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In Brief
-Fredric Jameson, who is stepping down as
chair of Duke's Literature Program, was honored with a four-day
conference in April on Utopia, one of the recurring themes in his
work. Over the past thirty years, he has helped change the field
of literary theory. He was one of the first scholars to bring French
theory to the United States, introducing thinkers such as Jacques
Derrida and Gilles Deleuze in a sympathetic but rigorous way. His
1971 book, Marxism and Form, helped revitalize Marxist study in
literary theory, and his emphasis on the connection between the
historical and political has played a role in the turn toward political
concerns in literary criticism. He came to Duke in 1985 and pioneered
a new kind of literature program, one that parallels more traditional
comparative literature programs but is focused on critical theory.
-John V. Brown has been named visiting director of the Jazz Studies
program and the Jazz Ensemble for the 2003-04 academic year by
the music department. Brown holds degrees from UNC-Greensboro and
UNC-Chapel Hill and serves on the faculties of Duke, UNC-Chapel
Hill, and North Carolina Central University. A bassist and well-respected
member of North Carolina's music community, he has performed with
Elvin Jones, Mark Whitfield, Nnenna Freelon, and Delfeayo Marsalis.
Brown also plays regularly with the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra,
the Carolina Ballet, and the Opera Company of North Carolina.
-Benjamin D. Reese Jr. was appointed vice president for institutional
equity, overseeing efforts to promote diversity and foster equal
opportunity within the university and health system. He succeeds
Sally M. Dickson, who announced in April that she would return
to Stanford University to assume a newly created position as associate
vice provost for faculty development and associate dean of humanities
and sciences. Reese will serve until December 2004 or until permanently
appointed to the position. Reese came to Duke in 1996 as an assistant
vice president in the Office of Institutional Equity, where he
oversees efforts to enhance cross-cultural relations throughout
the institution. He also developed a diversity planning guide for
managers and coordinated the development of an online module on
equity and employment for physicians. He is the co-leader of the
Diversity Leadership Group in Duke Hospital, an initiative he helped
develop to increase staff diversity and improve the equity of work
processes and systems.
-Six Duke scholars and researchers have been elected to the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences, an international learned society
composed of the world's leading scientists, scholars, artists,
business people, and public leaders. They are Henry Petroski, Aleksandar
S. Vesic Professor of civil and environmental engineering; theological
ethics professor Stanley M. Hauerwas; religion professor Ed P.
Sanders; Joel L. Fleishman, professor of law and public policy
studies; philosopher and senior research scholar Fred Dretske;
and physician Ralph Snyderman, chancellor for health affairs, executive
dean of the medical school, and president and chief executive officer
of the Duke University Health System. The 2003 class of 187 Fellows
and twenty-nine Foreign Honorary Members includes four college
presidents, three Nobel Prize winners, and four Pulitzer Prize
winners.
-Michael Mezzatesta, director of the Duke University Museum of
Art, will be leaving this summer at the conclusion of his third
five-year term. In a statement, President Nannerl O. Keohane said, "When
the Nasher Museum is completed in 2004, a new era in the life of
the university will begin. The provost and I have decided that
we should now bring in a director who will be well prepared for
planning major exhibitions, building strong new collections, and
ensuring that the Nasher Museum takes its rightful place among
the major university art museums in this country." She called
Mezzatesta "an indefatigable champion of building a new museum
worthy of Duke," and pointed particularly to his establishing
an innovative student curatorial program. DUMA curator Sarah Schroth
will be interim director.
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