Sandy Baum,
professor of economics, went to London in November to consult to
the Prime Minister’s Office and the office of the Chancellor of
the Exechequer on university tuition and student aid policies.
Terence Diggory,
Ross Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, presented a paper titled
" 'Peacefully Hammering': Williams's Urban Pastoral" in
a session on "[William Carlos]
Williams and the Urban Environment," at the annual convention
of the Modern Language Association Dec. 27-30, 2002, in New York
City.
Jeffrey Segrave,
professor of exercise science and athletics director, presented
an invited paper titled “The Modern Olympic Games and Ritual Invention”
at the American Historical Association annual meeting Jan. 3, in
Chicago.
Gordon Thompson,
associate professor of music, presented a lecture as part of the
Albany Institute of History and Art’s exhibition, The Beatles:
Now and Then, Photographs by Harry Benson. Thompson’s lecture,
“Twist and Shout: British Beatles and American Roots” dealt with
the songs by American rock and rhythm-and-blues artists that the
Beatles recorded.
Publications
Skidmore’s Advancement Office has been honored
with “Accolades” awards in communications by District II (Mid-Atlantic)
of the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education.
The awards will be presented Feb. 3 at CASE’s regional conference
in New York City.
College Relations staff members won a
Gold Award in the category of “Quality of News Writing.” The
pieces submitted were written by Bob Kimmerle,
director of college relations; Barbara Melville,
staff writer; and Andrea Wise, director
of media relations.
Scope, the Skidmore magazine,
won an Honorable Mention in the category of “Periodical Staff
Writing.” Four College Relations writers were cited: Barbara
Melville; Peter MacDonald,
director of publications; Sue Rosenberg,
Scopeeditor; and Maryann Teale Snell,
Scope associate editor.
Advancement’s Friends of the Tang brochure
took both a Gold Award in the category “Fund-Raising Publications”
and a Bronze Award in the category “Visual Design in Print, Single-Page
Publications.” Project manager for the brochure was Mary
Jo Driscoll, leadership gifts officer; the graphic designer
was free-lancer Beth Laub.
Erica Bastress-Dukehart,
assistant professor of history, is the author of The Zimmern
Chronicle: Nobility, Memory, and Self-Representation in 16th-Century
Germany, published in November by Ashgate Press, London.
The book brings the history of the Zimmern
family to English readers for the first time with an examination
of the most famous noble family chronicle to come out of 16th
century Germany. The work is distinctive because of its representation
of the collective memory of the Southwest German nobility. The
Zimmern authors included not only their own recollections, but
also those of their noble contemporaries. By memorializing relationships
within their community, they drew attention to the increasingly
important issue of how their lineages had been historically constituted.
Bastress-Dukehart relates the history
of the chronicle and introduces the long-standing mystery surrounding
the text’s authorship. She then draws attention to the importance
of inheritance and the obligation for ancestral memoralization
that property devolution demands, setting the stage for the history
that the chronicle tells. She portrays the Zimmern Chronicle
as more than a family history, arguing that because the authors
filled their work with legends, sexual tales, and farcical stories
of daily life in Southwestern Germany, they proved themselves
adept at stimulating the curiosity of their readers, thus ensuring
that the audience would read the work to its conclusion.
Bastress-Dukehart came to Skidmore in
the fall of 2002 from the University of Oregon, where she earned
several citations for her teaching. She graduated magna cum
laude from the University of Oregon, where she earned a B.S.
degree in history and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. She earned
M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in early modern European history at the
University of California at Berkeley.
Hédi Jaouad,
associate professor of French, is the new editor, and Marc-André
Weisman, associate professors of French, and Charlene
Grant, lecturer in Spanish, are new associate editors of
Revue CELAAN Review, the journal of the Center for the
Study of the Literatures and Arts of North Africa. Published
three times a year, the journal presents scholarly articles on
Maghrebian authors and French authors from the Maghreb (North
Africa) and occasional notes on North Africa’s role in the work
of authors from France and elsewhere. Jaouad has been associated
with the publication since its inception 20 years ago, while a
graduate student at Temple University. The Center was founded
by Eric Sellin, a former professor there. When Sellin (who was
a professor of Jaouad’s) retired, Jaouad accepted his invitation
to become editor of the review.
Reg Lilly, associate
professor of philosophy and chair, Department of Philosophy and
Religion, is the author of an article, “Foucault and the Disappearance
of the Visible Subject” included in the recently published collection,
Panorama: Philosophies of the Visible, edited by Wilhelm
Wurzer and published by Continuum Press.
Linda Simon,
professor of English, is the author of an essay, “William James:
The European Connection,” forthcoming in William James in Russian
Culture, edited by Joan Delaney Grossman and Ruth Rischin,
due in March from Lexington Books.