All News
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Dean of Faculty Suzanne Keen recognized 14 faculty members with Dean’s Scholarly Achievement Awards in three categories at the May 3 faculty meeting.
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As captain of Hamilton’s women’s basketball team, Kelcie Zarle ’22 is looking forward to combining her passions for the sport and communications after graduation as a social media coordinator for Moolah Kicks.
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Pavitra Sundar, associate professor of literature, recently participated in a roundtable discussion titled “Thinking, Doing, and Making with an Accent” hosted by the Program in Social, Cultural, and Critical Theory at the University of Arizona.
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The Huntington Library in Pasadena, Calif., recently hosted “Joycean Cartographers,” a conference to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the publication of James Joyce’s Ulysses.
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Associate Professor of Literature Pavitra Sundar was one of 45 authors invited to contribute a “keyword” to a special issue of the cinema studies journal Bioscope: South Asian Screen Studies.
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Austin Briggs, the Hamilton B. Tompkins Professor of English Literature Emeritus, recently participated in the 27th International James Joyce Symposium sponsored by the University of Trieste, Italy.
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Lucille Kline ’22 has been awarded a Critical Language Scholarship to study Russian through a virtual program offered by the University of Nizhny Novgorod. The Critical Language Scholarship is a program run by the U.S. Department of State for intensive language study in 15 critical languages.
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Associate Professor of Literature Pavitra Sundar was invited to be the chair and discussant for a recent talk by a fellow scholar of sound and radio, Vebhuti Duggal of Ambedkar University Delhi.
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“Making-of Videos: Of Placeless Studios and Pioneering Music Directors,” by Associate Professor of Literature Pavitra Sundar, appears as a chapter in Industrial Networks and Cinemas of India.
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Students in this fall’s Forever Wild: Cultural and Natural Histories of the Adirondack Park explored the social, political, and environmental issues and debates within the largest state park in the U.S. and presented their thoughts and findings online. Taught by Onno Oerlemans, the Elizabeth J. McCormack Professor of Literature, the course gave students a closer look at the geologic and conservation marvel that, in a non-pandemic semester, provides recreation and adventuring opportunities to many Hamilton students.
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