@64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

32
C74 !" 24=C4==80; <430;B ]$ BC0A60I8=6 F8C7 0BCA>=><H ] bd\\Ta !" @64;@ A6:2 <3 A52 4g_[^aX]V cWT c^^[b fTµeT dbTS P]S cWT bc^aXTb fTµeT c^[S c^ ½]S ZTT_ \P]PVT P]S STUh ^da \^bc [X\XcTS aTb^daRT _ !

Transcript of @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

Page 1: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 2: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 3: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 4: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

Xiao-Li MengMargot N. GillBari WalshVisual Dialogue

GRADUATE SCHOOL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION (GSAA) COUNCILReinier Beeuwkes

Mia de KuijperStacy DickA. Barr DolanRichard Ekman

Yonatan EyalJohn C.C. FanKenneth FroewissHomer HagedornR. Stanton HalesDavid HarnettLaVaughn HenryKaren J. HladikDaniel R. Johnson

Gopal KadagathurAlan Kantrow

Gyuri KaradyRobert E. KnightImad KordabFelipe LarraínJill Levenson

See-Yan LinAbraham Lowenthal

Suzanne Folds McCullaghJohn J. Moon

Sandra O. MooseF. Robert NakaBetsy M. Ohlsson-Wilhelm

Maury Peiperl

M. Lee Pelton

Nancy RamageJohn E. RiellyAllen Sanginés-KrauseDavid Staines

Marianne Steiner

Donald van Deventer

Lee ZhangGustavus Zimmerman

Kent Dayton

Elisabeth Moch

Bruce Peterson

Martha Stewart

Page 5: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

On stage at Sanders, presenting their work to faculty, alumni, and friends, the students simply shined.

Page 6: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

FENNA KRIENENPSYCHOLOGY

“Big Brain Science: Strategies for Mapping the Human Brain”

HANSUN HSIUNG EAST ASIAN LANGUAGES & CIVILIZATIONS

“TextbookTT Enlightenment: Europe,Japan, and the Rise of GlobalDistance Learning, 1720–1877”

Page 7: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

E

JEFF TEIGLERDIVISION OF MEDICAL SCIENCES

Learning the Language of the Immune System”

LIZ MAYNES-AMINZADEENGLISH

“Macrorealism: How Fiction Can Help Us Understand a Networked World”

AARON KUANAPPLIED PHYSICS

“Graphene Nanopores for Single-Molecule DNA Sequencing”

Page 8: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

ALEX FATTALANTHROPOLOGY

“Guerrilla Marketing: InformationWar and the Demobilization of FARC Rebels”

STEPHANIE DICKHISTORY OF SCIENCE

“Aftermath: Following Mathematics into the Digital”

EDGAR BARROSOMUSIC

“Enhancing Music, Social, andEntrepreneurial Innovation throughTrans-Disciplinary Collaboration”

Page 9: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

Diana Sorensen, at right, with Laura Malisheski at a digital humanities forum last spring.

HUMANITIES UNBOUND

Page 10: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

Q+A IDNAME:

Jessica Stern, PhD ‘92

FIELD OF STUDY:

Public Policy

TODAY:

Fellow at Harvard’s FXB Center for Health and Human Rights

Page 11: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

“This was a surprise to me, the extent to which jihad can be a moneymaking enterprise, and how money could be a motivation for some terrorists.”

Page 12: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

Good vs. Good

Obama and America’s Political Future

Reading for the Body: The Recalci-trant Materiality of Southern Fiction,

1893–1985

Speech Presentation in Homeric Epic

Prescribed: Writing, Filling, Us-ing, and Abusing the Prescription in Modern America

Free and French in the Caribbean

Page 13: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

HighLife: Condo Living in the Suburban Century

The Tribunal: Responses to John Brown and the Harpers Ferry Raid

Hippocratic, Religious, and Secular Medical Eth-ics: The Points of Conflict

Reconstructing the Campus

The Death and Life of Main Street

Classic Modern

Page 14: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 15: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 16: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 17: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 18: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 19: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 20: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

EVERETT MENDELSOHN

ARNOLD RAMPERSAD

Page 21: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

LOUISE RICHARDSON

SHERRY TURKLE

Page 22: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 23: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 24: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

STARGAZING WITH

Page 25: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 26: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 27: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 28: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner
Page 29: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

Your field is English literature of the early modern era. Does this inform your fiction?

As a professor-novelist, does your fiction tend to be on the bookish side?

So maybe your two modes — academic, novelist — aren’t so different?

Page 30: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

The Graduate School Alumni Association

Contact

Colloquy on the Web

Letters to the Editor

Moving?

HONORING A CHAMPION OF DIVERSITY AT HARVARD

NAVIGATING THE NONACADEMIC PHD PATH

PhD alumni Dodzie Sogah, Josef Kurtz, and Gentry Patrick

Meredith Fisher, HGWISE Mentor

of the Year

Page 31: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

CO N TAC T S A R A H C A RO T H ER S

O F F I C E O F G I F T P L A N N I N G

H A RVA R D U N I V ER S I T Y

124 M O U N T AU B U R N S T R EE T

C A M B R I D G E , M A 02138 - 5795

617 - 49 5 - 5040 O R 1 - 800 -V E R I TA S

O G P @ H A RVA R D. ED U

A LU M N I . H A RVA R D. ED U / P G O

Give Wisely. Gift Planning.

ADVANCE NEW KNOWLEDGE WITH A BEQUEST FOR THE GRADUATE SCHOOL

• Include Harvard in your will or living trust

• Designate Harvard as a beneficiary of retirement assets

Retain the use of your assets during your lifetime, provide tax benefits to your estate, and support futuregenerations of graduatestudents

Le Cong

Page 32: @64;@ A6:2 · Marianne Steiner

Alumni AssociationHolyoke Center 350, 1350 Massachusetts AvenueCambridge, Massachusetts, 02138-3846 USA

Nonprofit Organization

US Postage

Lowell, MA

Permit No. 57