Faculty-Staff Achievements, March 24, 2014
Activities
Dan Nathan, associate professor and chair, Department of American Studies, was co-leader (with Joseph Bruchac) of a discussion March 29 on the film Freedom Riders at the Saratoga Springs Public Library. The film was one of four presented during the libraryâs 51²è¹Ý¶ùCreated Equal: Americaâs Civil Rights Struggle.â The series is part of the Bridging Cultures initiative of the National Endowment for the Humanities in partnership with the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History to encourage public conversations about the changing meanings of freedom and equality in America.
Gregory Spinner, visiting assistant professor of religion, was the featured speaker March 23 in a âTown and Gownâ program hosted by Saratoga Film Forum. He spoke following the screening of the film The Rabbiâs Cat (Le chat du rabbin), an animated movie based on the comic book series by Joann Sfar. Spinner called the film one of his favorites. He is also a co-curator of the current Tang Museum exhibition âGraphic Jews: Negotiating Identity in Sequential Art,â open until April 13. The film forumâs 51²è¹Ý¶ùTown and Gownâ series introduces moviegoers to film-savvy scholars from area colleges whose work has been profoundly shaped by the movies.
Gordon Thompson, professor and chair, Department of Music, lectured on âBeatlemania! The Rise of the Beatles, 1963â Feb. 24 at Union College, Schenectady, as part of its Taylor Time series. This lecture focused on the cultural contexts of the bandâs unprecedented emergence from a regional act to national celebrities. He was also a guest speaker for the symposium titled âTomorrow Never Knows: The Beatles in Text and Imageâ on March 1 at the Kislak Center, the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. His paper, âReconstructing Abbey Road: History, Mnemohistory and Memories of Working with the Beatles,â delved into the nature of collective memory and the recording of âWhile My Guitar Gently Weeps.â

Publications
Jay Rogoff, visiting assistant professor of English, is the author of a fifth book of poems, titled Venera, published this month by Louisiana State University Press. According to the publisher, âThe poemâs in Venera explore varieties of love, both sacred and profane, by drawing from the natural world. Personal intimacy, and the human imagination as evoked in Biblical narratives and art.â Read more .
Linda Simon, professor emerita of English, is the author of published in the Journal of American Culture, Vol. 37, Issue 1, March 2014.
Mary Zeiss Stange, professor of womenâs studies and religion and director of the religion program, is one of two senior scholars aligned with the Center for Humans and Natureâa Chicago-based environmental think-tankâand its newly launched essay series,
Under the rubric âExpanding Our Natural and Civic Imagination,â the center offers âquestions for a resilient futureâ designed to âprobe assumptions about nature and humanityâs place within it.â The first such questionââDoes hunting make us human?ââfeatures essays by Stange and fellow senior scholar Jan Dizard, Charles Hamilton Houston Professor of American Culture at Amherst College. Over the course of the next several months, twenty more responses to the question will appear from an array of writers and scholars, with online contributions from readers.
In the News
Ron Seyb, Joseph C. Palamountain Jr. Professor of Government, was interviewed March 20 on WNYT-TV
regarding the Obama Administrationâs sanctions against Russia in retaliation for the
situation in Crimea.