NEWS

Michael Stanislawski has recieved a Festschrift (an edited volume honoring a noted academic) in honor of his contributions to the field of European Jewish History.

Michael Stanislawski has recieved a Festschrift (an edited volume honoring a noted academic) in honor of his contributions to the field of European Jewish History. The Festschrift, entitled “A Jew in the Street”: New Perspectives on European Jewish History in Honor of Michael Stanislawski, was edited by Nancy Sinkoff, Jonathan Karp, James Loeffler, and Howard Lupovich, and contains an essay by Elisheva Carlebach and sixteen other Columbia PhD’s who studied with Stanislawski. See more here.

Kim Phillips-Fein authored a review of John Ganz’s publication When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s in The Chronicle of Higher Education, which explores the history of right-wing politics throughout the 1990s in America.

Kim Phillips-Fein authored a review of John Ganz’s publication When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s in The Chronicle of Higher Education, which explores the history of right-wing politics throughout the 1990s in America. Read the review here.

Pamela Smith was awarded the 2024 International Prize for Research in Cultural History by the Hans and Helga Eckensberger Foundation in collaboration with the Herzog August Library.

Pamela Smith was awarded the 2024 International Prize for Research in Cultural History by the Hans and Helga Eckensberger Foundation in collaboration with the Herzog August Library. The award honors distinguished researchers who work in the field of cultural history with a focus on the history of knowledge. As part of the award, Professor Smith organized a summer session with Tina Asmussen, Asst. Professor for early modern mining history at the Ruhr University Bochum, entitled “MINESCAPES: Socio-Natural Landscapes of Extraction and Knowledge in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period”, which took place from May 31 to June 10, 2024 at the Herzog August Library. Read more about the award here.

Mae Ngai’s new book, Corky Lee’s Asian America: Fifty Years of Photographic Justice (coedited with Chee Wang Ng), was reviewed in the New York Times, the New Yorker, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the PBS-News Hour.  Ngai also discussed the book in several interviews and podcasts, including They Call Us Bruce.

Mae Ngai’s new book, Corky Lee’s Asian America: Fifty Years of Photographic Justice (coedited with Chee Wang Ng), was reviewed in the New York Times, the New Yorker, the San Francisco Chronicle, and the PBS-News Hour.  Ngai also discussed the book in several interviews and podcasts, including They Call Us Bruce.

 

 

Rhiannon Stephens was named as a recipient of the 2024 Faculty Mentoring Award, which recognizes senior faculty who have demonstrated an exceptional commitment to faculty mentoring through their work with tenure-track and mid-career faculty in developing their careers.

Rhiannon Stephens was named as a recipient of the 2024 Faculty Mentoring Award, which recognizes senior faculty who have demonstrated an exceptional commitment to faculty mentoring through their work with tenure-track and mid-career faculty in developing their careers. Read more here.

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