Marian Miner Cook
Athenaeum

A distinctive
feature of social and
cultural life at CMC

 

Current Semester Schedule

Athenaeum events are posted here as detailed information becomes available.

Mon, April 29, 2019
Lunch Program
Roselyn Hsueh

What is China’s regulatory state and what does it have to do with China’s aspiration to become a global power?  Roselyn Hsueh, associate professor of political science at Temple University and Global Order Visiting Scholar at the University of Pennsylvania,will explore the role of China’s regulatory state in its globalization strategy and implications for the current trade war, tech war, climate change, and global development.

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Roselyn Hsueh is an associate professor of political science at Temple University and a Global Order Visiting Scholar at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the author of "China’s Regulatory State: A New Strategy for Globalization" (Cornell University Press, 2011). Hsueh’s current research include her next book, under contract with Cambridge University Press, which investigates the mediating role of market governance in the relationship between global economic integration and development outcomes. The political economy of identity in the age of globalization is another major theme in her research agenda.

Hsueh regularly provides expert analysis and commentary. The Economist, Foreign Affairs, National Public Radio (NPR), Inside Higher Ed, The Huffington Post, The Washington Post and other outlets have featured her research. She has testified in Congress in front of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission and consulted for The Center for Strategic and International Studies. She serves on the Fulbright’s National Selection Committee. 

Hsueh is a member of the Georgetown Initiative for U.S.-China Dialogue on Global Issues and has served as a residential research faculty fellow and visiting scholar at U.C. Berkeley. She has also lectured as a visiting professor at the Graduate School of Finance and Asia Pacific Center, Tecnológico de Monterrey. Prior to arriving at Temple, Hsueh held the Hayward R. Alker Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Southern California and conducted in-depth fieldwork as a Fulbright Scholar and a David L. Boren Fellow of the National Security Education Program. She earned her B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. in political science from U.C. Berkeley.

Professor Hsueh’s Athenaeum talk is co-sponsored by the Keck Center for International and Strategic Studies.

Photo Credit: Margo Reed Photography

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Thu, April 25, 2019
Lunch Program
Sarah Moody

The 19th century saw the literary movement and social network we know as Spanish-American Modernismo emerge largely from the pages of international periodicals. Sarah Moody, associate professor of Spanish at the University of Alabama, examines the editorial choices of two magazines, Mundial Magazine and its ladies’ counterpart, Elegancias—both exported from Europe for consumption in Latin America—and compares their gendered portrayals of Paris to demonstrate how a certain type of modernity was purposefully “marketed” to Latin Americans at a key moment of engagement with globalization and especially with gendered, Parisian styles of modernity that suggested a possible future for Latin Americans' modern desires.

 

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Sarah Moody is associate professor of Spanish in the department of modern languages and classics at the University of Alabama, where she is also the director of the Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies program. Moody’s research examines Modernismo and women’s writing in Latin American literature of the 19th and early 20th centuries, especially focusing on the relationship between aesthetic systems and identity formulations like gender or nationalism. Her current book project, "Las Raras: Gendered Aesthetics, Women’s Writing and Intellectual Networks in Spanish-American Modernismo", examines ideas of femininity that were both fundamental to Modernismo’s formation and exclusionary towards women’s active participation in the movement as writers and authors.

(Parents Dining Room)

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Thu, April 18, 2019
Dinner Program
Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein

From refugee crises and global poverty to rigged elections, growing populism—and the intolerance and oppression it breeds, we are at a pivotal moment in history as the contempt for human rights spreads. Prince Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein of Jordan, former U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, is known for his outspoken criticism of the fascism, religious radicalism, and threats to civil liberties growing in countries around the world. Following his approval by the U.N. General Assembly in 2014, he became the sixth High Commissioner for Human Rights and was the first Arab and Muslim to hold the post.

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Throughout his years of service as a career diplomat and the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Prince Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein has been a champion for the protection of our fundamental and basic human rights. His work has involved the security of equality, justice, and respect—and has directly influenced international justice, U.N. peacekeeping, and women’s development. al-Hussein draws from his career in diplomacy and as the Human Rights Chief to address the geopolitical climate, relations in the Middle East, and current challenges to human rights. At the U.N., he called upon powerful and small states alike to secure human rights in their own countries and internationally, drawing notable attention to atrocities committed in Syria, Venezuela, Nicaragua, by ISIS, to the treatment of migrants and refugees in Libya, and the Rohingya genocide in Myanmar.

An expert in the field of international justice, al-Hussein was a central figure in the establishment of the International Criminal Court (ICC), chairing the complex negotiations to establish the exact terms of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. He was subsequently elected the first president of the governing body of the ICC in 2002, and grew it into the internationally recognized court that it is today. He has been active on many legal issues, including international law, post-conflict peace-building, international development, counter-nuclear terrorism, and women’s development. Following allegations of widespread abuse being committed by U.N. peacekeepers, al-Hussein was appointed by Kofi Annan as Advisor to the Secretary-General on Sexual Exploitation and Abuse. His report on this subject was the first comprehensive strategy for the elimination of sexual exploitation and abuse in U.N. peacekeeping operations.

al-Hussein holds a B.A. from The Johns Hopkins University, a PhD. in history from Cambridge University, and was presented with an Honorary Doctorate of Laws by the Southern California Institute of Law for his work on international justice. He is currently the Distinguished Global Leader-in-Residence at Perry World House (PWH) and a visiting scholar at University of Pennsylvania.  

Prince Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein's Athenaeum talk is co-sponsored by the President's Leadership Fund and the Mgrublian Center for Human Rights at CMC.


Food for Thought: Podcast with Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein

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Wed, April 17, 2019
Dinner Program
Cauleen Smith

Cauleen Smith, an interdisciplinary artist who blends the traditional visual art world with film-based practices, will discuss her touring exhibition “Give It Or Leave It” and explore models in which utopian social models of radical generosity and hospitality were successfully enacted in the United States: Alice Coltrane’s Gai Anatam Ashram, Simon Rodia’s Watt’s Rowers, Noah Purifoy’s Desert Museum, and the Combahee River Collective. Named for a decisive historical moment, they serve are foundations for films and installations which invite contemplation on the power of generous and liberatory spaces. 

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Cauleen Smith is an interdisciplinary artist whose work reflects upon the everyday possibilities of the imagination. Operating in multiple materials and arenas, Smith roots her work firmly within the discourse of mid-twentieth-century experimental film. Drawing from structuralism, third world cinema, and science fiction, she makes things that deploy the tactics of activism in service of ecstatic social space and contemplation.

On the faculty at California Institute of the Arts in the Art Program, Smith received a B.A. in creative arts from San Francisco State University and an M.F.A from the School of Theater Film and Television at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Smith is the recipient of the following awards: Rockefeller Media Arts Award, Creative Capital Film /Video, Independent Spirit Someone to Watch Award, Chicago 3Arts Grant, and the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Chicago Expo Artadia Award, and Rauschenberg Residency, Herb Alpert Awards in the Arts in Film and Video 2016, United States Artists Award 2017. She was the 2016 inaugural recipient of the Ellsworth Kelly Award.

Professor Smith’s Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Gould Center for Humanistic Studies at CMC.

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Tue, April 16, 2019
Dinner Program
Eric Poehler

Digital technologies are revolutionizing how archaeologists study the past. Today, it is common to see a tablet, laser scanner, or drone used hand in hand with a shovel, trowel, or wheelbarrow. In this talk, Eric Poehler, associate professor of classics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, will present three case studies of archaeological research infused with digital technologies from the recent past, the present, and the near future to examine the ways in which our approach to the past is changing.

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Eric Poehler is an associate professor of classics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and is the director of the joint Blended Learning and Digital Humanities program for the Five Colleges consortium. His previous digital project, the Pompeii Bibliography and Mapping Project won the 2018 Award for Outstanding Work in Digital Archaeology from the Archaeological Institute of America and his current project, the Pompeii Artistic Landscape Project (co-directed with Sebastian Heath), was just awarded $245,000 over the next three years.

Poehler is also active in the field and has more than 20 years of experience on excavations and urban surveys throughout the Mediterranean.

He is also the author of more than two dozen articles and books in leading venues including Oxford University Press, the American Journal of Archaeology, and the Journal of Roman Archaeology.

Professor Poehler's Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Digital Humanities Initiative at the Claremont Colleges.
 

View Video: YouTube with Eric Poehler


Food for Thought: Podcast with Eric Poehler

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Mon, April 15, 2019
Lunch Program
Dianna "DT" Graves '98 and Nyree Gray

In the fall of 2015, like students at many  other colleges across the country, CMC students drew attention to their concerns around diversity and campus climate. From establishing the CARE Center to expanding DOS services to increasing student aid, much has been done. This work is never complete. Come join Nyree Gray and Dianna "DT" Graves '98 to share your perspectives on how we can best inform these ongoing efforts.

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At this working lunch, Nyree Gray, Assistant Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion and Chief Civil Rights Officer at CMC and Dianna Graves, Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students at CMC will speak about campus initiatives, past and present. At tables hosted by D&I Committee members, attendees will be asked to share their own views about what's been accomplished, what’s yet to be done, and best next steps and priorities. RAs, students affiliated with the CARE Center, FYGs, affinity group leaders, ASCMC members, and club leaders are encouraged to attend so that in the future they can share perspectives with the broader community.

The lunch is open to everyone at CMC. Please come be a part of this important discussion!

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Thu, April 11, 2019
Dinner Program
Zev Yaroslavsky

Zev Yaroslavsky, director of the Los Angeles Initiative at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs and the department of history, has been at the forefront of Los Angeles County’s biggest issues, including transportation, the environment, health care, and cultural arts for almost 40 years. He will reflect on his life in public life serving the county of Los Angeles. He will be honored as the recipient of Rose Award for Excellence in Public Service 

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Zev Yaroslavsky was first elected to office in 1975, stunning the political establishment by winning the Los Angeles City Council’s coveted 5th District seat at the age of 26. He was chairman of the Council’s Finance Committee and earned a reputation for being unafraid to tackle controversial issues, including the Los Angeles Police Department’s use of excessive force and its improper spying on law-abiding residents. Yaroslavsky is also credited with playing a leading role in the sweeping reforms of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

Yaroslavsky was elected to the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. He served five terms as the Board’s Third District representative. He retired from office on December 1, 2014. Yaroslavsky was the driving force behind several major transit projects, including the Orange Line busway across the San Fernando Valley, the Exposition Light Rail line from downtown to Santa Monica which was completed at the end of 2015, and the subway— Purple Line—extension from Western Ave. to West Los Angeles which broke ground in 2014. After the closure of Martin Luther King, Jr. hospital in south Los Angeles, Yaroslavsky proposed a partnership between the University of California and Los Angeles County upon which the recently re-opened hospital was modeled.

During his public service career, Yaroslavsky was the county’s leader in the cultural arts.  The Los Angeles Times said of him before he retired, “It would be hard to find another major politician anywhere in the entire country with Yaroslavsky’s record for outright arts support and achievement.” He championed efforts to rebuild and modernize the world-famous Hollywood Bowl amphitheater and was instrumental in the development of architect Frank Gehry’s iconic Walt Disney Concert Hall, home of the L.A. Philharmonic Orchestra.

Apart from his responsibilities as an elected official, Yaroslavsky has long been associated with the National Democratic Institute (NDI), a non-governmental organization headquartered in Washington, D.C., that promotes the development of democratic institutions in burgeoning democracies.

Yaroslavsky is currently the director of the Los Angeles Initiative at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs and the department of history, focusing on the inter-section of policy, politics and history of the Los Angeles region. Yaroslavsky was born and raised in Los Angeles and earned an M.A. in British Imperial History and a B.A.  in Economics and History, both from UCLA. He is a graduate of Fairfax High School in Los Angeles.

Mr. Yaroslavsky’s Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Rose Rose Institute of State and Local Government at CMC.

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Wed, April 10, 2019
Dinner Program
Robert Kagan

For seven decades, American leadership has kept at bay the jungle of great power conflict, nationalism and tribalism, and spheres of influence. Drawing from his latest book, "The Jungle Grows Back: America and Our Imperiled World,” Robert Kagan, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, will reflect on what comes next for the United States.

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Robert Kagan is the Stephen & Barbara Friedman Senior Fellow with the Project on International Order and Strategy in the foreign policy program at Brookings. He is a contributing columnist at The Washington Post. A prolific writer, his newest book is “The Jungle Grows Back: America and Our Imperiled World” (Knopf, 2018).  His previous book was The New York Times bestseller, “The World America Made” (Knopf, 2012).

For his writings, Politico Magazine named Kagan one of the “Politico 50” in 2016, the “thinkers, doers and visionaries transforming American politics in 2016.” His most recent pieces include “The Twilight of the Liberal World Order” in “Brookings Big Ideas for America” and “Backing into World War III” in Foreign Policy.

He served in the State Department from 1984 to 1988 as a member of the policy planning staff, as principal speechwriter for Secretary of State George P. Shultz, and as deputy for policy in the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs.

He is a graduate of Yale University and Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and holds a doctorate in American history from American University.

Mr. Kagan’s Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Salvatori Center and the Keck Center for International & Strategic Studies, both at CMC.


Food for Thought: Podcast with Robert Kagan

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Wed, April 10, 2019
Lunch Program
Jonathan Petropoulos

Jonathan Petropoulos, the John V. Croul Professor of European History at Claremont McKenna College, will discuss his forthcoming book on the biography of one of history's biggest art plunderers, focusing on three areas: first, the scholarly field, where he will recount how researchers have addressed the “unfinished business” of World War II; second, the practical application of his scholarship, including how he has served as an expert witness in restitution litigation;  and third, the personal dimensions of his research, including the ethical challenges of interviewing former perpetrators to write the history and achieve some measure of justice.

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Jonathan Petropoulos is the John V. Croul Professor of European History and the chair of the department of history at Claremont McKenna College. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University (1990), where he also had an appointment as a lecturer in history and history & literature. He began working on the subject of Nazi art looting and restitution in 1983, when he commenced graduate work in history and art history. 

He is the author of “Art as Politics in the Third Reich” (University of North Carolina Press, 1996); “The Faustian Bargain: The Art World in Nazi Germany” (Oxford University Press, 2000); “Royals and the Reich: The Princes von Hessen in Nazi Germany” (Oxford University Press, 2006); “Artists Under Hitler: Collaboration and Survival in Nazi Germany” (Yale University Press, 2014). He has edited a number of other works and has helped organize art exhibitions, including Degenerate Art: The Fate of the Avant-Garde in Nazi Germany, which opened at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1991.

From 1998 to 2000, he served as research director for Art and Cultural Property on the Presidential Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States, where he helped draft the report, Restitution and Plunder: The U.S. and Holocaust Victims’ Assets (2001). In this capacity, he supervised a staff of researchers who combed archives in the United States and Europe in order to understand better how representatives of the U.S. government (including the Armed Forces) handled the assets of Holocaust victims both during and after the war. He also provided expert testimony to the Select Committee on Culture, Media and Sport in the U.K. House of Commons and to the Banking and Finance Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives.  He has also participated in a number of international conferences on the subject of Nazi art looting and Allied restitution, including the Washington Conference on Holocaust-Era Assets in 1998, and the Vilnius International Forum on Holocaust-Era Looted Cultural Assets in 2000.                                         

Petropoulos has served as an expert witness in a number of cases where Holocaust victims have tried to recover lost and stolen artworks. This includes Altmann v. Austria, which involved six paintings by Gustav Klimt claimed by Maria Altmann and other family members (five were returned).

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Tue, April 9, 2019
Dinner Program
Kristie Lynn Dotson

Kristie Dotson, professor of philosophy at both Carleton College and Michigan State University, will explore how in situations that call for accountability for serious wrongdoings, one can find oneself trapped in a “now” that follows from ineffective carceral imaginations, insufficient structural options for accountability, and inadequate lexicons of permissibility.

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Kristie Dotson is currently the Cowling Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Carleton College and associate professor of philosophy at Michigan State University. She researches in epistemology, metaphilosophy, and feminist philosophy (particularly Black feminisms). Specifically, Dotson works on how knowledge-related concerns play a role in maintaining and obscuring oppression. She has published numerous journals articles and is working currently on a monograph tentatively entitled, Varieties of Epistemic Oppression, which is under contract with Oxford University Press.

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Tue, April 9, 2019
Dinner Program
Donald Davis, Jr.

Donald Davis, professor in the department of Asian Studies at the University of Texas, Austin, examines how a thirteenth-century Sanskrit legal text conceptualizes slavery, servitude, and work. Rather than draw a sharp distinction between slaves and workers, this text views everyone from slaves and contract laborers to students, apprentices, and even managers as servants with limited freedom. The way this text categorizes the world of work provokes us to rethink whether contemporary discourses have surpassed or merely suppressed continuing experiences of work as a loss of freedom.

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Donald Davis has been teaching at U.T. Austin since 2013, having worked previously at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the University of Michigan, and Bucknell University. His primary research concerns the interaction of law and religion in medieval India. From one side, he looks at the historical evidence for law and legal practice in inscriptions, temple archives, and other dated documents as a way to contextualize the law in earlier periods of Indian history. From the other side, he studies the Dharmaśāstra tradition as a system of religious law and jurisprudence, apart from historical questions.

His book, “The Spirit of Hindu Law” (2010), provides a conceptual overview of the Hindu perspective on law and how it can relate to modern questions of policy, ethics, and religion. He has a continuing interest in Malayalam language and literature, and published “The Train that Had Wings” (2005), a collection of translated short stories by the Malayalam writer M. Mukundan. 

Most recently, Davis published “The Dharma of Business: Commercial Law in Medieval India”  (Penguin, 2017), a study of commerce-related titles of law in medieval Hindu law texts and is a co-editor (with Patrick Olivelle) of a volume for the Oxford History of Hinduism entitled “Hindu Law: A New History of Dharmaśāstra” (OUP, 2018). 

His current research broadens his interest in the practice of Hindu law in historical perspective, using materials beyond the Dharmaśāstra texts and from many parts of medieval India. At the same time, he is beginning work on a translation of the Mitākṣarā of Vijñāneśvara, a twelfth-century commentary and compendium on dharma.

(Parents Dining Room)

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Mon, April 8, 2019
Dinner Program
Fatima Goss Graves

How can the movement for gender justice build for the long haul during a period of resistance? Fatima Goss Graves, long-time civil and gender rights activist and president and CEO of the National Women’s Law Center, will explore how—even in the midst of defending core rights—we can use smart advocacy to achieve law, policy, and culture change. Whether it’s working on fueling workplace diversity, ending sexual harassment, or securing new funding for child care, she will discuss the myriad of ways in which to build the future we want and deserve.

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Fatima Goss Graves, who has served in numerous roles at National Women’s Law Center (“NWLC”) for more than a decade, has spent her career fighting to advance opportunities for women and girls. She has a distinguished track record working across a broad set of issues central to women’s lives, including income security, health and reproductive rights, education access, and workplace fairness. Goss Graves is among the co-founders of the TIME’S UP Legal Defense Fund.

Prior to becoming president at NWLC, Goss Graves served as the Center’s senior vice president for program, where she led the organization’s broad program agenda to advance progress and eliminate barriers in employment, education, health and reproductive rights and lift women and families out of poverty. Prior to that, as the Center’s vice president for education and employment, she led the Center’s anti-discrimination initiatives, including work to promote equal pay, combat harassment and sexual assault at work and at school, and advance equal access to education programs, with a particular focus on outcomes for women and girls of color.

Goss Graves has authored many articles, including “A Victory for Women’s Health Advocates”, National Law Journal (2016) and “We Must Deal with K-12 Sexual Assault”, National Law Journal (2015), and reports, including “Unlocking Opportunity for African American Girls: A Call to Action for Educational Equity” (2014), “Reality Check: Seventeen Million Reasons Low-Wage Workers Need Strong Protections from Harassment” (2014), and “50 Years and Counting: The Unfinished Business of Achieving Fair Pay” (2013).

Goss Graves received her B.A. from UCLA in 1998 and her J.D. from Yale Law School in 2001. She began her career as a litigator at the law firm of Mayer Brown LLP after clerking for the Honorable Diane P. Wood of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. She currently serves as an advisor on the American Law Institute Project on Sexual and Gender-Based Misconduct on Campus and was on the EEOC Select Task Force on the Study of Harassment in the Workplace and a Ford Foundation Public Voices Fellow.

She is widely recognized for her effectiveness in the complex public policy arena at both the state and federal levels, regularly testifies before Congress and federal agencies, and is a frequent speaker at conferences and other public education forums. Goss Graves appears often in print and on air as a legal expert on issues core to women’s lives, including in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, AP, Chicago Tribune, LA Times, San Francisco Chronicle, CNN, MSNBC, and NPR.

Food for Thought: Podcast with Fatima Goss Graves

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Mon, April 8, 2019
Lunch Program
Maya Kandel

The upcoming elections for the European Parliament (EP) will have major strategic and historic implications. Maya Kandel, French historian, scholar, and researcher at Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3, says that framing the elections as a fight between progressives and populists (or globalists and nationalists) is too simplistic. Instead, there are competing forces to contend with which are trying to redefine the European Union: From the transatlantic populist dialog on the political right to internal political arguments over nationalism and populist reform, from Russia seeking to undermine democratic governance to China seeking to extend its economic reach, the post-war European project is on the defensive, and Europe’s answer to the rise of populism will likely determine the future of liberal democracy.

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Maya Kandel is a French historian, associate researcher at Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3, specializing in U.S. foreign policy and defense issues, U.S. Congress and transatlantic relations. Since 2017 she has led United States and Transatlantic Issues at the Policy Planning Staff of the French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs. From 2011 to 2016, she was the program director and senior researcher on the United States at the French Institute for Strategic Research (IRSEM).

A graduate of Sciences Po Paris and of Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, Kandel has written extensively on these subjects for academic as well as general public publications. Her work has also focused on U.S. policy and strategy on the African continent, and in particular U.S.-French military cooperation. Her latest book, a history of the U.S. relation to the world, was published in April 2018 by Perrin Editions (Paris).


View Video: YouTube with Maya Kandel

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Thu, April 4, 2019
Dinner Program
Alexander Aviña

Alexander Aviña, associate professor of history at Arizona State University, will trace the origins of Mexico's contemporary drug violence—more than 250,000 people killed since 2006—to the use of state violence and terror against rebellious communities and insurgent groups during the 1970s. This '70s “Dirty War” spawned a network of political and military officials that, having eliminated revolutionary challenges to the Mexican state, proved key in the formation of a booming drug industry by the 1980s and 90s.

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Alexander Aviña is an associate professor of Latin American history in the School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies at Arizona State University. He previously taught at Florida State University. His book, "Specters of Revolution: Peasant Guerrillas in the Cold War Mexican Countryside" (Oxford University Press, 2014), was awarded the Maria Elena Martínez Book Prize in Mexican History for 2015 by the Conference on Latin American History. He has also published articles in the Journal of Iberian and Latin American Research and the NACLA Report on the Americas.  

His current research project explores the links between the political economy of narcotics, drug wars, and state violence in 1960s and '70s Mexico.


Food for Thought: Podcast with Alex Avina

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Mon, April 1, 2019
Dinner Program
Kay Ryan

United States Poet Laureate and Pulitzer Prize winning poet Kay Ryan will read some of her award-winning poetry and share personal reflections.

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Kay Ryan is a United States Poet Laureate and Pulitzer Prize winning poet. Her collections of poetry include most recently the 2011 Pulitzer Prize-winning “The Best Of It, New and Selected Poems” (Grove Press, 2010); "The Niagara River" (2005); "Say Uncle" (2000); "Elephant Rocks" (1996); and "Flamingo Watching" (1994). Her most recent book of poems, “Erratic Facts”, was published by Grove Press in October 2015.

About her work, J.D. McClatchy has said: “Her poems are compact, exhilarating, strange affairs, like Erik Satie miniatures or Joseph Cornell boxes. She is an anomaly in today’s literary culture: as intense and elliptical as Dickinson, as buoyant and rueful as Frost.”

Ryan’s awards include a MacArthur “Genius” Award; The National Humanities Medal awarded by President Obama in 2012; the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and an Ingram Merrill Award. In 2017 she was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts & Letters and in 2006 was elected a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets in 2006. In 2008, she was appointed the Library of Congress’s sixteenth Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry.

Ms. Ryan’s Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Gould Center for Humanistic Studies in collaboration with the poetry colloquium of the department of literature.

Photo credit: Christina Koci Hernandez


Food for Thought: Podcast with Kay Ryan

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Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum

Claremont McKenna College
385 E. Eighth Street
Claremont, CA 91711

Contact

Phone: (909) 621-8244 
Fax: (909) 621-8579 
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