Donna Adamo
(315) 443-5172
Louis Menand, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and New Yorker staff writer, will present “A Man is Shot: The Content of a Cinematic Technique,” Thursday, Oct. 7, in the Joyce Hergenhan Auditoriumin in Newhouse 3. The lecture is sponsored by the Dikaia Foundation’s Stephen Crane Annual Lecture Series, The College of Arts and Science’s English Department and the Goldring Arts Journalism Program based at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. Menand’s lecture is free and starts at 7:30 p.m.
Menand, who was born in Syracuse and raised near Boston, is widely recognized as a gifted writer, book critic, modern scholar and essayist of American studies. Menand is the author of four books and has written hundreds of reviews and essays. His most famous work “The Metaphysical Club” (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001), a detailed history of American intellectual and philosophical life in the 19th and 20th centuries, received a Pulitzer Prize in history in 2002.
“I thought he’d be the perfect person for the job,” says David Yaffe, assistant professor of English at Syracuse University who went to graduate school to study with Menand. “From the standpoint of the University, I couldn’t think of anybody better than Luke Menand. He embodies the University’s initiative, spurred by Chancellor Nancy Cantor, for Scholarship in Action. Luke does that in an extremely organic way. Often scholars put on a scholar hat when they write for scholars and a public hat when they write for the public. Luke doesn’t. He writes the same way whenever he writes, whoever he’s writing for.”
Menand graduated from Pomona College before attending Harvard Law School for one year (1973-1974). It was during his first year of law school at Harvard when he realized he didn’t “have the personality” to be a lawyer because he “didn’t like to argue.” He transferred to Columbia University, where he earned a Ph.D. in English. He taught at Princeton University and the City University of New York before being named the Robert M. and Anne T. Bass Professor of English and American Literature and Language at Harvard University. Menand once told a Harvard Magazine reporter he doesn’t revise his writings, preferring instead to write “one draft, very deliberately.”
Of Menand’s Pulitzer Prize-winning talents, Yaffe says, “His writing is so engaging and meets the standards of great writing. You absolutely have to read one sentence to the next. It is a rare gift. He’s a successful writer on his own, but it so happens he’s also an academic.” Yaffe adds, “Luke covers a lot of range and has written about everything from ‘Lord of the Rings’ to Stephen Pinker.”
Menand’s lecture is part of the Stephen Crane Annual Lecture Series, which is sponsored by the Dikaia Foundation. The series was established to honor one of SU’s most noteworthy alumni, Stephen Crane. Crane, who only lived to age 29, had an enormous impact on the literary world and is best known for his 1891 Civil War novel, “The Red Badge of Courage.” The annual lecture series addresses various aspects of American literature, with lectures given by literary scholars of high stature—an appropriate tribute to Crane.
June 05, 2012 The program, designed in collaboration with the Casting Society of America, was developed for casting students, including key professional components and core courses with fellow Tepper students.
Read more
August 24, 2012 Natalie Teale, a senior Earth sciences and geography major in Syracuse University’s College of Arts and Sciences, spent the summer as part of an immersive research experience in the cloud forest of Costa Rica.
Read more
September 13, 2012 Syracuse University today announced that it has surpassed its goal for the most ambitious fundraising effort in the institution’s history.
Read more
September 10, 2012 Civil engineering professor Cliff Davidson had a breathtaking view of the City of Syracuse from a rooftop garden recently. But it’s the possibilities of that prime location that made the experience memorable.
Read more
September 10, 2012 Trauma, psychiatric medications, family therapy, nutrition and systems reform are a sampling of the topics experts from across the country will discuss at the Children’s Mental Health Summit, September 27-29 in Syracuse.
Read more