Division of Social Studies News by Date
December 2013
12-19-2013
When Italian professor Joseph Luzzi's wife, Katherine, died suddenly in a car accident, Dante's Divine Comedy took on new meaning as he faced his grief.
12-17-2013
Ian Buruma looks at the military tensions over a group of small islands in the East China Sea as they relate to the dynasic politics of China, Japan, and Korea.
12-12-2013
Kirkus Reviews lists Ian Buruma's Year Zero among the year's best nonfiction, calling it an "insightful meditation on the world's emergence from the wreckage of World War II."
12-11-2013
Lucy Flamm '15 is taking full advantage of her college experience. She has obtained funding for internships, started an arts club at Bard, and is studying abroad in London this year. Of Bard students she says, "People learn from each other because everyone is so open about what they’re interested in, and brave enough to challenge each other’s opinions and assertions."
12-10-2013
Bard history faculty member Greg Moynahan has been appointed the new historian for the village of Tivoli, New York. “I look forward to helping develop this history in new formats for new audiences and to building on the wonderful work done by my predecessor, Bernie Tieger," said Professor Moynahan.
12-10-2013
This week, the APA recognized Professor Daniel Mendelsohn's contributions to the field of classical studies by honoring him with the 2013 President's Award.
12-05-2013
Bard class of 2013 alumni Arthur Holland Michel and Dan Gettinger, founders of the Center for the Study of the Drone at Bard, argue for an interdisciplinary and nonpartisan approach to drone study.
12-05-2013
A Greek tragedy, a retuned piano, and many musical Bardians: Dylan Mattingly '14 discusses his composition of The Bakkhai, to be performed at Bard on December 10.
12-05-2013
"You have to know who you are—as a person, but also as a member of a given civilization—in order to speak about a work," says Professor Mendelsohn in this interview.
12-03-2013
Environmental and urban studies major Jess Lambert '14 came to Bard from the small town of Liberty, New York. As a student representative for the Bard Sustainability Council, she’s committed to improving environmental practices on campus. "I’m glad I found a place that really recognizes the importance of pursuing the work you’re most excited about," she says. "That’s been really empowering for me."
November 2013
11-26-2013
Professor Mead and former State Department official Nicholas Burns talk about the new, six-month deal with Iran, and the challenges ahead for reaching a long-term agreement.
11-18-2013
The success or failure of Vladimir Putin's strategic plan for Russia depends on whether Ukraine signs a free-trade agreement with the EU at its November 28th summit for eastern countries, writes Walter Russell Mead.
11-18-2013
Bard High School Early College professor Daniel Freund examines the history of our evolving notions of the sun's impact on health and well-being.
11-12-2013
Hazel Gurland-Pooler '99 of Ark Media is coproducing two episodes of The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross, a PBS documentary series hosted by scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr.
11-07-2013
"What the humanist education does is both teach us to love the world as it has been handed down to us and also to make it our own," writes Roger Berkowitz.
11-03-2013
Senior Julia DeFabo's Bard experience has taken her to unexpected places. A student athlete playing for Bard's tennis team, she came to the College planning to study sociology or human rights. Instead she developed an unexpected interest in African art, particularly how it is curated and discussed from a Western perspective. The Pennsylvania native has since studied in France and Senegal and plans to pursue a Ph.D. in African art history after graduation.
October 2013
10-30-2013
Professor Danner reflects on the violence in the region, U.S. intervention, and the new book The Syria Dilemma, edited by Nader Hashemi and Danny Postel.
10-30-2013
10-27-2013
What really caused World War I? Professor Richard Aldous looks at The War That Ended Peace, by Margaret MacMillan.
10-17-2013
In the New York Review of Books 50th anniversary issue, Daniel Mendelsohn finds feminism in the cultural phenomenon that is Game of Thrones.
10-16-2013
Ian Buruma looks at how Europe and Asia rebuilt after the war's devastation to people, infrastructure, and institutions in his new book Year Zero: A History of 1945.
10-11-2013
Bill Emmott, former Editor-in-Chief of The Economist, will present and discuss his new documentary film Girlfriend in a Coma on Thursday, October 17, at 6 pm in the Jim Ottaway Jr. Film Theater, Milton and Sally Avery Arts Center at Bard College. Called “beautiful and cruel” by Le Monde, Girlfriend in a Coma—cowritten by Emmott with Annalisa Piras, the film’s director—deals with the current political and economic crisis in Italy.
10-09-2013
What goes into a good translation? Professor Mendelsohn considers the fine balancing act of bring a work to life in a different language.
10-08-2013
Ian Buruma considers Edward Snowden's claim that he acted in accordance with his own conscience in light of recent remarks by Pope Francis on the importance of individual conscience to living morally.
10-04-2013
Daniel Mendelsohn asks what the Greek poet Constantine Cavafy can tell us about the U.S. government shutdown.
10-01-2013
Ian Buruma "depicts heroism, exultation and gratitude, but also brutality, venality, injustice, deceit, hypocrisy—and crushing disappointment" at the end of World War II.
10-01-2013
Elena Ferrante is "so gifted that by the end she has you in tears," writes Italian professor Joseph Luzzi on Ferrante's newest novel.
September 2013
09-25-2013
What does it mean to be an educated citizen? Bard's Roger Berkowitz talks about the upcoming Hannah Arendt Center conference, "Failing Fast: The Educated Citizen in Crisis" (October 3–4).
09-23-2013
Charles Simic reviews Professor Ian Buruma's new book about the end of World War II, Year Zero: A History of 1945.
09-16-2013
Richard Aldous spoke about the legacy of President John F. Kennedy at the Kennedy Summer School in Ireland. Professor Aldous is writing a biography of Arthur Schlesinger, JFK’s special assistant.
09-11-2013
Do humanitarian interventionists get Syria wrong? Bard's Walter Russell Mead weighs in.
09-09-2013
Bard history professor Richard Aldous's new biography Tony Ryan: Ireland's Aviator chronicles the life of the billionaire philanthropist. This article offers a taste of the new book.
09-05-2013
Ian Buruma considers the implications of President Obama's "red line," and the distinction between chemical weapons and conventional weapons.
09-05-2013
As the tennis season comes to a close, Professor Joseph Luzzi performs an annual ritual of rereading John McPhee’s Levels
of the Game, about the historic 1968 U.S. Open semifinal between Arthur Ashe and Clark
Graebner.
09-04-2013
Richard Aldous lends his expertise to an ongoing series on the history of British conservatism. This episode looks at the controversy around Free Trade in the 1840s.
09-04-2013
Last week the New York Times announced a new back page for its Book Review, called Bookends, in which two writers tackle a provocative question. Daniel Mendelsohn and Francine Prose are among the columnists.
09-03-2013
"The thing to get rid of first is the notion that there is such a thing as the East. Because there isn’t," says Professor Buruma.
August 2013
08-22-2013
Arthur Holland Michel '13, of the Center for the Study of the Drone at Bard, met with all manner of drones at a recent convention in Washington, D.C.
08-22-2013
"The Obama administration had a grand strategy in the Middle East," writes Professor Mead. "It was well intentioned, carefully crafted and consistently pursued. Unfortunately, it failed."
08-16-2013
Stephen Mucher explains the motivations behind the first teacher observations of the 19th century.
08-06-2013
Arthur Holland Michel '13, of Bard's Center for the Study of the Drone, examines the many possible uses of drone technology, and the ethical implications of drone development.
July 2013
07-18-2013
Stellar Bard volunteer Karimah Janelle Shabazz '15 brings her passion for civic engagement and education to Ghana this week, on a service trip funded by Episcopal Relief & Development.
07-08-2013
Professor Berkowitz examines the controversy over Hannah Arendt's Eichmann in Jerusalem, and her insight "not that Eichmann was just following orders, but that Eichmann was a 'joiner.'''
07-03-2013
Professor Berkowitz discusses the founding of the Hannah Arendt Center, and the new biopic about the political thinker.
07-02-2013
President Leon Botstein sits down with the Vienna Review to talk memoirs, modernism, and the role of music in a polyglot world. (PDF)
07-02-2013
"The Flood of Rights" conference will explore the intersection between photography, new media, and human rights. The conference is cosponsored by the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard, the Bard Human Rights Project, and the LUMA Foundation, and will take place in Arles, France, September 19–22, 2013.
07-01-2013
History faculty member Richard Aldous marks the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy's historic visit to Ireland with a look at a controversial presidency. "Certainly JFK the man was a contradiction. Yet none of the four presidents who followed ... showed anything approaching his public grace or calibre."
07-01-2013
Professor Mead discusses Edward J. Snowden's presence in Russia, and U.S. foreign policy concerns in Middle East.
07-01-2013
Experimental Humanities director Maria Cecire and Bard professor Walter Russell Mead spoke with fellows from 16 countries at Bard's U.S. Foreign Policy Institute, cosponsored by the Center for Civic Engagement and the U.S. Department of State's Bureau for Educational and Cultural Affairs.
June 2013
06-28-2013
"Master craftsman" Daniel Mendelsohn's essay collection makes NPR's list of top five nonfiction summer reads.