Law, Culture & Legacies of Slavery
Renowned historian, author and legal scholar, Annette Gordon-Reed will lecture on “Law, Culture and Legacies of Slavery” on Sept. 12 at 5 p.m. in Higgins Hall, room 300. Gordon-Reed, the Carol K. Pforzheimer Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Professor of History, and Charles Warren Professor of American Legal History Law at Harvard University, won a National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize for history for her book, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family. Her other works include Race on Trial: Law and Justice in American History, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy, and a biography of president Andrew Johnson. Sponsor: The Clough Center for the Study of Constitutional Democracy in collaboration with the BC Legal History Round-Table.
Aftermath Book Launch
The Boston College Center for Human Rights and International Justice will host a book launch for Aftermath: Deportation Law and the New American Diaspora, written by Law Professor Daniel Kanstroom, on Sept. 12 at 5:00 p.m. in the Heights Room of Corcoran Commons. Kanstroom will offer commentary on his book, and Harvard University Professor of Sociology Mary Waters will talk about the social effects of U.S. immigration policy on immigrant families and communities. Read more about the book and event.
Fighting teacher burnout
Almost half of new teachers leave the profession within their first year. New teachers need support, mentoring, encouragement, and, most importantly, hope in order to survive the challenges of their first years of teaching. Encouragement comes in the form of a book co-edited by Boston College Lynch School of Education Associate Professor Audrey Friedman, 2009 Massachusetts Professor of the Year. Burned In: Fueling the Fire to Teach features essays from visionary educators, including Friedman’s Lynch School colleagues Andy Hargreaves and Curt Dudley-Marling. According to the publisher, the personal stories, as well as powerful research findings about what teachers need to succeed in today’s classrooms, will help fuel new and veteran educators’ passion for teaching so they stay ‘burned in’ instead of burning out. Listen to an interview conducted by Boston College Libraries’ Brendan Rapple in which Friedman discusses the book and her own passion for classroom teaching.
A poet’s Magnum Opus
Epitaphs for the Journey, a new collection by award-winning poet and University Professor of English Paul Mariani, offers the best of his long and distinguished career: it brings together new poetry, revisits his extensive body of work which spans four decades, and includes revisions of earlier work that has already been highly acclaimed. Mariani’s lyrics chronicle his journey—from the streets of New York in the mid-twentieth century, growing up in a working-class family, to his own marriage, fatherhood and grandfatherhood. More at BC News.
God and humanity
Theologian Dominic F. Doyle, an associate professor of systematic theology in the Boston College School of Theology and Ministry, has published a new book that, according to the publisher, “shows how the Christian virtue of hope breathes new life into humanism, enabling believers to approach God as the human good.” In The Promise of Christian Humanism: Thomas Aquinas on Hope, Doyle shows how the work of St. Thomas Aquinas, Charles Taylor, Nicholas Boyle, and others reveals the essential bond between the Christian virtue of hope and the life-affirming sensibilities of humanism. Doyle has been honored with the John Templeton Award for Theological Promise and the Catholic Theological Society of America’s Catherine LaCugna Award to New Scholars.
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged Christianity, God, School of Theology and Ministry
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Transformation of a Jewish curse
A new book by Rabbi Ruth Langer, a professor of theology and associate director of the Center for Christian-Jewish Learning at Boston College, has been hailed as “masterful” by Jewish Ideas Daily. Rabbi Langer is an expert in Jewish tradition and Jewish-Christian relations. According to the publisher (Oxford University Press), in Cursing the Christians?: A History of the Birkat HaMinim, Rabbi Langer traces the transformation of the birkat haminim from a medieval Jewish curse of Christians to its modern transformation within the Jewish world into a general petition that God remove evil from the world.
Posted in Boston College Authors
Tagged Christian-Jewish Learning, Jewish, prayer, Theology Dept.
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