Lauren RubensteinDecember 3, 20151min
In an essay published on The Washington Post's "Answer Sheet" blog, President Michael Roth responds to those in the media who see political correctness "run amok" on college campuses. "I work with students everyday, and I have had protesters at my office, and I don’t see their realities reflected in public discourse," he writes. Roth sees political correctness as a "charismatic bogeyman with strange powers to titillate liberal and conservative writers alike." (more…)

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Laurie KenneyDecember 2, 20151min
More than 60 Graduate Liberal Studies students, their guests, and community members attended a free open class meeting of "Monk and Mingus: The Cutting Edge of Jazz," at Russell House on Nov. 30. Presented by Graduate Liberal Studies and Jazz Ensemble Coach Noah Baerman, the event included a discussion followed by a performance by Baerman of pieces composed by and associated with jazz greats Thelonious Monk and Charles Mingus. Baerman was accompanied by bassist Henry Lugo and Visiting Assistant Professor of Music and Private Lessons Teacher Pheeroan akLaff on percussion. (Photos by Will Barr '18) (more…)

Lauren RubensteinDecember 2, 20154min
Four Wesleyan undergraduates and a faculty member received awards in the latest call for proposals from NASA's Connecticut Space Grant Consortium. Astronomy major Rachel Aronow '17 was awarded an Undergraduate Research Fellowship in the amount of $5,000 for her project, "Planet Formation and Stellar Characteristics in Tatooine-like Systems." She is working with Bill Herbst, the John Monroe Van Vleck Professor of Astronomy, studying Tatooine-like systems (named after the fabled home system of Luke Skywalker), which are planet-forming disks that surround a close pair of stars that are in orbit around each other. Aronow conducted research with Herbst last summer, and these funds will support further…

Lauren RubensteinDecember 1, 20153min
Andrew Curran, professor of French, William Armstrong Professor of the Humanities, wrote a moving piece in The New York Times about the life-changing experience of his father's sudden death. Among other things, Curran describes the experience of seeing his father's body for the last time and saying goodbye. He also recounts the trip to his parents' house in North Carolina as a "chronology-less blur of grief and purifying laughter." He writes: I still dream quite often about my father. He generally makes an appearance toward 2 or 3 in the morning, sometimes waving to me from his car (he loved taking extraordinarily long car trips)…

Lauren RubensteinDecember 1, 20153min
Suzanne O'Connell, professor of earth and environmental sciences, faculty director of the McNair program, is the author of a new op-ed appearing on Inside Sources and The Hartford Courant, in which she urges aggressive action to counteract climate change. O'Connell acknowledges the difficulty in communicating the urgency of climate change, and writes that one way she's found to express this to her students is to liken climate change to cancer. That is, it is the rapid rate at which we are introducing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere—much like the accelerated rate of cell growth in cancer—that is so harmful. She writes: Cancer progresses at different rates in different…

Lauren RubensteinNovember 30, 20152min
Gary Yohe, the Huffington Foundation Professor of Economics and Environmental Studies, was a guest on WNPR's "Where We Live" to discuss drought and climate change, particularly in light of the climate talks going on in Paris. "Droughts have occurred on every continent. They have occurred certainly in North America—Texas has suffered a severe drought, California has suffered a severe drought," said Yohe. "I'm not sure New England has suffered a severe drought but we are certainly below average in terms of rainfall. One of the things that people in Paris are worried about though, is that not only are drought conditions a source…

Lauren RubensteinNovember 24, 20152min
A book by Stephen Angle, the Mansfield Freeman Professor of East Asian Studies, was recently published in Chinese translation by Jiangxi People's Press. Titled, "Contemporary Confucian Political Philosophy: Toward Progressive Confucianism," the book was originally published by Polity in 2013. The Chinese version includes a new preface. According to the blurb for the English-language version: Confucian political philosophy has recently emerged as a vibrant area of thought both in China and around the globe. This book provides an accessible introduction to the main perspectives and topics being debated today, and shows why Progressive Confucianism is a particularly promising approach. Students…

Lauren RubensteinNovember 20, 20155min
Writing in the The Washington Post, President Michael Roth questions the predominant media narrative painting college students as "pampered with coddled minds." Roth argues that such denigration of young people by older generations is an age old tradition, dating back to the founding fathers shaking "their heads about dueling and drinking on campus." He writes: When I look around my campus and visit others, I don’t find pampered students with coddled minds. I find math majors in the gym every day preparing for a soccer match or a swim meet. I find writers pulling all-nighters to finish a project working side by…

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David LowNovember 18, 20152min
Jeanine Basinger, the Corwin-Fuller Professor of Film Studies, appears in an interview about internationally renowned film actress Ingrid Bergman in the new documentary Ingrid Bergman—In Her Own Words, directed by Stig Bjorkman, which recounts the life of the cinema luminary through the subject’s home movies, photographs, diary entries and letters to family and friends. The director had access to these materials from the Ingrid Bergman Collection at the Wesleyan Cinema Archives, making ample use of them in the film. The documentary also features interviews with Bergman’s daughter, actress and filmmaker Isabella Rossellini, as well as other relatives and actresses Liv…