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DARRYL WRIGHT, Professor of Philosophy and Chair, Department of Humanities, Social Sciences and the Arts (Ph.D. University of Michigan): history of ethics; moral and political philosophy.


BILL ALVES, Professor of Music (D.M.A., University of Southern California): music composition, especially involving computer music, gamelan, tuning systems, abstract cinema.


ISABEL BALSEIRO, Alexander and Adelaide Hixon Professor of Humanities (Ph.D., New York University): African and Latin American literary and visual culture, as well as postcolonial intellectual history in comparative perspective.


HAL S. BARRON, Louisa and Robert Miller Professor of Humanities (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania): U.S. social and cultural history, the cultural construction of the “rural” in the 20th century, the impact of ethnic food on American culture.


DAVID CUBEK, Asst. Professor of Music and Director of the Claremont concert orchestra (D.M.A., Northwestern University): symphonic music since 1750; 18th and 19th century musical form & analysis.


MARIANNE DE LAET, Assoc. Professor of Anthropology and Science, Technology, and Society (Ph.D. Anthropology, University of Utrecht): practices of knowledge-making in scientific and other cultural environments, material effects of knowledge on the world, cultural influences that channel, organize, enable and constrain knowing.


ERICA DYSON, Asst. Professor of Religious Studies (Ph.D., Columbia University): religion and science, intersections between social-change activism and religion.


GARY R. EVANS, Ruth and Harvey Berry Professor of Entrepreneurial Leadership and Director, Entrepreneurial Network (Ph.D., UC Riverside): financial institutions and small business development, enterprise and entrepreneurship.


JEFFREY D. GROVES, Professor of Literature (Ph.D., The Claremont Graduate School): nineteenth-century American trade publishing; the history of the book in America.


CHARLES W. KAMM, Asst. Professor of Music and Director of Choral Activities, Joint Music (M.M.A. Yale University): 17th century performance practice, Scandinavian music, nationalism and the arts, aesthetics.


DEBRA MASHEK, Iris and Howard Critchell Asst. Professor of Psychology (Ph.D., Stony Brook University): psychological implications of romantic relationships and community connectedness.


RACHEL MAYERI, Assoc. Professor of Media Studies (M.F.A., UC San Diego): intersections of art and science in experimental documentaries and museum exhibits, from the Baroque origins of special effects to the science fictional discoveries of contemporary genetics.


RICHARD G. OLSON ’62, Professor of History and Willard W. Keith Jr. Fellow in the Humanities (Ph.D., Harvard University): history of science, gender issues in science, science and religion, U.S. science policy.


PAUL STEINBERG, Assoc. Professor of Political Science and Environmental Policy and Director, Center for Environmental Studies (Ph.D., UC Santa Cruz): design of political institutions for the conservation of biological diversity, global environmental politics, qualitative research methods.


LISA M. SULLIVAN, Professor of Economic History and Core Curriculum Director (Ph.D., University of Toronto): work and human identity, the political economy of higher education, socio-economic themes in children’s literature.


CHANG TAN, Asst. Professor of Chinese Language and Culture (Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin): contemporary Chinese art and literature; modernism and cultural studies.


.................................................................................................................................................. FIELDS OF CONCENTRATION


American Studies * Anthropology * Art * Asian American Studies Asian Studies


Black Studies (including Africana Studies) * Chicano Studies Classics


Cultural Studies * Dance


Economics * Education


Environmental Studies * H A R V E Y M U D D C O L L E G E | t h e m a n u a l 31


European Studies * Foreign Languages


Gender Studies (including Women’s Studies and Feminist Studies) * German Studies History * History of Ideas


Holocaust & Human Rights International Relations * Jewish Studies * Latin American Studies * Linguistics


Literature (including English and Literature in translation) *


Media Studies * Music *


(including Government and Public Policy) * Psychology * Religious Studies * Science, Technology, & Society * Sociology Theatre


Philosophy * Political Studies


* indicates fields regularly covered by HMC faculty


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