[UC] Amy Gutmann Inaugural Symposia

2004-10-15 Thread Benseraglio2


I attended two dynamite panel discussions this afternoon on the occasion of Amy Gutmann's installation as Penn's 8th President. They were both studded with academic and media superstars and like blew me away. Hopefully transcripts of both will be available sometime soon, because they're impossible to summarize.
 
High points for me were sociologist Elijah Anderson's discussion of his study of the Reading Terminal Market in terms of a "Cosmopolitan Canopy" and Fernando Pereira's presentation on how scientific information wants to be free, demonstrating both how free scientific information is being dispersed on the Web, and also how the old paradigm of paper publishing is trying to hold back progress.
 
Another high point was Skip Gates' description of how Jean Genet came to Yale during the strike in 1970 when Bobby Seale was being tried in New Haven. Shortly thereafter Cornel West, in an enormous Afro, stood up in the audience and mentioned Martin Luther King, Frantz Fanon, and the Dark Side of the New American Empire in one breath. BTW he was sitting near or beside Amy. These dudes seem to ADORE her, for some reason.
 
Keep tuned in to the biggest reality show in town, as we probe the continuing question of whether a nice white lady who makes a million bucks a year can bring happiness to all the disadvantaged black chilluns in West Philadelphia and thereby avert a violent class struggle and revolution.
 
Ross Bender
http://rossbender.org
 
 
 





1. Creating and Communicating Knowledge in an Unequal World 
How, in an era of staggering complexity and instant global communication, can the flow of new knowledge and information among widely disparate populations strengthen democracy, enhance individual lives, and promote mutual respect and understanding? 

Panel Chair:
Ms. Andrea Mitchell, Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent, NBC News 

Panelists:

Professor Elijah Anderson, Department of Sociology, School of Arts and Sciences
Professor John J. Dilulio, Jr., Department of Political Science, School of Arts and Sciences
Professor Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Annenberg School for Communication
Professor Fernando Pereira, Department of Computer and Information Science, School of Engineering and Applied Science




5. Making the Most of Our Cultural Differences
How does diversity â of peoples, values, ideas, and experiences â enhance the educational and research capacities of universities and become an invaluable resource for democratic societies facing the challenges of an increasingly demanding, dangerous, and unpredictable world?

Panel Chair: 
Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Department of African and African-American Studies, Harvard University

Panelists: 

Professor K. Anthony Appiah, Department of Philosophy, Princeton University
Professor Howard F. Chang, Law School
Professor Ania Loomba, Department of English, School of Arts and Sciences
Professor Barbara Savage, Department of History, School of Arts and Sciences


Re: [UC] Amy Gutmann Inaugural Symposia

2004-10-15 Thread Gary J. Jastrzab

On Oct 15, 2004, at 8:14 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

I attended two dynamite panel discussions this afternoon on the occasion of Amy Gutmann's installation as Penn's 8th President.

Her inauguration in Irvine Auditorium this morning was not too shabby, either. It was a spectacularly medieval celebration.

GJJ


Re: [UC] Amy Gutmann Inaugural Symposia

2004-10-15 Thread Craigsolve




In a message dated 10/15/2004 9:30:16 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
a 
  violent class struggle and revolution.

Your fantasies must be fun.
 
During my tenure in West & Southwest Philadelphia the constant 
immutable elements of life have been drinkin drugin unsafe-sex and violence. 
Scholarship has been somewhat cyclical. What is the difference between survival 
and class struggle as exemplified by those living west of the river? 
 
Interesting the Presidential Inauguration Symposia was listed on the 
Inauguration web page but not on the Today at Penn calendar page.
 
Ciao,
 
Craig


Re: [UC] Amy Gutmann Inaugural Symposia

2004-10-16 Thread Wilma de Soto
Title: Re: [UC] Amy Gutmann Inaugural Symposia



Wow!  I wish I had known about this sooner.  Sounds like a great way to spend an afternoon.  
Besides, anyone who can link Dr. Frantz Fanon, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and The Dark Side of the New American Empire in one instance is worth hearing.

Wilma


On 10/15/04 8:14 PM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

I attended two dynamite panel discussions this afternoon on the occasion of Amy Gutmann's installation as Penn's 8th President. They were both studded with academic and media superstars and like blew me away. Hopefully transcripts of both will be available sometime soon, because they're impossible to summarize.
 
High points for me were sociologist Elijah Anderson's discussion of his study of the Reading Terminal Market in terms of a "Cosmopolitan Canopy" and Fernando Pereira's presentation on how scientific information wants to be free, demonstrating both how free scientific information is being dispersed on the Web, and also how the old paradigm of paper publishing is trying to hold back progress.
 
Another high point was Skip Gates' description of how Jean Genet came to Yale during the strike in 1970 when Bobby Seale was being tried in New Haven. Shortly thereafter Cornel West, in an enormous Afro, stood up in the audience and mentioned Martin Luther King, Frantz Fanon, and the Dark Side of the New American Empire in one breath. BTW he was sitting near or beside Amy. These dudes seem to ADORE her, for some reason.
 
Keep tuned in to the biggest reality show in town, as we probe the continuing question of whether a nice white lady who makes a million bucks a year can bring happiness to all the disadvantaged black chilluns in West Philadelphia and thereby avert a violent class struggle and revolution.
 


Ross Bender
http://rossbender.org


 
 
 
1. Creating and Communicating Knowledge in an Unequal World How, in an era of staggering complexity and instant global communication, can the flow of new knowledge and information among widely disparate populations strengthen democracy, enhance individual lives, and promote mutual respect and understanding? 
Panel Chair: Ms. Andrea Mitchell  , Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent, NBC News 
Panelists: Professor Elijah Anderson  , Department of Sociology, School of Arts and Sciences Professor John J. Dilulio, Jr.  , Department of Political Science, School of Arts and Sciences Professor Kathleen Hall Jamieson  , Annenberg School for Communication Professor Fernando Pereira  , Department of Computer and Information Science, School of Engineering and Applied Science
5. Making the Most of Our Cultural Differences How does diversity — of peoples, values, ideas, and experiences — enhance the educational and research capacities of universities and become an invaluable resource for democratic societies facing the challenges of an increasingly demanding, dangerous, and unpredictable world? 
Panel Chair: Professor Henry Louis Gates  , Jr., Department of African and African-American Studies, Harvard University 
Panelists: Professor K. Anthony Appiah  , Department of Philosophy, Princeton University Professor Howard F. Chang  , Law School Professor Ania Loomba  , Department of English, School of Arts and Sciences Professor Barbara Savage  , Department of History, School of Arts and Sciences