Njit Academic Calendar Fall 2023 – The latest book by Matt L. Jones, “How Data Became: From the Age of Mind to the Age of Algorithms,” written with Chris Wiggins, was featured in a recent New Yorker article on data science. The article also references Matthew Connelly’s recent publication, The Declassification Machine: Revealing America’s Biggest Secrets.
The latest book by Matt L. Jones, “How Data Became: From the Age of Mind to the Age of Algorithms,” written with Chris Wiggins, was featured in a recent New Yorker article on data science. The article also references Matthew Connelly’s recent publication, The Declassification Machine: Revealing America’s Biggest Secrets. Learn more about this work on each professor’s Twitter account: Matt L. Jones (@nescioquid), Chris Wiggins (@chrishwiggins) and Matthew Connelly (@mattspast)
Njit Academic Calendar Fall 2023
Hannah Farber received the Hagley Award for Best Business Book at the 2023 US Underwriters Business Conference and the John Lyman Book Award for the US Navy from the North American Oceanographic Society.
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David Rosner published an article in the American Journal of Public Health about scientific manipulation and fraud by the Monsanto Corporation in the 1970s and 1980s.
David Rosner published an article in the American Journal of Public Health about scientific manipulation and fraud by the Monsanto Corporation in the 1970s and 1980s. Read the article here.
Greg Mann spoke to the press in Mali after participating in a video conference to mark International Women’s Day and the fight for women’s rights and democracy in Mali in the 1990s.
Njit Academic Calendar Spring 2021 Poland, Save 32%
Greg Mann spoke to the press in Mali after participating in a video conference to mark International Women’s Day and the fight for women’s rights and democracy in Mali in the 1990s. Read the article (in French) here and the English translation here.
March 30, 17:00-18:00 The Afro-Atlantic community in 17th-century Amsterdam: archival research, digital humanities and the public
Moderator: Arno Visser, Visiting Professor at Queen Wilhelmina University Columbia and Professor of Renaissance Tissue Culture at Utrecht University.
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In the seventeenth century, more people of African descent came to the Dutch Republic as servants (whether slaves or free) or sailors. Recent studies have shown that c. In 1630, a small free black community appeared in Amsterdam, which can be found on the Jodenbreestraat (“Jewish Broad Street”). This was the area where many artists lived, including Rembrandt. This new research is based on a combination of marriage records with new archival findings and is made possible by the progress of All Amsterdam Acts, a major digital humanitarian project that aims to uncover Amsterdam’s complete notary archives.
Through a combination of presentation and interactive work, this workshop will explore the opportunities and challenges of this type of research, focusing on three components: archival research, digital humanities and the public (public debate, social media and exhibitions about slavery). .
Marc Ponte is a historian at the Amsterdam City Archives. He has curated recent exhibitions in Amsterdam (Black in the Time of Rembrandt, Rembrandt Museum, 2020 Amsterdam and Slavery, Amsterdam City Archives, 2020) and Alkmaar (Alkmaar Plantation, Stedelijk Museum Alkmaar, 2-322).
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Mark Ponte, “The Black in Amsterdam in 1650” in: ed. Colfina and Runia, Black in the Time of Rembrandt (W Books/Museum Rembrandthuis, 2020) 44–61.
Marc Ponte, “Zwarte vrouwen in het midden van de zeventiende eeuw”, in: Maarten Hell ed., Amstelodomum. All Amsterdam acts. Ruzie, rouw en roddels bij de notaris, 1578–1915 (Amsterdam, 2022) 130–143.
Marc Ponte, “The Afro-Atlantic Gemeance in Amsterdam in the zeventiende-euews”, TSEG/Journal of Social and Economic Studies of the Low Countries, 15(4), p. 33-62. DOI: https://lnkd.in/eEvRw32X.
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Anthony Grafton is the Henry Putnam University Professor at Princeton University, where he has taught since 1975. His special interests are the culture of Renaissance Europe, books and readers, and science and education in the West from antiquity to the 19th century. century and science from antiquity to the Renaissance. He is the author and co-author of numerous books, including Forgers and Critics: Creativity and Duality in Western Science (1990); Ink Fingers: Bookmaking in Early Modern Europe (2020); and The Art of Discovery: Exploring the Past in Renaissance Europe (2022).
Pamela Smith is Seth Lowe Professor, Director of the Center for Science and Society, and Chair of the Department of Dutch-Language World Studies at Columbia University.
Professor Grafton will talk about the intellectual culture of early modern Dutch humanism with a particular focus on Leiden University. The report will provide a new look at the collection of early Dutch books from the library of the Holland Society of New York, housed in the Columbia University collection since 1901.
New Jersey Institute Of Technology
The lecture is organized by Arno Visser, Queen Wilhelmina Visiting Professor at Columbia University and Professor of Renaissance Texture Culture at Utrecht University, in collaboration with the Department of Dutch Language World Studies, Columbia University Rare Book and Manuscript Library. , the European Institute and the Holland Society of New York.
LH Seminar with Maria Adele Carey (New York University) – “Human Frontiers: The Chinese Abroad and the Making of Modern China.” Commentator: Madeline Zelin (Columbia, )
April 12, 4:20 PM – 6:00 PM LH Seminar with Maria Adele Carey (New York University) – “Human Frontiers: The Chinese Abroad and the Making of Modern China.” Commentator: Madeline Zelin (Columbia, )
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April 12 Workshop with Maria Adele Carey (New York University) from 4:20 pm to 6:00 pm. “The Human Frontier: Overseas Chinese and the Making of Modern China” Commentator: Madeleine Zelin (Columbia,
April 12 Workshop with Maria Adele Carey (New York University) from 4:20 pm to 6:00 pm. “The Human Frontier: The Chinese Abroad and the Making of Modern China.” Commentator: Madeline Zelin (Columbia, ).
This speech presents a genealogy of “women’s status reports” produced in the decolonizing world. I consider the epistemological and ethical dilemmas of the rise of policy reporting, which since the 1970s has served as the primary vehicle for examining minority gender and sexuality in the multinational knowledge industry of the UN, government agencies, and NGOs. This new political economy of women and gender is based on biological deterministic understandings of gender differences based on fields such as demography and population studies. While they claimed to champion the rights of women and LGBTQ people, these accounts often glossed over political issues of caste, class, and racial dominance. Reiterating the report, I raise two methodological questions about gender: How does the global historiography of gender really use the vast archives of international policy reporting? What forms of knowledge have been lost because decades of intellectual energy and material resources have been devoted to reporting?
Co Op & Internship
Durba Mitra is Richard B. Wolff Associate Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Harvard University and Director of the Schlesinger Women’s Faculty at the Library of America. Her book Indian Sex Life: Sexuality and the Colonial Origins of Modern Social Thought (Princeton, 2020) shows how ideas about deviant female sexuality became the basis for modern social thought.
New York Latin American Seminar (department sponsored, organized by Baruch College) – Julio Esteban Vesub (Inst. Patagónico de Ciencias Sociales y Humanas/Columbia), “The Act of War”: Sketches of Major Francisco Host during the Conquest of Patagonia , 1879-1880.
April 14, 11:00 am to 1:00 pm Seminar on Latin America in New York (co-sponsored by the department, hosted by Baruch College) – Julio Esteban Vesub (Inst. Patagónico de Ciencias Sociales y Humanas/Columbia), “The Military Act: 1879 – Sketches of Major Francisco Hosta during the conquest of Patagonia in the 1880s.
Events And Workshops
Friday, April 14, 2023 • Seminar on Latin America in New York (co-sponsored by the department, hosted by Baruch College) –
• New York Latin American Seminar (department sponsored, organized by Baruch College) – Julio Esteban Vesub (Patagonia Institute of Social and Human Sciences/Columbia), “The Act of War”: Sketches of Major Francisco Host during the Conquest, Patagonia , 1879 -1880. »
Please join us on Friday, April 14th from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm to bring the Reformation to life? In this one-day colloquium, we will review recent developments in Reformation studies and explore avenues for future research. This event is being held in honor of the retirement of Reverend. Dr. Ewan K. Cameron, Henry Luce III President of the Reformed Church. Professor Cameron is the first and so far only holder of the Henry Luce III pulpit in the Reformed Church and will retire at the end of this academic year. Guest speakers include: Kenneth G. Bruce Gordon, Titus Street Professor of Theology at Yale Divinity School and Kirsten McFarlane, Associate Professor of Early Modern Christianity at the University of Oxford.
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Ewan Cameron was educated at Eton and Oxford, where he obtained a first class BA in 1979 and a Ph.D. In 1982 From 1979 to 1985 he was a lecturer at All Souls College, Oxford. In 1985, he moved to the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, where he worked in the department for 17 years, gaining the titles of Associate Professor (1992) and Professor (1997).