the urban cauldron where immigrants sink or swim (El super, Los olvidados). If small, the imaginary solution to our contemporary rootlessness (Atame) or a metaphor for suffocating oppression (Lorca’s plays, Calle mayor, El espíritu de la colmena, Madeinusa). If metropolis, the centrifugal host of postmodern excesses and loss (Generación X, MacOndo), the tentative locus of postrevolutionary modernism (Maples Arce). Roads into or out of it and its 118 Theatre darkened alleyways are the quintessential frame of noir narrative (Nahum Montt, Muñoz Molina). Is the country a haven for time-tested virtues and resistance to forms of coercion (Fuentovejuna), or a desert where all dreams are deformed or come crashing down (Ana María Matute)? Are nature and nurture, culture and history, at war with each other, and how can we negotiate our own space between them (Cortázar)? We will explore these themes—and others that will surely emerge in this context—in literature and film from both sides of the Atlantic, while pursuing a systematic review of advanced Spanish grammar. Intermediate III level, course taught in Spanish. If you have not studied Spanish at SLC prior to this year, It is strongly recommended that you take the Spanish Placement Test in addition to the interview with the instructor. Spanish Language Authors of the 21st Century Eduardo Lago Advanced—Year Although academia tends to lag behind, Spanish language authors of today have trascended notions such as national origin or geographical location. Dychotomies such as peninsular vs. Latin American literature stopped being meaningful many years ago. More than ever, the only common bond among these writers in the 21st century is the language in which their works are written: Spanish. In this course, we will study the literary production of the Spanish-speaking world—ignoring, as the authors do, artificial barriers such as nationality. Novelists writing in Spanish today have more in common with young authors from the rest of the world than with their venerable ancestors. Globally, they have joined ranks with authors who have also uprooted the notion of tradition. Technology plays a fundamental role in this revolutionary new phase. We will explore the literary production of the Spanish-speaking world as manifest in fictional works published (and occasionally unpublished) during the first 11 years of the 21st century. Advanced level. Advanced Spanish: Memory and Fiction: (Re)creating (Our)selves Claudia Salazar Advanced—Year This course focuses on the creation and recreation of (our)selves and the construction of national memories. The course will have two approaches: On one hand, we will explore how breaking the boundaries between memory and fiction allows writers and artists of the Hispanic world to construct their own image. The second approach will be devoted to the evaluation and discussion of the “politics of memory” that shape the recovering of historical processes in Spain and Latin America. We will study a selection of journals, theatre, short fiction, poetry, interviews, autobiographies, autofiction, paintings, photography, testimonials, and films—paying close attention to the processes of selfrepresentation and the cultural tasks of memory. We will emphasize, through literary and cultural analysis, several aspects of the texts in relation to their social and historical contexts, while improving oral communication, lexical, grammatical, and written skills. Evaluation will be based on active participation in class discussions, preparedness to class, short response papers, brief presentations, interviews with New York-based writers and artists, and individual projects elaborated with the instructor during conferences. Students are welcome to explore their own memories and to participate in the process of writing themselves. Weekly meetings with the language assistant are a requirement. Advanced level. This course will be taught entirely in Spanish. It is strongly recommended that students take the Spanish placement test in addition to interviewing with the instructor. Another course offered this year in Spanish is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. Literature in Translation: Fantastic Gallery: 20th-Century Latin American Short Fiction (p. 65), Maria Negroni Spanish Theatre The Sarah Lawrence College Theatre program embraces the collaborative nature of theatre. Our objective is to create theatre artists who are skilled in many disciplines: Actors who write; directors who act; theatre makers who create their own projects; sound, set and lighting designers who are well versed in new media and puppetry. Students have the advantage of choosing from a multidisciplinary curriculum taught by working theatre professionals that also draws on the resources of the College’s Theatre, THE CURRICULUM 119 Music, and Dance programs. At the heart of this curriculum are focused programs in acting, directing, playwriting, and design, with supplementary offerings in production and technical work. Theatre students are encouraged to cross disciplines as they investigate all areas of theatre. The faculty is committed to active theatre training—students learn by doing—and have put together a vocabulary that stresses relationships among classical, modern, and original texts. The program uses a variety of approaches to build technique, while nurturing individual artistic directions. The Theatre program examines not just contemporary American performance but also diverse cultural influences and the major historical periods that precede our own. Courses include Alexander Technique, acting, comedic and dramatic improvisation, creation of original work, design, directing, movement, musical theatre, playwriting, puppetry, speech, solo performance, voice, and the art of bringing theatre into the local community. Curriculum Beginning students are required to enroll in a Theatre Techniques program, supplemented by at least one component of their own choice. Continuing students create an individualized Theatre Third with the guidance of their don and the theatre faculty. Components are chosen to extend skills and interests and to develop performing and practical experience. There are open auditions for faculty-, student-, and guestdirected productions; there is a proposal system for student-directed, -written, and -devised work within the season production schedule. Practicum The theatre faculty is committed to the philosophy that students learn by doing. Classes provide a rigorous intellectual and practical framework, and students are continually engaged in the process of making theatre. The program helps students build a solid technique based on established methodologies, while also being encouraged to discover and develop their individual artistic selves. Wide-ranging opportunities are available for students to learn by doing. Students may participate in internships or fieldwork in New York City theatres and theatre organizations. The College’s Theatre Outreach program is a training program that uses music, writing, theatre techniques, and the visual arts to address social and community issues. The outreach course has been a vibrant component in the curriculum for more than two decades, encouraging development of original material with a special emphasis on cross-cultural experiences. Many theatre components include an open-class showing or performance. In addition, there are multiple performance and production opportunities in acting, singing, dance, design, directing, ensemble creation, playwriting, and technical work available to students throughout the academic year. The College’s performance venues include productions and readings sponsored by the department in the Suzanne Werner Wright Theatre, a modified thrust stage, and the Frances Ann Cannon Workshop Theatre, as well as student-produced work in the student-run blackbox DownStage Theatre. Workshops, readings, and productions are also mounted in the blackbox Open Space Theatre and in various performance spaces throughout the campus. Theatre Colloquium Required of all students taking a Theatre Third (including First-Year Studies with Dave McRee and Stuart Spencer) and Theatre Graduate students, the Theatre Colloquium will meet six times during the academic year to explore current topics in the theatre and meet leading professionals in the field. First-Year Studies in Theatre: Directing in the Contemporary Theatre William D. McRee FYS This course will explore the job of the theatre director as both artist and artistic collaborator. Dramatic script analysis, rehearsal preparation and process, actor/director and writer/director relationships, and the director’s artistic expression will be covered in discussion and in class exercises. Students will be exposed to a variety of directing style and techniques through frequent trips to New York City theatrical productions and venues. For this course, a strong interest in the work of theatre directing is highly recommended. Students enrolled in First-Year Studies in Theatre may take an additional Theatre component as part of their Theatre 120 Theatre Third. They are also required to attend scheduled Theatre Colloquiums and complete a set amount of technical support hours for the department. Students do not have to take First-Year Studies in Theatre to take Theatre classes as a first-year student. First-Year Studies courses are an intense exploration of one area of theatre, and students should have a strong interest in that area before signing up for the course. First-Year Studies in Theatre: The Playwright’s Perspective Stuart Spencer FYS In this class, we will spend roughly half of our time reading great plays and the other half writing them. Over the course of the year, we will read plays that represent the major epochs in the last 2,500 years of Western theatre. We will discuss their historical context—the politics, economics, architecture, and other factors that shaped both their dramaturgy and their substance. Through a combination of lecture, discussion, and essays, the student should emerge with access to the major idioms of dramatic writing. Meanwhile, every student will also be studying the craft of playwriting. We will begin with small, tentative explorations: short scenes that explore issues of structure or creative process. The goal is to develop a sense of craft and technique that is individual yet based on traditional dramaturgical ideas. By the second term, students will be writing their own extended play based on a historical subject or short story of their own choice. Students enrolled in First-Year Studies in Theatre may take an additional Theatre component as part of their Theatre Third. They are also required to attend scheduled Theatre Colloquiums and complete a set amount of technical support hours for the department. Students do not have to take First-Year Studies in Theatre to take Theatre classes as a first-year student. First-Year Studies courses are an intense exploration of one area of theatre, and students should have a strong interest in that area before signing up for the course. Theatre Techniques Students taking theatre at Sarah Lawrence for the first time are enrolled in Theatre Techniques: Technology and are encouraged to enroll in Theatre Techniques: History and Histrionics and Theatre Techniques: Design Components—three courses that introduce them to the history of theatre and to a wide range of technical theatre skills. Students who are interested in performance have priority enrollment in Theatre Techniques: The Actor’s Workshop. Students are also required to complete 25 hours of technical work each semester. Theatre Techniques: Actor’s Workshop Ernest H. Abuba, Doug MacHugh, Fanchon Miller Scheier, Erica Newhouse Open—Year This workshop will translate the actor’s imagination into stage action by building one’s performance vocabulary. The class engages students’ essential self by expanding their craft through a wide-ranging set of training techniques. This class meets twice a week. Design Elements I Year This course is for students with little or no design or technical experience who are curious about design and want exposure to multiple design areas. It is also a useful tool for directors, playwrights, and actors who want to increase their understanding of the design and technical aspects of theatre to enhance their abilities as theatrical artists. This is a very hands-on class, in which students will learn the basics needed to execute set, costume, lighting, and sound designs. We will use a short scene or play as the focus of our discussions of the collaborative design process. Class format will include both classes with the full design faculty and classes focused on specific design areas. Design Elements II Spring This course is for students who have design or technical experience or have taken Design Elements I and want to explore design and technical theatre in greater depth. This course is also useful for students who are studying one area of design and want an introduction to other areas. Students will explore two of the four design areas (set, costume, lighting, and sound design) in greater depth, building their technical skills, design basics, and collaborative communication skills. Class format involves classes with the full design faculty and six weeks of classes in each of two design areas with individual design teachers. The goal of this semester is to have students THE CURRICULUM 121 develop the ability to create a simple design in their chosen areas. Open to students who have taken Design Elements I or with faculty permission. Brief Chronicle: A Short History of the Theatre Stuart Spencer This course is a shorter, one-semester version of History and Histrionics. Like History and Histrionics, it is designed to give students an overview of major periods in world theatre but in a more concise format. Students will explore theatre as both a product of its time and place and of the vision of individual playwrights. Through a combination of lecture and discussion, students should emerge with access to the major idioms of dramatic writing. This class meets once a week. Theatre Techniques: History and Histrionics Stuart Spencer Open—Year This course is designed to give students an overview of major periods in world theatre. We will explore theatre as both a product of its time and place and of the vision of individual playwrights. Through a combination of lecture and discussion, students should emerge with access to the major idioms of dramatic writing. This class meets once a week. Theatre Techniques: Technology Rebecca Sealander Open—Fall This course is an introduction to the Sarah Lawrence College performance spaces and their technical capabilities. Required of all students new to the Theatre program. The following classes have required auditions during registration week: Advanced Puppet Theatre/Performance, Contemporary I for Dance & Theatre, New Musical Theatre Lab, Singing Workshop, SLC Lampoon. New Musical Theatre Lab Shirley Kaplan, Thomas Mandel Open—Year Exploring forms, styles, and collaborative techniques needed to create musicals, the students will develop book and lyrics based on original material. Students will research the history of musicals from the emergence of European cabaret and performance, with a particular focus on the influence of interdisciplinary needs of contemporary musicals. The process of adaptation, auditioning, casting, rewriting, rehearsals, and performance will also be presented. Open to actors, singers, composers, lyricists, and musicians. Audition required Acting Poetic Realism Michael Early Open—Year The plays of Anton Chekov, Tennessee Williams, and August Wilson will serve as the point of departure in our exploration of the craft of acting. In this class, students will be challenged to expand their range of expression and build their confidence to make bold and imaginative acting choices. Particular attention will be paid to learning to analyze the text in ways that lead to defining clear, specific, and playable actions and objectives. Acting Shakespeare Michael Early Intermediate—Year Those actors rooted in the tradition of playing Shakespeare find themselves equipped with a skill set that enables them to successfully work on a wide range of texts and within an array of performance modalities. The objectives of this class are to learn to identify, personalize, and embody the structural elements of Shakespeare’s language as the primary means of bringing his characters to life. Students will study a representative arc of Shakespeare’s plays, as well as the sonnets, with the goal of bringing his characters to life. Class time will be divided between physical, vocal, and text work. Breaking the Code Kevin Confoy Advanced—Year A specific, text-driven approach to performance, based upon identifying, analyzing, and exploiting particular attributes common to characters in all plays, this class provides a foundation and a context for the most vital and decisive characterizations. Students will read, discuss, and act scenes from contemporary plays and adaptations. This class meets twice a week. 122 Theatre Close Up and Personal Doug MacHugh Advanced—Year Using the foundations learned during their first years in the Theatre program, students will apply their theatrical training to the camera. The students will learn how to maintain an organic experience in spite of the rigid technical restrictions and requirements. The second half of each semester will be dedicated to putting a scene on its feet and shooting it. We will use a monitor playback system for reviewing work to help identify specific problems. Limited enrollment. This class meets twice a week. Comedy Workshop Christine Farrell Intermediate—Year Comedy Workshop is an exploration of the classic structures of comedy and the unique comic mind. It begins with a strong focus on improvisation and ensemble work. The athletics of this creative comedic mind is the primary objective of the first semester exercises. Status play, narrative storytelling, and the Harold exercise are used to develop the artist’s freedom and confidence. The ensemble learns to trust the spontaneous response and their own comic madness. Second semester educates the theatre artist in the theories of comedy. It is designed to introduce students to Commedia dell arte, vaudeville, parody, satire, and standup comedy. At the end of the final semester, each student will write five minutes of standup material that will be performed one night at a comedy club in New York City and then on the SLC campus on Comedy Night. Creating a Role Ernest H. Abuba Open—Year It is a sanctum of discovery, enabling the actor to explore non-Western movement: centering energy, concentration, the voice, and the “mythos” of a character to discover one’s own truth in relation to the text, contemporary as well as the classics. Traditional, as well as alternative, approaches to acting techniques are applied. Fall semester concentrates on working on roles such as Hamlet, Leontes, Caliban, Othello, Lear, Macbeth, Hecuba, Medea, Antigone, and Lady Macbeth; spring semester, applied to scene study from such works by Arrabal, Beckett, Ionesco, Maria Irene Fornes, Sam Shepard, Albert Camus, and Jean Genet. This class meets twice a week. Improvisation Laboratory Fanchon Miller Scheier Advanced—Year Using experimental exercises and improvisation, we will explore the character’s connections to his or her environment, relationships, needs, and wants. In the second semester, we will concentrate on fashioning a workable technique, as well as on using improvisation to illuminate scene work from the great dramatic playwrights: Lorca, Chekhov, Strindberg, O’Neill, Shaw, etc. This course is available to students who are willing to approach material experimentally in a laboratory setting. This class meets twice a week. Singing Workshop Shirley Kaplan, Thomas Mandel Open—Year We will explore an actor’s performance with songs and various styles of popular music, music for theatre, cabaret, and original work—emphasizing communication with the audience and material selection. Dynamics of vocal interpretation and style will also be examined. This class requires enrollment in a weekly voice lesson and an Alexander Technique class. Audition required. This class meets once a week. SLC Lampoon Christine Farrell Advanced—Year SLC Lampoon is a comedy ensemble of actors, directors, and writers. The techniques of Second City and Theatersports will be used to create an improvisational troupe that will perform throughout the campus. The ensemble will craft comic characters and write sketches, parodies, and political satire. This work will culminate in a final SLC Lampoon Mainstage performance in the style of Second City or Saturday Night Live. Audition required. Theatre 360: The Big Picture Kevin Confoy Open—Year This course examines how theatre reflects and defines its times. By studying the artists, theatre companies, and some of the most provocative THE CURRICULUM 123 plays and musicals written in and around recent events (from the social and political upheaval of the 1960s to the AIDS crisis of the mid-1980s to 9/11), we will come to see how theatre shapes a point of view on the world. Students will study a large selection of plays and documentaries and participate in discussions that will range from the history of the time periods studied to why different plays on the same subject (Larry Kramer’s The Normal Heart, Tony Kushner’s Angels in America) differ so greatly in form, style, and purpose. A wide range of topical issues and various aspects of theatre production will be discussed. Students will make presentations, show scene work, and/or write on topics that reflect their own particular points of view. The Acting Process Christine Farrell Open—Year This course will ask theatre artists (directors, actors, playwrights, designers) to explore their own understanding of the acting process through physical action and scene study techniques. Each student will work on four scenes over the course of the year. The scenes will be chosen to develop emotional range, to create comic character, to experience extreme physical movement, and to discover an individual approach to diversity. The Webisodics Project/Web Series Asylum Doug MacHugh, Frederick Michael Strype Advanced—Year During the fall semester, we will develop—through theatrical exercises, improvisations, character development, and “hands-on” collaboration with the screenwriting team—an ensemble cast. As the webisodics are developed, workshopped, and revised, the filmmakers will be shooting and editing the weekly staged readings as performed by the actors. The actors will further explore, investigate, and create three-dimensional complex characters. We will review and discuss revisions and complexity of plot in class. Camera blocking and comprehension of camera movements will be taught. When principal photography is wrapped, the actors will further develop their craft by working with the screenwriters doing table reads and staged readings of original material. These workshop pieces will be shot, edited, and discussed in class to enhance the revision process. The outcome of this past year’s course is the Web series, “Socially Active,” which can be viewed online at: http://vimeo.com/channels/sociallyactive. This class will be team-taught by Theatre instructor Douglas Mac Hugh and Filmmaking instructor Fred Strype. Enrollment is limited. Permission of the instructors is required. This class meets once a week for four hours. World Theatre David Diamond, Mia Yoo Open—Fall The historic La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York's East Village hosts this survey of contemporary and historic international theatre. Students will have the opportunity to meet and experience artists from around the world who are presenting performances at La MaMa ETC. In addition to learning the history of international theatre in New York through the La MaMa archives, students will have workshops with visiting artists and see examples of their work. Coordinators of the La MaMa International Symposium for Directors, David Diamond and Mia Yoo, will host students in New York where, each week, they will exchange ideas with visiting and local artists. Alexander Technique June Ekman Open—Year The Alexander Technique is a neuromuscular system that enables the student to identify and change poor and inefficient habits that may be causing stress and fatigue. With gentle hands-on guidance and verbal instruction, the student learns to replace faulty habits with improved coordination by locating and releasing undue muscular tensions. This includes easing of the breath and the effect of coordinated breathing on the voice. It is an invaluable technique that connects the actor to his or her resources for dramatic intent. This class meets once a week. Breathing Coordination for the Performer Sterling Swann Open—Year Students will improve their vocal power and ease of speech through an understanding of basic breathing mechanics and principles of speech. Utilizing recent discoveries of breathing coordination, performers can achieve their true 124 Theatre potential by freeing their voices, reducing tension, and increasing concentration and stamina. Students will consolidate their progress by performing pieces in their field (theatre, dance, music, etc.) in a supportive atmosphere. This class meets once a week. Building a Vocal Technique Sterling Swann Intermediate—Year A continuation of Breathing Coordination for the Performer, which is suggested as a prerequisite, students may work on scenes that they currently are rehearsing and also bring in pieces of their own choosing. Emphasis will be on physical ease and the use of breathing coordination to increase vocal range and power. This class meets once a week. Contemporary I for Dance and Theatre Peter Kyle Open—Year Successful performances in dance and theatre rely on training that prepares performers in mind, body, and spirit to enter the realm of aesthetic exploration and expression. In this class, we will work toward acquiring skills that facilitate the investigation of previously unimagined ways of moving. Through traditional and experimental practices, students will develop a sense of form, energy use, strength and control, and awareness of time and rhythm. Improvisation is an important aspect of this study. Audition required. Introduction to Stage Combat Sterling Swann Open—Year Students will learn the basics of armed and unarmed stage fighting, with an emphasis on safety. Actors will be taught to create effective stage violence, from hair pulling and choking to sword fighting, with a minimum of risk. Basic techniques will be incorporated into short scenes to give students experience performing fights in both classic and modern contexts. This class meets once a week. Advanced Stage Combat Sterling Swann Intermediate—Year This course is a continuation of Introduction to Stage Combat and offers additional training in more complex weapons forms, such as rapier and dagger, single sword, and small sword. Students receive training as fight captains and have the opportunity to take additional skills proficiency tests, leading to actor/combatant status in the Society of American Fight Directors. This course meets once a week. Movement for Performance David Neumann Open—Year This is a movement class for anyone interested in performance; no movement experience is necessary. All that is required is an open, curious mind when approaching the work. Daily warmups and improvisation lead to moving in larger ranges and creating original movement. Later in the semester, we will explore the integration of text and movement composition for the theatre. As a requirement of the class, there will be unique opportunities to observe rehearsals and/or performances of Mr. Neumann’s professional engagements in New York City. This class meets twice a week. Stage Management Greta Minsky, Rebecca Sealander Open—Year This course will focus on the art and practice of stage management. Students will be assigned productions and will be mentored through the process from auditions through tech week and strike. This class meets once a week. Greta Minsky will teach during the fall semester; Rebecca Sealander, during the spring semester. Actor and Director Lab: PROOF Kevin Confoy Advanced—Year This course creates a working process for the presentation of plays. Student actors and directors will work together on chosen scripts as a way of determining and shaping a common and shared approach to the text that will provide a foundation for the most vivid, physical, and distinctly realized expressions of a play. Students will be expected to both act and direct in scenes and short plays that will be presented as part of the Theatre program season. THE CURRICULUM 125 Directing the 20th Century: From Chekhov to Churchill Will Frears Intermediate—Year This class will focus on directing plays in the 20th-century canon, covering a range of styles and content. It will cover the whole journey of directing a play, with a strong emphasis on practical work. Students will be required to bring in design research for plays and to direct scenes from the plays, both of which they will present to the class for critique. The class will focus on how to use the text to inform the choices made by the director. Plays on the syllabus include The Three Sisters, Our Town, Top Girls, The Glass Menagerie, and Angels in America: Millennium Approaches. This class meets twice a week. Directing, Devising, and Performance David Neumann Intermediate—Fall This class is a laboratory, where students will explore (on their feet) a range of methodologies, philosophies, and approaches to creating performance and theatre. How do you direct a theatre piece without starting with a play? Alongside a broad survey of artists and art movements of the 20th century that continue to influence theatre artists today, students will practice a variety of ways of staging with and without text, always in relation to being a “live event." Following a trajectory from the Dadaists to Fluxus, from the surrealists to John Cage (and beyond), we will wrangle with these “postdramatic” artists and explore how their ideas can lead us in finding our own unique theatrical voice. Class will culminate in performances assembled from work made in class. Students will be given reading and creative assignments outside of class and will be expected to work collaboratively throughout the term. This class meets once a week. DownStage Kevin Confoy Intermediate, Sophomore and above—Year DownStage is an intensive, hands-on conference in theatrical production. DownStage student producers administrate and run their own theatre company. They are responsible for all aspects of production, including determining the budget and marketing an entire season of events and productions. Student producers are expected to fill a variety of positions, both technical and artistic, and to sit as members of the board of directors of a functioning theatre organization. In addition to their obligations to class and designated productions, DownStage producers are expected to hold regular office hours. Prior producing experience is not required. This class meets twice a week. Internship Conference Ruth Moe Intermediate—Year For students who wish to pursue a professional internship as part of their program, all areas of producing and administration are possible: production, marketing, advertising, casting, development, etc. Students must have at least one day each week to devote to the internship. Through individual meetings, we will best determine each student’s placement to meet individual academic and artistic goals. Production Workshop Robert Lyons Open—Year The creative director of the Theatre program will lead a discussion group for all the directors, assistant directors, and playwrights participating in the fall theatre season (including readings, workshops, and productions). This is an opportunity for students to discuss with their peers the process, problems, and pleasures of making theatre at Sarah Lawrence College (and beyond). This workshop is part problem solving, part support group—with the emphasis on problem solving. This course is required for students who accept a position in the fall season. Tools of the Trade Rebecca Sealander, Technical Staff Open—Spring This course focuses on the nuts and bolts of lightboard operation, sound-board operation, and projection technology, as well as the use of Final Cut Pro® and Pro Tools® editing programs and basic stage carpentry. Students who take this course will be eligible for additional paid work as technical assistants in the Theatre program. This class meets once a week. 126 Theatre Advanced Puppet Theatre/ Performance Design Techniques in Media and Puppetry Dan Hurlin Robin Starbuck Intermediate—Year Students will spend all year constructing, developing, and rehearsing a single puppet production. This year’s production, Double Aspect by acclaimed experimental playwright Erik Ehn, is part of a cycle of 17 plays that “…look at America through the lens of its genocides.” Each of the 17 plays will be produced at various venues across the country during the 2011/2012 season, with all productions converging on La Mama, in New York City, in the fall of 2012. During the 2011/2012 academic year, students will be involved in all facets of Double Aspect, from researching the conflicts in El Salvador and Guatemala (the setting of the play) to the fabrication of puppets, choreography of puppeteers, and the final performance. Double Aspect will be given full production at Sarah Lawrence College in the spring of 2012 and will tour to La Mama the following fall. Audition required. Classes will meet for three hours per week. Collaborative Contemporary Theater: Grad Projects I David Neumann Advanced—Year This course will provide a critical and supportive forum for the development of new works of original performance, focusing primarily on where current dance and theatre combinations find inspiration. In the first semester, students will explore contemporary theatre-building techniques and methodologies from Dada to Judson Church and beyond. The majority of time will be devoted to lab work, where students will create their own short performance pieces through a multidisciplinary approach. Students will be asked to devise original theatre pieces that utilize such methods as solo forms, viewpoints, chance operations, and creations from nontheatrical sources. In addition to the laboratory aspect of the class, a number of plays, essays, and artists’ manifestos will be discussed. In the second semester, students will collaborate on a single evening-length work, utilizing theatrical and nontheatrical sources in an attempt to speak to our cultural moment. There will also be opportunities to visit rehearsals and performances of professional theatre and dance in New York City. Open to first-year graduates. This class meets once a week. Open—Year This course allows students to explore design possibilities in projection, animation, scenic design, and puppetry through a series of exploratory projects and group work. Visual sequences will be created using overhead projectors, stop-motion animation techniques, shadow puppetry, and video animation. The course will introduce basic digital-image manipulation in Photoshop®, simple video animation in AfterEffects®, and the live manipulation of video using Isadora® media interface software. Individual projects in the second semester will challenge students to integrate these techniques into performance. Basic knowledge of Photoshop and the MAC operating system is highly recommended. This class meets once a week. Grad Lab Dan Hurlin, Shirley Kaplan, David Neumann Year Taught by a rotating series of SLC faculty and guest artists, this course focuses on developing the skills needed for a wide variety of techniques for the creation and development of new work in theatre. Ensemble acting, movement, design and fabrication, playwriting, devised work, and music performance are all explored. The class is a forum for workshops, master classes, and open rehearsals, with a focus on the development of critical skills. In addition, students in Grad Lab are expected to generate a new piece of theatre, to be performed for the SLC community, every month. These performances will include graduate and undergraduate students alike. Open to graduate students only. Making New Work Shirley Kaplan Open—Year This is a performance lab open to actors, dancers, visual artists, writers, musicians, filmmakers, and directors. The class will form an ensemble where creative process, media crossovers, and global forms and styles are presented within an active media lab. The group, using shared performance techniques, will explore the development of personal devised work. Methods of vocal and physical work will add to interdisciplinary THE CURRICULUM 127 collaborations in order to explore sources of inspiration for new work. Investigating both traditional and contemporary performance, we will acknowledge new connections that are happening between videogames and text, science and technology. Crossing cultural and media traditions, the group will create and present weekly projects, as well as a final performance. Projects Dan Hurlin Year This course will provide a critical and supportive forum for the development of new works of original theatre with a focus on conducting research in a variety of ways, including historical and artistic research, workshops, improvisations, experiments, and conversation. Each student focuses on creating one original project—typically, but not limited to, a solo, duet, or trio—over the course of the full year. During the class, students will show works in progress. During conference, students and faculty will meet to discuss these showings and any relevant artistic and practical problems that may arise. Open to second-year graduate students only. Puppet Theatre Dan Hurlin Open—Year This course will introduce students to the uniquely interdisciplinary performing medium of puppetry. Students will research and study a global range of ancient and modern puppet styles and forms: Western models such as toy theater and string puppets, as well as Eastern practices such as Indonesian shadow and Japanese Bunraku, among others. After conducting research, interviewing contemporary puppet artists, and visiting puppet fabrication studios in New York City, students will have hands-on experiences with each form, developing short original puppet works focusing on manipulation skills, contemporary construction methods, and creative problem solving. This class meets once a week for two hours. Costume Design I Carol Ann Pelletier Open—Year This course is an introduction to the many aspects of costuming for students with little or no experience in the field. Among the topics covered are: basics of design, color, and style; presentation of costume design from preliminary concept sketches to final renderings; researching period styles; costume bookkeeping from preliminary character lists to wardrobe maintenance charts; and the costume shop from threading a needle to identifying fabric. The major class project will have each student research, bookkeep, and present costume sketches for a play. Some student projects will incorporate production work. This class meets once a week. Costume Design II Carol Ann Pelletier Intermediate—Year This is a more advanced course in costume design for students who have completed Costume Design I or who have the instructor’s permission to enter. Topics covered in Costume Design I will be examined at greater depth, with the focus on students designing actual productions. An emphasis will be placed on the students developing sketching techniques and beginning and maintaining their portfolios. This class meets once a week. Advanced Costume Conference Carol Ann Pelletier Advanced—Year This is an advanced conference in costume design. Lighting Design I Greg MacPherson Open—Year Lighting Design I will introduce the student to the basic elements of stage lighting, including tools and equipment, color theory, reading scripts for design elements, operation of lighting consoles and construction of lighting cues, and basic elements of lighting drawings and schedules. Students will be offered hands-on experience in hanging and focusing lighting instruments and will be invited to attend technical rehearsals. They will have opportunities to design productions and to assist other designers as a way of developing greater understanding of the design process. This class meets once a week. 128 Theatre Lighting Design II Greg MacPherson Intermediate—Year Lighting Design II will build on the basics introduced in Lighting Design I to help develop the students’ abilities in designing complex productions. The course will focus primarily on CAD and other computer programs related to lighting design, script analysis, advanced console operation, and communication with directors and other designers. Students will be expected to design actual productions and in-class projects for evaluation and discussion and will be offered the opportunity to increase their experience in design by assisting Mr. MacPherson and others, when possible. Scenic Design I Open—Year This course introduces basic elements of scenic design, including developing a design concept, drafting, and practical techniques for creating theatrical space. Students will develop tools to communicate their visual ideas through research, sketches, and models. The class will discuss examples of design from theatre, dance, and puppetry. Student projects will include both conceptual designs and production work in the department. This class meets once a week. There is a $50 course fee. Faculty: TBA Scenic Design II Intermediate—Year This class will further develop the student’s skill set as a scenic designer through work on department productions and individual projects. Students will be introduced to CAD drawing and computer modeling through Vectorworks® and develop their ability to communicate with directors, fellow designers, and the technical crew. In addition, students will continue to have hands-on exposure to practical scenic construction, rigging, and painting techniques. Students in this course are required to design a department production. Faculty: TBA Sound Design I & II Jill Du Boff Open—Year This course will cover sound design from the beginning of the design process through expectations when meeting with a director, how to collaborate with the rest of the design team, and ultimately creating a full sound design for performance. The course will explain how to edit sound, as well as many of the programs commonly used in a professional atmosphere. Throughout the course, we will create sound effects and sound collages and cover the many ways that sound is used in the theatre. Skills learned in this class will prepare students to design sound in many different venues and on different types of systems. The class will focus on the creative side of sound design, while covering the basics of system design, sound equipment, and software. This class will meet once a week. Developing the Dramatic Idea Cassandra Medley Open—Year You have an idea, or vision, for a play that you would like to write. You have no particular idea for a play, yet you feel eager to explore and learn how to write in the dramatic form—which involves live characters interacting in threedimensional space before a live audience. Either way, this course involves learning craft techniques, as well as advanced methods for dramatizing your ideas from initial scenes to completed rough first drafts. We incorporate freewriting and brainstorming techniques, acting improvisation, and audio and video recordings from your in-process work. Class texts will be selected from the white-ethnic, and AfricanAmerican theatre canon. This class meets twice a week. Experiments in Language and Form Cassandra Medley Open—Year In this class, we will focus on writing “experimental theatre”—that is, we will experiment with theatrical forms that extend beyond traditional portrayals of time, threedimensional space, language, character, and dramatic structure—and discover the impact that different types of onstage presentations might have on audiences. We are not interested in imitating the style of experimental playwrights but, rather, using their texts as influence, stimulus, and encouragement as we attempt our own experiments. We will also style experimental texts to ascertain the types of environments—political, spiritual, mental, social—that influenced such texts to be THE CURRICULUM 129 generated; that is, created. Our aim, first and foremost, is to investigate and explore ways to genuinely give theatrical expression to our personal-political-spiritual interior lives, values, observations, and beliefs. We will then strive to examine the most effective manner of communicating our theatrical experiments to an audience. Our experimental writing may include a multimedia presentation as part of the scripted, onstage play or performance. This class meets once a week. Face the Blank Page Lucy Thurber Intermediate—Year This class is open to anyone with a full to almostcompleted first draft of a play. Plays are not literature. Plays are meant to be heard out loud, rehearsed, and workshopped on their feet. Plays go through a development process before becoming a rehearsal-ready draft. Once in rehearsal, the work on the script continues into previews. Students will learn how to rewrite in the rehearsal room and how to work with actors and directors on new, unfinished work. This class meets once a week. REWRITE Lucy Thurber, Will Frears Intermediate—Year Over the course of a semester (or year), this class will focus on the relationship between playwright and director during the development of a new play. Playwrights must bring in a full-length play that is ready to be worked on. Over the course of the semester, we will work through notes—directing readings, staging, rewriting in collaboration, rewriting in rehearsal, cutting, learning when not to rewrite and how playwrights talk about staging—all in the building of an effective artistic collaboration. This class will meet for four hours once a week. Spencer Workshop Stuart Spencer Advanced—Year This course is designed for playwriting students who have a basic knowledge of dramatic structure and an understanding of their own creative process. Students will be free to work on plays of any length and with themes, subjects, and styles of their choice. They may also work on more than one project at a time. Work will be read aloud and discussed in the class each week. The course requires that students be self-motivated and enter with an idea of which play or plays they plan to work on. This class meets once a week. Writers Gym Cassandra Medley Open—Year “You can’t wait for inspiration, you have to go after it with a club.”—Jack London Writers Gym is a first-year creative writing “gymnasium.” Our focus is on weekly writing exercises that develop characters and stories—whether for the stage, screenplay, or fiction/memoir prose narration. In addition, we study theories about the nature of creativity and explore strategies for improving writing discipline and for working writing blocks. Our goals are as follows: to study writing methods that help to inspire, nurture, encourage, and sustain our urge/ need to write; to concentrate on building the inner lives of our characters through in-depth character work, in order to create stronger stories; to explore—that is to say, investigate—and gain access into our spontaneous ideas; to articulate and gain a more conscious relationship to the “inner territory” from which we draw ideas; to confront issues that block the writing process; and to gain greater confidence in revision, as we pursue clarification of the work. Our yearlong class procedure will include weekly writing exercises, writing and revising multiple short pieces that the students generate—plays, prose fiction and nonfiction, or short screenplay. Students will be assigned selected readings from the aforementioned genres plus a variety of essay excerpts concerning the creative process. In addition, one class a week will focus on the history of theatre. Writing for Solo Performance Pamela Snead Intermediate—Year This class is for actors who want to write and act in their own work. The work may be autobiographical or nonautobiographical. The genre may extend itself to music and spoken word. We will work heavily with text and really delve into the characters to make them fully realized in reference to the story that is being told. We will use Jungian and some Greco/ Roman myth to get inside the characters and make them understood and universal. The atmosphere is such that students may try anything and experiment. 130 Theatre Methods of Theatre Outreach Allen Lang Open—Year Developing original, issue-oriented dramatic material using music and theatre media, this course will present the structures needed for community extension of the theatre. Performance and teaching groups will work with small theatres, schools, senior-citizen groups, museums, centers, and shelters. Productions and class plans will be made in consultation with the organizations and our touring groups. We will work with children’s theatre, audience participation, and educational theatre. Teaching and performance techniques will focus on past and present uses of oral histories and crosscultural material. Sociological and psychological dynamics will be studied as part of an exploration of the role of theatre and its connections to learning. Each student will have a servicelearning team placement. Special projects and guest topics will include the use of theatre in developing new kinds of after-school programs, styles and forms of community on-site performances, media techniques for artists who teach, and work with the Sarah Lawrence College Human Genetics program. This class meets once a week. The Performing Arts for Social Change Paul Griffin Intermediate—Year In today’s world, theatre is increasingly defined as a commercial enterprise. This course will examine the use of theatre for social change, examining its practice, theory, role, and production. Discussions will include approaches to using theatre for creating personal and social change and the key elements of successful projects from creative process to performance to organization to impact. Interactive class sessions will include participation in a creative process involving community building, team building, conflict resolution, social analysis, and scene creation. Each student will be expected to develop a coherent theory of change, construct a viable performing arts-based project “blueprint,” and participate in a community event created from the creative process. Students will also visit one Saturday rehearsal of the City at Peace project in New York City, a nonprofit organization using the performing arts to empower teenagers to transform their lives and communities. This class meets once a week. Far-Off, Off-Off, Off-, and On-Broadway: Experiencing the 2011-2012 Theatre Season William D. McRee Open—Year Weekly class meetings in which productions are analyzed and discussed will be supplemented by regular visits to many of the theatrical productions of the current season. The class will travel within the tristate area, attending theatre in as many diverse venues, forms, and styles as possible. Published plays will be studied in advance of attending performances; new or unscripted works will be preceded by examinations of previous work by the author or company. Students will be given access to all available group discounts in purchasing tickets. This class meets once a week. London Theatre Tour William D. McRee Open—Intersession The purpose of the course is to experience and examine present-day British theatre: its practices, playwrights, traditions, theatres, and artists. This is a two-credit academic course, and any student enrolled at Sarah Lawrence College is eligible to take the class. During two weeks in London, students will attend a minimum of 12 productions, tour various London theatres, meet with British theatre artists, attend regularly scheduled morning seminars, and make an oral presentation on one of the plays that the group is attending. Plays will be assigned prior to the end of the fall semester, and preparation and research for the presentation should be completed before arriving in London. Productions attended will include as wide a variety of venues, styles, and periods of theatre as possible. Seminars will analyze and critique the work seen, as well as discover themes, trends, and movements in the contemporary theatre of the country. Free time is scheduled for students to explore London and surrounding areas at their leisure. Theatre students may be invited to participate in outside programs, including: THE CURRICULUM 131 The London Theatre Program (BADA) Intersession Sponsored by Sarah Lawrence College and the British American Drama Academy (BADA), the London Theatre Program offers undergraduates from Sarah Lawrence an opportunity to work and study with leading actors and directors from the world of British theatre. The program offers acting classes with leading artists from the British stage. These are complemented by individual tutorials, where students will work one-on-one with their teachers. A faculty selected from Britain’s foremost drama schools teaches technical classes in voice, movement, and stage fighting. This intense conservatory training is accompanied by courses in theatre history and theatre criticism, tickets to productions, and the experience of performing in a professional theatre. In addition, master classes and workshops feature more of Britain’s fine actors and directors. Designed for dedicated students who wish to study acting in London, the program offers enrollment in either the fall or spring semester for single-semester study. Those wishing to pursue their training more intensely are strongly encouraged to begin their training in the fall and continue with the Advanced London Theatre Program in the spring semester. Acceptance is by audition only. La MaMa E.T.C. Intersession La MaMa E.T.C. sponsors two summer events in Umbria, Italy, in conjunction with Sarah Lawrence College: International Symposium for Directors, a three-week training program for professional directors, choreographers, and actors in which internationally renowned theatre artists conduct workshops and lecture/demonstrations; and Playwright Retreat, a one-week program where participants have ample time to work on new or existing material. Each day, master playwright Lisa Kron will meet with the playwrights to facilitate discussions, workshops, and exercises designed to help the writers with whatever challenges they are facing. More information is available at http://lamama.org/ programs/la-mama-umbria-international. Creativity Workshop Edwin Sherin Spring This is an experimental workshop. Among its objectives are exploring the participants’ impulsive response to texts (plays for theatre and screen and some poetry), as well as examining the power of intuition to more deeply understand these texts. The key elements require exercises in various forms of “active” meditation. The work is often strenuous and requires physical skill and agility and a passion for adventure. Our overarching objective is to enhance the participants’ ability to act, write, or direct for theatre. Another course offered this year in Theatre is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. The Webisodics Project/Web Series Asylum (p. 137), Frederick Michael Strype Visual Arts, Doug MacHugh Theatre Visual Arts Students enrolled in a visual arts course at Sarah Lawrence College work in a new environment created to support the College’s unique arts pedagogy: a philosophy of teaching that not only encourages an individual investigation into the nature of the creative process but also provides a setting to foster the exchange of ideas across artistic disciplines. While courses are taught in the traditional seminar/conference format, the Monika A. and Charles A. Heimbold, Jr. Visual Arts Center is specifically designed to break down barriers among visual arts media. It features ateliers that give each student an individual work area for the year—while its open classrooms and movable walls encourage students to see and experience the work of their peers in painting, sculpture, photography, filmmaking, printmaking, drawing, visual fundamentals, and digital imagery. Students can enhance their work in a chosen discipline by enrolling in a workshop—a minicourse—selected from 10 offerings annually. In some visual arts courses, a particular workshop will be required. This recently developed program expands students’ technical skills and enables them to utilize different media in the development of their work. Workshops are open to students of any visual arts medium, promoting 132 Visual Arts even more interaction and understanding across disciplinary boundaries, and furthering the College’s overall emphasis on interdisciplinary work The Heimbold Center, a high-performance “green” building, embodies an environmentally friendly approach that features safe alternatives to toxic materials, special venting systems, and an abundance of natural light. In addition to well-equipped, open-space studios, individual ateliers, and digital technology in every studio and classroom, the building also includes space for welding, woodworking, clay and moldmaking; a common darkroom, a digital imaging lab, and critique rooms; a sound studio, a screening room, and a large exhibition area. The Center’s doors open onto a mini-quad, allowing students from throughout the College both access to and inspiration from their peers’ works-inprogress. The visual arts curriculum is reflected in—but not confined to—the Heimbold Center’s visual arts facilities. The building also houses courses in visual culture, increasing the integration of the creative arts and the humanities. The College’s proximity to New York City brings recognized artists to campus to lecture and also gives the students the opportunity to visit hundreds of galleries and some of the world’s major museums. Faculty members are working artists who believe in the intrinsic value—for all students—of creative work in the visual arts, the inseparable connection of the creative arts and the liberal arts, and the necessity of art in life. All visual arts faculty and their students have access to technicians, based in the Heimbold Center, who will provide technical support in most areas. In 2011-12, various workshops in the visual arts disciplines will be offered that serve to broaden students’ vocabulary and technical skills. In the past, workshops in Metalworking, Letterpress, Web Design, Drawing, Water Color, Woodworking, Artist Books, Final Cut, Sculpture Methods, and Photoshop have been offered. First-Year Studies in Visual Art Gary Burnley FYS This course will explore and consider ways of thinking about the world around us, both the nature and the aim of visual art. Working from a range of subject matter and with a variety of media, we will examine the process of converting raw materials and ideas into understandable form. Developing critical and analytical awareness will be stressed, along with habits of discipline necessary to support all creative endeavors. Nurturing and sustaining a unique point of view, personal experimentation, interpretation, and innovation will also be encouraged. Readings and discussion of art and cultural history will be an important part of the weekly course work. First-Year Studies: The Photograph Now Joel Sternfeld FYS For its first 100 years, photography was blackand-white—an abstraction of human sightedness. Newly born photography shook (and was shaken by) painting, as it pushed into the world as an engine of modern consciousness. When color photography came along, it didn’t hesitate to present new pleasures and new problems to thoughtful practitioners and adherents of the medium. The recent arrival of digital photography has created an image culture that is changing by the day—and changing the world by the day. Through black-and-white, color, and digital darkroom work and a broad range of readings, students will grow familiar with photographic practices and theories as they respond to the pull of their individual aesthetic. First-Year Studies: Outside Cinema: Contemporary Approaches to Video Art Production Robin Starbuck FYS This First-Year Studies seminar explores, in depth, the rich world of film/videomaking as artistic expression. Students will participate in a series of assignments, both practical hands-on and through lecture, discussion, and screenings (artist interviews, documentaries, and artist work). We will focus on the “voice” of the individual in the fall semester and the self as it relates to our natural environment in the spring semester. Through a series of short video production projects, we will explore movingimage forms and style that blur the boundaries among narrative, documentary, and abstract filmmaking. There is, by definition, no formula for this kind of work. Rather, this course introduces the language and techniques of film production alongside strategies for the use of film THE CURRICULUM 133 and audio design as creative expression. Fall semester projects will focus on the making of video diaries and first-person works that examine identity and alterity. During the spring semester, we will redirect these concerns to an exploration of our relationship to the natural environment—its aesthetics, politics, and science. For example, if you complete a film based on an avatar’s experience in the fall semester, you might recreate this idea in the spring semester to integrate a particular landscape or to speak to an environmental concern that you have. Over the course of the year, we will look at and analyze the pioneering work of many experimental film/video artists, including Gilliam Wearing, Doug Aiken, Pipolotti Rist, Seoungho Cho, Shaun Gladwell, Corey Archangel, and others. Readings will include selections from several texts, including: Berger’s Ways of Seeing, A.L. Rees’s A History of Experimental Film and Video, Bell Hooks's, Yearning: Race, Gender, and Cultural Politics, and M.M. Yvette’s Figuring the Landscape: Experimental Film and the Ecological Movement. The class will also include field trips to several New York City galleries and museums. Drawing: Translating an Invisible World John O'Connor Open—Fall Drawing is an endlessly exciting art form that encourages experimentation and embraces mistakes. It naturally exploits the relationship between seeing and thinking. This course will challenge what you think of as drawing. You will learn about the tools of traditional drawing (paper, graphite, ink, charcoal, conte, etc.) and will learn how to translate what you see onto paper. Simultaneously, you will begin to learn how to express yourself individually through drawing—how will your drawings be different from everyone else’s? We will begin with the fundamentals of drawing through observation (line, value, space), move into more complex subjects and combinations of materials, even touching on collage and abstraction, and finish with a large-scale, independent project. Each week, we will work in new ways, continuing to build on what came before and often approaching similar subject matter in different ways. We will not keep our subjects at a distance but will try to connect with them, move around and through them, deconstruct them—really understand what we are drawing. Ultimately, what can your drawings reveal beyond what we all plainly see? While we may all be looking at and drawing the same thing, you will be asked to find your own solutions to problems, take your drawings in new and unexpected directions, and extrapolate from what you know and learn. This course will ask you to look at your world with intensity and render the invisible on paper. This course is suitable for all levels. Independent work outside of class is required. Studio practice will be reinforced through discussion, occasional written work, readings, slides, and gallery/museum visits. A studio visit with an artist in New York City will also be scheduled. Drawing: A Big Evolution John O'Connor Open—Spring Drawings demand to be changed over time through process—they are always evolving. This evolution will serve as the foundation for this highly creative drawing course. In class, you will work on observational and idea-based drawings over extended periods of time. You’ll work on each project in class for approximately two weeks and will bring it to a state of finish outside of class. Through varied, in-depth projects, you will gain a greater understanding of the techniques of drawing and will learn to combine ideas and mediums in personal, thought-provoking ways. Your choice of medium will be flexible and varied and will include charcoal, graphite, ink, pastel, conte, colored pencil, etc. Additionally, you will be asked to directly address the scale of your drawings—from very small, intricate works to large-scale, exuberant pieces. The subjects of our drawings will vary widely, as well—from detailed drawings of the human figure to abstract, conceptual drawings in color. Some additional subjects may include: space, memory, time, narrative, installation, collage, imagination, collaboration, movement and time, color, and humor. Permeating all of this will be our investigation into ways of introducing content into your work—what will your drawings be about? This course is suitable for all levels. Independent work outside of class is required. Studio practice will be reinforced through discussion, occasional written work, readings, slides, and gallery/museum visits. A studio visit with an artist in New York City will also be scheduled. 134 Visual Arts Concepts in Game Design Angela Ferraiolo Open, Small seminar—Fall This course surveys the historical basis of and current practices in game design, which is phase one of game development. Just as a study of rhetoric and persuasive argument lays the foundation for effective written communication, the study of game design lays the foundation for an equally effective digital communication. While the structure of games may seem like a small fraction of interactive design, the concepts related in this class should prove fundamental to your ability to design any interactive experience from a simple website to a MMORPG. The class is divided into three sections. Part I looks at games structures, rules, and mechanics from paper to physical to digital games and examines the relationship between play styles, game engines, and level design. We will cover the rise of the experimental game mechanic, its importance both artistically and commercially, and the evolution of game play from the playground to the first-person shooter to the large-data simulator. Part II covers strategies of interaction, including pattern languages, flow, progression, and emergence. We will also read a bit about early theories of play and the strategies behind art games of the Surrealist, Dadaist, Fluxus, and Situationist movements in art. Part III examines ethical issues of design and looks at societal and cultural values that may be encoded in games, the rise of serious games, the benefits and dangers of games as educational tools, the games for change movement, social media, mobile gaming, and the opportunity that games offer as a means of activist design. Behind the facade of toy, games are templates for many types of interaction. Some offer new potential for action and collaboration. In other cases, games are a means of enculturation that transmit social values, race and gender roles, and personal and community identities. A game can be a language, an environment, or a system. Many believe a game can be about anything. Above all, a game is an experience—and it’s the experience that we're trying to understand. Let’s Get Physical: Building an Interactive World Brian Jones Open—Spring Through individual and group projects, students will be introduced to the world of creating interactions using sensors. Instead of keyboard and mouse inputs, sensors allow the real world of heat, sound, motion, moisture, pressure, and more to become inputs for computation. From interactive sculptures to plants that tweet when they need to be watered, the possibilities are endless. Creative Code Angela Ferraiolo Open, Small seminar—Spring This course is an introduction to graphics and interactive programming for visual artists and writers. Programmers are welcome, though the class assumes no programming background. The course is divided into two sections: first, a focus on basic skills—especially the fundamentals of computational form, including the concepts of drawing, color, procedural animation, loops, transformations, recursion, arrays, noise, and behavior; second, students will build on these skills to work with live inputs, gesture, and human interaction and pursue more advanced concepts such as generative code, flocking, or simulation. Conference projects may include visualizations, video experiments, installations, and games. This course is taught in Processing 1.0 and Max/MSP/Jitter and may make use of input devices such as Web cams and the Kinect sensor. Digital Documentary Storytelling: Development and Process Rico Speight Open—Year This yearlong course explores the art of documentary storytelling. Synthesizing theory and practice, the course introduces the palette of documentary production styles and approaches illustrated in the works of the Maysles brothers, Newsreel Collective, Barbara Kopple, Spike Lee, Sam Pollard, Errol Morris, Werner Herzog, and Jennifer Fox, as well as in big box-office documentaries by Michael Moore, Charles Ferguson (Inside Job), and Lauren Lazin (Tupac Resurrection). Students are encouraged to experience theory as a means of empowering their own production practices. The course is designed to work both as seminar and practicum. In weekly sessions, students consider ideological, ethical, and political implications of documentary production and examine the relationship between documentary films and social change. Over the full year, students will develop, research, write treatments for, pitch, THE CURRICULUM 135 produce, direct, and edit short 10-minute documentaries. Technical labs in shooting and editing are scheduled throughout both fall and spring terms to strengthen technical production and editing skills. Production and editing exercises, as well as conceptual writing assignments, will prepare students for the tasks of putting together treatments and pitching samples and trailers for their productions. Ultimately, students are encouraged to explore the aesthetics and practices of documentary filmmaking as an avenue of self-expression: They are given the opportunity to create the short documentary they’ve always imagined. Frame By Frame I Damani Baker Open—Fall This course is for students who wish to “think cinematically.” It will be an intensive, hands-on introduction to filmmaking. Students will work individually and in groups to produce a series of fiction films. In addition to the required class work, students will attend mandatory craft courses in directing actors, cinematography, and editing. The craft course takes place one evening a week outside of class. The first film assignment, entitled “The 2 Minute,” is a video project to be edited in camera. Students will not be allowed to review their material until it is presented in class. The second assignment, “On Location,” will introduce students to 16mm cameras and production. Six-to-eight classes during the fall semester will be dedicated to the second assignment, in which students will practice skills learned in cinematography, acting, and general set coordination. The final requirement is the conference project. Students will produce and direct a five-minute film, working with assigned crews. This will incorporate all of the technical aspects of film production that were discussed in lectures, screenings, and demonstrations: preproduction planning, budgeting, shotlist, storyboards, and script breakdown. In this course, students will explore the structure and aesthetics of films from around the world, while gaining practical experience transforming their own ideas into action. Writing Movies I Rona Naomi Mark Open—Fall During the course of this seminar/workshop, students will learn how to write narrative screenplays with an eye toward completing a feature-length work. The course will cover basics of format and style, and there will be weekly assignments aimed at developing students’ screenwriting muscles. Students will “pitch” ideas, rigorously outline stories, and write and revise pages of their blueprint for a feature-length film. The class is designed to help the beginning screenwriter find his or her voice as a film artist, using the written language of visual storytelling. Animation Sketchbooks Robin Starbuck Open—Fall This course provides a theoretical framework, covering the principles of 2D animation and its use in creating movement through successive drawings. Regardless of your drawing skill level, in this class you will have the opportunity to turn any drawings, no matter how rudimentary, into short animated films. A variety of techniques are explored for creating metamorphosis, movement, holds, squash and stretch, depth, and resistance. Students first use the stop-motion stand to capture and view handcrafted work and then move on to shooting live action in video and translating this into animation through rotoscoping. Projects are designed to give students production knowledge covering stop motion, Adobe Photoshop®, Flash and After Effects®. In this one-semester class, students complete a series of film exercises, encouraging a full range of 2D animation skills and a final project. Emphasis will be upon principles that support concept development and animations that demonstrate a poetic understanding of rhythm and motion. Films illustrating drawnanimation techniques are screened regularly. Discussion and readings provide context for idea development and visual invention. Upon completion of this course, students will have a working definition of animation systems and techniques that they can later apply to any digital media: gaming, film, or art production. Animation for Short Films Robin Starbuck Open—Spring In this class, students will refine their animation and storytelling skills by focusing on the process of creating a single animated short, including story development, visualization, character development, shot-by-shot storyboards, keyframing, continuity, and animatics. All of the production steps required to complete a short 136 Visual Arts animated film will be demonstrated and applied through exercises aimed at the production of a final one- or two-minute film by each student or team of students. Participants will develop and refine their personal style through exercises in story design and assignments directed at translating these into moving images. Live action, digitized hand-drawn images, and photographs will be assembled in sync to sound. Compositing exercises will cover a wide range of features. Green screen, keyframing, timeline effects, 2D and 3D space, layering, and lighting are some of the motion graphics techniques that we will use. Methods of digitizing traditional animation will also be included. Exercises will enable students with a working knowledge of Adobe Photoshop, Flash, and After Effects. 4D Cinema is available for those already comfortable working in 3D platforms. Students with more advanced skills wishing to work independently are welcome to join the class. Frame By Frame II Damani Baker Intermediate—Spring This course is for intermediate and advanced students who wish to “think cinematically.” It will be an intensive, hands-on course in filmmaking. Students will work individually and in groups to produce a series of short films. In addition to the required class work, students will attend mandatory craft courses in directing actors, cinematography, and editing. The craft course takes place one evening a week outside of class. The first film assignment, entitled “The 2 Minute,” is a video project to be edited in camera. Students will not be allowed to review their material until it is presented in class. The second assignment, “On Location,” will introduce students to 16mm cameras and production. Six-to-eight classes will be dedicated to the second assignment, in which students will practice skills learned in cinematography, acting, and general set coordination. The final requirement is the conference project. During the semester, students will produce and direct a fiveminute film, working in crews; advanced students are able to choose between fiction and nonfiction for their conference work. This will incorporate all of the technical aspects of film production that were discussed in lectures, screenings, and demonstrations: preproduction planning, budgeting, shotlist, storyboards, and script breakdown. In this course, students will explore the structure and aesthetics of films from around the world, while gaining practical experience transforming their own ideas into action. Making the Genre Film: Horror, Sci-Fi & Fantasy Rona Naomi Mark Intermediate—Spring Working within a genre can greatly assist the fledgling filmmaker by suggesting content and stylistic elements, thereby freeing the artist to focus on self-expression. This is a hands-on production course, with a focus on producing genre films. Our class discussions and video exercises will explore various ideas present in the so-called “lesser genres” of horror, sci-fi and fantasy: the idea of the “monster,” man/woman vs. society suspense, fear, sexual politics, and repression, as well as the smart use of special effects and other strategies for the independent filmmaker working in the genre. In addition to class exercises, students will each produce and direct a short video project for their conference work. Script to Screen I Rona Naomi Mark Open—Fall This hands-on production course will introduce students to the entire process of narrative filmmaking from concept through exhibition. Fundamentals of screenwriting, directing, producing, and editing will be explored through a series of targeted exercises. Students will develop and produce a short film throughout the course, putting their visual storytelling skills into practice. Filmmaking Structural Analysis: Film Writing Frederick Michael Strype Open—Fall This course explores narrative storytelling forms in contemporary cinema and screenwriting. Geared toward the perspective of the aspiring/ emerging screenwriter, filmmaker, and/or media artist, the seminar includes screenings of films and the concurrent reading of source materials and their respective screenplays. Cinema language, dramatic theory, and cinematic story structures will be explored, including sequencing, episodic, three-act, four-act, seven-act, teleplay, and the so-called character-driven forms. THE CURRICULUM 137 Selected texts will also be read, and weekly structural analyses will be written. Students will also explore screenwriting exercises throughout the course and investigate the connection between oral storytelling and the nature of narration through the screenplay. Conference projects often focus on the development of a long-form screenplay/teleplay, analytical research paper, or other film-related endeavors. A foundation course for narrative screenwriting, filmmaking, and new media projects, as well as dramatic analysis, the course develops skills that can be applied to other forms of dramatic writing and storytelling. No prior experience is necessary. Writing Movies II Rona Naomi Mark Intermediate—Spring This course will focus on completing scripts begun in the first semester or in other classes. Once the first drafts are finished, students will work on editing and revising their screenplays. By trimming excess dialogue, rewriting dramatic beats, restructuring narrative elements, and excising scenes or sequences in their entirety, students will learn the art of rigorous revision and emerge at semester’s end with a well-crafted, polished, feature-length screenplay. Writing the Film Frederick Michael Strype Intermediate—Spring This course is for the emerging screenwriter, including those initiating a new screenplay/ project, adapting original material into the screenplay form, rewriting a screenplay, or finishing a screenplay-in-progress. A review of screenwriting fundamentals during the first few weeks, as well as a discussion of the state of each project, will be followed by an intense screenwriting workshop experience. Students are expected to enter the course with an existent screenplay, a strong idea, an outline or narrative roadmap of their project, and the capability of “talking out” the story. The expectation is for students to finish a first-draft, long-form project. Published screenplays, several useful texts, and clips of films will form a body of examples to help concretize aspects of the art and craft. The Webisodics Project/Web Series Asylum Frederick Michael Strype, Doug MacHugh Intermediate, Advanced—Year “The Web Series Asylum” is a unique interdisciplinary, collaborative, yearlong course between filmmaking and theatre that collides screenwriters, actors, and filmmakers to develop, craft, and deliver an original online Web series. This class will be team-taught by filmmaking/ screenwriting instructor Fred Strype and Theatre instructor Douglas MacHugh. In the fall semester, from the varied disciplines involved in writing, acting, and filmmaking, the Web series team will explore characters, story threads, performance, and working within a film-production environment. As the screenplays are developed, workshopped, and rewritten, the filmmakers will be shooting and editing the weekly staged readings, as performed by the actors. The class will analyze writing, filmmaking, and performance; adjustments and revisions will be made throughout the process, as the episodes begin to emerge. In the spring, the Web series screenplay will be finalized, rehearsed, and the series shot. Students will then be involved in analyzing the editing process. The posting of the edited episodes will begin after spring break, with the aim of the series being fully online by Senior Week. In the latter weeks of the spring semester, the writers and actors will workshop table reads and staged readings of original material developed and revised in conference by the screenwriters. The actors will gain further experience working with the filmmakers, as these workshops will be shot and edited, as well. The outcome from this past year’s course is the Web series, “Socially Active,” and can be viewed online at: http://vimeo.com/channels/ sociallyactive or http://www.youtube.com/user/ sociallyactiveweb. Enrollment is limited. Permission of the instructors is required. Contemporary Painting Practices/Traditional Techniques Angela Dufresne Open—Year This course is an investigation of technical practice, as well as conceptual and critical skills, common to the expanded field of contemporary painting. A series of explorative assigned problems for the first section of the course will 138 Visual Arts challenge the students to resolve problems of composition and narrative based on research, reference, and material concerns. Assignments will prompt students to generate paintings from various tactical approaches: observation, print and digital media, imagination, etc. After evaluating these projects, the students will be encouraged to develop their own problems dealing with personal, investigative painting. We will use traditional materials and techniques to explore traditional problems in painting—color, scale, abstraction, light, and so on—based on individual concerns. Students will learn to develop their own projects based on their sensibilities revealed in the first section of assignments as a means to develop a language and context for creative ideas. Through assignments, drawing, experimentation, risk taking, writing, research, presentations, and critiques, students will challenge and personalize their relationship to painting as a medium in contemporary society. Students will make use of a sketchbook/image archive throughout the course They will be encouraged to tie in current media interests—i.e., film, the Internet, -zines, television, literature, news media, etc.—with a painting practice. This is a studio-oriented class, though students will be expected to work outside of class on projects related to the studio explorations. We will also investigate ideas via readings, artist lectures, videos, field trips, workshops, and other material. Open to students who have had painting courses at a college or advanced high-school level. Beginning Painting: Value, Color, and Composition Angela Dufresne Open—Fall This course will be an extensive introduction to painting in oils and a vigorous investigation into the composition, design, and execution of paintings with traditional painting materials. Through drawing, still life, life models, and an array of reference material, we will execute a series of paintings that will involve the investigation of color theory, as well as spatial constructs, including traditional perspective but also contemporary problems of photography and collage. For conference, each student will be asked to study one specific artist over the course of the semester and make works that directly respond to that artist’s work. Each student will also write an essay that will be presented to the class, which will take the form of a letter written to the artist in question and take on the attitude of the student’s semester-long relationship with that artist. The focus of the course is the practice of painting and the development of a personal relationship with that history. There will be regular critiques, presentations, class trips, and one exhibition. Basic Painting: Color and Form Ursula Schneider Open—Spring The goal of this course is to develop an individual visual vocabulary and to work with the paints in an accomplished manner. We will begin with drawing and painting from observation, using still lifes and the figure. Each project will have three levels of complexity, allowing for individual and creative solutions. Color theory will be the basis for abstract paintings on paper. The history of abstract painting will be discussed in the form of slide presentations. Oil and acrylic paints will be used to explore a variety of painting styles; e.g., as creating direct marks, texture, and layers. Assignments will enable each student to practice and to understand her or his own preference in working with the brushes and paints. There will be regular class discussions about the work in progress and historical and contemporary art issues. For conference, the student will select readings about the making of art, art history, and artists. The student will be required to make weekly drawings and writings, which will serve as a journal about observations and information presented in class and as a tool to develop ideas for painting. The class and conference work will require the student to work independently in the studio, in addition to class periods. Advanced Painting Ursula Schneider, John O'Connor Advanced, Small seminar—Year Acrylics, together with pure pigments, will be the painting media used in this course. This will give the student who has worked in oil paints the opportunity to develop new painting skills. Mr. O’Connor will begin the class by introducing the following concepts: color, space, the figure, and collage. Students will develop their individual working process and create unique solutions in response to the questions posed in the assignments. Experimentation with images will be encouraged by drawing and painting from life, using photography and working digitally on the THE CURRICULUM 139 computer. In the spring, Ms. Schneider will work with individual students to continue developing their ideas and painting methods. The class will begin by painting from the model to practice color and gesture. Then, we will experiment with painting on nontraditional surfaces, combining images and objects. The structure of this course is divided between class projects and conference work. In conference, students will be expected to complete three-to-six paintings a semester. Throughout the course, there will be class readings and individual research on contemporary art and artists, as well as visits to New York City galleries. The goal of this course is to take risks and to make soundly constructed paintings. J The course is open to students with previous college-level painting and drawing experience. The course will be taught by Mr. O'Connor in the fall and Ms. Schneider in the spring. Basic Analog Black-andWhite Photography Michael Spano Open—Year This is an analog, film-based course that introduces the fundamentals of black-and-white photography: acquisition of photographic technique, development of personal vision and artistic expression, and discussion of photographic history and contemporary practice. Reviews are designed to strengthen the understanding of the creative process, while assignments will stress photographic aesthetics and formal concerns. Conference work entails research into historical movements and individual artists’ working methods through slide presentations. Throughout the year, students are encouraged to make frequent visits to gallery and museum exhibitions and share their impressions with the class. The relationship of photography to liberal arts also will be emphasized. Students will develop and complete their own bodies of work as the culmination of their study. This is not a digital photography course. Students need to have at least a 35mm film camera and be able to purchase film and gelatin silver paper throughout the year. Digital Photography Michael Vahrenwald Open—Year This course will provide students with an overview of the digital darkroom. The class will use digital media as an extension of traditional photographic practice and discuss both the advantages and the limits of digital technology. Students will learn basic image manipulation in Photoshop®, ink-jet printing, the use of digital cameras, and scanning film. The focus of the class will be based upon the development of photographic projects, along with readings on the history of both traditional and digital photography. Intermediate Photography Justine Kurland Intermediate—Year This wildly explorative class investigates the potentials of black-and-white photography, color photography, and the assimilation of the two. The history of the photographic medium will be explored. Editing, sequencing, and output size will be introduced to students through bibliomaniac explorations and gallery/museum visits. Students are welcome to use either analog or digital. The development of a personal vision, based upon a personal set of interests and/or beliefs, will be at the core of this experience. Advanced Photography Joel Sternfeld Advanced—Year This is a rigorous studio course, in which students will produce a body of work while studying the relevant artistic and photographic precedents. A working knowledge of photographic history and contemporary practice is a prerequisite, as is previous art or photographic work that indicates readiness for the advanced questions presented by this course. Printmaking I, II Kris Philipps Open, Small seminar—Year This course introduces the student to the basic fundamentals and concepts of printmaking in an environment that practices newly developed, nontoxic printmaking methodologies. Participants will learn how to develop an image on a particular surface (either hand-drawn or computer-generated), how to transfer the image to paper, edition printing, and presentation. Students will utilize the tools, materials, and equipment required to produce a print in a variety of media, including intaglio, silkscreen, and relief prints. The techniques involved in each of these processes are numerous and 140 Visual Arts complex. Emphasis is placed on finding those techniques best-suited to the development of each class member’s aesthetic concerns. Artist Books Kris Philipps Intermediate, Small seminar—Year In the past, the book was used solely as a container for the written word. In the past 30 years, however, the book has emerged as a popular format for visual expression. Students will begin this class by learning to make historical book forms from various cultures (coptic, codex, accordion, and Japanese-bound) so that they will be able to see the book with which we are familiar in a new and wider context. From here, students will apply newly learned techniques to the production of nontraditional artist books. The class will also cover all aspects of letterpress printing, including setting type, using the press, and making and printing with polymer plates. Whether text, images, or the combination of the two are employed, emphasis will be placed on the creation of books as visual objects. Advanced Printmaking Kris Philipps Advanced, Small seminar—Year This course offers an opportunity for an in-depth study of advanced printmaking techniques. Students will be encouraged to master traditional skills and techniques so that familiarity with process will lead to the development of a personal and meaningful body of work. Edition printing and exploration in multicolor prints, assigned reading, and an individual project will be required. Concepts in Sculpture Rico Gatson Open—Year What is sculpture? How do we make it? How do we talk about it? What does it mean? This is a yearlong course that invites students to investigate fundamental-to-advanced concepts in sculpture. Students will gain a greater understanding of technique, materials, and process with a specific emphasis on the integration of larger social, political, and aesthetic concerns and how to address them in the work. As the course progresses, students will have the opportunity to work in digital and experimental media. The course will cover the period from the late 20th century to the present. There will be regular presentations, assigned projects, and trips to galleries and museums. At the completion of each project, there will be a group critique where feedback is offered and process explored. Experimentation and personal expression are highly encouraged. Experience working three-dimentionally is welcome but not required. Please bring examples of previous work to the interview. Architecture Studio: Designing Built Form Tishan Hsu Open, Small seminar—Fall This course will introduce the student to architectural design. We will learn the basic language of drawing architectural space and the process of designing within that language. We will learn techniques for model building. Students will read and discuss a range of approaches to: (1) designing habitable space, and (2) how the process of design is applied to a range of interventions in urban and environmental design practices. This will include looking at and thinking about how architecture is an art—and one that expresses the values of a culture. We will explore how environmental sustainability is influencing the design of human environments and how to incorporate sustainability into design. The course will be project-based and include drawing, model building, designing with 3-D software, and graphics. Experience in drawing is helpful. Things and Beyond Tishan Hsu Intermediate—Fall This course will explore the possibilities for creative production in an expanded practice of what is loosely defined as sculpture. We will consider different ways of thinking about art and different ways of thinking about ourselves, what we encounter in the world, and what we can imagine doing as a result of an encounter. We will explore concepts in critical theory that question the role of art, how it is produced, and in what kinds of spaces/sites cultural production can take place. Experimentation with the integration of digital media into sculptural practice will be supported. The course will include readings in which we will explore how texts can enable different kinds of (art)work to emerge. In doing so, students will be asked to suspend (but not give up) their ideas about what THE CURRICULUM 141 art is and how it should be made. Students will have access to a range of materials such as cardboard, wood, metal, plaster, digital media, and mechanical systems, with technical support provided in the handling of these media. Experience in the visual, performative, industrial, and/or digital arts is helpful. For the interview, students are encouraged to bring images of work done in any medium. another form, and the like. No experience is necessary beyond a passion to write for the screen. Interdisciplinary Studio/ Seminar Open, Small seminar—Fall Producers are credited on every film, television, and media project made. They are crucial—even seminal—to each and every production, no matter how big or small. Yet, even as a pivotal position in the creative and practical process of making a film, TV show, or media project, the title “Producer” is perhaps the least understood of all the collaborators involved. What is a producer? This course answers that question, examining what a producer actually does in the creation of screen-based media and the many hats that one, or a small army of producers, may wear at any given time. Students will explore the role of the producer in the filmmaking, television, and video process from the moment of creative inspiration through project development to financing, physical production (indeed, down to the nuts-and-bolts aspects of budgeting, scheduling, and delivering a film, TV, or video project), marketing, navigating the film-festival gauntlet, as well as drilling down into the distribution process and strategies. A practical course in the ways and means of producing, the class will consider the history and current state of producing through case studies of projects, as well as through visiting producers, directors, and artisans from the film, television, and mediamaking community. Students will also gain hands-on experience in developing projects, breaking them down into production elements, as well as crafting schedules and budgets. Conference projects may include the producing of a film or media project by a student in another filmmaking production class at the College, a case study of several films from the producer’s perspective, the development and preproduction of a proposed future “virtual” film or video project, and the like. The course provides a practical skill set for students seeking work in the filmmaking and media-making world after Sarah Lawrence College. The course also provides filmmakers and screenwriters with a window on the importance of and mechanics pertaining to the producing discipline. Gary Burnley Advanced—Year A dialogue with peers working in a variety of disciplines, this course is designed for experienced visual-arts students. It is a forum to share and discuss critical, creative, intellectual strategies and processes while building, nurturing, and sustaining an independent point of view. Each participant will be expected to focus on growing the values, commitments, and attitudes embedded in his or her own body of work and ideas. Experimentation, innovation, and uniqueness of vision will be encouraged, along with habits of discipline necessary to support all creative endeavors. Readings and discussion of art and cultural history are an important part of the weekly course work. Open to juniors and seniors with prior visual-arts experience. Writing for the Screen Ramin Serry Open, Small seminar—Fall This course will focus on the fundamentals of writing for the screen, with a particular focus on the short-form screenplay. The course, which will explore the nature of screenwriting, is structured as a rigorous workshop. Students will begin writing the first week and continue every week. They will read peer work, with the entire process supported by in-class analysis and critiques thereof. We will migrate from initial idea through research techniques, character development, story generation, outlining, the rough draft, and rewrites to a series of finished short-form screenplays. Fundamentals of character, story, universe and setting, dramatic action, tension, conflict, structure, and style will be explored. In conference, students may research and develop long-form screenplays or teleplays, craft a series of short screenplays for production courses or independent production, rewrite a previously written script, adapt original material from Producing Independent Film, TV, and Video—A RealWorld Guide Heather Winters 142 Women’s Studies Women’s Studies Writing The Women’s Studies curriculum comprises courses in various disciplines and focuses on new scholarship on women, sex, and gender. Subjects include women’s history; feminist theory; the psychology and politics of sexuality; gender constructs in literature, visual arts, and popular culture; and the ways in which gender, race, class, and sexual identities intersect for both women and men. This curriculum is designed to help all students think critically and globally about sexgender systems and to encourage women in particular to think in new ways about themselves and their work. Undergraduates may explore women’s studies in lectures, seminars, and conference courses. Advanced students may also apply for early admission to the College’s graduate program in Women’s History and, if admitted, may begin work toward the Master of Arts degree during their senior year. The MA program provides rigorous training in historical research and interpretation. It is designed for students pursuing careers in academe, advocacy, policymaking, and related fields. In Sarah Lawrence College’s nationally recognized Writing program, students work in close collaboration with faculty members who are active, successful writers. The program focuses on the art and craft of writing. Courses in poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction are offered. In workshops, students practice their writing and critique each other’s work. The program encourages students to explore an array of distinctive perspectives and techniques that will extend their own writing ability—whatever their preferred genre. Conferences provide students with close, continual mentoring and guidance and with opportunities to encounter personally their teachers’ professional experiences. Teachers critique their students’ writing and select readings specifically to augment or challenge each student’s work. In conferences, student and teacher chart a course of study that best allows individual students to pursue subjects and issues that interest them, to develop their own voice, to hone their techniques, and to grow more sophisticated as readers and critics. The College offers a vibrant community of writers and probably the largest writing faculty available to undergraduates anywhere in the country. Visits from guest writers who give public readings and lectures are an important component of the curriculum throughout the year. Sarah Lawrence College also takes full advantage of its proximity to the New York City literary scene, with its readings, literary agencies, publishing houses, and bookstores—as well as its wealth of arts and culture. The city provides fertile ground for internships in which students can use their writing training in educational programs, schools, publishing houses, small presses, journal productions, magazines, and nonprofit arts agencies. Courses offered this year in Women’s Studies are listed below. Full descriptions of the courses may be found under the appropriate disciplines. Culture and Mental Illness (p. 5), Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology Advanced French: The Quill and the Dress: French Women Writers in Early Modern France (p. 39), Eric Leveau French Tudor England: Politics, Gender, and Religion. An Introductory Workshop in Doing History (p. 51), David Bernstein History Public Stories, Private Lives: Methods of Oral History (p. 53), Mary Dillard History Gender, Education, and Opportunity in Africa (p. 53), Mary Dillard History First-Year Studies: Gender and the Culture of War in US History, 1775-1975 (p. 45), Lyde Cullen Sizer History Queer Theory: A History (p. 61), Julie Abraham Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies Embodiment and Biological Knowledge: Public Engagement in Medicine and Science (p. 114), Sarah Wilcox Sociology First-Year Studies: Exploring Subject Matter in Fiction Carolyn Ferrell FYS How do we, as writers, take our lived experiences and transform them into fiction? The novelist Janet Frame observed, “Putting it all down as it happens is not fiction; there must be the journey by oneself, the changing of the light focused upon the material, the willingness of the author herself to live within that light, that city of reflections governed by different laws, materials, THE CURRICULUM 143 currency.” Through weekly writing assignments and exercises, we will begin the journey into this softly lit territory of subject matter, asking questions along the way that will hopefully expand our grasp of the craft of fiction: What makes a story a story? What is the difference between showing and telling? Do we write what we know or what we don’t know? Class will be divided between the discussion of student stories and of published authors such as Nikolai Gogol, Flannery O’Connor, Cornelius Eady, George Saunders, Edward P. Jones, Alison Bechdel, and Alice Munro. Students will explore an author in depth for conference work and will be required to attend at least two campus readings per semester. This workshop will also focus on developing the art of the critique—which, developed over time and in a supportive and open-minded atmosphere, will ultimately help us better understand the workings of our own creative writing. First-Year Studies: World Literature and Writing Myra Goldberg FYS One stream of this first-year studies class is an introduction to aspects of world literature: The Arabian Nights, ancient Indian and Middle Eastern love poetry, a graphic novel from Iran and one from Malaysia, a contemporary novel from Zimbabwe, two story collections from the Caribbean, and so on. We will use these readings as inspiration for our writing, a source of knowledge and wisdom about story form and life, and a source of assignments. The other stream will be a continuous journal of the student’s own life and work, discussed in small groups in the second class meeting and kept for the year, with assignments as the year goes on increasingly given by members of the group. First-Year Studies in Fiction April Reynolds Mosolino FYS All great stories are built with good sentences. In this workshop, students will create short stories or continue works-in-progress that will be read and discussed by their peers. Class sessions will focus on constructive criticism of the writer’s work, and students will be encouraged to ask the questions with which all writers grapple: What makes a good story? Have I developed my characters fully? And does my language convey the ideas that I want? We will talk about the writer’s craft in this class—how people tell stories to each other, how to find a plot, and how to make a sentence come to life. This workshop should be seen as a place where students can share their thoughts and ideas in order to then return to their pages and create a completed imaginary work. There will also be some short stories and essays on the art of writing that will set the tone and provide literary fodder for the class. First-Year Studies in Fiction Joan Silber FYS This class is designed to help students travel far in fiction writing by trying a wide range of approaches. We’ll spend time each week discussing stories by a range of authors, and regular writing assignments will be linked to these models. We’ll look at the elements of fiction—setting, character, time, plot, point of view—as well as less usual categories. As students begin to present their own work in class, we’ll see how forms emerge and how beginnings can develop into shaped pieces. In conference, we’ll talk about which assignments have triggered the strongest possibilities, and students will begin to write longer, more complicated pieces and to grow their own notions of story. First-Year Studies: Exploring Voice, Image, and Form in Poetry Cathy Park Hong FYS What makes a line? What makes an image? How do you mold a poetic form that best captures the self? Part poetry workshop and part intensive reading discussion class, we will first explore poetry's traditional foundations of line, image, form, and voice and then learn how to adventurously expand upon the fundamentals. In the first semester, we will explore voice and its many masks of alter ego, persona, monologue, and apostrophe. We will broaden our ideas on the poetic line by working with a spectrum of forms from sonnets, ghazals, and sestinas to prose poems. To help oil our imaginative rig, we will read William Carlos Williams, Elizabeth Bishop, John Berryman, Gwendolyn Brooks, Aga Shahid Ali, and others. In the second semester, we will expand upon the poetic foundations that we have learned by reading poets from the avant-garde tradition such as Gertrude Stein, Charles Olson, 144 Writing Harryette Mullen, and Lyn Hejinian. We will write ars poeticas (poems that are about what poems should be or do), collage sound poems, serialized poems, and homophonic translations. In addition, we will develop our critical poetic vocabulary through a series of workshops, reading discussions, and critical assignments. Expect to write a poem a week generated from writing assignments, as well as reading a book a week. At the end of the year, we will revise and gather the poems that we have written and compile our own chapbooks. First-Year Studies in Poetry Marie Howe FYS This is a class in which we will immerse ourselves in the reading and writing of poetry. We will look closely at a published poet’s poems—at syntax, line, diction, image, music, etc.—and the poet’s strategies and techniques. We will attend poetry readings and slams, watch films, view art, and generally immerse ourselves in the soup of inspiration. We will spend time generating poems together, inspired by the poets we experience, and look closely at one another’s work. Each writer in our class will meet with another class member once a week for a “poetry date.” Each writer will be responsible for reading the assigned work and for bringing to class one written offering each week. We will work hard, learn a great deal about poetry, and have a wonderful time. Living Poets Jeffrey McDaniel Open, Lecture—Fall Each week, we will read a published book by a living writer and discuss that book in detail, roughly locating it in the context of contemporary American poetry. Each of the authors on the syllabus will come to class and share his or her work publicly with the group. Each reading will be followed by a discussion with the author, where students will be able to ask about influence, creative process, and craft. Our group conferences will be writing workshops, where each student will bring in copies of a new poem for discussion. Over the course of the semester, students will read 11 books of poetry, writing one- to two-page critical responses. Students will revise three of their own poems as a final creative project. For a final critical project, students will write a five-page paper, focusing on one or two of the authors on the syllabus. Connected Collections Mary Morris Open—Year From Edgar Alan Poe (Fall of the House of Usher) to Sandra Cisneros and Tim O’Brien, writers have been engaged in the art of writing stories that weave and interconnect. Whether through theme as in Poe or, more recently, Dan Chaon’s Among the Missing or Joan Silber’s Ideas of Heaven, through geography as in James Joyce’s Dubliners or Sandra Cisernos’ House on Mango Street, or characters as in The Things They Carried (O’Brien) or Olive Kittridge (Elizabeth Strout), or finally an incident that links them such as Haruki Murakami’s After the Quake, Russell Banks’s The Sweet Hereafter, or Thornton Wilder’s The Bridge of San Luis Rey, writers have found ways to link their stories. This workshop will focus on the writing of stories that are connected in one of these various ways. We will read extensively from connected collections. Exercises will be created in order to help students mine their own material in order to create small collections of narratives with similar preoccupations, terrains, or people. Visible and Invisible Ink: How Fiction Writing Happens Lucy Rosenthal Open—Year Successful fiction writing is a pleasure that requires work and an educated patience. Using as our basic text the stories that students themselves write, we will seek to show how each story, as it unfolds, provides clues—in its language, narrative tendencies, distribution of emphases, etc.—to the solution of its own creative problems. We will explore such questions as these: What are the story's intentions? How close does the writer come to realizing them? What shifts in approach might better serve both intentions and materials? What is—or should be—in any given piece of work the interplay of theme, language, and form? We will look at the links between the answers to these questions and the writer’s evolving voice. Discussion and analysis of student work will be supplemented by consideration of published short stories by writers such as Tim O’Brien, Jhumpa Lahiri, ZZ Packer, Rick Moody, Junot Diaz, Katherine Anne Porter, James Thurber, and Truman Capote. Exercises—which can serve as springboards for longer works—will be assigned weekly. Designed to provide opportunities for free writing and to increase students’ facility with THE CURRICULUM 145 technique, the exercises will be based on the readings and on values and issues emerging from the students’ work. Fictions of Embodiment Sayantani DasGupta Open—Fall How does fiction tell of the body? More importantly, how does it emerge from and get shaped by embodied identities? This workshop will examine the body and embodiment in the short story, the novel, and select memoir/ nonfiction. We will incorporate close reading of text and weekly writing exercises, along with workshops of student writing. Possible texts include works by Alice Walker, Lynne Sharon Shwartz, Lucy Grealy, Nancy Mairs, Richard McCann, Richard Selzer, Mark Haddon, Laurie Halsie Anderson, Cortney Davis, Shyam Salvadurai, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Jose Saramango. Ultimately, the course will explore the interconnections of voice and body. In the words of Nancy Mairs, “No body, no voice; no voice, no body. That’s what I know in my bones.” Fiction Techniques William Melvin Kelley Open—Fall Art may come from the heart, but craft comes from the brain. Taking a craft orientation, the class identifies and isolates essential technical elements of fiction writing—the merits of various points of view, the balance of narrative and dialogue, the smooth integration of flashback into narrative, the uses of long or short sentences, tenses—and then rehearses them until the writer develops facility and confidence in their use. We accomplish this by daily writing in an assigned diary. In addition to assigned writing, the writer must (or attempt to) produce 40 pages of work each semester. The class reads short fiction or excerpts from longer works that illustrate the uses of these numerous techniques and pays special attention to James Joyce’s Ulysses, a toolbox of a novel that employs most of the techniques of fiction developed since its 17th-century beginnings. Each writer must choose and read a novel of literary or social value written by a woman, such as Wuthering Heights, Frankenstein, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, or Gone with the Wind. Conducted in a noncompetitive and cooperative way, the class brainstorms a plot and, with each writer taking a chapter, composes a class novel. Finally, the class explores the proper use of a writer’s secondary tool—the copy machine in the production of a simple publication, a ’zine—extending the process of fiction writing beyond the frustrating limbo of the finished manuscript. Fictional Techniques adopts a hammer-and-nails approach to writing prose fiction, going behind the curtain to where the scenery gets painted and the levers get yanked. Writing and Reading Fiction Brian Morton Open—Fall In class, we will discuss a group of novels that have in common qualities of economy, subtlety, and restaint. Authors to be read include Henry James, E.M. Forster, Elizabeth Taylor, Penelope Fitzgerald, and Barbara Pym. In conference, we will discuss your fiction. Although open to everyone, this class may be best-suited to students who have taken at least two prior writing classes. Memory and Fiction Victoria Redel Open—Fall In this course, we will explore the uses of childhood and memory as springboards for short fiction. How do writers move from the kernel of experience to the making of fiction? How do writers use their own past to develop stories that are not the retelling of what happened but an opportunity to develop a fiction with its own integrity and truth? We will work from writing experiments and weekly reading of short fictions and novels. Fiction Workshop Brooke Stevens Open—Fall I do not believe that great authors are necessarily great wordsmiths—take Dostoyevsky or Dreiser, two of my favorites—nor are they always the smartest people in the room; but what they do have is the ability to translate deep feelings, subtle observations, and ideas into a story. To foster this, I create a supportive and intelligent class atmosphere and teach the class a little like a visual arts class. In addition to reading and discussing a wide variety of literary short fiction, we'll look at interviews of filmmakers, painters, and writers with an emphasis on self-exploration, broadening our influences, and feeding the imagination. I also ask students to share with the class some aspect of their own personal journey and interests outside of fiction writing. In the 146 Writing end, everyone will produce their own finished short stories and, just as importantly, write constructive, thoughtful, and thorough critiques of each other's work. This class is open to both the beginner and the advanced short-story writer. Voice and Form Carolyn Ferrell Open—Spring It’s something we talk about in workshop and admire in the literature we read, but how does one discover one’s voice in fiction? How is voice related to subject matter, form, and point of view? How does one go about creating a memorable voice on the page? Through writing exercises and weekly reading assignments, we’ll explore these and other questions. Readings will include several genres, including young adult novels, graphic memoirs, short stories, poetry, and creative nonfiction. Authors we’ll read include George Saunders, Barry Yourgrau, Sherman Alexie, Aimee Bender, and Jacqueline Woodson. Students will get a chance to workshop stories at least twice during the semester; for conference there will be additional reading. Come prepared to work hard, critique the writing of others with care and insight, and hone the elements of craft in your own fiction. Words & Pictures Myra Goldberg Open—Spring This is a course with writing at its center and the other arts, mainly but not exclusively visual, around it. It should let you see what you can put together that has been kept apart. We will read and look at all kinds of things—children’s books, mysteries, poetry, short stories, fairy tales, graphic novels, performance pieces—and think about the ways in which people have used writing and other arts to speak to each other. People in these classes have combined text and pictures in conference work involving cartoons, quilts, Tshirts, texts with music behind them, and so on. There will be weekly assignments that specify what emotional territory you are in but not what you make of it. This semester course has less elaborate conference work than the yearlong course. Sparks in the Void: A FictionWriting Workshop David Hollander Open—Spring When I began teaching writing at Sarah Lawrence College, I was of the write-what-youknow school and pushed my students to “mine their experience in search of hidden truths” (or something like that). In the 10 intervening years, I’ve traveled 180 degrees from this position, so this course will emphasize the value of play and experimentation in the creation of short fiction. Our reading list may include a short novel or two (Autobiography of Red by Anne Carson, The Collected Works of Billy the Kid by Michael Ondaatje), as well as numerous short stories by writers whose works seem—as the late novelist John Hawkes once phrased it—“plucked from the void.” These writers may or may not include Robert Coover, Dawn Raffel, Joy Williams, Stanley Elkin, Rick Moody, Shelley Jackson, Donald Barthelme, and Harlan Ellison, along with an array of others of whom you probably have not heard. In addition to generating weekly responses to strange assignments, students will each “workshop” at least one story and possibly two. But to be honest, I have grown suspicious of the peer-critique model. We will be writing all the time; but rather than using peer critique as an instructive tool, we will instead use great and unorthodox published works—with a bit of peer critique thrown in for good measure. I am looking for generous individuals who are open to experimentation and play in fiction or who are interested in defining (or redefining) their work in nontraditional terms. That said, the course is offered (generously) to writers of all levels and backgrounds. Fiction Techniques William Melvin Kelley Open—Spring Art may come from the heart, but craft comes from the brain. Taking a craft orientation, the class identifies and isolates essential technical elements of fiction writing—the merits of various points of view, the balance of narrative and dialogue, the smooth integration of flashback into narrative, the uses of long or short sentences, tenses—and then rehearses them until the writer develops facility and confidence in their use. We accomplish this by daily writing in an assigned diary. In addition to assigned writing, the writer must (or attempt to) produce 40 pages of work THE CURRICULUM 147 each semester. The class reads short fiction or excerpts from longer works that illustrate the uses of these numerous techniques and pays special attention to James Joyce’s Ulysses, a toolbox of a novel that employs most of the techniques of fiction developed since its 17th-century beginnings. Each writer must choose and read a novel of literary or social value written by a woman, such as Wuthering Heights, Frankenstein, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, or Gone with the Wind. Conducted in a noncompetitive and cooperative way, the class brainstorms a plot and, with each writer taking a chapter, composes a class novel. Finally, the class explores the proper use of a writer’s secondary tool—the copy machine in the production of a simple publication, a ’zine—extending the process of fiction writing beyond the frustrating limbo of the finished manuscript. Fictional Techniques adopts a hammer-and-nails approach to writing prose fiction, going behind the curtain to where the scenery gets painted and the levers get yanked. Fiction Workshop Mary LaChapelle Open—Spring Nabokov stated that there are three points of view from which a writer can be considered: as a storyteller, as a teacher, and as an enchanter. We will consider all three, but it is with the art of enchantment that this workshop is most dedicated. We will walk through the process of writing a story. Where does the story come from? How do we know when we are ready to begin? How do we avoid succumbing to safe and unoriginal decisions and learn to recognize and trust our more mysterious and promising impulses? How do our characters guide the work? How do we come to know an ending, and how do we earn that ending? And finally, how do we create the enchantment necessary to involve, persuade, and move the reader in the ways that fiction is most capable. We will investigate craft through readings and discussion and some exercises. Our objective for the semester is to write and revise and to workshop one or two fully developed stories. Dialogue in Fiction: Sounds and Silence Lucy Rosenthal Open—Spring Dialogue is an essential element of craft. This course will consider how the inflections of speech and the timing of silences help to bring a work of fiction alive. Some writers depend heavily on dialogue; others, not. It gives us choices. With student writing serving as our basic text, and drawing also from a varied reading list, we will talk about what those choices are and how to make them—how they may or may not serve your story. Writers ranging from Salinger and Richard Yates to Jhumpa Lahiri and Katherine Anne Porter can offer us models. We will also look at dialogue’s links to other aspects of craft: Can it, for example, help to flesh a character or advance a story? How can we translate the immediacy of our own speech onto the page? How can we give it to our characters? We will also talk about the first-person narrator and the interior monologue, the dialogue with self, and the “rehearsal” conversation that characters can have with characters offstage or otherwise not there. We will consider the importance, too, of what remains unsaid: how the discrepancy between what a character says and what she or he feels or does (e.g., the hidden agenda, the secret, the lie) can give a story urgency. We will consider these issues as they relate to each student story. Finally, we will explore ways to make our own writing relaxed and conversational for our own dialogue with the reader—and each other. Short exercises will be assigned weekly. They will be based on the readings and on issues emerging from student work. They can also serve as springboards for longer stories. Fiction Workshop Melvin Jules Bukiet Advanced—Year You write. I read. We talk. Place in Fiction Lucy Rosenthal Advanced—Fall Characters are not disembodied spirits. They need a place to live. With student stories serving as our basic text, and also drawing from a varied reading list, we will explore the multiple uses of place in fiction and how it can serve to define characters, advance story, and illuminate theme. We will consider questions such as why does a story happen here rather than there—say, in Richard Yates’s suburbia, ZZ Packer’s Atlanta, Jose Donoso’s Buenos Aires or Chile, Nadine Gordimer’s South Africa, Katherine Anne Porter’s Texas, Junot Diaz’s inner city, or Denis Johnson’s highways and roads. Each region—its landscape, its history, its culture—has its own set 148 Writing of values and associations. Changes of scene—from country to country and even from room to room—can also reflect shifts in a character’s state of mind. What does it mean, for example, for a character to be—or to feel—“out of place” or “at home”? What does it mean for a character to know—or, as is often the case, not know—his or her place? What, then, does exile mean? Or homelessness? We will consider these and other issues as they relate to each student story. Short exercises will be assigned. Supplementary readings will include selected novels, short stories, and essays. Students will be expected to participate actively in class discussion. There will also be an opportunity to raise broader questions about the challenges of the writing experience and to share insights. Multimedia Uses of Oral History Gerry Albarelli Open—Fall This course explores multimedia uses of oral history, with an emphasis on writing for oral history-based radio, television, and film documentaries. Students will learn basic techniques of oral history interviewing and will be responsible for conducting two oral history interviews that will serve as the basis for a major writing project and for an end-of-semester multimedia exhibit. Although this is primarily a writing workshop in which work will be discussed, we will also go on several field trips in order to conduct interviews locally. Readings will include Driss ben Hamed Charhadi, Joseph Mitchell, Donald A. Ritchie, Doris Lessing, Clarice Lispector, and Studs Terkel. Screenings will include Harlan County USA, Common Threads, Licensed to Kill, A Walk Into the Sea: Danny Williams and the Warhol Factory, and Animal Love. Wrongfully Accused Marek Fuchs Open—Fall Long-form investigative journalism has opened many doors, perhaps most literally in America's penal system where journalists have regularly revealed—and freed—the wrongfully convicted. This class will set out to expose the innocence (or confirm the guilt) of a man or woman convicted of a controversial murder or other serious felony. Working collectively and using all tools and traditions of investigative journalism, the class will attempt to pull out all known and unknown threads of the story to reveal the truth. Was our subject wrongfully accused, or are his or her claims of innocence an attempt to game the system? The class will interview police, prosecutors, and witnesses, as well as the friends and family of the victim and of the accused. The case file will be examined in depth. A long-form investigative piece will be produced, complete with multimedia accompaniment. Nonfiction Laboratory Stephen O’Connor Open—Fall This course is for students who want to break free of the conventions of the traditional essay and memoir and discover the full range of narrative and stylistic possibilities available to nonfiction writers. During the first half of the semester, students will read and discuss examples of formally innovative nonfiction that will serve as the inspiration for brief assignments. During the second half of the semester, students will workshop longer pieces that they will have written in consultation with the instructor as a part of their conference work. Among the texts that will be discussed in class are Nathalie Sarraute’s memoir in two voices, Childhood; Susan Griffin’s double narrative, Red Shoes; George W. S. Trow’s dazzling exploration of the effects of television on political culture, Within the Context of No Context; Natalia Ginzburg’s disarmingly straightforward portrait of her marriage, He and I; Oscar Wilde’s brilliantly ironic (but also earnest) philosophical dialogue, The Decay of Lying; David Shields’s oddly moving Life Story, composed entirely of bumper sticker slogans; and “list essays” by Carole Maso and Eliot Weinberger. Writing Our Moment Marek Fuchs Open—Spring It would be safe to say that journalism and nonfiction writing are currently undergoing a transformation. Our most storied publications are in a state of crisis. Big-city newspapers are failing by the day. Magazines are imperiled. Book publishers face encroaching competition from handheld electronic devices and online search engines that do not recognize copyright laws. What is an ambitious, intuitive writer to do going forward? Quite simply: Harness all the strengths of the storytelling past to a new world of few THE CURRICULUM 149 space restrictions, more flexible tones, the ready presence of video, audio, and animation—which can either enrich or encroach upon text—and comprehend the role of writer in such a way as to include and exploit new media. We will examine the relationship between literary nonfiction, which has always been cinematic in focus and flexible in tone, and the once and future practice of journalism. Masters of 20th-century nonfiction such as V.S. Naipaul, Truman Capote, Joseph Mitchell, and Roger Angell—steeped as they are in the journalistic practice of their time—can serve as guideposts to our uncertain future. We will examine, through reading and writing, the ways in which the formulas of journalism are transformed into literature. We will emphasize the importance of factuality and fact-checking and explore adapting modern storytelling to video, photography, and sound. As the semester progresses, literary nonfiction will be both discovered and reinvented to fit our new world. the subject that is their lives. But there’s another kind of memoir that is trying to tell a whole other kind of truth. These are more personal stories of dysfunction, addiction, overcoming the odds. They take us on alcoholic journeys or into dungeons—into scary families and scarier souls. In this workshop, we attempt to uncover this kind of truth; but this isn't a class in autobiography. What differentiates these stories from other tales of grief and woe is that they are, quite simply, well-told. It is one thing to have a story to tell. It is quite another to know how to tell it. In this workshop, we will read these memoirs and attempt to write one of our own. We’ll read Jonathan Ames, Mary Karr, Kathryn Harrison, Jeanette Taylor, and Nick Flynn, as well as others. The emphasis will be on how to tell our stories. We will work on scenes and scene development. The goal is for students to begin to write, or at least to contemplate, a memoir of their own. Writing, Radio, and Aurality A Question of Character: The Art of the Profile Ann Heppermann Open—Spring In this course, we will explore what it means to write for radio and other aural contexts. The course will involve deep listening, critical analysis, and discussion of narrative texts. We’ll listen to a variety of works across radio’s history—from The Futurists to Glenn Gould to This American Life, particularly taking a close look at emerging radio projects and sound art organizations such as free103point9, Third Coast International Audio Festival, East Village Radio, and Megapolis. Students also will learn how to create a broadcast or installation piece that will be premiered at UnionDocs gallery in Brooklyn. The technical aspects involved in the course include microphone techniques, interviewing skills, digital editing, and podcast creation. Guest lecturers will include writers, hosts, producers, and installation artists, who will discuss their works and show their range of writing and experiences in the field. An end-of-semester field trip to WNYC New York Public Radio will be planned. Edgy Memoirs Mary Morris Open—Spring There are memoirs that people write when they’ve had a great acting career or been president of a large country. We read these for their historic/cultural value—for our interest in Alice Truax Open—Spring Any writer who tries to capture the likeness of another—whether in biography, history, journalism, or art criticism—must face certain questions. What makes a good profile? What is the power dynamic between subject and writer? How does a subject’s place in the world determine the parameters of what may be written about him or her? To what extent is any portrait also a self-portrait? And how can the complexities of a personality be captured in several thousand—or even several hundred—words? In this course, we will tackle the various challenges of profile writing, such as choosing a good subject, interviewing, plotting, obtaining and telescoping biographical information, and defining the role of place in the portrait. Students will be expected to share their own work, identify in other writers’ characterizations what they admire or despise, and learn to read closely many masters of the genre: Joseph Mitchell, Tom Wolfe, Daphne Merkin, Janet Malcolm. We will also turn to shorter forms of writing—personal sketches, obituaries, brief reported pieces, fictional descriptions—to further illuminate what we mean when we talk about “identity” and “character.” The goal of this course is less to teach the art of profile writing than to make us all more alert to the subtleties of the form. 150 Writing Poet as World Citizen Tina Chang Open—Year This class is part poetry workshop and part examination of the social consciousness and responsibilities of poets in the world. In class, we will explore our own creative possibilities, write and workshop extensively, and read the work of socially and politically engaged international poets such as Carolyn Forche, Robert Pinksy, Nazim Hikmet, Mahmoud Darwish, Bei Dao, and Martin Espada, among others. As an additional aspect of the course, we will collaborate with the Community-Word Project (CWP), a New York City-based arts-in-education organization that inspires children in underserved communities to read, interpret, and respond to their world and to become active citizens. This part of the class will guide you to transform your creative process into a teaching tool and wil provide an opportunity to assist in New York City public schools under the mentorship of experienced CWP staff teaching artists. Please note that this yearlong class will require you to attend three Saturday training sessions in the fall and six-to-eight community field days in public schools in the spring. The class culminates in conference work that will ask you to reflect on the impact the collaboration has had on you and the impact you’ve had on your community. Less Race Less Race Less Ness Thomas Sayers Ellis Open—Fall As both black and white poets begin to unlock the aesthetic doors to new ways of writing race and racism in America, the challenge to invent new and bolder forms has produced quite a few fascinating new books and voices; and much of this new work is redefining what it means to be an American poet, as well as providing some very interesting critiques of American literary history and rejuvenating the way the aesthetic toolbox is used. Black writers such as Evie Schockley (The New Black), Douglas Kearney (The Black Automaton), and Khadijah Queen (Black Peculiar) have chosen expressive approaches that have eliminated “explaining” and “bargaining for equality” or “proving their humanity,” while white writers such as Jake Adam York (A Murmuration of Starlings) and Martha Collins (Blue Front) explore civil rights and the history of hate crimes in order to provide rare testimonials toward America’s long-sought identity repair. This is a workshop course, a poem a week (about race or its absence in our lives), some memorization, judicious and percussive exchanges, lots of handouts, required reading, and a final portfolio. Poetry Workshop: The Making of the Complete Lover Suzanne Gardinier Open—Fall “The known universe has one complete lover, and that is the greatest poet.”—Walt Whitman This course, a semester-long variation on the theme of the traditional poetry workshop, will focus on acquiring the ways and means of Whitman’s complete lover via the study of great poetry. En route, we will read aloud, discuss particular topics (e.g., line breaks, punctuation, truth), and do various tuning and strengthening exercises. Conference time will be devoted to student work. Students will also be asked to compile an anthology and a chapbook collection of original poetry for class distribution, to memorize, and to participate in two class readings over the course of the term. The only prerequisites are a curiosity about all poetry, not just one’s own, and a commitment to undertake whatever labors are necessary to write better on the last day of class than on the first. Poetry Workshop Rachel Eliza Griffiths Open—Fall In this workshop, we will focus on ways of seeing and on how “sight” works in relation to the creative process—particularly to poetry and writing. Students will participate in workshops that will balance exercises geared to generate new writing, as well as in in-class group workshops. Exercises will involve mixed-media prompts—brief flirtations with film, visual arts, photography and sound, class-generated dares, and close readings of life. In vigorous fellowship with poetry and essays related to the task of writing itself, we will challenge intuition, craft, and the imagination. We will focus on understanding and enriching creative rituals for ourselves and our writing. Openness is the utterance. Conference time will focus on further THE CURRICULUM 151 individual work and revision; each student should be prepared to lead an engaging class discussion on some aspect of creativity and the imagination in relation to poetry. Students will be expected to create a folio of discovery by the end of the semester. Each student will be expected to write one poem a week, as well as to read and discuss multiple books of poems. The Image Factory: A Poetry Workshop Kate Knapp Johnson Jeffrey McDaniel Open—Fall In this one-semester class, we will read poets who push the boundaries of logic and utilize wild, irrational imagery. Poets to be read include French and Spanish surrealists of the 1920s-30s; American poets from the 1950s and ’60s whose work is fueled by stark, leaping imagery; postWorld War II Eastern Europeans; and a number of contemporary writers who drive their imaginations above the proverbial speed limit. In addition to our weekly workshops, there will be biweekly screenings, where we will examine surrealist films, including several by Luis Buñuel, looking for parallels between the genres. Through writing exercises and revision, students will be pushed to explore associative imagery in their own poetry and to discover for themselves the various ways that similes and metaphors and intuitive leaps can be employed to create a threedimensional experience for the reader. Each week, students will read a book of poetry, type a short critical response, and turn in a new poem. The semester will culminate with students vigorously revising a small manuscript of poems. Young America Cynthia Cruz Open—Spring In this poetry workshop, we will read and discuss the work of young American poets. By reading closely and discussing these works, students will gain a better understanding of craft (various techniques such as line, music, fragment, white space, and metaphor), as well as how to go about incorporating the various components of one's life. For example, how does one incorporate the influence of pop culture, family, illness, war, poverty, and excess via poetry? The hope is that, by the end of this one semester course, each student will find at least one young American poet whose work inspires her/him and will learn more about craft and how to structure a poem. Poetry Workshop: Poetic Process Open—Spring In this reading and writing workshop, we will undertake three primary tasks: discuss close readings of poems and texts relevant to poetry and the creative process; find ways to generate new work of our own through exercises, models, and experiments; and, finally, workshop our own poems for revision purposes. Throughout this semester, we will explore the theme of poetic process, asking ourselves: How do we grow as artists? How can other arts and sciences inform our work? And what is the role of the unconscious in creativity and revision work? Inclass readings will include a variety of contemporary poets (US and multicultural writers—Whitman, Neruda, Vallejo, Mort, etc.). This will be a class-community effort; rigorous and compassionate participation is required. There will be class readings. Conference work will be assigned individually, and a minimum of eight new (and revised) poems will be expected. Our classroom is reserved for risk taking, exploring, and mistake making. Please park preconceptions and egos outside. Where Words Are Born Jeffrey McDaniel Open—Spring In this class, students will strive to create poems that are alive on the page: sonically, emotionally, imaginatively, linguistically. Each week, students will read a book of poems and occasionally type short, critical responses. The syllabus, without an overt thematic link, will function as a constellation: sparkly, nonlinear, with some aesthetic dark space between the collections. Students will bring in a new first draft of a poem each week. Because the act of writing is a process and not an event, students will be expected to revise a selection of poems vigorously to chisel their breathing. Fifty percent of each class will be spent discussing the reading; the remaining 50 percent will be devoted to student work. In addition, there will be biweekly Thursday night meetings, where we will begin to think about the ways a poetic text may come to life in a theatrical setting. The class will culminate in a theatrical 152 Writing presentation of student work, where students will embody and give breath to several poems that they have written. Poetry Workshop: Poetic Tone Martha Rhodes Open—Spring This poetry workshop will focus on poetic tone—what exactly it is and how we establish, sustain, and modulate tone in our poems. We will define tone and look, for example, at how other poets manage tonal shifts in their work. Along with looking at the poems of workshop participants, we will take as examples a diverse group of writers to see how they establish poetic “attitude” in their work. Another course offered this year in Writing is listed below. A full description of the course may be found under the appropriate discipline. The Nonfiction Essay: Writing the Literature of Fact, Journalism, and Beyond (p. 71), Nicolaus Mills Literature FACULTY 153 Faculty Current Faculty Each year, Sarah Lawrence invites distinguished scholars and artists to teach at the College on a guest basis. In 2011-2012, approximately 18 percent of our faculty are teaching on a guest basis. Colin D. Abernethy Chemistry Chemistry BSc (Hons), Durham University, England. PhD, The University of New Brunswick, Canada. Current research interests include the synthesis of new early transitionmetal metal nitride compounds and the development of practical exercises for undergraduate chemistry teaching laboratories. Author of publications in the fields of inorganic and physical chemistry, as well as chemical education. Recipient of research grants from The Royal Society, the Nuffield Foundation, Research Corporation for the Advancement of Science, and the American Chemical Society. Received postdoctoral research fellowships at the University of Texas at Austin and Cardiff University, Wales. Previously taught at: Strathclyde University, Scotland; Western Kentucky University; and Keene State College, New Hampshire. SLC, 2010– Julie Abraham Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies (on leave spring semester) BA (Hons.), University of Adelaide, Australia. MA, MPhil, PhD, Columbia University. Special interest in lesbian/gay/queer studies, 20th-century British and American literature, contemporary feminisms, and literatures of the city; author of Are Girls Necessary?: Lesbian Writing and Modern Histories, Metropolitan Lovers: The Homosexuality of Cities, and numerous essays; editor of Diana: A Strange Autobiography; contributor to The Nation and The Women’s Review of Books. SLC, 2000– Samuel Abrams Politics AB, Stanford University. AM, PhD, Harvard University. Fellow at the Hamilton Center for Political Economy at New York University; member of Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government Program on Inequality and Social Policy; research fellow with Harvard’s Canada Program. Main topics of research include social policy, inequality, international political economy, and comparative and American politics; special interest in network analysis, the media, Congress, political behavior, urban studies and cities, public opinion and survey research, political communication and elections, and the social nature of political behavior; conducted fieldwork throughout Europe and North America. Two substantial projects are presently in progress: a comparative, historical study to understand political participation in western democracies (i.e., Why do some people vote, while others do not?) and an examination of American political culture and the nature of centrism and polarization in the United States. SLC, 2010– Ernest H. Abuba Theatre Recipient of an OBIE Award, five New York State Council on the Arts fellowships for playwriting and directing, a Rockefeller Foundation fellowship, Creative Artist Public Service Award (CAPS), Best Actor Focus Press Award, Society of Stage Directors and Choreographers (SSDC) member. Broadway: Pacific Overtures, Shimada, Loose Ends, The King and I, Zoya's Apartment, director Boris Morozov; Maly Theatre. Regional/ off-Broadway roles: King Lear, Macbeth, Oberon, King Arthur, Autolycus, Chebutykin, James Tyrone, Lysander, Mishima, Caucasian Chalk Circle, director Fritz Bennewitz; Berlin Ensemble. Author of Kwatz! The Tibetan Project, Leir Rex, The Dowager Empress of China, An American Story, Eat a Bowl of Tea, Night Stalker, opera Cambodia Agonistes, all produced off-Broadway; national tours to the Cairo Experimental Theatre and Johannesburg, South Africa. Performed Butoh with Shigeko Suga in Spleen, Accade Domani by Dario Fo, and Sotoba Komachi. Film/TV: 12 Monkeys (director Terry Gilliam), King of New York, Call Me, New York Undercover, Kung Fu. Director/ screenwriter: Mariana Bracetti, Arthur A. Schomburg, Asian American Railroad Strike, Iroquois Confederacy, Lilac Chen-Asian American Suffragette, and Osceola - PBS/CBS. Voice of His Holiness the Dalai Lama on the audiobook The Art of Happiness. SLC, 1995Jefferson Adams History (on leave spring semester) BA, Stanford University. PhD Harvard University. Special interest in European political, diplomatic, and cultural history, with emphasis on modern Germany; visiting scholar at the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace; author of Historical Dictionary of German Intelligence; editor and translator of Beyond the 154 Current Faculty Wall: Memoirs of an East and West German Spy; senior editor, International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence; member, American Council on Germany. SLC 1971– Cameron C. Afzal Religion (on leave spring semester) BA, Grinnell College. MA, McGill University. MDiv, Yale University. PhD, Columbia University. Active member of the Society of Biblical Literature and the American Academy of Religion, as well as the Catholic Biblical Association; has written on the Apocalypse of John and has taught broadly in the fields of New Testament and Early Christianity, Judaism in the Second Temple Period, the Hebrew Bible, and Late Antique Christian Mysticism. SLC, 1992– Kirsten Agresta Music Sean Akerman Psychology BA, Wheaton College. PhD candidate, Graduate Center, City University of New York. Areas of specialization include life studies and narrative inquiry, existential and phenomenological theories of interpretation, and stories of transformation (i.e., the sublime, creative development, physical illness, and trauma). Current work includes an exploration into aesthetic experience and its relation to the practice of self and identity and an inquiry into the inheritance of exile among Tibetans living in New York City. SLC 2011— Gerry Albarelli Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, Brown University. Author of Teacha! Stories from a Yeshiva (Glad Day Books, 2001), chronicling his experience as a non-Jew teaching English as a second language to Yiddish-speaking Hasidic boys at a yeshiva in Brooklyn; has published stories in numerous anthologies and reviews, including The Penguin Book of Gay Short Stories, Global City Review, The Breast, and Fairleigh Dickinson Review; on the faculty of Eugene Lang College; works for the Columbia University Oral History Research Office, where he has initiated numerous documentary projects; conducted hundreds of life history interviews with gay cops, retired vaudevillians and showgirls, ironworkers, immigrants, and, most recently, people affected by the events of September 11 and veterans recently returned from the war in Iraq. He worked as an educator and project designer on Columbia’s “Telling Lives Oral History Project.” This project, which was launched in eight classrooms in two middle schools in New York City’s Chinatown, culminated in seven books, two documentary films, and a multimedia exhibit. He served as editor of three of the books, producer of the documentaries, and curator of the exhibit. He is currently working on an oral history project and multimedia exhibit for the Bridgeport (Connecticut) Public Library, as well as an oral history of the war in Iraq. His memoir, Mary, Queen of Immigrants, will be published in 2006. SLC, 2004— Glenn Alexander Music Abraham Anderson Philosophy AB, Harvard College. PhD, Columbia University. Fellowships at École Normale Supérieure and the University of Munich. Interests in philosophy and history of science, history of modern philosophy, and the Enlightenment. Author of The Treatise of the Three Impostors and the Problem of Enlightenment, as well as of articles on Kant, Descartes, and other topics. Contributor to the new Kant-Lexikon. Has taught at the Collège International de Philosophie, St. John’s College, Instituto de Investigaciones Filosóficas, and elsewhere. SLC, 2007– William Anderson Music Emily Katz Anhalt Hyman H. Kleinman Fellowship in the Humanities —Greek (on leave spring semester) AB, Dartmouth College. PhD, Yale University. Primary interests are Greek epic and lyric poetry, Greek historiography, Greek tragedy, and Greek and Roman sexuality. Publications include Solon the Singer: Politics and Poetics (Lanham, MD, 1993), as well as several articles on the poetics of metaphor in Homer and on narrative techniques in Herodotus. SLC, 2004– Neil Arditi Literature BA, Yale University. MA, PhD, University of Virginia. Special interest in British Romantic poetry, Romantic legacies in modern and contemporary poetry, and the history of criticism and theory. Essays published in Raritan, Parnassus, Keats-Shelley Journal, Philosophy and Literature, and Jewish-American Dramatists and Poets. SLC, 2001– Damani Baker Visual Arts BA, Sarah Lawrence College. BA, MFA, University of California-Los Angeles, School of Film and Television. Writer and director; nominated for the Rockefeller Artist Award, the Edie and Lew Wasserman Award, the Motion FACULTY 155 Picture Association of America Award, a George Soros/Sundance Institute grant; selected in 2000 by Filmmaker magazine as one of “25 new faces in independent film”; co-founded Soulfire Films (2000), a nonprofit production company; Soulfire’s flagship project, Grenada: A Dream Deferred, is a documentary that revisits the events and circumstances of the 1983 U.S. invasion of Grenada; directed and produced films for PBS, Bill Moyers, Mel Stuart Productions, the American Legacy Foundation, and Danny Glover’s Carrie Productions. SLC, 2003– Nancy Baker Philosophy BA, Wellesley College. PhD, Brandeis University. Special interests in philosophy of mind, the later work of Wittgenstein, philosophy of religion, and feminist theory; author of articles on Wittgenstein and Vygotsky. SLC, 1974– Carl Barenboim Roy E. Larsen Chair in Psychology —Psychology BA, Clark University. PhD, University of Rochester. Special interest in the child’s developing ability to reason about the social world, as well as the relation between children’s social thinking and social behavior; articles and chapters on children’s perspective-taking, person perception, interpersonal problem solving, and the ability to infer carelessness in others; past member, Board of Consulting Editors, Developmental Psychology; principal investigator, grant from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. SLC, 1988– Deanna Barenboim Anthropology BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, PhD candidate, University of Chicago. Special interests in the cultural construction of intersubjectivity, personhood, and agency; transborder and transnational experience; politics of indigeneity; ethnicity and race; cross-cultural modes of illness and healing; ethnographic practice; Mexico and Latin America. Ethnographic fieldwork in Yucatán, Mexico, and with Maya migrants in California. Recipient of grants and fellowships from the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education, and the University of Chicago Center for Latin American Studies. SLC, 2009— Mary Barnard Spanish BA, University of Texas-Arlington. MA, University of North Texas. PhD (in progress), Rutgers University. Dissertation in progress on rural to urban migration in contemporary Peruvian theatre. General research interests include the theatre, film, and narrative of Latin America; comparative approaches to the epistemologies of the “Global South"; and performance studies. SLC, 2011— Jo Ann Beard Writing BFA, MA, University of Iowa. Essayist and creative nonfiction writer; author of The Boys of My Youth, a collection of autobiographical essays, as well as essays/articles published in magazines, journals, and anthologies. Recipient of a Whiting Writers’ Award. SLC, 20002005; 2007– David Bernstein History BA, Brandeis University. MA, PhD, Harvard University. Special interest in the religious, social, and cultural history of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, with an emphasis on art and architecture; lecturer and essayist; author, The Mystery of the Bayeux Tapestry; recipient of grants from the American Philosophical Society, American Council of Learned Societies, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. SLC, 1969– Igor Begelman Music Stefania Benzoni Italian BA, University L. Bocconi, Milan, Italy. Taught college Italian at all levels, including language coaching for opera majors in the Music Conservatory at SUNY-Purchase; organized cultural and language learning trips to Northern Italy. SLC, 2001; 2006— David Bernstein History (on leave fall semester) BA, Brandeis University. MA, PhD, Harvard University. Special interest in the religious, social, and cultural history of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, with an emphasis on art and architecture; lecturer and essayist; author, The Mystery of the Bayeux Tapestry; recipient of grants from the American Philosophical Society, American Council of Learned Societies, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. SLC, 1969– Chester Biscardi Director, Program in Music—Music (on leave spring semester) BA, MA, MM, University of Wisconsin. MMA, DMA, Yale University. Composer; recipient: Rome Prize from American Academy in Rome, Academy Award in Music and Charles Ives Scholarship from American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, Aaron Copland Award, fellowships from the Bogliasco Foundation, the Djerassi Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Japan Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, and the Rockefeller 156 Current Faculty Foundation (Bellagio), as well as grants from the Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard, the Koussevitzky Music Foundation in the Library of Congress, the Martha Baird Rockefeller Foundation, Meet the Composer, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the New York Foundation for the Arts, among others; music published by C. F. Peters, Merion Music, Inc. of Theodore Presser Company, and Biscardi Music Press; recordings appear on the Albany, Bridge, CRI (New World Records), Intim Musik (Sweden), Naxos, New Albion, New Ariel, North/South Recordings, and Sept Jardins (Canada) labels. Yamaha Artist. SLC, 1977– Laure-Anne Bosselaar Writing Author of The Hour Between Dog and Wolf and Small Gods of Grief, which won the 2001 Isabella Gardner Prize for Poetry. Her third poetry collection, A New Hunger, was selected as an ALA Notable Book in 2008. She is the recipient of a Pushcart Prize, and her poems have appeared in The Washington Post, Georgia Review, Ploughshares, AGNI, Harvard Review, and many other publications. She is the editor of four anthologies: Night Out: Poems about Hotels, Motels, Restaurants and Bars; Outsiders: Poems about Rebels, Exiles and Renegades; Urban Nature: Poems about Wildlife in the City; and Never Before: Poems About First Experiences. With her husband, poet Kurt Brown, she translated a selection of poems entitled The Plural of Happiness, by the Flemish poet, critic, and essayist Herman de Coninck. She also translates American poetry into French, and Flemish poetry into English. SLC, 2001Patti Bradshaw Dance BM, University of Massachusetts. Certified yoga union instructor and Kinetic Awareness instructor. Has taught at the New School, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian; workshops at New York University, The Kitchen, hospitals, and various schools and studios in New York and Greece. Dancer, choreographer, and maker of puppet theatre. Work shown at St Ann’s Warehouse in 2005 and 2006. SLC, 2000– Roy Brand Philosophy (on leave yearlong) BA, Tel Aviv University, Israel. MA, PhD, New School for Social Research. Special interests in continental philosophy, modern and contemporary aesthetics, philosophy of film and new media, and trauma and popular culture. Author of articles for Culture, Theory and Critique, Critical Studies in Media Communication, Diánoia, The Philosophical Forum, Epoché, Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal, and International Studies in Philosophy; chapter contributor to Media Witnessing and Metaphysics in the Post-Metaphysical Age; editor and translator of Philosophy in a Time of Terror: Dialogues with Habermas and Derrida; editor and consultant curator of Bare Life: Contemporary Art Reflecting on the State of Emergency; and co-curator of Melancholy—an international group show. Recipient of awards and fellowships, including Lady Davies Fellowship, The American Philosophical Association Prize, and The Marshall McLuhan Prize. Taught at Vassar College, National Autonomous University of Mexico, Bezalel Academy of Art, and Hebrew University of Jerusalem. SLC, 2007– Bella Brodzki The Alice Stone Ilchman Chair in Comparative and International Studies —Literature BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, Hebrew University. PhD, Brown University. Special interests in critical and cultural theory, gender studies, postcolonial studies, translation studies, autobiography, and modern and contemporary fiction. Selected scholarly publications include essays in PMLA, MLN, Yale French Studies, Studies in Twentieth-Century Fiction, Yale Journal of Criticism, Modern Fiction Studies, Profils Américains, and in collections such as Borderwork: Feminist Engagements with Comparative Literature; Women, Autobiography, and Fiction: A Reader; Critical Cosmos: Latin American Approaches to Fiction; Feminism and Institutions: A Dialogue on Feminist Theory; and MLA Approaches to Teaching Representations of the Holocaust. Author of Can These Bones Live?: Translation, Survival, and Cultural Memory; coeditor of Life/Lines: Theorizing Women’s Autobiography. Recipient of National Endowment for the Humanities fellowships, Lucius Littauer Award, and Hewlett-Mellon grants. Visiting professor at Université de Montpellier-Paul Valéry and Université de Versailles-St. Quentin. SLC, 1984– Melvin Jules Bukiet Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MFA, Columbia University. Author of Sandman’s Dust, Stories of an Imaginary Childhood, While the Messiah Tarries, After, Signs and Wonders, Strange Fire, and A Faker’s Dozen; editor of Neurotica, Nothing Makes You Free, and Scribblers on the Roof. Works have been translated into half a dozen languages and frequently anthologized; winner of the Edward FACULTY 157 Lewis Wallant Award and other prizes; stories published in Antaeus, The Paris Review, and other magazines; essays published in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times and other newspapers. SLC, 1993— Gary Burnley Mary Griggs Burke Chair in Art and Art History—Visual Arts BFA, Washington University. MFA, Yale University. One-person and group exhibitions in the United States and Europe; works included in major private, corporate, and museum collections; awards and fellowships include the Federal Design Achievement Award, National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council, and CAPS; public commissions include the MTA and St. Louis Bi-State Development. SLC, 1980– Scott Calvin Physics BA, University of California-Berkeley. PhD, Hunter College. Taught at Lowell High School, University of San Francisco, University of California-Berkeley, Hayden Planetarium, Southern Connecticut State University, and Hunter College. Author of research papers in Xray absorption spectroscopy and physics education, as well as books intended to prepare students for the Medical College Admission Test. Currently working with magnetic nanoparticles designed for cancer treatment, as well as on a textbook of X-ray spectroscopy. SLC, 2003– Lorayne Carbon Director, Early Childhood Center—Psychology BA, State University of New York-Buffalo. MSEd, Bank Street College of Education. Special areas of interest include social justice issues in the early childhood classroom and creating aesthetic learning environments for young children. Former early childhood teacher, director, Oak Lane Child Care Center, Chappaqua, N.Y., and education coordinator of the Virginia Marx Children’s Center of Westchester Community College. Adjunct professor, Westchester Community College; workshop leader at seminars and conferences on early childhood education. SLC, 2003– David Castriota Art History (on leave spring semester) BA, New York University. MA, MPhil, PhD, Columbia University. Special interests in Greek art of the classical and Hellenistic periods, Roman art of the late republic and early empire, and the art of prehistoric Europe; author of Myth, Ethos, and Actuality: Official Art in Fifth-Century B.C. Athens, The Ara Pacis Augustae and the Imagery of Abundance in Later Greek and Early Roman Imperial Art, and a critical commentary on Alois Riegl’s Problems of Style: Foundations for a History of Ornament; editor of Artistic Strategy and the Rhetoric of Power: Political Uses of Art from Antiquity to the Present; recipient of fellowships from the Dumbarton Oaks Center for Early Christian and Byzantine Art and the Society of Fellows of Columbia University and of grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American Philosophical Society. SLC, 1992– William Catanzaro Dance Composer and multi-instrumentalist; recognition and funding from NEA, The Samuels S. Feld Fund, New York State Council on the Arts, Harkness Foundation, NYU Humanities Council, NYU Service/Learning Fund; commissions include choreographers Anna Sokolow, Steve Paxton, Viola Farber, Milton Myers; work presented nationally and internationally with the New Danish Dance Theater, TanzFabrik Berlin, Amsterdam Theatreschool, Cyprus Festival, Teatro San Martin, The Alvin Ailey School, Philadanco, Player’s Project, Dallas Black Theater, Jacob’s Pillow, DTW, and others. Former accompanist and teacher of music for dancers at The Juilliard School, Marymount Manhattan College, Limón School, Martha Graham School, New York University; current faculty at The Alvin Ailey School, Steps on Broadway; Music Director for the Young Dancemakers Company. SLC, 2003– Pat Catterson Dance BA, Northwestern University. MFA, Goddard College. A dedicated educator and choreographer of 103 works, her writing has been published in Ballet Review, JOPERD, Attitude Magazine, and Dance Research Journal. She first performed Yvonne Rainer’s work in 1969 and, since 1999, has been Rainer's dancer, rehearsal assistant, and custodian of her early works. Recipient of a 2011 Guggenheim Fellowship, a Fulbright, and multiple grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the CAPS Program, the Harkness Foundation, and the Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation. She has been on the faculties at Sarah Lawrence College, University of California-Los Angeles, Juilliard School, Princeton University, Muhlenberg College, Barnard College, Merce Cunningham Studio, and Marymount Manhattan College. 158 Current Faculty Tina Chang Writing MFA, Columbia University. Poet, Brooklyn poet laureate, and author of Half-Lit Houses and Of Gods & Strangers; co-editor of the anthology Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia, and Beyond (W.W. Norton, 2008). Poems have appeared in American Poet, McSweeney’s, The New York Times, Ploughshares, Quarterly West, and Sonora Review, among others. Recipient of awards from the Academy of American Poets, the Barbara Deming Memorial Fund, The Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation, The New York Foundation for the Arts, Poets & Writers, and The Van Lier Foundation, among others. SLC, 2005— Sciences, the first recipient of the President’s Award for Innovative Pedagogy, and, in 1992, the recipient of the state-wide SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Distinguished College Teaching. She has also taught economics, labor history, and public policy as a guest faculty member at Sarah Lawrence College. Dr. Christensen’s research focuses on the intersection of economics with public policy issues, with a particular emphasis on issues of race, gender, class, and labor; e.g., the experiences of low-income women in the AIDS crisis, the politics of welfare “reform,” the “gendered” nature of the current recession, and the impact of our campaign finance system on public policy. SLC, 2008— Susannah Chapman Music Una Chung Literature BA, University of California-Berkeley. MA, San Francisco State University. PhD, Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Special interests in Asian American literature and film, late 20th-century transnational East and Southeast Asian cultural studies, East Asian film, postcolonial theory, ethnic studies, globalization, affect, new media. SLC, 2007– Persis Charles History BA, Bryn Mawr College. MA, Brown University. PhD, Tufts University. Special interest in modern social and women’s history, with particular emphasis on British and French history. SLC, 1977– Priscilla Chen Spanish BA, State University of New York-Stony Brook. MA, Queens College. Currently completing a doctorate in Spanish literature at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York; special interests includes Golden Age peninsular literature, Latin American literature and culture in general, and fiction. SLC, 2004— Eileen Ka-May Cheng History BA, Harvard University. MA, MPhil, PhD, Yale University. Special interest in Early American history, with an emphasis on the American Revolution and the early American republic, European and American intellectual history, and historiography. Author of The Plain and Noble Garb of Truth: Nationalism and Impartiality in American Historical Writing, 1784-1860; author of articles and book reviews for History and Theory, Journal of American History, Reviews in American History, and Journal of the Early Republic. SLC, 1999– Kim Christensen Economics BA, Earlham College (economics and peace/ global studies). PhD, University of Massachusetts-Amherst (political economy). Taught economics and women’s/gender studies (1985-2010) at SUNY-Purchase, where she received several awards for her teaching: the fourtime recipient of the Students’ Union Award for Outstanding Teaching in the Letters and Raymond D. Clarke Biology BSc, McGill University. MFS, MPhil, PhD, Yale University. Special interest in ecology of coral reef fish; visiting researcher at West Indies Laboratory and Smithsonian Institution; guest faculty at Queen’s University (Canada) and University of Massachusetts-Boston; grant support from American Philosophical Society, National Geographic Society, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Science Foundation, and others; author and lecturer on issues of marine ecology. SLC, 1972– Rachel Cohen Writing (On leave yearlong) AB, Harvard University. Author of A Chance Meeting (Random House, 2004), a nonfiction book tracing a chain of 30 American writers and artists who knew or influenced or met one another over the period from the Civil War to the civil rights movement; winner of the 2003 PEN/Jerard Fund Award. Essays in The New Yorker, The Threepenny Review, McSweeney’s, DoubleTake, Parnassus, and Modern Painters and in 2003 Best American Essays and 2003 Pushcart Prize anthologies. Fellow of the New York Institute for the Humanities at New York University. Fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the MacDowell Colony. SLC, 2003– FACULTY 159 Kevin Confoy Theatre BA, Rutgers College. Certificate, London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA). Graduate, The Conservatory at The Classic Stage Company (CSC), Playwrights Horizons Theater School Directing Program. Director and producer, off-Broadway and regional productions. Producer/producing artistic director, SLC Theatre Program (19942008). Executive producer, Ensemble Studio Theatre, New York; associate artistic director, Elysium Theatre Company, New York (19901992); Development Program director, Circle Repertory Company (Circle Rep), New York. Recipient of two grants from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation; OBIE Award, Outstanding Achievement Off and OffOff Broadway (producer). Nomination, Drama Desk Award, Best Revival of a Play (acting company. Director, first (original) productions of 11 published plays. SLC, 1984– Dominic Corva Politics BS, Economics, University of Houston. BA, Creative Writing, University of Arizona. MA and PhD, Geography, University of Washington. Research interests include the role of social movements in political formation, the geopolitics of the “war on drugs” in the Western Hemisphere, transnational governance and state repression, biopolitics and hegemonic strategy, and the political economy of commodity chains. Substantive regional focus on Latin America. Recent publications in Political Geography and ACME. SLC, 2009— Drew E. Cressman Biology BA, Swarthmore College. PhD, University of Pennsylvania. Special interest in the molecular basis of gene regulation and the control of gene expression; specifically focused on the control of antigen-presenting genes of the immune system and the subcellular localization of the regulatory protein CIITA; author of papers on mammalian liver regeneration and CIITA activity; recipient of grants from the Irvington Institute for Biomedical Research and the National Science Foundation. SLC, 2000– Cynthia Cruz Writing BA, Mills Colllege. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Poet; author of Ruin (Alice James Books, 2006) and The Glimmering Room (Four Way Books, 2012); recipient of fellowships from Yaddo, the MacDowell Colony, and a Hodder Fellowship at Princeton University. Work has been published in Isn’t it Romantic: 100 Love Poems by Younger American Poets (Wave Books, 2004) and The Iowa Anthology of New American Poetries (The University of Iowa Press, 2004). SLC 2008— Annelle Curulla French BA, Connecticut College. MA, Middlebury College. MPhil, Columbia University. Pensionnaire étranger at Ecole Normale Supérieure. Specialist in literature and culture of the Enlightenment and French Revolution, with an emphasis on the theory and practice of drama. Dissertation, “The Convent Plays of the French Revolution,” studies theatrical representations of sacred feminine space in relation to republican gender ideology and the development of revolutionary drama. Research interests include women and authorship, literary experiments, and the interplay of social practices with changing forms of oral and written communication. Recipient of the Whiting Fellowship and Chateaubriand Fellowship. SLC, 2011— Dance Faculty Dance Sayantani DasGupta Writing AB, Brown University. MD, MPH, Johns Hopkins University. Writer of fiction and creative nonfiction. Originally trained in pediatrics and public health, she teaches courses in illness and disability memoir—as well as narrative, health, and social justice—at Columbia University’s Program in Narrative Medicine and in the Health Advocacy graduate program at Sarah Lawrence College. Author of a memoir, a book of folktales, and co-editor of an award-winning collection of women’s illness narratives, Stories of Illness and Healing: Women Write their Bodies. She teaches prose in the “Writing the Medical Experience” summer workshop at Sarah Lawrence. SLC, 2001— Michael Davis Philosophy BA, Cornell University. MA, PhD, Pennsylvania State University. Interests in Greek philosophy, moral and political philosophy, and philosophy and literature; author of many books, the most recent of which are The Autobiography of Philosophy, a translation of Aristotle’s On Poetics, and Wonderlust: Ruminations on Liberal Education; member, editorial board, Ancient Philosophy; lecturer, essayist, and reviewer. SLC, 1977– Isabel de Sena Spanish MA, University of CaliforniaBerkeley. PhD, University of California-Santa Barbara. Special interests include medieval Peninsular literature, Latin American literature in general and fiction in particular, and Luso- 160 Current Faculty Brazilian literature and culture; translations include Virginia Woolf’s Between the Acts. SLC, 1997– Cultures fellowship at Columbia University’s Society of Fellows in the Humanities. SLC, 2001– Isabel de Sena Literature MA, University of California-Berkeley. PhD, University of California-Santa Barbara. Special interests include medieval Peninsular literature, Latin American literature in general and fiction in particular, and Luso-Brazilian literature and culture; translations include Virginia Woolf’s Between the Acts. SLC, 1997– Beth Ann Ditkoff Biology BA, Yale University. MD, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Former surgical oncologist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia University Medical Center; Department of Surgery, College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia University. Author of The Thyroid Guide (HarperCollins, 2000) and Why Don’t Your Eyelashes Grow? Curious Questions Kids Ask About the Human Body (Penguin, 2008). SLC, 2010— Robert R. Desjarlais Anthropology BA, University of Massachusetts-Amherst. MA, PhD, University of California-Los Angeles. Special interests in the cultural construction of experience, subjectivity and inter-subjectivity, death and mourning, and the political economy of illness and healing; ethnographic fieldwork in the Nepal Himalayas, with the residents of a homeless shelter in Boston, and among competitive chess players; author of Body and Emotion: The Aesthetics of Illness and Healing in the Nepal Himalayas; Shelter Blues: Sanity and Selfhood Among the Homeless; Sensory Biographies: Lives and Deaths Among Nepal’s Yolmo Buddhists; and Counter-play: an Anthropologist at the Chessboard. Recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship and a Howard fellowship. NIMH postdoctoral research fellow at Harvard Medical School. SLC, 1994– Emily Devine Dance BA, Connecticut College. Trained with Jose Limón, Martha Graham, Merce Cunningham, and Viola Farber; performed with Dan Wagoner and Dancers, Nancy Lewis, Mirjam Berns, Cork (Ireland) National Ballet; choreographer, Dance Alliance of New Haven, Roxanne Dance Foundation, Swamp Gravy, and independent productions; recipient of choreography grants from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts; teaches dance and movement workshops throughout the United States and in Canada, France, Sweden, Australia, and New Zealand. SLC, 1988– Mary Dillard History BA, Stanford University. MA, PhD, University of California-Los Angeles. Special interests include history of West Africa, particularly Ghana and Nigeria; history of intelligence testing and external examinations in Africa; history of science in Africa; and gender and education. Recipient of a Spencer fellowship and Major Natalia Dizenko Russian Stephen Dobyns Writing Author of more than 30 books of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction, including a recent book of poems, Pallbearers Envying the One Who Rides. His book, Cemetery Nights, won the Poetry Society of America’s 1987 Melville Cane Award. Received a Guggenheim fellowship and three National Endowment for the Arts fellowships. Taught at a dozen colleges and universities, including the University of Iowa, Boston University, and the MFA program at Warren Wilson College. Recently published his first collection of short stories, Eating Naked: Stories, two stories appeared in The Best American Short Stories 1995 and 1999; poetry collection, The Porcupine’s Kisses, published by Penguin in fall 2002. SLC, 2003— Jerrilynn Dodds Dean of the College—Art History BA, Barnard College, MA, PhD Harvard University. Work has centered on issues of artistic interchange—in particular among Christians, Jews, and Muslims—and how groups form identities through art and architecture. Special interest in the arts of Spain and the history of architecture. Author of Architecture and Ideology in Early Medieval Spain and NY Masjid: The Mosques of New York and co-author of Arts of Intimacy: Christians Jews and Muslims in the Making of Castilian Culture, among other books and publications. SLC, 2009– Roland Dollinger German BA, University of Augsburg, Germany. MA, University of Pittsburgh. PhD, Princeton University. Special interest in 20th-century German and Austrian literature; author of Totalität und Totalitarismus: Das Exilwerk Alfred Döblins and several essays and book reviews on 19th- and 20th-century German literature; FACULTY 161 coeditor of Unus Mundus: Kosmos and Sympathie, Naturphilosophie, and Philosophia Naturalis. SLC, 1989– Aurora Donzelli Anthropology BA, MA, University of Pavia, Italy. PhD, University of Milan-Bicocca. Special interests in linguistic anthropology, political oratory and ritual speech, vernacular practical philosophies, ethnopoetics, missionization and the emergence of colonial discourse genres; ethnographic fieldwork in Southeast Asia (upland Sulawesi and East Timor); author of several articles on language and ethnicity, local theories of action, power and emotions, verbal art, and language ideologies. FCT postdoctoral research fellow at Institute of Theoretical and Computational Linguistics, Lisbon, and Endangered Languages Academic Programme (SOAS), London. SLC, 2009– Charlotte L. Doyle Psychology BA, Temple University. MA, PhD, University of Michigan. A generalist in psychology with special interests in the creative process, psychological theory, and children’s literature. Articles written on the creative process in art, the fiction writing episode, facilitating creativity in children, and the definition of psychology. Books include Explorations in Psychology (a textbook) and seven picture books for children: Hello Baby, Freddie’s Spaghetti, Where’s Bunny’s Mommy?, You Can’t Catch Me, Twins!, Supermarket!, and The Bouncing Dancing Galloping ABC. SLC, 1966– Kermit Driscoll Music Jan Drucker Director, Child Development Institute's Empowering Teachers Program—Psychology BA, Radcliffe College. PhD, New York University. Clinical and developmental psychologist with teaching and research interests in the areas of developmental and educational theory; child development; parent guidance; clinical assessment and therapy with children and adolescents; and the development of imaginative play and other symbolic processes in early childhood and their impact on later development. Professional writings have centered on various forms of early symbolization in development and in clinical work with children. SLC, 1972– Jill Du Boff Theatre BA, The New School. Has designed sound on Broadway, off-Broadway and regionally. Designs on Broadway include: The Constant Wife, The Good Body, Bill Maher: Victory…, Three Days of Rain (assoc.), Inherit The Wind (assoc.), Wit (national tour). Designed for the following offBroadway: Atlantic, MTC, MCC, Playwrights Horizons, Public, Vineyard, Second Stage, NYTW, WP, New Georges, Flea, Cherry Lane, Signature, Clubbed Thumb, Culture Project, Actor’s Playhouse, New Group, Promenade, Urban Stages, Houseman, Fairbanks, Soho Rep, Adobe . Regionally: Minneapolis Children’s Theatre, Bay Street, La Jolla Playhouse, Cincinnati Playhouse, Westport Country Playhouse, Berkeley Rep, Portland Stage, Long Wharf, The Alley, Kennedy Center, NYS&F, South Coast Rep, Humana, Williamstown, Berkshire Theatre, ATF. Television; Comedy Central Presents: Slovin & Allen, NBC’s Late Fridays. Film: We Pedal Uphill. Radio: contributing producer for PRI’s Studio 360; contributor to the book Sound and Music For The Theatre. Two Drama Desk nominations; two Henry Hewes nominations. Awards: Ruth Morley Design Award. SLC, 2009— Angela Dufresne Visual Arts BFA, Kansas City Art Institute. MFA, Temple University, Tyler School of Art. Exhibited in national and international shows. Exhibitions include CRG Gallery and Monya Rowe Gallery (New York City), Brooklyn Academy of Music, P.S. 1 Museum (New York City), The Hammer Museum (Los Angeles), The Aldrich Museum (Ridgefield, Connecticut), Kinkead Contemporary Gallery (Los Angeles), Brandeis University, Mills College, The University of Richmond Museum, and Galleria Glance (Torino, Italy). Fellowships at the Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown, Massachusetts, and the Headlands Center for the Arts, Sausalito, California, and a Jerome Foundation Grant. SLC, 2010Rujeko Dumbutshena Dance Originally from Zimbabwe, she has been teaching and performing throughout the United States, Canada, and Australia since 1994. She has performed at venues that include the Getty Museum, Lincoln Center, and the Sydney Opera House. She is co-founder and artistic director of the Panjea Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to bringing African and Western 162 Current Faculty cultures together through cultural exchange tours, music and dance conferences, and workshops. SLC, 2005— Interests include literary representation of interiority, including madness, surrealism, and film. SLC, 2010— Glenn Dynner Religion BA, Brandeis University. MA, McGill University. PhD, Brandeis University. Scholar of East European Jewry with a focus on the social history of Hasidism and the Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment). Author of the book Men of Silk: The Hasidic Conquest of Polish Jewish Society, which received a Koret Publication Award and was a finalist for the National Jewish Book Awards. Received textual training in several Israeli yeshivas and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Additional interests include PolishJewish relations, Jewish economic history, and popular religion. Recipient of the Fulbright Award. Member (2010-11), Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton University. SLC, 2004– Thomas Sayers Ellis Writing MFA, Brown University. Poet; author of The Maverick Room; “The Good Junk” (from Take Three #1); two chapbooks, The Genuine Negro Hero and Song On; and the forthcoming Quotes Community: Notes for Black Writers. Co-founder of the Dark Room Collective and the recipient of a Mrs. Giles Whiting Writers Award, as well as fellowships from Yaddo and the MacDowell Colony. Poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, Grand Street, Tin House, Ploughshares, Harvard Review, Callaloo, and The Best American Poetry, 1997 and 2001. SLC, 2006– Michael Early Theatre BFA, New York University Tisch School of the Arts. MFA, Yale University School of Drama. Extensive experience off-Broadway and in regional theatre, television, and commercials; artist-in-residence, Oberlin College. SLC, 1998— June Ekman Theatre BA, Goddard College, University of Illinois. ACAT-certified Alexander Technique Teacher, 1979. Inventor of an ergonomic chair, the Sit-aRound; taught the Alexander Technique in many venues: the Santa Fe Opera, Riverside Studios in London, Utrecht, the Netherlands; dancer, Judson Dance Theater, Alwin Nikolais, Anna Halprin, and others; direction and choreography off-Broadway; appeared in Innovation (PBS); OffOff Broadway Review Award, 1995-1996. SLC, 1987— Kirsten Ellicson French BA, Brown University. Maîtrise en lettres modernes, Université de Versailles. MPhil, Columbia University. Pensionnaire étranger at the Ecole normale supérieure Lyon; instructor of literature humanities in Columbia University’s core curriculum. Specialist in 19th- and early 20th-century French literature and art, with an emphasis on the origins of literary modernity. Dissertation, “Disordered Collecting in French Literature 1880-1892,” explores the relationships between art collecting and literary decadence. Beverly Emmons Dance BA, Sarah Lawrence College. Designed lighting for Broadway, Off-Broadway, regional theatre, dance, and opera in the United States and abroad. Broadway credits include Annie Get Your Gun, Jekyll & Hyde, The Heiress, Stephen Sondheim’s Passion, and The Elephant Man. Her lighting of Amadeus won a Tony award. She has worked at the John F. Kennedy Center, the Guthrie, Arena Stage, and the Children’s Theatre of Minneapolis. Off Broadway, she lit Vagina Monologues and worked for Joseph Chaikin and Meredith Monk; for Robert Wilson, Einstein on the Beach and The Civil Wars, Part V. Her designs for dance include works by Martha Graham, Trisha Brown, Alvin Ailey, and Merce Cunningham. She has been awarded seven Tony nominations, the 1976 Lumen award, 1984 and 1986 Bessies, a 1980 Obie for Distinguished Lighting, and several Maharam/American Theater Wing design awards. SLC, 2011— Oren Fader Music Charling C. Fagan Director of Libraries and Academic Computing—Undergraduate Catalogue BA, Ohio Wesleyan University. MLS, Case Western Reserve University. Chair, New York State Higher Education Initiative, 2010–; member, Middle States Evaluation Team, 2003–; member, Board of Trustees, Metropolitan New York Library Council; first vice president, METRO; member, Better Salaries and Pay Equity Task Force, American Library Association. SLC, 1989– FACULTY 163 Christine Farrell Theatre BA, Marquette University. MFA, Columbia University. One-year Study Abroad, Oxford, England. Actress, playwright, director. Appeared for nine seasons as Pam Shrier, the ballistics detective on Law and Order. Acting credits include Saturday Night Live, One Life to Live; films: Ice Storm, Fatal Attraction; stage: Comedy of Errors, Uncle Vanya, Catholic School Girls, Division Street, The Dining Room. Two published plays: Mama Drama and The Once Attractive Woman. Directed in colleges as well as offBroadway and was the artistic director and cofounder of the New York Team for TheatreSports. Performed in comedy improvisation throughout the world. SLC, 1991– Kim Ferguson Psychology BA, Knox College. MA, PhD, Cornell University. Special interests include culturalecological approaches to infant and child development, children at risk (children in poverty, HIV/AIDS orphans, children in foster care and institutionalized care), health and cognitive development, and development in African contexts. Areas of academic specialization include infant categorization development and the influences of the task, the stimuli used, and infants’ culture, language, and socioeconomic status on their performance; infant face processing in African and American contexts; and relationships between the quality of southern African orphan care contexts and child outcomes. SLC, 2007– Esther Fernández Spanish (on leave yearlong) BA, Wheaton College. MA, PhD, University of California-Davis. Areas of specialization: 17thcentury Spanish drama, Spanish drama from all periods, erotic literature, performance studies, and Cervantes. Publications: Los corrales de comedias españoles en el siglo XVII: espacios de sensualidad clandestina; Jugando con Eros: El erotismo metadramático en la Llamada de Lauren de Paloma Pedrero; En busca de un teatro comprometido: La entretenida de Miguel de Cervantes bajo el nuevo prisma de la CNTC; El coto privado de Diana: El perro del hortelano, de un texto sexual a un sexo visual; Mirar y desear: la construcción del personaje femenino en El perro del hortelano de Lope de Vega y de Pilar Miró. Coauthored, with Cristina Martínez-Carazo, La risa erótica de Sor Juana en Los empeños de una casa. SLC, 2008– Angela Ferraiolo Visual Arts BLS, SUNY-Purchase. MFA, Hunter College. MFA (forthcoming), Brown University. Shipped titles: Layoff (Tiltfactor Labs, New York), Earth and Beyond (MMORPG, Westwood Studios/ Electronic Arts), Aidyn Chronicles (Nintendo 64, THQ). Her plays have been produced offBroadway at The Brick Playhouse, La Mama Galleria, and Expanded Arts. Her video work has been featured in Digital Fringe, Melbourne, Austrailia, and on die Gesellschafter.de, Bonn, Germany. Currently the Electronic Writing Fellow at Brown University, where she is working on new forms of interactive narrative, she is also the Internet art and Web cinema reviewer for Furtherfield.org, an arts collective based in London. SLC, 2010— Carolyn Ferrell Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, City College of New York. Author of the short story collection Don’t Erase Me, awarded the Art Seidenbaum Award of The Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the John C. Zachiris Award given by Ploughshares, and the Quality Paperback Book Prize for First Fiction; stories anthologized in The Best American Short Stories of the Century; Giant Steps: The New Generation of African American Writers; The Blue Light Corner: Black Women Writing on Passion, Sex, and Romantic Love; and Children of the Night: The Best Short Stories by Black Writers, 1967 to the Present; recipient of grants from the Fulbright Association, the German Academic Exchange (D.A.A.D.), the City University of New York MAGNET Program, and the National Endowment for the Arts (Literature fellow for 2004). SLC, 1996– David Fieni French BA, University of California-Berkeley. PhD, UCLA. Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in French and History Across the Disciplines, Cornell University. Special interests in francophone literature and societies, postcolonial theory, literature and thought from the Maghreb in French and Arabic, orientalism, comparative literature, the relationship between mourning and literary practice, and global multilingual graffiti. SLC, 2011— Barbara Forbes Dance Royal Academy of Dancing, London. Institute of Choreology, London. Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing, Cecchetti Method. Previously on faculty of National Ballet School of Canada, Alvin Ailey School, New York 164 Current Faculty University, and Finis Jhung Studio. Ballet mistress and teacher, Joffrey Ballet, New Orleans Ballet, and Chamber Ballet USA. Currently Feldenkrais practitioner at Feldenkrais Learning Center, New York City. SLC, 2000– Joseph C. Forte Art History BA, Brooklyn College. MA, MPhil, PhD, Columbia University. Special interest in art and architecture of the Italian Renaissance and the 17th century, the history of architecture, and art and architectural theory; author of articles on Italian 16th-century drawings, French painting of the 17th century, and American 19th-century architecture. SLC, 1978– T. Griffith Foulk Religion BA, Williams College. MA, PhD, University of Michigan. Trained in Zen monasteries in Japan; active in Buddhist studies, with research interest in philosophical, literary, social, and historical aspects of East Asian Buddhism, especially the Ch’an/Zen tradition; co-editor in chief, Soto Zen Text Project (Tokyo); American Academy of Religion Buddhism Section steering committee, 1987-1994, 2003-; board member, Kuroda Institute for the Study of Buddhism and Human Values; recipient of Fulbright, Eiheiji, and Japan Foundation fellowships and grants from the American Council of Learned Societies and the National Endowment for the Humanities. SLC, 1995– Marvin Frankel Psychology BA, City College of New York. PhD, University of Chicago. Clinical internship in client-centered therapy, Counseling Center of the University of Chicago; postdoctoral fellowship at Educational Testing Service, Princeton, New Jersey. Contributed recent chapters and articles that deal with the changing nature of the psychotherapeutic relationship, the anatomy of an empathic understanding, we-centered psychotherapeutic relationships, and the clinical education of nondirective and directive psychotherapists. SLC, 1972– Melissa Frazier The Margot C. Bogert Distinguished Service Chair —Russian AB, Harvard University. PhD, University of California-Berkeley. Special interests include the 19th-century novel and literature and the literary marketplace. Author of articles and books on topics including Pushkin, Senkovskii, Gogol, Tolstoy, and Russian Formalism. Awarded the 2007 Jean-Pierre Barricelli Prize for “Best Work in Romanticism Studies” by the International Conference of Romanticism for Romantic Encounters: Writers, Readers, and the “Library for Reading” (Stanford University Press, 2007). SLC, 1995– Suzanne Gardinier Writing BA, University of Massachusetts-Amherst. MFA, Columbia University. Author of the long poems The New World (1993) and Dialogue with the Archipelago (2009); Today: 101 Ghazais (2008), Iridium (2010), seven long elegies, A World That Will Hold All the People, and essays on poetry and politics. Fiction published in Fiction International, The American Voice, and The Paris Review; essays in The Manhattan Review and The Kenyon Review. Recipient of The Kenyon Review Award for Literary Excellence in the Essay and of grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the Lannan Foundation. SLC, 1994– Will Frears Theatre BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MFA, Yale School of Drama. Film Direction: Coach, All Saints Day (winner, best narrative short, Savannah Film Festival) Beloved. Stage Direction, Off Broadway: Still Life (MCC), Rainbow Kiss (The Play Company), The Water’s Edge (Second Stage), Pen (Playwrights Horizons), Terrorism (The New Group/The Play Company), Omnium Gatherum (Variety Arts), Where We’re Born and God Hates the Irish (both at Rattlestick Playwrights Theatre), Get What You Need (Atlantic 453), and Kid-Simple (Summer Play Festival). Regional: Romeo & Juliet, Bus Stop, The Water’s Edge, and A Servant of Two Masters at the Williamstown Theatre Festival; The Pillowman at George Street Playhouse; Hay Fever and The Price at Baltimore CenterStage; Sleuth at the Bay Street Theatre; Our Lady of 121st Street (Steppenwolf Theatre); Omnium Gatherum (Actor’s Theatre of Louisville). Artistic Director, Yale Cabaret, 1999-2000 season. Recipient of Boris Sagal and Bill Foeller directing fellowships. 2010— Donald Friedman Music Marek Fuchs Writing BA, Drew University. Wrote The New York Times “County Lines” column for six years and a book, A Cold-Blooded Business, based on a murder case he covered in The New York Times, which Kirkus Reviews called “riveting.” Produces syndicated online video column for TheStreet.com, often a lead feature on Yahoo! Finance. Served as editorin-chief of Fertilemind.net; twice named “Best of the Web” by Forbes Magazine. Awards include the Silver Award in 2007 from the League of American Communications Professionals; named FACULTY 165 the best journalism critic in the nation by Talking Biz Web site at the University of North Carolina School of Journalism and Mass Communication. When not writing or teaching, serves as a firefighter in Hastings, New York. Next book coming out in Spring 2012 on firefighters. SLC 2010— Liza Gabaston French Graduate, École Normale Supérieure (rue d’Ulm). Agrégation in French Literature, Doctorate in French Literature, Paris-Sorbonne. Dissertation on “Body Language in Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu” to be published by Honoré Champion in July, 2011. Beyond Proust and the narrative representation of the body, interests include 19th- and early 20th-century literature, history and theory of the novel, and relationships between literature and the visual arts. SLC 2010— Suzanne Gardinier Writing BA, University of Massachusetts-Amherst. MFA, Columbia University. Author of the long poem, The New World, winner of the Associated Writing Programs Award Series in poetry; A World That Will Hold All the People, essays on poetry and politics; Today: 101 Ghazals (2008); the long poem, Dialogue with the Archipelago (2009); and fiction published in The Kenyon Review, The American Voice, and The Paris Review. Recipient of The Kenyon Review Award for Literary Excellence in the Essay and of grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the Lannan Foundation. SLC, 1994Rico Gatson Visual Arts BA, Bethel University. MFA, Yale University School of Art. Working in painting, sculpture, and video, he employs the tropes of repetition, accumulation, and wit to shape his social commentary. Through the appropriation and compression of multilayered symbols, he untangles the power of these symbols and illustrates how they function in various public spheres. He has co-organized several significant exhibitions, including: Intelligent Design at Momenta Art, Brooklyn, NY; Strand at New York Center for Art and Media Studies; and Pac Man at Artist Curated Projects in Los Angeles. He has had numerous solo exhibitions, including African Fractals and Dark Matter at New York's Ronald Feldman Gallery, where he is represented. He has exhibited work in numerous group exhibitions at major institutions, including The Studio Museum in Harlem, The Reina Sofia in Madrid, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, The Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria, The Brooklyn Museum of Art, The New Museum of Contemporary Art, and MIT List Visual Arts Center. SLC, 2010— Myra Goldberg Writing BA, University of California-Berkeley. MA, City University of New York. Author of Whistling and Rosalind: A Family Romance; stories published in journals including The Transatlantic Review, Ploughshares, Feminist Studies, The Massachusetts Review, The New England Review, and in the book anthologies Women in Literature, Powers of Desire, The World’s Greatest Love Stories, and elsewhere in the United States and France; nonfiction published in the Village Voice and elsewhere; recipient of Lebensberger Foundation grant. SLC, 1985– Martin Goldray Marjorie Leff Miller Faculty Scholar in Music—Music (on leave yearlong) BA, Cornell University. MM, University of Illinois. DMA, Yale University. Fulbright scholar in Paris; pianist and conductor, with special interests in 17th- through 20th-century music; performed extensively and recorded as pianist soloist, chamber musician, and conductor; performed with most of the major new music ensembles such as the New Music Consort and Speculum Musicae; worked with such composers as Babbitt, Carter, and numerous younger composers and premiered new works, including many written for him; toured internationally as a member of the Philip Glass Ensemble from 1983-1996; conducted the premieres of several Glass operas and appears on many recordings of Glass’s music; has conducted film soundtracks and worked as producer in recording studios; on the faculty of the Composers Conference at Wellesley College. SLC, 1998– Peggy Gould Dance BFA, MFA, New York University, Tisch School of the Arts. Certified teacher of Alexander Technique; assistant to Irene Dowd; private movement education practice in New York City. Other teaching affiliations: Smith College, The Ailey School/Fordham University, Dance Ireland/IMDT, 92nd St. Y/Harkness Dance Center, SUNY Purchase (summer), Jacob’s Pillow. Performances in works by Patricia Hoffbauer and George Emilio Sanchez, Sara Rudner, Joyce S. Lim, David Gordon, Ann Carlson, Charles Moulton, Neo Labos, 166 Current Faculty T.W.E.E.D., Tony Kushner, Paula Josa-Jones. Choreography presented by Dixon Place, The Field, P.S. 122, BACA Downtown (New York City); Big Range Dance Festival (Houston); Phantom Theater (Warren, Vermont); Proctor’s Theatre (Schenectady, 2008/09 Dangerous Music Commission). Grants: Meet the Composer, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Harkness Dance Center. SLC, 1999– Paul Griffin Theatre Founded City at Peace, Inc. in Washington, DC, in 1994, then founded and now leads City at Peace-National—a nonprofit that uses the performing arts to empower teenagers to transform their lives and communities across the United States. He has directed the creation and performance of 10 original musicals written from the real-life stories of diverse groups of teens and has overseen the creation of 30 more. City at Peace now has programs in seven US cities, several communities in Israel, and in Cape Town, South Africa. Prior to his work with City at Peace, he was co-director of the Theater of Youth, a company member of the No-Neck Monster Theater Co. in Washington, DC, a member of Impro-Etc. performing improvised Shakespeare classics in England and Scotland, and a student/performer with Ryszard Cieslak from Jerzy Grotowsky’s Polish Lab Theater. Honored as one of Tomorrow's Leaders Today by Public Allies, he also received the Hamilton Fish Award for Service to Children and Families. He and City at Peace have appeared in numerous venues across the country, including the Arena Stage, The Public Theater, “Nightline” with Ted Koppel, and HBO in a documentary on the City at Peace program. SLC 2008— Rachel Eliza Griffiths Writing MA English Literature, University of Delaware. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Special interest in photography, visual art, and mixed media. Photographer, painter/mixed media artist, poet; author of Miracle Arrhythmia (Willow Books, 2010), The Requited Distance (Sheep Meadow Press, 2011), and Mule & Pear (New Issues Poetry & Prose, forthcoming 2011). Recipient of fellowships, including Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, the Cave Canem Foundation, Vermont Studio Center, New York State Summer Writers Institute, and others. SLC 2011— Hilda Harris Music BA, North Carolina Central University. Singer and actress; performer in opera, oratorio, and orchestral concerts in the United States and Europe; solo artist with Metropolitan Opera Affiliate Artist Program; freelance recording artist, vocal division of the Chautauqua Institution. SLC, 1992– Matthea Harvey Writing (On leave spring semester) BA, Harvard College. MFA, University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Poet; author of Pity the Bathtub Its Forced Embrace of the Human Form (Alice James Books, 2000); Sad Little Breathing Machine (Graywolf, 2004); Modern Life (Graywolf, 2007), winner of the Kingsley Tufts Award, a New York Times Notable Book of 2008, and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award; and a children’s book, The Little General and the Giant Snowflake, illustrated by Elizabeth Zechel (Soft Skull Press, 2007). Contributing editor for jubilat and BOMB. Has taught at Warren Wilson, the Pratt Institute, and the University of Houston. SLC, 2004– Sarah Hassan Dance BA, Sarah Lawrence College. A performer and teacher of Middle Eastern belly dance and tribal fusion belly dance, she has studied Turkish and Egyptian cabaret belly dance, American tribal belly dance, flamenco, ballet, and high-flying and single-point trapeze. Former member and choreographer for The Harem Belly Dance Studio; off-Broadway debut in Randy Weiner and Alfred Preisser’s “Caligula Maximus” (La MaMa E.T.C.); featured in numerous showcases, including the 2009 Festival of the East and 2010 Rakkasah Spring Caravan in the New York City metro area. Former Peace Corps volunteer (Mongolia). Special interests include Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, orientalism, circus arts, turn-ofthe-century cabaret, and the folk dances of North Africa, Spain, and India. SLC, 2010— Mark Helias Music Joshua Henkin Writing (on leave yearlong) BA, Harvard College. MFA, University of Michigan. Author of the novel Swimming Across the Hudson; short stories in DoubleTake, Ploughshares, Southern Review, North American Review, Boulevard, and elsewhere; nonfiction in The New York Times Book Review, The Los Angeles Times, The Nation, Mother Jones, and elsewhere; grants from PEN and Michigan Council of the Arts. SLC, 2000– FACULTY 167 Ann Heppermann Writing A Brooklyn-based, independent, radio/ multimedia documentary producer, transmission sound artist, and educator, her stories air nationally and internationally on National Public Radio, the BBC, and on numerous shows, including: This American Life, Radio Lab, Marketplace, Morning Edition, Studio360, and many others. A Peabody award-winning producer, she has also received Associated Press, Edward R. Murrow, and Third Coast International Audio Festival awards. A transmission artist with free103point9, her work has been exhibited at UnionDocs, Chicago Center for the Arts, and other venues. She has taught classes and workshops at Duke Center for Documentary Studies, Smith College, Columbia University, and the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism; for years, she was the director of radio at Brooklyn College. She is a co-creator of Mapping Main Street, a collaborative media project documenting the nation’s more than 10,000 Main Streets, which was created through AIR’s MQ2 initiative along with NPR, the CPB, and the Berkman Center at Harvard University. Her work has been funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Association of Independents, the Arizona Humanities Council, and the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard. Currently, she is a Rosalynn Carter for Mental Journalism Fellow and will be making a multimedia documentary about preteen anorexia in partnership with Ms. Magazine and NPR. SLC, 2010— Kathleen Hill Writing BA, Manhattanville College. MA, Columbia University. PhD, University of Wisconsin. Author, Still Waters in Niger, nominated for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and named a Notable Book of the Year by The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Chicago Tribune; the French translation, Eaux Tranquilles, was shortlisted for the Prix Femina Etranger. Her short stories and essays have appeared in The Hudson Review, The Kenyon Review, and The Yale Review, among other publications, and have won a number of literary awards. The Anointed, published in DoubleTake, was included in Best American Short Stories, Pushcart Prize XXV, and The Pushcart Book of Short Stories. An excerpt from her recently completed novel, Who Occupies this House, appeared in a recent issue of Ploughshares. SLC, 1991—1994; 1997— David Hollander Writing BA, State University of New York-Purchase. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Author of the novel, L.I.E.; his short fiction recently appeared in McSweeney’s, Post Road, Unsaid, The Collagist, The Black Warrior Review, and elsewhere; his nonfiction has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Poets & Writers, and Gastronomica (and elsewhere). His work has frequently been anthologized, most recently in Best American Fantasy, 2008. SLC, 2002— Rona Holub Co-Director, Graduate Program in Women’s History—History BA, The College of New Jersey. MA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, PhD, Columbia University. Special interest in U.S. women’s, urban, 19-century social history, with particular emphasis on New York City, crime and capitalism, and growth of the bourgeois narrative. Contributor to Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia and Encyclopedia of Women in American History. Awarded Gerda Lerner Prize. SLC, 2007– Cathy Park Hong Writing BA, Oberlin College. MFA, University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Poet; author of Translating Mo’um (Hanging Loose Press, 2002) and Dance Dance Revolution (W. W. Norton, 2007), which was chosen for the Barnard New Women’s Poets Series; recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship, the National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, and a Fulbright grant for South Korea; work has been published in Pushcart Prize anthology and New Asian American Anthology, The Next Generation, among others; essays and articles published in the Village Voice, Guardian, Salon, and Christian Science Monitor. SLC, 2006– James Horowitz Literature BA, New York University. MA, PhD, Yale University. Special interests include Restoration and 18th-century literature, the history of the novel, film and film theory, political history, Henry James, and gender studies. SLC, 2008— Marie Howe Writing BS, University of Windsor. MFA, Columbia University. Poet; author of The Good Thief, selected by Margaret Atwood for the National Poetry Series; editor, with Michael Klein, of In the Company of My Solitude: American Writing from the AIDS Pandemic; author of What the Living Do; recipient of the Peter I. B. Lavan 168 Current Faculty Younger Poet Prize from the Academy of American Poets, the Mary Ingram Bunting fellowship from Radcliffe College, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Massachusetts Artist Foundation, and the Guggenheim. SLC, 1993– Tishan Hsu Visual Arts (on leave spring semester) BSAD, MArch, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sculptor and painter; one-person and group exhibitions in the United States, Mexico, and Europe; work included in major private and museum collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, High Museum, Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris), and the Centro Cultural Arte Contemporaneo (Mexico City); honorary member, Board of Directors, White Columns, New York; recipient of grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. SLC, 1994– Iréne Hultman Dance A native of Sweden and a New York City-based choreographer, teacher, and dancer, Hultman was a member of the Trisha Brown Dance Company from 1983-1988 and also worked as its rehearsal director 2006-2009. In 1988, she created Iréne Hultman Dance and received national and international recognition. Several of her works premiered at The Joyce Theater and Danspace Project at St. Mark’s Church. She has also choreographed seven opera productions, as well as musicals and cabarets that include South Pacific and A Touch of Kurt Weill. She is the co-founder of Järna-Brooklyn, a Swedish-American cultural entity that encourages artistic experimentation and exchange. She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in choreography and a Foundation for Contemporary Performance Arts award, among others. She served on The Bessie Committee (New York City dance and performance award) and is serving on Danspace Project’s Artist Advisory Board. She is also on the faculty of Movement Research. SLC, 2010— Dan Hurlin Theatre BA, Sarah Lawrence College. Performances in New York at Dance Theater Workshop, PS 122, La MaMa ETC, Danspace, The Kitchen, St. Ann’s Warehouse, and at alternative presenters throughout the United States and the United Kingdom. Recipient of a Village Voice OBIE Award in 1990 for solo adaptation of Nathanael West’s A Cool Million and the 2000 New York Dance and Performance (aka “Bessie”) Award for Everyday Uses for Sight, Nos. 3 & 7; recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts, and a 2002-2003 Guggenheim fellowship and of grants from Creative Capital, the Rockefeller Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts, the Mary Cary Flagler Charitable Trust, and the New England Foundation for the Arts. Recipient of the Alpert Award in the Arts for Theatre, 2004. Former teacher at Bowdoin, Bennington, Barnard, and Princeton. SLC, 1997Robert Ingliss Music Tara Elise James Associate Director, Women’s History Program—Women’s Studies BA, Temple University. MA, Sarah Lawrence College. SLC, 2001Kate Knapp Johnson Director, Graduate Writing Program in Poetry—Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. Columbia School of the Arts. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. NCPsyA, Westchester Institute. Special interests include Jungian studies and religion; author of When Orchids Were Flowers, This Perfect Life, and Wind Somewhere, and Shade, which received the Gradiva Award; most recently published in Ploughshares, The Salt Journal, Luna, and The Sun; recipient of New York Foundation for the Arts Award. SLC, 1987– Elizabeth Johnston Psychology (on leave fall semester) MA, St. Andrew’s University, Scotland. DPhil, Oxford University. Special interests in human perception of three-dimensional shape, binocular vision, and the perception of depth from motion; author of articles and book chapters on shape perception from stereopsis, sensorimotor integration, and combining depth information from different sources. SLC, 1992– Alwin A. D. Jones Literature BA, Tufts University. MA, PhD, University of Virginia. Special interests include African American literature and studies, 18th century to the present; Caribbean literature and studies, literatures in English and/or translations; early American/transatlantic literatures; postcolonial literatures in English, particularly of the African diaspora; race, cultural, and postcolonial theory; black popular culture; performance poetry; and the intersection of black music and resistance internationally. SLC, 2008– FACULTY 169 Brian Jones Visual Arts BFA, Howard University. Graduate, Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP), Tisch School of the Arts, New York University. A creative technologist presently designing mobile experiences and interactive hardware, he is driven by the new modes of expression emerging from mobile and wireless technology. A professional photographer before coming to Sarah Lawrence College, his clients included W+K, Nike, ExxonMobil, BBDO, Deutsch, Walmart, Almay, Frito-Lay, Young & Rubicam, Chase Manhattan, Apple, Procter & Gamble, GQ, Cosmopolitan, Newsweek, and Esquire. Over 13 years in the business, he moved from being a retoucher to shooting still life, beauty, portraiture, and fashion. SLC 2011— Daniel Kaiser Literature BA, Columbia College. MA, Yale University. Special interest in 19th- and 20th-century American and European literature, with particular emphasis on relationships between politics and literature; recipient of French government-Fulbright fellowship for study at the Sorbonne. SLC, 1964-1971; 1974– Shirley Kaplan Director, Theatre Outreach; Shirley Kaplan Faculty Scholar in Theatre—Theatre Diploma in Sculpture and Painting, Academie de la Grande Chaumiere, Paris. Playwright, director, and designer, with productions throughout the United States and Europe; co-founder, OBIE Award-winning Paper Bag Players; founder, The Painters’ Theatre. Directing credits include Ensemble Studio Theatre, Playwrights Horizons, UBU Repertory, La MaMa E.T.C., Ensemble Studio Theatre, Music Theatre Group, New York Performance Works; guest director/playwright, St.Archangelo, Italy; directed new works by Richard Greenberg, David Ives, Leslie Lyles, Eduardo Machado, Denise Bonal, Keith Reddin, and Arthur Giron. Writer/lyricist, Rockabye. Designer, Ben Bagley’s Cole Porter Shows, U.S. and European tours; created interactive theatre workshops for The Kitchen and New York City museums; developed original ensembles on major arts grants. Winner, Golden Camera Award, U.S. Industrial Film and Video Festival; finalist for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize for her play, The Connecticut Cowboy; recipient of Westchester Arts Council Award in Education and Excellence Award, the Ensemble Studio Theatre. Founder and codirector, Sarah Lawrence College Theatre Outreach. SLC, 1975– Kenneth G. Karol Biology BSc, University of Wisconsin-Madison. PhD, University of Maryland-College Park. Research interest in molecular systematics, classification and evolution of green algae and land plants, and interest in organellar genome evolution. Currently an assistant curator at the New York Botanical Garden Cullman Molecular Systematics Program, adjunct faculty member at City University of New York, international collector of algae, and author of more than 30 papers and book chapters on algae and land plant evolution. SLC, 2008— Susan Kart Art History MA, MPhil, PhD (forthcoming), Columbia University. Specialization in 20th-century African art, arts of the African diaspora, Islamic arts in Africa, and colonial period African art. Primary research based in Senegal, West Africa. Articles and reviews published in Critical Interventions, African Studies Review, and the HNet for African Art. Additional academic interests include pre-Columbian and Latin American art. SLC, 2008– Kuniko Katz Japanese BA, Antioch College. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Columnist and frequent contributor to various Japanese newspapers and magazines in the United States and Japan. Translator of articles and the book Hide and Seek, by Theresa Cahn-Tober, into Japanese. SLC, 2006— William Melvin Kelley Writing Harvard College. Fiction writer and video-maker; author of A Different Drummer, Dancers on the Shore, A Drop of Patience, dem, Dunfords Travels Everywheres, and stories and nonfiction in The New Yorker, Esquire, Mademoiselle, and Saturday Evening Post; awards and grants from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Rockefeller Foundation, the New York Foundation for the Arts, and the Wurlitzer Foundation. SLC, 1989– Barbara Bray Ketchum Dance Kathleen Kilroy-Marac Anthropology BA, University of Wisconsin-Madison. MA, MPhil, PhD candidate, Columbia University. Special interests include sub-Saharan African history, culture, and politics; colonialism and postcoloniality; issues of representation and the production of knowledge; experimental ethnography; commodities and the anthropology of consumption; spirit possession, witchcraft, and 170 Current Faculty spectrality; reckonings of time and the politics of memory. Carried out ethnographic fieldwork in Dakar, Senegal; dissertation, “The Impossible Inheritance: Time, Memory, and Postcolonial Subjectivity at the Fann Psychiatric Hospital in Dakar, Senegal,” considers how the recent history of a well-known psychiatric hospital in Dakar has come to be recounted through personal narratives that also reflect discourses of national hope and hopelessness of the past, in the present, and for the future. Fellowships include the FulbrightHays (DDRA) Award and a Columbia University Travel Grant for dissertation research. SLC, 2007— Daniel King The Sara Yates Exley Chair in Teaching Excellence —Mathematics BS, Lafayette College. MS, PhD, University of Virginia. Special interests in mathematics education, game theory, history and philosophy of mathematics, and the outreach of mathematics to the social sciences and the humanities. Author of research papers in the areas of nonassociative algebra, fair division theory, and mathematics education; chair, Metropolitan New York Section of the Mathematical Association of America; member, Board of Editors, The College Mathematics Journal. SLC, 1997– Jonathan King Music BA, Amherst College. MS, University of Montana. MA, MPhil, PhD candidate, Columbia University. Special interests include American vernacular music, African musical traditions, Western art music, 20th-century popular music, improvisation, music and language. SLC, 2007— Ekaterina Korsunskaia Russian AB, Moscow University, Russia. MA, Institute for the History of Arts and the Humanities, Russia. Worked as a correspondent for the Moscow daily and as a museum curator. Moved to the United States in 1992 and worked as a New York correspondent for the Newsweek-Russia magazine. Taught Russian language at the New School for Social Research and New York University. Special interests include Russian folklore and theatre. SLC, 1998– Arnold Krupat Literature BA, New York University. MA, PhD, Columbia University. Special interest in cultural studies and Native American literatures. Editor for Native American literatures, The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Author of For Those Who Come After: A Study of Native American Autobiography; The Voice in the Margin: Native Literature and the Canon; Ethnocriticism: Ethnography, History, Literature; The Turn to the Native: Studies in Criticism and Culture; Red Matters: Native American Studies; All That Remains: Varieties of Indigenous Expression; and a novel, Woodsmen, or Thoreau & the Indians. Recipient of Fulbright, Woodrow Wilson, and National Endowment for the Humanities fellowships; Guggenheim Fellow, 2005-2006; Sarah Lawrence Excellence in Teaching Award, 2007. SLC, 1968– Justine Kurland Visual Arts BFA, School of Visual Arts (New York). MFA, Yale University. New York-based photographer/ artist with solo exhibitions at numerous galleries and museums worldwide, including: Frank Elbaz Gallery, Elizabeth Leah Gallery, Monte Faria Gallery, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, Monte Clark Gallery. Works represented in numerous permanent collections, including: The International Center of Photography (New York), Museum of Contemporary Photography (Chicago), Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum of Art (New York), and Whitney Museum of American Art. Guest lecturer at Columbia University, Columbia College of Art, University of California-Los Angeles, and numerous others. Her photos have been published widely and featured most notably in Art in Review, The New York Times, Vogue, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, and Harper’s Bazaar. Her photography is featured in numerous books and catalogues, including: Art Photography Now, Bright, Susan (Aperture Foundation, 2005), Old Joy, Jonathan Raymond (Artspace Books, 2004), and Justine Kurland: Spirit West, John Kelsey (Coromandel, 2002). SLC, 2011— Peter Kyle Dance BA, Kenyon College. MFA, University of Washington. Dancer, choreographer, teacher, filmmaker, and artistic director of Peter Kyle Dance; choreographic commissions across the United States and internationally in Scotland, Norway, Germany, Cyprus, and China. Peter Kyle Dance has performed in New York City at One Arm Red, Abrons Arts Center, Chez Bushwick, Joyce SoHo, Symphony Space, DNA, 3LD, and the 92nd Street Y, among other venues. Previously a solist with Nokolais and Murray Louis Dance and performed in the companies of Mark Morris, Erick Hawkins, Gina Gibney, Laura Glenn, and P3/east, among others. Also teaches at Marymount Manhattan College, HC Studio, and Nikolais/Louis Summer Dance Intensive and FACULTY 171 conducts residencies and workshops internationally. His Tiny Dance Film Series has been installed internationally since 2006. SLC, 2009— Mary LaChapelle Writing (on leave fall semester) BA, University of Minnesota. MFA, Vermont College. Author of House of Heroes and Other Stories; stories published in Nimrod, Northern Lit Review, Redbook, and First; anthologized in the United States, Japan, and England; recipient of awards from PEN/Nelson Algren, Whiting, and Katherine Anne Porter and of a Bush Foundation fellowship. SLC, 1992– Eduardo Lago Spanish MA, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain. PhD, Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Special interests in translation theory, the aesthetics of the Baroque, and the connections among contemporary U.S. Latino, Iberian, Spanish American, and Luso-Brazilian fiction writers. Author of Ladrón de mapas (Map Thief), a collection of short stories published in September 2007; Cuentos disperses (Scattered Tales, 2000), a collection of short stories; and Cuaderno de Méjico (Mexican Notebook, 2000), a memoir of a trip to Chiapas. First novel Llámame Brooklyn (Call Me Brooklyn, 2006) won Spain’s Nadal Prize and the City of Barcelona Award for best novel of the year, the Fundación Lara Award for the novel with the best critical reception, the National Critics Award, and best novel of the year in Spain by El Mundo. Recipient of the 2002 Bartolomé March Award for Excellence in Literary Criticism. Currently director of Instituto Cervantes of New York. SLC, 1994– Kevin Landdeck Merle Rosenblatt Goldman Chair in Asian Studies—Asian Studies BA, Valparaiso University. MA, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor. PhD, University of California-Berkeley. Recipient of a Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation dissertation grant for archival research in Chongqing (China). Research concerns 20th-century China, specifically Kuomintang war mobilization and interior society during the Sino-Japanese War (1937-45). Dissertation, “Under the Gun: Nationalist Military Service and Society in Wartime Sichuan, 1938-1945,” presently being revised for future publication, examines the statemaking projects embedded within conscription and voluntary enlistment in Chiang Kai-shek's army. Translating the confessions and jottings of a captured KMT spy, who spent 16 years undergoing self-reform in a communist prison, is a side project currently in progress. Key areas of interest include China’s transition from a dynastic empire to a nation-state; the role of war in state-making; modes of political mobilization and their intersection with social organization; and private life and selfhood, including national, regional, or local and personal identities. Broadly teaches on modern (17th-century to present) East Asian history, with a focus on politics, society, and urban culture. In addition to a course on war in 20th-century Asia, a personal involvement in photography has inspired a course on photographic images and practice in China and Japan from the 19th-century through the present. Member of the American Historical Association, Association of Asian Studies, and Historical Society for Twentieth-Century China. SLC, 2011— Allen Lang Theatre BA, Empire State College (SUNY). MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Published plays include Chimera and White Buffalo in the French Performance Journal Collages and Bricollages. Recipient of the Lipkin Playwright Award and Drury College Playwright Award. Plays produced in New York City at La Mama and other venues; directed plays in New York and regionally; acted in New York City and regional theatre, on television and in the cult films by Michael DiPaolo. Artistic director of the Water Street Theatre Company in Stevens Point, Wisconsin. Conducted theatre and creative writing workshops for participants of all ages in New York City, South America, and throughout the United States. SLC, 2011— Ann Lauinger Literature BA, University of Pennsylvania. Oxford University. MA, PhD, Princeton University. Special interest in medieval and Renaissance poetry, particularly English. Author of papers and articles on Shakespeare and Ben Jonson; Persuasions of Fall, a book of poems; and poems in Confrontation, Missouri Review, Parnassus, and other magazines; recipient of Agha Shahid Ali Poetry Prize, Ernest J. Poetry Prize, ThouronUniversity of Pennsylvania British-American Exchange Program scholarship; Woodrow Wilson fellow. SLC, 1973– 172 Current Faculty Joseph Lauinger Literature BA, University of Pennsylvania. MA, Oxford University. MA, PhD, Princeton University. Special interest in American literature and film, the history of drama, and classical literature; recipient of the New York State Teacher of Excellence Award and a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities; fiction and poetry published in Epoch, Lost Creek, Georgetown Review, Confrontation, and Pig Iron; plays performed throughout the United States and in the United Kingdom, Australia, and India; member of the Dramatists Guild. SLC, 1988– Karen R. Lawrence President—Literature BA, Yale University. MA, Tufts University. PhD, Columbia University. Special interest in modern and postmodern literature, the novel, and travel writing. Author of The Odyssey of Style in Ulysses, Penelope Voyages: Women and Travel in the British Literary Tradition, and numerous essays on modern literature; editor of Transcultural Joyce and Decolonizing Tradition: New Views of Twentieth-Century “British” Literary Canons. Current work includes the fiction and theory of Christine Brooke-Rose and collected essays on Joyce. Recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship and the Rosenblatt Prize for Excellence in Research, Teaching, and Service from the University of Utah. Former chair of English at the University of Utah and dean of humanities at the University of California-Irvine. Former president of the International James Joyce Foundation and the Society for the Study of Narrative Literature. President of Sarah Lawrence College, 2007— Tom Lee Theatre BFA, Carnegie Mellon University. Designed sets, puppets, and video animation for dance, theatre, and new opera in New York and Europe; resident artist of La MaMa E.T.C.; worked with companies in Siberia, Ukraine, Poland, Italy, and Japan; received a Jim Henson Foundation grant for his puppet epic, Hoplite Diary, and grants from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, Meet the Composer (with Yara Arts Group), and the NEA/ TCG Career Development Program for Designers. SLC, 2005— Eric Leveau French Graudate of École Normale Supérieure (Fontenay-Saint Cloud, France). Agrégation in French Literature and Classics. Doctorate in French literature, Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV). Special interest in early modern French literature, with emphasis on theories and poetics of theatre, comedy and satire, rhetoric, the evolution of notions of writer and style during the period. SLC, 2003-2006; 2008– Linwood J. Lewis Psychology BA, Manhattanville College. MA, PhD, City University of New York. MS, Columbia University. Special interests in the effects of culture and social context on conceptualization of health and illness, multicultural aspects of genetic counseling, the negotiation of HIV within families, and the development of sexuality in ethnic minority adolescents and adults. Recipient of a MacArthur postdoctoral fellowship and an NIH-NRSA research fellowship. SLC, 1997– Robert Lyons Theatre Doug MacHugh Theatre BA, New England College. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Actor, writer, director. Taught for two years at the Universidad Nacional in El Salvador. Staff writer for Jones Entertainment and Gates Productions. Has written PSAs, commercials, industrials, documentaries, and 60 hours of local and regional live television in Los Angeles. Film acting credits include Clean and Sober, Alien Nation, Come See the Paradise, and Weird Science; television acting credits include Guiding Light, Law and Order, Cheers, Quantum Leap, LA Law, and Night Court; stage credits include Holy Ghost, End Game, Up, Down, Strange, Charmed, Beauty and Truth (director), Platypus Rex, Mafia on Prozac, North of Providence, Only You, To Kill A Mockingbird, and The Weir. SLC, 2000— Greg MacPherson Theatre Designed lighting for hundreds of plays and musicals in New York and around the United States, as well as in Europe, Australia, Japan, and the Caribbean. Designs have included original plays by Edward Allan Baker, Cassandra Medley, Stewart Spencer, Richard Greenberg, Warren Leight, Lanford Wilson, Romulus Linney, Arthur Miller, and David Mamet. Continues to design the Las Vegas production of Penn & Teller and to work as resident designer for the 52nd Street Project. Received an American Theatre Wing Maharam Award nomination for his lighting design of EST’s Marathon of One-Act Plays and has taught lighting design at Sarah Lawrence College since 1990. SLC, 1990— FACULTY 173 Patrisia Macías Sociology BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, PhD, University of California-Berkeley. Research interests include international migration, border controls, human smuggling, the penal state, race relations, ethnographic methods, and social theory; current project examines the role of states, smugglers, vigilantes, and NGOs in regulating clandestine migrations at the United States-Mexico border; recipient of grants and fellowships from the National Science Foundation, Andrew Mellon Program in Latin American Sociology, Social Science Research Council, and Center for Latino Policy Research at the University of California-Berkeley. SLC, 2007– Rona Naomi Mark Visual Arts BA, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. MFA, Columbia University. Award-winning writer, director, and producer. Festivals and awards include Best of Fest—Edinburgh International Film Festival; Filmmaker Magazine—Audience Choice Award; Scenario Award—Canadian International Film and Video Festival; second place, Best Short—Galway Film Fleadh; Best Comedy/Best of Night—Polo Ralph Lauren New Works Festival; BBC’s Best Short Film About the Environment—Tel Aviv International Student Film Festival; Opening night selection—Three Rivers Film Festival; Hong Kong International Jewish Film Festival; Irish Reels Film Festival; Seattle True Independent Film Festival; NewFilmmakers Screening Series; Hoboken International Film Festival; Miami Jewish Film Festival; Munich International Student Film Festival; Palm Beach International Jewish Film Festival; Pittsburgh Israeli Jewish Film Festival; Toronto Jewish Film Festival; Vancouver Jewish Film Festival. Finalist in Pipedream Screenplay Competition; third prize—Acclaim TV Writer Competition; second place—TalentScout TV Writing Competition; finalist—People’s Pilot Television Writing Contest; Milos Forman Award; finalist—Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Student Film Awards. Current feature film projects include screenwriter/ director/producer, Strange Girls—Mdux Pictures, LLC. Screenwriter/director, Shoelaces. SLC, 2007— James Marshall Computer Science (on leave yearlong) BA, Cornell University. MS, PhD, Indiana University-Bloomington. Special interests in robotics, evolutionary computation, artificial intelligence, and cognitive science. Author of research papers on developmental robotics, neural networks, and computational models of analogy; author of the Metacat computer model of analogy. SLC, 2006– Merceditas Mañago-Alexander Dance BA, Empire State College (SUNY). Dancer with Doug Varone and Dancers, Pepatian, Elisa Monte Dance Company, Ballet Hispanico, and independent choreographers such as Sara Rudner and Joyce S. Lim. Recipient of the Outstanding Student Artist Award from the University of the Philippines Presidents’ Committee on Culture and the Arts. Taught at Alvin Ailey School; guest faculty member, 92nd Street Y, Marymount Manhattan College, Metropolitan Opera Ballet, New York University Tisch School of the Arts, Rutgers University Mason Gross School of the Performing Arts. Participant/teacher, 2004 Bates Festival-Young Dancers Workshop, solo works: Free Range Arts, Dixon Place, Brooklyn Arts Exchange, and Danspace Project/St. Mark’s Church. SLC, 2002— Jeffrey McDaniel Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MFA, George Mason University. Poet. Author of four books of poetry: The Endarkenment (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2008), Alibi School, The Forgiveness Parade, and The Splinter Factory. Poems published in many anthologies, including Best American Poetry, New (American) Poets, and The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry. Recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Washington, DC, Commission for the Arts. SLC, 2001– Elena McGhee Theatre BA, University of Massachusetts. Actor, vocal coach, and designated Linklater voice instructor. Recent teaching appointments include Fordham, Tepper Semester/Syracuse, Shakespeare & Company, ACT, New York University, and CAL/ ARTS. Her private clients appear on Broadway, film and television. Her acting credits include Classic Stage Company, Classical Theatre of Harlem, The Ontological Hysterical, Ensemble Studio Theatre, Los Angeles Women’s Shakespeare, The Odyssey/Los Angeles, Worcester Foothills, The Nora, and The New Rep/ Boston. SLC, 2007— William D. McRee Theatre BA, Jacksonville University. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Co-founder and artistic director for Jacksonville’s A Company of Players, 174 Current Faculty Inc.; productions with The Actor’s Outlet, Playwrights Horizons, Summerfest, and the Ensemble Studio Theatre. SLC, 1981– Cassandra Medley Theatre University of Michigan. Playwright; co-author, A-My Name is Alice; author, terrain (nominated for Susan Smith Blackburn Prize), Womenswork/ Ma Rose, Antaeus Plays in One Act, Mildred/13th Moon, Voices of Color/Rosalie; plays performed throughout the United States and Europe; recipient of an Outer Critics Drama Circle Desk Award, a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts grant in playwriting, and a Walt Disney screenwriting fellowship; staff writer for ABC Television daytime series; member, Ensemble Studio Theatre and Writer’s Guild of America, East. Most recently produced plays include Relativity, Kuntu Rep of Pittsburgh, Southern Rep of New Orleans, 2007; the Ensemble Studio Theatre, May 2006; the St. Louis Black Repertory Theatre, February 2006; and the Magic Theatre in San Francisco, June 2004. Relativity won the 2006 Audelco August Wilson Playwriting Award and was featured on Science Friday, National Public Radio. Published by Broadway Play Publishing. SLC, 1989– Jeffrey Miller History BA, Princeton. LLB, Harvard Law School. Professor of law at Pace Law School and, until recently, its academic dean for five years. He has taught constitutional law, torts, and various courses in environmental law. Prior to teaching, he was an enforcement official with the Environmental Protection Agency in Boston and in Washington, DC for 10 years, finishing his time there as head of its Office of Enforcement. He has practiced law as an associate in a Boston law firm and as a partner in a Washington, DC law firm. He has authored four books or monographs and more than two dozen chapters in books and scholarly articles, primarily on issues of environmental law. SLC, 2011— Nicolaus Mills Literature BA, Harvard University. PhD, Brown University. Special interest in American studies. Author of Winning the Peace: The Marshall Plan and America’s Coming of Age as a Superpower, The Triumph of Meanness: America’s War Against Its Better Self, Their Last Battle: The Fight for the National World War II Memorial, Like a Holy Crusade: Mississippi 1964, The Crowd in American Literature, and American and English Fiction in the Nineteenth Century; editor of Getting Out: Historical Perspectives on Leaving Iraq, Debating Affirmative Action, Arguing Immigration, Culture in an Age of Money, Busing USA, The New Journalism, and The New Killing Fields; contributor to The Boston Globe, The New York Times, Chicago Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, Newsday, The Nation, Yale Review, National Law Journal, and The Guardian; editorial board member, Dissent magazine. Recipient of fellowships from the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, American Council of Learned Societies, and the Rockefeller Foundation. SLC, 1972– Greta Minsky Theatre BA, University of Kansas. Stage manager of original productions of works by Tom Stoppard, Neil Simon, Laurence Fishburne, Doug Wright, Charles Busch, Larry L. King, Ernest Abuba, and Lillian Garrett-Groag, among others. Broadway, Off Broadway, touring, dance, opera, and concert work includes productions with Manhattan Theatre Club, Circle Rep, WPA, Pan Asian Rep, Vineyard Theatre, La MaMa E.T.C., The Women’s Project, Radio City Music Hall, Carnegie Hall, and New York City Opera. Cofounder of Modern Times Theater. SLC, 1998— Nike Mizelle German BA, Queens College. MA, MPhil, Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Special interests in New German Cinema, German Romanticism, contemporary German authors, and 20th-century art history. Translator of articles on German music; contributor to Pro Helvetia Swiss Lectureship. Monika Maron Symposium chairperson, Gent. SLC, 1987– Ruth Moe Theatre Production manager for the Sarah Lawrence College Theatre program. Other production management work includes seven seasons with the Westport Country Playhouse, also Shakespeare and Company, Classic Stage Company, The Working Theatre, The Colorado Festival of World Theatre, East Coast Arts Theatre, Berkshire Public Theatre, and The Jerash Festival in Amman, Jordan. Production stage management credits include productions with the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Mabou Mines, New York Theatre of the Deaf, and Fast Folk Musical Magazine. Member of AEA. SLC, 1999— Angela Moger Literature BA, Bryn Mawr College. MA, University of Pennsylvania. PhD, Yale University. Special FACULTY 175 interests include theory of narrative, French literature of the 19th century, decadence in painting and literature, and semiotic and rhetorical approaches to the short story. Recipient of Yale University’s Mary Cady Tew Prize and the Dwight and Noyes Clark fellowship. Scholarly publications include essays in PMLA, Yale French Studies, Substance, and Romanic Review; the anthologies NineteenthCentury Literary Criticism and Maupassant Conteur et Romancier; and the books Hurdles and Moving Forward, Holding Fast: The Dynamics of Movement in Nineteenth-Century French Culture. Visiting professor at the Institut d’E´tudes Francaises d’Avignon. Dean of studies, Sarah Lawrence College, 1972-1975. SLC, 1971– Mary Morris Writing BA, Tufts College. MPhil, Columbia University. Novelist, short-story writer, and writer of travel literature. Author of the novels Crossroads, The Waiting Room, The Night Sky, House Arrest, Acts of God, and Revenge; the short-story collections Vanishing Animals and Other Stories, The Bus of Dreams, and The Lifeguard Stories; the travel memoirs Nothing to Declare: Memoirs of a Woman Traveling Alone and Wall to Wall: From Beijing to Berlin by Rail; and an anthology of the travel literature of women, Maiden Voyages, Angels and Aliens: A Journey West, and The River Queen. A book about the Mississippi River is forthcoming (Henry Holt and Company). Recent work in Antaeus, Boulevard, and Epoch; recipient of the Rome Prize in Literature and grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, and Creative Artists Public Service Awards. SLC, 1994– Bari Mort Music BFA, State University of New York-Purchase. MM, The Juilliard School. Pianist, winner of Artists International Young Musicians Auditions; New York recital debut at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall. Member of New York Chamber Ensemble; performed with International String Quartet, Musica de Camera, Da Capo Chamber Players, Colorado String Quartet, American Symphony Orchestra, Columbia Artists’ Community Concerts. Broadcasts include PBS Live from Lincoln Center and NPR in New York and San Francisco. Recorded for ERM Records and Albany Records; on the faculty of Bard College, 1997-2006. SLC, 2008— Brian Morton Director, Graduate Program in Fiction—Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. Author of the novels The Dylanist, Starting Out in the Evening, A Window Across the River, and Breakable You. SLC, 1998– April Reynolds Mosolino Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. Taught at the 92nd Street Y and New York University; her short story, Alcestis, appeared in The Bluelight Corner: Black Women Writing on Passion, Sex, and Romantic Love; her fiction work has also appeared in the anthology Mending the World with Basic Books, 110 Stories: New York Writes After September 11 (New York University Press) and The Heretics Bible (Free Press). Her first novel, Knee-Deep in Wonder, won the Zora Neale Hurston/Richard Wright Foundation Award. Her second novel, The Book of Charlemagne, is forthcoming (Free Press/Simon & Schuster). SLC, 2003— Jamee K. Moudud Economics BS, MEng, Cornell University. MA, PhD, The New School for Social Research. Current interests include the study of macrodynamics and fiscal policy, the analysis of competition in the history of economic thought, Sir Roy Harrod’s contributions to growth and policy, the role of the state in the development process, and the econometric analysis of the effects of public investment. Author of two academic papers published during 2008-09 in the International Journal of Political Economy, one on the developmental state and the other on the investigation of expansionary fiscal policies in Harrod’s growth framework; three papers presented at the 2009 Eastern Economic Association Annual Conference; a book in process, Disequilibrium Dynamics, Stock-Flow Consistency, and the Role of State, to be published by Edward Elgar Press. SLC, 2000– Patrick Muchmore Music BM, University of Oklahoma. Composer/ performer with performances throughout the United States; founding member of New York’s Anti-Social Music; theory and composition instructor at City College of New York. SLC, 2004— Joshua Muldavin Geography (on leave spring semester) BS, MA, PhD, University of California-Berkeley. Special interests in China, Japan, and Asia, 176 Current Faculty policy, rural development, international aid, agriculture and food, climate change, environment, political economy, and political ecology. Current research projects analyze international environmental policy and impacts on local resource use and vulnerability in the Himalayan region; climate change policy; socialist transition’s environmental and social impacts in China; sustainable agriculture and food systems; global resource and development conflicts via capital flows to Africa, Latin America, and South/Southeast Asia; and aid to China since 1978. Twenty-eight years of field research, primarily in rural China. Recipient of grants from National Science Foundation, Social Science Research Council, Ford Foundation, MacArthur Foundation, and Fulbright. Invited lecturer at Princeton, Yale, Oxford, Johns Hopkins, U.S. Congressional Commission, European Parliament. Executive Director of the Action 2030 Institute. Contributor to The Political Geography Handbook, Economic Geography, Geopolitics, Environment and Planning A, Geoforum, and Annals of the Association of American Geographers, International Herald Tribune, BBC World News, and other media outlets. SLC, 2002– Priscilla Murolo Co-Director, Graduate Program in Women’s History—History BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, PhD, Yale University. Special interest in U.S. labor, women’s, and social history; author, The Common Ground of Womanhood: Class, Gender, and Working Girls’ Clubs; co-author, From the Folks Who Brought You the Weekend: A Short, Illustrated History of Labor in the United States; contributor to various encyclopedias and anthologies and to educational projects sponsored by labor and community organizations; reviewer for Journal of American History, Journal of Urban History, International Labor and Working Class History, and other historical journals; contributor and editorial associate, Radical History Review; recipient of Hewlett-Mellon grants. SLC, 1988– Cheiko Naka Japanese Maria Negroni Spanish BA, Universidad de Buenos Aires. MA, PhD Columbia University. Author of numerous books of poetry, three books of essays, two novels, and a book-object, Buenos Aires Tour, in collaboration with Argentine artist Jorge Macchi; translated from French and English the works of several poets, including Louise Labé, Valentine Penrose, Georges Bataille, H.D., Charles Simic, and Bernard Noël. Her work has appeared in the United States in The Paris Review, Circumference, Lumina and Bomb (New York). Recipient of Guggenheim (1994), Rockefeller (1998), Fundación Octavio Paz (2001), The New York Foundation for the Arts (2005), and the Civitella Ranieri (2007) fellowships; the PEN Award for “Best Book of Poetry in Translation” for Islandia; and, in Mexico City, the Siglo XXI International Prize for Essay Writing for her book Galería Fantástica. SLC, 1999– Ellen Neskar Asian Studies BSc, University of Toronto. MA, MPhil, PhD, Columbia University. Special interest in the social and cultural history of medieval China, with emphasis on the intersection of politics and religion; author of the forthcoming Politics and Prayer: Shrines to Local Worthies in Sung China; member, Association of Asian Studies; recipient of an American Council of Learned Societies grant. SLC, 2001– David Neumann Theatre As artistic director of advanced beginner group, work presented in New York at P.S. 122, Dance Theater Workshop, Central Park SummerStage (collaboration with John Giorno), Celebrate Brooklyn, and Symphony Space (collaboration with Laurie Anderson). Featured dancer in the works of Susan Marshall, Jane Comfort, Sally Silvers, Annie-B Parson & Paul Lazar’s Big Dance Theater, and club legend Willi Ninja; previously a member of Doug Varone and Dancers and an original member and collaborator for eight years with the Doug Elkins Dance Company. Over the past 20 years, choreographed or performed with directors Hal Hartley, Laurie Anderson, Robert Woodruff, Lee Breuer, Peter Sellars, JoAnn Akalaitis, Mark Wing-Davey, and Les Waters; recently appeared in Orestes at Classic Stage Company, choreographed The Bacchae at the Public Theater, and performed in a duet choreographed with Mikhail Baryshnikov. SLC, 2007– Dennis Nurkse Writing BA, Harvard College. Published nine books of poetry (as D. Nurske), including The Border Kingdom, Burnt Island, The Fall, The Rules of Paradise, Leaving Xaia, and Voices over Water; poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, The Paris Review, and The Times Literary Supplement (UK); recipient of a literature award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim fellowship, a Whiting Writers’ Award, two National Endowment for the FACULTY 177 Arts fellowships, two New York Foundation for the Arts fellowships, and two awards from Poetry. SLC, 2004– Erica Newhouse Theatre Dennis Nurkse Writing (on leave spring semester) BA, Harvard. Author of nine books of poetry (under “D. Nurkse”), including The Border Kingdom, Burnt Island, The Fall, The Rules of Paradise, Leaving Xaia, and Voices over Water; poems have appeared in The New Yorker and Atlantic Monthly; recipient of a Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim fellowship, a Whiting Writers’ Award, two National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, two New York Foundation for the Arts fellowships, and two awards from The Poetry Foundation. SLC, 2004John O'Connor Visual Arts BA, Westfield (MA) State College. MFA, MS in Art History, Pratt Institute. Attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and was a recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts grant in painting and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation grant. He has taught at Princeton University, Pratt Institute, and New York University. Recent exhibitions at Pierogi Gallery in Brooklyn; Martin Asbaek Projects in Copenhagen, Denmark; Fleisher Ollman Gallery in Philadelphia; The Lab in Dublin, Ireland. His is included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Southern Methodist University, and New Museum of Contemporary Art. SLC 2010— Stephen O’Connor Writing BA, Columbia University. MA, University of California-Berkeley. Author of Rescue, short fiction and poetry; Will My Name Be Shouted Out?, memoir and social analysis; Orphan Trains: The Story of Charles Loring Brace and the Children He Saved and Failed, history. Fiction and poetry have appeared in The New Yorker, Conjunctions, TriQuarterly, The Missouri Review, The Quarterly, Partisan Review, The Massachusetts Review, Fiction International, and elsewhere. Essays and journalism have been published in The New York Times, DoubleTake, The Nation, AGNI, The Chicago Tribune, The Boston Globe, and New Labor Forum, among others. Recipient of the Cornell Woolrich Fellowship in Creative Writing from Columbia University, the Visiting Fellowship for Historical Research by Artists and Writers from the American Antiquarian Society, and the DeWitt Wallace/Reader’s Digest Fellowship from the MacDowell Colony. SLC, 1997; 2002– Tara Helen O’Connor Music Leah Olson Biology (on leave fall semester) BA, Evergreen State College. PhD, State University of New York-Albany. Special interest in the neurobiology of circadian rhythms and in the neurobiology of learning and memory; research and papers on circadian rhythms. SLC, 1987– Dael Orlandersmith Theatre OBIE Award for Beauty’s Daughter, which she wrote and starred in at American Place Theatre. Toured extensively with the Nuyorican Poets Cafe (Real Live Poetry) throughout the United States, Europe, and Australia. Her play, Monster, premiered at New York Theatre Workshop in November 1996. Attended Sundance Theatre Festival Lab for four summers developing new plays. The Gimmick, commissioned by the McCarter Theatre, premiered on its Second Stage on Stage and went on to the Long Wharf Theatre and New York Theatre Workshop. Yellowman was commissioned by and premiered at the McCarter in a co-production with the Wilma Theater and the Long Wharf Theatre. Vintage Books and Dramatists Play Service published Yellowman and a collection of earlier work. Pulitzer Prize award finalist and Drama Desk award nominee as an actress in Yellowman, which premiered at Manhattan Theatre Club in 2002. Susan Smith Blackburn award finalist with The Gimmick in 1999 and won for Yellowman. Recipient of an NYFA grant, the Helen Merrill Emerging Playwrights award, a Guggenheim, and the 2005 Pen/Laura Pels Foundation Award for a playwright in mid-career. Won a Lucille Lortel Playwrights Fellowship in 2006. In 2007, completed a new commission, called Bones, for the Mark Taper Forum and premiered a new work, The Blue Album, in collaboration with David Cale at Long Wharf. Currently working on a play called Horsedreams and Dancefloors, as well as a memoir, Character. SLC, 2008— Sayuri I. Oyama Japanese (on leave yearlong) BA, Yale University. MA, PhD, University of California-Berkeley. Special interests include modern Japanese literature, narratological and political approaches to literature, ethnic and other minorities in Japan. Articles and presentations on Shimazaki Toson. Recipient of a 178 Current Faculty Japan Foundation fellowship, University of California-Berkeley Townsend Center for the Humanities Fellow. SLC, 2002– Matthew Parker Computer Science BA (computer science), Vassar. MA, New York University (Interactive Telecommunications Program). A software developer for many years, he is the founder of Lumalus Inc, a technology consulting company that develops solutions for a wide range of projects from mobile applications and museum and corporate installations to Kinect Xbox games. As a new media artist and game designer, his work has been displayed at venues such as SIGGRAPH Asia, the New York Hall of Science, Museum of the Moving Image, FILE Games Rio, and Sony Wonder Technology Lab. He and his team created the game Lucid, which was a finalist in Android's Developer Challenge 2; his game Recurse was a finalist for Indiecade 2010. He has served as a researcher and adjunct faculty member at New York University since 2009. SLC, 2011— Nicole Pearce Dance Carol Ann Pelletier Theatre BA, Brandeis University. Costume designer for Ping Chong & Company; resident designer for UBU Repertory Theatre; founding member of Yara Arts Group; extensive work in off-Broadway and experimental theatre; venues include La MaMa E.T.C., Theatre for the New City, UBU Rep, and Theatre Row, along with festivals in Kiev, Lviv, and Kharkiv, Ukraine. SLC, 1993– Gilberto Perez The Noble Foundation Chair in Art and Cultural History —Film History BS, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. MA, Princeton University. Author of The Material Ghost: Films and Their Medium and of numerous articles for the London Review of Books, Raritan, The Yale Review, The Nation, The Hudson Review, Sight and Sound, and other publications; recipient of a Noble fellowship for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts at the Museum of Modern Art, a Mellon Faculty fellowship at Harvard University, the Weiner Distinguished Professorship in the Humanities at the University of Missouri, and other awards. SLC, 1983– David Peritz Politics BA, Occidental College. DPhil, Oxford University. Special interests in democracy in conditions of cultural diversity, social complexity and political dispersal, critical social theory, social contract theory, radical democratic thought, and the idea of dispersed but integrated public spheres that create the social and institutional space for broad-based, direct participation in democratic deliberation and decision-making; recipient of a Marshal Scholarship; taught at Harvard University, Deep Springs College, and Dartmouth College; visiting scholar at Erasmus University, Rotterdam, and the London School of Economics. SLC, 2000– Kris Philipps Director, Visual Arts Program—Visual Arts BFA, Alfred University. MFA, University of South Florida. Studied at Royal College of Art, London, and held Tamarind Master Printer fellowship; exhibited in many national and international shows; one-person exhibitions include the Newark Museum, Staempfli Gallery, and Condeso/Lawler Gallery, New York. SLC, 1983– Gina Philogene Psychology PhD, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris. Interests in social and cultural psychology, history of psychology, race and social identity, as well as social representations. Author of From Black to African American: A New Representation; The Representations of the Social: Bridging Theoretical Traditions (with Kay Deaux); Racial Identity in Context: The Legacy of Kenneth B. Clark; and the forthcoming How the Right Made It Wrong: Names in the Shadow of the Political Correctness. Recipient of several grants, including the National Science Foundation and the American Psychological Association. Published several articles in professional journals and currently an associate editor of the Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology. SLC, 1998– Eddye Pierce-Young Music BM, MM, University of Colorado. Additional study, Graz, Austria. Concert artist (soprano): national, European, and Asian stages; national finalist in both the San Francisco Opera and Metropolitan Opera competitions; recipient of awards and grants in the fields of vocal performance and music education. SLC, 1989– Kevin Pilkington Writing Coordinator—Writing BA, St. John’s University. MA, Georgetown University. Teaches a graduate workshop at Manhattanville College. Author of six collections: Spare Change was the La Jolla Poets Press National Book Award winner, and his chapbook won the Ledge Poetry Prize; Ready to Eat the Sky, published by River City Publishing as FACULTY 179 part of its new poetry series, was a finalist for the 2005 Independent Publishers Books Award; In the Eyes of a Dog was published in September 2009 by New York Quarterly Books. Another collection, The Unemployed Man Who Became a Tree, will appear in 2011 from Black Lawrence Press. Poetry has appeared in many anthologies, including Birthday Poems: A Celebration, Western Wind, and Contemporary Poetry of New England. Nominated for four Pushcarts and has appeared in Verse Daily. Poems and reviews have appeared in numerous magazines, including: Poetry, Ploughshares, Iowa Review, Boston Review, Yankee, Hayden’s Ferry, Columbia, and North American Review. SLC, 1991– Mary A. Porter Associate Dean of the College—Anthropology BA, Manchester University. MA, PhD, University of Washington. Special interests include gender, class, race, sexuality, colonialism, education, oral history, and sub-Saharan Africa; ethnographic fieldwork with Swahili people in coastal Kenya; co-author of Winds of Change: Women in Northwest Commercial Fishing and author of several articles on gender and education; grants include Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Research fellowship and Spencer fellowship; consultant, UNESCO. SLC, 1992– Marilyn Power Economics BA, PhD, University of California-Berkeley. Special interests include economics of gender, race, and class; feminist economics; political economics of the environment; the history of economic thought; and macroeconomics. Author of articles in Feminist Studies, Review of Radical Political Economics, Industrial Relations, Feminist Economics, and others. Co-author of Living Wages, Equal Wages: Gender and Labor Market Policies in the United States (Routledge, 2002). SLC, 1990– Victoria Redel Writing BA, Dartmouth College. MFA, Columbia University. Author of two books of poetry and three books of fiction. Latest novel, The Border of Truth (Counterpoint, 2007), weaves the situation of refugees and a daughter’s awakening to the history and secrets of her father’s survival and loss. Loverboy (Graywolf, 2001/Harcourt, 2002) was awarded the 2001 S. Mariella Gable Novel Award and the 2002 Forward Silver Literary Fiction Prize and was chosen in 2001 as a Los Angeles Times Best Book. Lover-boy was adapted for a feature film directed by Kevin Bacon. Most recent collection of poems, Swoon (University of Chicago Press, 2003), was a finalist for the James Laughlin Award. SLC, 1996– Nelly Reifler Writing BA, Hampshire College. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Author of short-story collection, See Through; fiction in magazines and journals, including Bomb, Post Road, McSweeney’s, Nerve, and Black Book, as well as in the anthologies 110 Stories: New York Writes After September 11, Lost Tribe: New Jewish Fiction from the Edge, Found Magazine’s Requiem for a Paper Bag, and Tell: An Anthology of Expository Narrative (forthcoming). Recipient of a Henfield Prize in 1995, a UAS Explorations Prize in 1997, and a Rotunda Gallery Emerging Curator grant for work with fiction and art in 2001. Codirector of Pratt Institute’s Writers’ Forum, 2005-present; curator of Barbes reading series, Brooklyn; founder and president, Dainty Rubbish record company. SLC, 2002— Hamid Rezai Politics BA, MA, University of Munich, Germany. MPhil, PhD candidate, Columbia University. Special interests include Islamic and Western political thought, comparative politics of the Middle East, social movements in the Middle East, and Iranian studies. Recent awards include Columbia University Contemporary Civilization Preceptorship Award (2008-10), Columbia University Multi-Year Faculty Fellowship (2003-2010), Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Summer Teaching Scholars Award (2008), Margaret Abdel-Ahad Pennar Fellowship (2006-2007), and the Andrew W. Mellon and John W. Kluge Endowment for a New Generation of Faculty Excellence Fellowship (2006). Courses on the Middle East and political theory taught at Columbia University, Drew University, and City University of New York—Queens College. Defended dissertation in September 2010 on “State, Dissidents, and Contention: Iran 1989-2010.” SLC, 2010— Martha Rhodes Writing Author of three poetry collections: Mother Quiet, Perfect Disappearance (winner of the 2000 Green Rose Prize, New Issues Press), and At the Gate. Poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, AGNI, Fence, Ploughshares, TriQuarterly, and other journals. Anthologized in The Extraordinary Tide: New Poetry by American Women (Columbia University Press) and The New American Poets: A Bread Loaf Anthology (University Press of New 180 Current Faculty England), among others. Teaches at Sarah Lawrence College and at the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. Founding editor and director of Four Way Books, an independent literary press in New York City. SLC, 2005— Sandra Robinson Frieda Wildy Riggs Chair in Religious Studies—Asian Studies BA, Wellesley College. PhD, University of Chicago. Special interest in South Asian cultures, religions, and literatures. Two Fulbright Awards for field research in India. Articles, papers, and poems appear in international venues. Ethnographic photographs exhibited. Chair of the South Asia Council and member of the Board of Directors, Association for Asian Studies. Administrative board of HarvardRadcliffe College. Senior fellow, Center for the Humanities, Wesleyan University. Delegate to Copenhagen U.N. summit on global poverty. Group leader for the Experiment in International Living. National selection boards for institutional Fulbright grants. SLC, 1990– Judith Rodenbeck Art History BA, Yale University. BFA, Massachusetts College of Art. PhD, Columbia University. Teacher of art since 1945, covering intersections between modernist literature, philosophy, and visual and time-based arts. Special interest in art and technology. Author of Radical Prototypes: Allan Kaprow and the Invention of Happenings; co-author of Experiments in the Everyday: Allan Kaprow and Robert Watts— Events, Objects, Documents; articles and reviews in Artforum, Grey Room, Modern Painters, and The Art Book. Editor-inchief ex-officio of Art Journal. Recipient of 2009 Creative Capital/Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant. SLC, 2000– Patrick Romano Music BM, MM, West Chester University. Currently choral director at the Riverdale Country School, Manhattan School of Music Preparatory Division. Member of the faculty of the Perlman Summer Music Program. An established tenor soloist specializing in the baroque and classical repertoire; performed with the Waverly Consort, the American Bach Soloists, the Bethlehem Bach Choir, and the Rifkin Bach Ensemble; guest soloist, Marlboro Music Festival, the Pablo Casals Festival, and the University of Maryland Handel Festival; recorded the Bach B minor Mass with the American Bach Soloists, the Mozart Requiem with the Amor Artis Choir and Orchestra, and the Bach St. John Passion with the Smithsonian Chamber Players. SLC, 1999– Tristana Rorandelli Italian (on leave spring semester) BA (magna cum laude), Università degli Studi di Firenze, Florence, Italy. MA, PhD (with distinction), New York University. Areas of specialization: 20th-century Italian women’s writings; modern Italian culture, history, and literature; fascism; Western medieval poetry and thought. Recipient of the Julie and Ruediger Flik Travel Grant, Sarah Lawrence College, for summer research, 2008; the Penfield fellowship, New York University, 2004; and the Henry Mitchell MacCracken fellowship, New York University, 1998-2002. Publications: “Nascita e morte della massaia di Paola Masino e la questione del corpo materno nel fascismo,” Forum Italicum (Spring 2003). Translations, “The Other Place” by Barbara Serdakowski and “Salvation” by Amor Dekhis in Multicultural Literature in Contemporary Italy (editors Graziella Parati and Marie Orton, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2007). SLC, 2001-2002; 2004; 2005– Lucy Rosenthal Writing BA, University of Michigan. MS, Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. MFA, Yale School of Drama. Fiction writer, critic, editor, playwright; author of the novel The Ticket Out and editor of anthologies Great American Love Stories, World Treasury of Love Stories, and The Eloquent Short Story: Varieties of Narration; reviews and articles published in the Washington Post, Chicago Tribune Book World, Ms., Saturday Review, The New York Times Book Review, and Michigan Quarterly Review; plays produced at Eugene O’Neill Memorial Theater Center, Waterford, Connecticut; recipient, Pulitzer Fellowship in Critical Writing; served on Bookof-the-Month Club’s Editorial Board of judges and as the Club’s senior editorial adviser. SLC, 1988– Shahnaz Rouse Sociology BA, Kinnaird College, Pakistan. MA, Punjab University, Pakistan. MS, PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Special student, American University of Beirut, Lebanon. Academic specialization in historical sociology, with emphasis on the mass media, gender, and political economy. Author of Shifting Body Politics: Gender/Nation/State, 2004; co-editor, FACULTY 181 Situating Globalization: Views from Egypt, 2000; contributor to books and journals on South Asia and the Middle East. Visiting faculty, University of Hawaii at Manoa and the American University in Cairo. Member, Editorial Advisory Board, Contributions to Indian Sociology, and past member, Editorial Committee, Middle East Research and Information Project. Past consultant to the Middle East and North Africa Program of the Social Science Research Council, as well as the Population Council West Asia and North Africa Office (Cairo). Recipient of grants from the Fulbright-Hays Foundation, the Social Science Research Council, the American Institute of Pakistan Studies, and the Council on American Overseas Research Centers. SLC, 1987– Sara Rudner Director, Program in Dance—Dance BA, Barnard College. MFA, Bennington College. Dancer and choreographer; participated in the development and performance of Twyla Tharp’s modern dance repertory; founded and directed the Sara Rudner Performance Ensemble. Recent choreographic projects include “Dancing-onView,” one of a series of dance marathons, and “Heartbeat,” a fusion of technology and dance. Currently a member of “Ersaloly Mameraem,” a dancers’ consortium. Past collaborations have included Mikhail Baryshnikov, Dana Reitz, and Christopher Janney. She has choreographed for theatre and opera productions at the Public Theater, the Salzburg Festival, the Santa Fe Opera, and the Paris Opera. Awards include a Bessie, a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial fellowship, a Dance Magazine award, and support from the National Endowment for the Arts and the New York State Council on the Arts. SLC, 1999Claudia Salazar Spanish BA, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos. PhD, Advanced Certificate in Creative Writing in Spanish, New York University. Area of specialization: modern and contemporary Latin American literature, with a special focus on South America. Interests in literature and film; life writing; women, gender, and sexuality studies; crossings among memory, gender, and political violence; transatlantic studies; performance and visual culture. Creator and director of Perufest: Festival of New Peruvian Cinema. Articles, essays, and short stories published in several books and journals. Editor of the anthology, Voces para Lilith, Literatura contemporánea de temática lésbica en Sudamérica (Editorial Estruendomudo: Lima, 2011). SLC, 2011— Wayne Sanders Music BM, Roosevelt University. Voice teacher, coach, and pianist; collaborated and performed with Kathleen Battle, Jessye Norman, Florence Quivar, and the late William Warfield; consultant to the Houston Grand Opera, the Savonlinna Opera Festival (Finland), and Munich’s Münchener Biennale; provided musical direction for presentations ranging from an allstar tribute to Marian Anderson, Aaron Davis Hall (New York) to Porgy and Bess in Helsinki and Savonlinna, Moscow, and Tallinn (Estonia); participated in touring performances of Opera Ebony’s acclaimed Black Heritage concert series and served as its conductor over the course of its international run in Canada, Iceland, and Switzerland; co-founder of Opera Ebony, a historic African American opera company based in New York. SLC, 1996– Kristin Zahra Sands Religion BA, New School for Social Research. MA, PhD, New York University. Special interests include Sufism, Qur’anic exegesis, religion and media, and political theology. Author of Sufi Commentaries on the Qur’an in Classical Islam (Routledge, 2005). Taught in and directed the Arabic Language Program at New York University. SLC, 2003– Nyoman Saptanyana Music Barbara Schecter Director, Graduate Program in Child Development/ Psychology—Psychology BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, PhD, Teachers College, Columbia University. Developmental psychologist with special interest in cultural psychology, developmental theories, and language and development; author and researcher on cultural issues in development and metaphoric thinking in children. SLC, 1985– Fanchon Miller Scheier Theatre BA, Adelphi University. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Film, television, and theatre actress; member, Robert Lewis Acting Company and Green Gate Theatre; director and actress, regional and educational theatre; University of Virginia Artist-in-Residence program; founder, In Stages theatre company; recipient of two grants from the New York State Council on the Arts; co-director of London Theatre Intersession ’88. 182 Current Faculty SLC, 1985– Carsten Schmidt Music Künstlerische Abschlussprüfung “mit Auszeichnung,” Folkwang-Hochschule Essen, Germany. MM, Artist Diploma, Indiana University. MMA, DMA, Yale University. Extensive performance and broadcast activities as soloist, chamber musician, and soloist with orchestras throughout Europe, North America, and Japan; numerous master classes, lectures, and workshops at educational and research institutions; special interests include keyboard literature and performance practices, early keyboard instruments, the music of Ernst Krenek, relationship of performance, analysis, hermeneutics, recent gender studies, interaction of poetry and music in song repertoire; member, artistic board, Volte Foundation for Chamber Music, the Netherlands; artistic director, International Schubert Festival 1997; research fellow, Newberry Library; fellow, German National Scholarship Foundation. SLC, 1998– Astrid Schrader Science, Technology, and Society DiplPhys, Technical University, Berlin. MS, PhD, University of California-Santa Cruz. Postdoctoral fellow at Pembroke Center, Brown University. Special interests include science and technology studies, feminist epistemology, environmental ethics and policy, poststructuralism (esp. Derrida), gender studies, animal studies, and philosophy of science. Dissertation, “Dinos & Demons: The Politics of Temporality and Responsibility in Science”; forthcoming publication in Social Studies of Science. Currently working on a project in science studies entitled, “Species Politics in Harmful Algal Research.” SLC, 2009— Carsten Schmidt Music (on leave fall semester) Künstlerische Abschlussprüfung “mit Auszeichnung,” Folkwang-Hochschule Essen, Germany. MM, Artist Diploma, Indiana University. MMA, DMA, Yale University. Extensive performance and broadcast activities as soloist, chamber musician, and soloist with orchestras throughout Europe, North America, and Japan; numerous master classes, lectures, and workshops at educational and research institutions; special interests include keyboard literature and performance practices, early keyboard instruments, the music of Ernst Krenek, relationship of performance, analysis, hermeneutics, and recent gender studies, interaction of poetry and music in song repertoire; member, artistic board, Volte Foundation for Chamber Music, the Netherlands; artistic director, International Schubert Festival 1997; research fellow, Newberry Library; fellow, German National Scholarship Foundation. SLC, 1998- Tony Schultz Dance BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, City College of New York. Currently finishing PhD at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Scientist, writer, educator, and performer. Conducting research in computer vision for applications in human movement analysis; has worked with culture makers interested in developing experimental and computationally based methodologies; collaborated with musicians Derrick Carlomagno and Damian Quinones, worked with dancers Christopher Williams and Kristin Sloan of New York City Ballet, and consulted for architects Maggie Peng and Dana Karwas. Studied dance both inside and outside of the academy, most notably with Luis Demalsy (aka B-Boy Mach3) and Angele M’Paria (aka B-Girl Angel). In 2007, participated in the We-B-Girlz 25th Anniversary Breakin’ event at Lincoln Center as the manager of London’s Flowzaic Crew; guest taught dance with Laurel Dugan at the Dalton School and performed with Mare Hieronimus in TUNDRA at the CoolNY dance festival. Currently working on a project with performance artist Otis Houston (aka Black Cherokee), a dance blogger, writer, and performer on thewinger.com. SLC, 2006— Ursula Schneider Visual Arts (on leave fall semester) BA, Kunstgewerbeschule Zurich and Keramisch Fachschule Bern. MFA, San Francisco Art Institute. Painter and sculptor; one-person shows nationwide and in Europe; works represented in private and museum collections; recipient of Schweizer Kunststipendium; awards from San Francisco Art Festival, Oakland Museum, and the National Endowment for the Arts. SLC, 1986– Malia Scotch-Marmo Visual Arts MFA, Columbia University. Writer and associate producer of Steven Spielberg’s fantasy film, Hook, and received story credit for Madeline. Her first produced film was Once Around, directed by Lasse Hallstrom. Uncredited work in order of the size of her contribution, as she sees it, includes Jurassic Park, Other Sister, Only You, Enchanted, and Polar Express. She has collaborated with many established directors on both produced and unproduced material, including Norman Jewison, FACULTY 183 Alfonso Cuaron, Alfonso Arau, Luis Mandoki, Sabiha Sumar, Garry Marshall, and Rob Reiner. Adjunct professor at Columbia Graduate Film School, an advisor for Sundance Institute, an instructor (summer, 2010) at la FEMIS in Paris, and an advisor (summer, 2011) at Maisha Film Lab, founded by Mira Nair; she will be advising emerging Rwandan writers in Kigali, Rwanda. Recently co-wrote a script with Sabiha Sumar, an award-winning Pakistani director and alumna of Sarah Lawrence College. The film, Rafina, was shot in October 2010 in Karachi, Pakistan, and will be completed in summer, 2011. Winged Boy, a story she rewrote for Gold Circle, is also in productiton. SLC, 2009— Rebecca Sealander Theatre Samuel B. Seigle Greek BA, University of Pittsburgh. AM, Harvard University. Classical philologist; scholar of Greek dance, Greek and Roman poetic structure, linguistics, ancient religions and mythology, political and social conventions of ancient cultures and their relationship to the contemporary world; president (1973-1975) and censor (1977-1993) of New York Classical Club. SLC, 1964– Judith P. Serafini-Sauli Italian BA, Sarah Lawrence College. PhD, Johns Hopkins University. Author of Boccaccio, Twayne World Authors Series; translator and editor, Ameto, by Giovanni Boccaccio, Garland Medieval Text Series. SLC, 1981– Vijay Seshadri Director, Graduate Program in Creative Nonfiction BA, Oberlin College. MFA, Columbia University. Author of Wild Kingdom and The Long Meadow (poetry collections); former editor at The New Yorker; essayist and book reviewer in The New Yorker, The New York Times Book Review, The Threepenny Review, The American Scholar, and various literary quarterlies; recipient of the James Laughlin Prize of the Academy of American Poets, MacDowell Colony’s Fellowship for Distinguished Poetic Achievement, The Paris Review’s Bernard F. Conners Long Poem Prize, New York Foundation for the Arts grant, National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial fellowship, and area studies fellowships from Columbia University. SLC, 1998– Vijay Seshadri Director, Graduate Program in Creative Non-Fiction, The Michele Tolela Myers Chair in Writing —Writing BA, Oberlin College. MFA, Columbia University. Author of Wild Kingdom and The Long Meadow (poetry collections); former editor at The New Yorker; essayist and book reviewer in The New Yorker, The New York Times Book Review, The Threepenny Review, The American Scholar, and various literary quarterlies; recipient of the James Laughlin Prize of the Aca-demy of American Poets, MacDowell Colony’s Fellowship for Distinguished Poetic Achievement, The Paris Review’s Bernard F. Conners Long Poem Prize, New York Foundation for the Arts grant, National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial fellowship and area studies fellowships from Columbia University. SLC, 1998Deganit Shemy Barbara Bray Ketchum Artist-inResidence—Dance Gabriel Shuford Music William Shullenberger Literature BA, Yale University. MA, PhD, University of Massachusetts. Special interests in Milton, 17thcentury English literature, English Romanticism, African literature, theology and poetics, and psychoanalytic criticism. Author of Lady in the Labyrinth: Milton’s ‘Comus’ as Initiation; coauthor with Bonnie Shullenberger of Africa Time: Two Scholars’ Seasons in Uganda; essays published in Milton Studies, Renaissance Drama, and other journals and collections. Senior Fulbright Lecturer at Makerere University, Uganda, 1992-1994; director of NEH Summer Seminars on the Classical and the Modern Epic, 1996 and 1999. SLC, 1982– Mark R. Shulman History BA, Yale University. MS, Oxford University; PhD, University of California-Berkeley; JD, Columbia University. Served as editor-in-chief of the Journal of Transnational Law and received the Berger Prize for International Law at Columbia; assistant dean for Graduate Programs & International Affairs, Pace Law School; directed the Worldwide Security Program at the EastWest Institute; practiced law at Debevoise & Plimpton until 2003; member of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York; chairs the Committee on International Human Rights; serves on the Council on International Affairs and the Task Force on National Security and the Rule of Law; has taught the laws of war and war crimes 184 Current Faculty tribunals at Columbia Law School and military history at Yale, the Air War College, and at Columbia (SIPA); has published widely in the fields of history, law, and international affairs; books include: The Laws of War: Constraints on Warfare in the Western World (1994), Navalism and the Emergence of American Sea Power (1995), An Admiral’s Yarn (1999), and The Imperial Presidency and the Consequences of 9/11 (2007); articles have appeared in the Columbia Journal of Transnational Law, Journal of National Security Law & Policy, Fordham Law Review, Houston Journal of International Law, Journal of Military History, and Intelligence and National Security. SLC, 2009— Michael Siff Computer Science BA, BSE., MSE, University of Pennsylvania. PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Special interests in programming languages, cryptology, and software engineering; author of research papers on interplay between type theory and software engineering. SLC, 1999– Joan Silber Writing BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, New York University. Author of two story collections, Ideas of Heaven (finalist for the National Book Award and the Story Prize) and In My Other Life, and four novels, The Size of the World, Lucky Us, In the City, and Household Words; winner of the PEN/Hemingway Award; short stories anthologized in The Scribner Anthology of Contemporary Short Fiction, The Story Behind the Story, The O. Henry Prize Stories (2007 and 2003), and two Pushcart Prize collections. Recipient of a Literature Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and grants from National Endowment for the Arts and New York Foundation for the Arts. SLC, 1985– Kanwal Singh Physics BS, University of Maryland-College Park. MS, PhD, University of California-Berkeley. Postdoctoral research associate, University of Oslo, Norway. Special interests in lowtemperature physics, science education and education policy, and scientific and quantitative literacy. Author of articles in theoretical condensed-matter physics (models of superfluid systems) and physics teaching. Taught at Middlebury College, Wellesley College, and Eugene Lang College at The New School University. SLC, 2003– Lyde Cullen Sizer History BA, Yale University. MA, PhD, Brown University. Special interests include the political work of literature, especially around questions of gender and race, U.S. cultural and intellectual history of the 19th and early 20th centuries, and the social and cultural history of the U.S. Civil War. Her book, The Political Work of Northern Women Writers and the American Civil War, 1850-1872, won the Avery O. Craven Award from the Organization of American Historians. The Civil War Era: An Anthology of Sources, edited with Jim Cullen, was published in 2005; book chapters are included in Love, Sex, Race: Crossing Boundaries in North American History; Divided Houses: Gender and the American Civil War; and A Search for Equity. SLC, 1994– Fredric Smoler The Adda Bozeman Chair in International Relations—Literature BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MA, MPhil, PhD, Columbia University. Central interest in European history and culture, with special emphasis on intellectual history and literature. Contributing editor at American Heritage Magazine; writes regularly for First of the Month; occasional contributor to The Nation, The Observer (London), etc.; former editor, Audacity. SLC, 1987– Scott Snyder Writing BA, Brown University. MFA, Columbia University. Author of the short-story collection, Voodoo Heart (Dial Press). Stories have appeared in Zoetrope: All-Story, Epoch, Tin House, and One Story, among other journals. SLC, 2006— Sungrai Sohn Music Michael Spano Visual Arts BA, Queens College. MFA Yale University. Oneperson and group shows at the Museum of Modern Art, Fogg Art Museum, Cleveland Museum of Art, Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Brooklyn Museum of Art, and National Portrait Gallery. Works represented in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, St. Louis Art Museum, Baltimore Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Art in Boston, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Princeton Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, and Museum of Modern Art in New York. Recipient of grants and fellowships from New York Foundation for the Arts, Camera Works, CAPS, FACULTY 185 Art Matters, and the Guggenheim Foundation. Author of Time Frames: City Pictures and Auto Portraits. SLC, 1999– studio work has included an application of Freudian theory to American culture and identity. SLC, 2007— Rico Speight Visual Arts BA, Boston University. MA, Emerson College (Boston). Postgraduate studies as a Revson Fellow at Columbia University School of the Arts, Graduate Film Division, and the Columbia University Digital Media Center. His two-part documentary series on the parallel lives of African American and black South African young people in post-apartheid South Africa and post-9/11 America was broadcast on South African Broadcasting Corporation TV (SABC) and PBS and screened at festivals in the United States, as well as internationally. Concurrent with his own work, he has taught at New York University, Pratt Institute, City College, and Hunter College, all in New York City. He was awarded artist fellowships in film and video by the New York Foundation for the Arts and honored by the Black Filmmaker's Hall of Fame for his narrative short, Deft Changes. SLC, 2007— Joel Sternfeld Visual Arts BA, Dartmouth College. Photographer/artist with exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Recipient of two Guggenheim fellowships and a Prix de Rome. Author of American Prospects, On This Site, Stranger Passing, and four other books. SLC, 1985– Stuart Spencer Theatre BA, Lawrence University. Author of numerous plays performed in New York and around the country, including Resident Alien (Broadway Play Publishing). Other plays include In the Western Garden (Broadway Play Publishing), Blue Stars (Best American Short Plays of 19931994), and Sudden Devotion (Broadway Play Publishing). A playwriting textbook, The Playwright’s Guidebook, was published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in 2002. Recent plays are Alabaster City, commissioned by South Coast Rep, and Judy Garland Died for Your Sins. Former literary manager of Ensemble Studio Theatre; fellow, the Edward Albee Foundation; member, Dramatist Guild. SLC, 1991– Robin Starbuck Visual Arts BA, Salem College. MFA, School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Also studied at the Experimental Sound Studio in Chicago and at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Currently completing a certificate in documentary production and editing from New York University. Received multiple awards and grants for her work and exhibits, both nationally and internationally. Current studio orientation is video installation with elements of comic image painting and sculpture. For the past several years, Brooke Stevens Writing MA, The Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars. His first novel, The Circus of the Earth and the Air (Harcourt), was a “New and Noteworthy Paperback” for The New York Times, a nominee for the Barnes and Noble Discover award, a finalist for the World Fantasy award, and featured in People Magazine and Vanity Fair. John Barth called it “a vivid, sustained, and scarifying dream.” In 2001, The Washington Post Book World said of his second novel, “Tattoo Girl [St. Martin's Press] is as much about being sad as it is about being terrified, and there Stevens has worked a charm that will keep you in your seat and reading, even when you’d rather not, even when you wish for something to break the spell.” The novel was also published in the United Kingdom, where it appeared on bestseller lists; it was later translated into Japanese, French, and German. In 2004, his third book, Kissing Your Ex (Penguin), was a finalist, along with Jodi Picoult, Elizabeth Berg, and Ann Tyler, for the Romantic Times Best Women’s Fiction of 2004. SLC, 2011— Frederick Michael Strype Visual Arts BA, Fairfield University. MFA, Columbia University School of the Arts. Postgraduate study: American Film Institute, New York University, Tisch School of the Arts. Screenwriter, producer, director. Recent awards, grants, festivals: Grand Prize, Nantucket Film Festival, Tony Cox Award in Screenwriting; Nantucket Screenwriters Colony; World Jewish Film Festival, Askelon, Israel; Tehran International Film Festival; Berlin Film Festival Shorts; Uppsala Sweden Film Festival; USA Film Festival; Washington (DC) Jewish Film Festival; Los Angeles International Children’s Film Festival; Temecula Valley International Film Festival “Best of the Fest”; Portugal Film Festival Press Award; Fade In Magazine Award/Best Short Screenplay; Angelus Film Festival Triumph 186 Current Faculty Award; Austin Film Festival Screenwriting Award; Heartland Film Festival Crystal Heart Award; New Line Cinema Filmmaker Development Award; Hamptons International Film Festival; Schomburg Cultural Grants. Raindance Pictures: projects developed for Columbia/Tristar/Sony, Lifetime, MTM Productions, Family Channel, FX, Alliance/ Atlantis, Capella Films, Turman-Foster Productions, James Manos Productions, FX, Avenue Pictures. SLC, 2003– Sterling Swann Theatre BA, Vassar College. Postgraduate training at London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA), Sonia Moore Studio, and with David Kaplan (author, Five Approaches to Acting). President and artistic director, Cygnet Productions, National Equity Theatre for Young Audiences company; leading performer, Boston Shakespeare Company; guest faculty at Storm King School, Western Connecticut State University, and Vassar College; advanced actor/ combatant, Society of American Fight Directors (SAFD); winner of the Society of American Fight Directors’ 2006 Patrick Craen award; designated practitioner, Stough Institute of Breathing Coordination; certified teacher, Alexander Technique. SLC, 1991— Philip Swoboda History BA, Wesleyan University. MA, MPhil, PhD, Columbia University. Previously taught at Columbia University, Hunter College, Lafayette College, University of Wisconsin-Madison; special interest in the religious and intellectual history of early modern Europe and in the history of Eastern Europe, particularly Russia and Poland; author of articles on early 20th-century Russian philosophy and religious thought; served on the executive committee of the Mid-Atlantic Slavic Conference. SLC, 2004– Rose Anne Thom Joseph Campbell Chair in the Humanities—Dance BA, McGill University. Labanotator and reconstructor; writer, critic for Dance Magazine, Collier’s Encyclopedia, and Society of Dance History Scholars; oral historian for the Dance Collection at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts and the School of American Ballet; consultant, New York State Council on the Arts Dance Program; guest faculty, Princeton University, 2003; former teacher at SUNY Purchase, Southern Methodist University, American Ballet Theater School. SLC, 1975— Lucy Thurber Theatre Author of seven plays: Where We’re Born, Ashville, Scarcity, Killers and Other Family, Stay, Bottom of the World, and Monstrosity. The Atlantic Theater Company opened its 2007-08 season with Scarcity. Rattlestick Playwrights Theater produced Where We’re Born, Killers and Other Family, and Stay. Bottom of The World was commissioned by Women’s Expressive Theater, Inc. Monstrosity was workshopped by Encore Theatre Company (San Francisco) and Williamstown Theatre Festival. Recipient of the 2000-2001 Manhattan Theatre Club Playwriting Fellowship and was a guest artist at the Perseverance Theatre. Readings and workshops held at Manhattan Theatre Club, the New Group, Primary Stages, MCC Theater, PlayPenn, New River Dramatists, Tribeca Theater Festival, Eugene O’Neill, the Public Theater, and Soho Rep. Playwright-in-residence at the Orchard Project, summer 2007. Dinner is published in Not So Sweet, a collection of plays from Soho Rep’s Summer Camp. Scarcity was published in the December 2007 issue of American Theatre. A member of New Dramatists, 13P, MCC Playwrights Coalition, and Writers Group at Primary Stages. Published by Dramatists Play Service. Currently commissioned by Playwrights Horizons. SLC, 2008— Frank Tomasulo Film History MA in Cinema Studies, New York University. PhD in Film and Television, UCLA. The author of more than 80 scholarly articles and more than 100 academic papers, “Dr. T” has devoted himself to film-TV publication as editor-in-chief of both Journal of Film and Video (1991-96) and Cinema Journal (1997-2002). His anthology, More than a Method: Trends and Traditions in Contemporary Film Performance, was published by Wayne State University Press in 2004. He teaches film courses at The City College of New York (CUNY) and online graduate seminars for National University. Prior, he was director of the BFA Program at Florida State University's College of Film and Television, chair of the Division of CinemaTelevision at Southern Methodist University, and chair of the Department of Communication at Georgia State University. He has taught a variety of film-TV history, theory, and production classes at UCLA, Ithaca College, Cornell University, and the University of California-Santa Cruz. He received the University Film and Video Association’s Teaching Award (2009) and the Georgia State University Outstanding Teacher Award (1998). SLC, 2011— FACULTY 187 Alice Truax Writing BA, Vassar College. MA, Middlebury College. Editor at The New Yorker, 1992-2002. Book editor, 2001-present. Book reviews have appeared in The New York Times Book Review, The New Yorker, Vogue, The New York Review of Books. Edited books include Random Family by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, Mostly True by Molly O’Neill, Aftermath by Joel Meyerowitz, The Surrender by Toni Bentley, Send by William Schwalbe and David Shipley, King’s Gambit by Paul Hoffman, and Violent Partners by Linda Mills. SLC, 2004— Malcolm Turvey Film History (on leave yearlong) BA, MA, University of Kent. PhD, New York University. Specialization in film and philosophy, film theory, European avant-garde film, film and modernism, classical Hollywood genres, film and emotion. Editor and writer for October; co-editor of Wittgenstein, Theory, and the Arts (Routledge, 2001) and Camera Obscura/Camera Lucida: Essays in Honor of Annette Michelson (University of Amsterdam Press, 2003). Essays have appeared in a number of journals and anthologies, including Framework, Millennium Film Journal, Film Studies: An International Review, Artforum, Film Theory and Philosophy (Oxford University Press, 1997); Freud’s Worst Nightmares (Cambridge, University Press, 2003), The Philosophy of Film: Introductory Text and Readings (Blackwell, 2005), and European Film Theory (Routledge, 2008). Book Doubting Vision: Film and the Revelationist Tradition is forthcoming from Oxford University Press in 2008. Currently working on a book on European avant-garde film of the 1920’s, The Filming of Modern Life, for the October book series. SLC, 2000Michael Vahrenwald Visual Arts BFA, The Cooper Union. MFA, Yale University. Group exhibitions at the Whitney Museum, The Walker Art Center, The Carnegie Museum of Art, Yale School of Architecture, The Nerman Museum, and HDLU Croatia. Solo exhibitions at Galerie Alian Le Gaillard, South First Gallery, and Andrew Rafacz Gallery. Works represented in the permanent collection of The Whitney Museum and The Nerman Museum. SLC, 2010— Rima Vesely-Flad Public Policy BA, University of Iowa. MDiv, Union Theological Seminary. MIA, Columbia University. Special interest in the interconnections between reformed theology, enlightenment philosophy, and racial identification in the enactment of 19th- and 20th-century public policies, with an emphasis on criminal justice, employment opportunities, and urban and rural development. Recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship and a Union Square award. SLC, 2011— Marina Vitkin Philosophy PhD, University of Toronto. Special interests in Hegel and his predecessors (modern philosophy) and successors (19th- and 20th-century continental philosophy), post-Hegelian Russian philosophy, and philosophical problems of intellectual diversity and pluralistic understanding. SLC, 2004– Ilja Wachs Ilja Wachs Chair in Outstanding Teaching and Donning—Literature BA, Columbia College. Special interest in 19thcentury European and English fiction, with emphasis on psychological and sociological relationships as revealed in works of Dickens, Tolstoy, Dostoevski, Balzac, Stendhal, James, Flaubert, and others. Dean of the College, 1980 to 1985. SLC, 1965– Gwen Welliver Dance BA, Pennsylvania State University. MFA, Bennington College. Dancer and choreographer; original work presented at Dance Theater Workshop, 92nd Y Harkness Dance Festival, Movement Research at the Judson Church, Center for Performance Research. Performed with Doug Varone and Dancers (1990-2000); recipient of a Bessie Award for Sustained Achievement (2000); rehearsal director, Trisha Brown Dance Company(2000-2007); also performed projects by Douglas Dunn with Rudy Burckhardt, Helmut Gottschild (ZeroMoving Dance Company), Ohad Naharin, and Dana Reitz. Teaches worldwide at ADF, Bates Dance Festival, Dansens Hus (Denmark), International Summer School of Dance (Japan), Kalamata International Dance Festival (Greece), P.A.R.T.S. (Belgium), Trisha Brown Studios, and TSEKH Summer School (Russia); guest teaching venues include Barnard College, Hampshire College, Hollins University, Hunter College, Mount Holyoke College, University of California-Santa Barbara, Virginia Commonwealth College. Movement Research (New York City) faculty member, 1997-present; previously on the faculty of New York 188 Current Faculty University's Tisch School of the Arts (1995-2000, 2009-2011) and Bennington College (2007-2009 Fellow). SLC, 2011— Kent State University; recent articles in Critical Studies in Media Communication and the American Journal of Public Health. SLC, 2005– Jean Wentworth Music Diploma, Juilliard School of Music. As part of the one-piano, four-hand team of Jean and Kenneth Wentworth, has performed widely in the United States, Europe, the Middle East, and India and recorded a wide variety of four-hand repertoire; contributor to The Music Quarterly, The Piano Quarterly, and Key Note magazine; past recipient of Walter W. Naumburg Award; faculty member, Calcutta School of Music; recipient of Andrew W. Mellon grant for faculty development and Hewlett-Mellon grant, 1988. SLC, 1972– Sara Wilford Director, Art of Teaching Graduate Program—Psychology BA, Sarah Lawrence College. MSEd, EdM, Bank Street College of Education. Former early childhood and public elementary schoolteacher; keynote speaker and workshop leader for seminars and conferences on early childhood education; member, editorial advisory board, Child magazine; contributor to Scholastic, Inc. publications; author of Tough Topics: How to Use Books in Talking with Children About Life Issues and Problems, What You Need to Know When Your Child Is Learning to Read, and Nurturing Young Children’s Disposition to Learn. Holder of the Roy E. Larsen Chair in Psychology (2001-2006). SLC, 1982– Kathy Westwater Dance BA, College of William and Mary. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Choreographer and dancer; choreography presented at Dance Theater Workshop, Brooklyn Museum of Art, and PS 122, among other venues, and archived in the Franklin Furnace Archive and the Walker Arts Center Mediatheque Archive. Recipient of awards from New York Foundation for the Arts and the Djerassi Resident Artists Program and of commissions from Dance Theater Workshop, Danspace Project at St. Mark’s Church, and Summer Stage’s Dance Festival. Previously a guest teacher at Bennington College, 92nd Street Y, and Trisha Brown Studio. Published writings include “Technology and the Body,” an interview with Merce Cunningham in the Movement Research Journal Millennial Issue, which she guest edited. SLC, 2001— Fiona Wilson Literature MA, University of Glasgow. MA, PhD, New York University. Scholar and poet. Special interests in 18th-to 20th-century British literature, poetry and poetics, and Scottish writing. Recipient of a Hawthornden fellowship (2008) and current chair of the Scottish Literature Discussion Group of the Modern Language Association. Author of essays published in Romanticism’s Debatable Lands (Palgrave, 2007), Keats-Shelley Journal, Pequod, Edinburgh Companion to Contemporary Scottish Literature (Edinburgh University Press, 2007), and elsewhere. Poetry published in Best Scottish Poems (Scottish Poetry Library, 2005), Poetry Review, The Independent, The Scotsman, Grand Street, and Literary Review. SLC, 2008— Cal Wiersma Music Matthew Wilson Music Sarah Wilcox Sociology (on leave spring semester) BA, Wesleyan University. MA, PhD, University of Pennsylvania. Areas of expertise include medical sociology, the sociology of science and knowledge, gender and sexuality, and the mass media; special interests in interactions among experts, laypersons, and social movements; current project, entitled “Claiming Knowledge: Gay Communities, Science, and the Meaning of Genes,” explores how ideas about biology and sexuality have been produced, circulated, contested, and negotiated within and outside of science; recipient of GLAAD Center for the Study of Media & Society grant for research on coverage of the politics of sexuality in regional media; taught at the University of Maine and Daniel Wohl Music BA, Bard College. MM, University of Michigan. Composer. Recipient of ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composers award, New York Youth Symphony Competition, Definiens C3 Composers Competition, ASCAP/Bang on a Can fellowship, among others; grants from Meet the Composer and the Brooklyn Arts Council. Music performed by ensembles such as the American Symphony Orchestra, St. Luke’s Chamber Ensemble, New York Youth Symphony, the Da Capo Chamber Players, Lunaire Quartet, and the University of Michigan Philharmonia. Artistic director/composer-in-residence: Transit Ensemble. Freelance film composer. SLC, 2008— FACULTY 189 Komozi Woodard Esther Raushenbush Chair—History BA, Dickinson College. MA, PhD, University of Pennsylvania. Special interests in African American history, politics, and culture, emphasizing the black freedom movement, women in the Black Revolt, US urban and ethnic history, public policy and persistent poverty, oral history, and the experience of anticolonial movements. Author of A Nation Within a Nation: Amiri Baraka and Black Power Politics and reviews, chapters, and essays in journals, anthologies, and encyclopedia. Editor, The Black Power Movement, Part I: Amiri Baraka, from Black Arts to Black Radicalism; Freedom North; Groundwork; Want to Start a Revolution?: Women in the Black Freedom Struggle. Reviewer for American Council of Learned Societies; adviser to the Algebra Project and PBS documentaries Eyes on the Prize II and America’s War on Poverty; board of directors, Urban History Association. SLC, 1989– Joseph W. Woolfson Mathematics BS, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. New York University. Adelphi University. Investigator, under grant from Office of Naval Research, in realm of mathematical group theory; inventor, with U.S. patents relating to the technology of pick-resistant magnetic lock cylinders; issued a patent for an air conditioning muffler device (November 2003). SLC, 1965– Miyabi Yamamoto Japanese BA, Barnard College. MA, PhD candidate, University of California-Berkeley. Special interests include Japanese language, literature, and culture of all periods; modern Korean studies; minority studies; gender studies; colonial and postcolonial studies; and the relationship between memory and narrative. Raised bilingual in Japan, she is an experienced translator and interpreter between Japanese and English. Fellowships received include the Japan Foundation Fellowship, the Korea Foundation Fellowship, and the Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowships. SLC, 2011— John A. Yannelli William Schuman Scholar in Music—Music BPh, Thomas Jefferson College, University of Michigan. MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Composer, innovator in the fields of electronic music and music for theatre and dance, composer of traditional and experimental works for all media, specialist in improvisational techniques, director of the Sarah Lawrence Improvisational Ensemble, toured nationally with the United Stage theatre company and conceived of and introduced the use of electronic music for the productions. Freelance record producer and engineer; music published by Soundspell Productions. SLC, 1984— Jonathan Yates Music Mali Yin Chemistry BS, Shaanxi Normal University, China. PhD, Temple University. Postdoctoral research associate, Michigan State University. Researcher and author of articles in areas of inorganic, organic, and protein chemistry; special interests in synthesis and structure determination of inorganic and organometallic compounds by Xray diffraction and various spectroscopic techniques, protein crystallography, environmental chemistry, and material science. SLC, 1996– Mia Yoo Theatre Thomas Young Music Cleveland Music School Settlement. Cleveland Institute of Music. Singer, actor, and conductor; founder and conductor, Los Angeles Vocal Ensemble; principal with San Francisco Opera, Royal Opera House, Opéra La Monnaie, Netherlands Opera, Opéra de Lyon, New York City Opera, and Houston Grand Opera; festivals in Vienna, Salzburg, Holland, Maggio, and Munich; two Grammy nominations; two Cleo nominations; national tours, Broadway, offBroadway, regional theatre, and television. SLC, 1989– Charles Zerner Barbara B. and Bertram J. Cohn Professorship in Environmental Studies—Environmental Studies BA, Clark University. MArch, University of Oregon. J.D., Northeastern University. Special interests in environmental ethnography; political ecology; environmental justice, law, language, and culture; environmental security and public policy. Ethnographic fieldwork with Mandar fishing communities of Sulawesi, Indonesia, and reef management in Indonesia’s Maluku Islands; former program director, the Rainforest Alliance. Contributor and editor, People, Plants, and Justice: The Politics of Nature Conservation and Culture and the Question of Rights: Forests, Coasts, and Seas in Southeast Asia; and co-editor, Representing Communities: Politics and Histories of CommunityBased Natural Resource Management. Co-editor, 190 Current Faculty with Banu Subramaniam and Elizabeth Hartmann, of Making Threats: Biofears and Environmental Anxieties (AltaMira Press, 2005). Residencies at the University of CaliforniaIrvine, Humanities Research Institute, and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; grants include Fulbright-Hays fellowship for fieldwork in Indonesia, National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Social Science Research Council. SLC, 2000– Matilde Zimmermann History (on leave fall semester) BA, Radcliffe College. MA, University of Wisconsin-Madison. PhD, University of Pittsburgh. Special interest in the Nicaraguan and Cuban revolutions, Che Guevara’s life and writings, labor and social movements, Atlantic history and the African diaspora in the Caribbean and Latin America, history of Latinos/ as in the United States, environmental history. Author, Sandinista: Carlos Fonseca and the Nicaraguan Revolution (Duke, 2000); Carlos Fonseca y la revolución nicaragüense (Managua, 2003); Bajo las banderas de Che y de Sandino (Havana, 2004); A Revolução Nicaragüense (São Paulo, 2005); Comandante Carlos: La vida de Carlos Fonseca Amador (Caracas, 2008). Director, Sarah Lawrence College Study Abroad program in Havana, Cuba. SLC, 2002– Carol Zoref Writing Coordinator—Writing BA, MFA, Sarah Lawrence College. Fiction writer and essayist; recipient of fellowships and grants from the Virginia Center for Creative Arts, Hall Farm Center for Arts, and In Our Own Write; winner of I.O.W.W. Emerging Artist Award; and finalist for the Henfield and American Fiction Awards and Pushcart Prize. SLC, 1996– Elke Zuern Politics (on leave fall semester) AB, Colgate University. MA, MPhil, PhD, Columbia University. Research interests include the role of social movements in new democracies, institutional and extra-institutional mechanisms of protest, popular responses to poverty and inequality, state-civil society alliances, and the role of violence in processes of democratization. Regional specialization: sub-Saharan Africa; extensive fieldwork in South Africa. Recipient of a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship at Amherst College and a Lowenstein fellowship; recent articles in Comparative Politics, Politique Africaine, African Affairs, South African Labour Bulletin, Transformation, and African Studies Review. SLC, 2002– NOTES 191 Left blank for your notes. 192 Notes Left blank for your notes.