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By Susan Killenberg McGinn
Sept. 4, 2003
Some
of the nation's top scholars will gather in the coming academic
year at Washington University in St. Louis to have "Conversations"
on such topics as: What kind of international borders will exist
in the 21st century? What is the future of freedom? Who are "public
intellectuals"? And what purpose do they serve? Where did modern
humans come from?
Washington University is celebrating its 150th
anniversary in 2003-04, and in recognition of the sesquicentennial
theme, "Treasuring the Past, Shaping the Future," Arts & Sciences
is hosting a series of four "Conversations" among scholars whose
disciplines range from anthropology and biology to law and women's
studies. The "Conversations" are free and open to the public.
Thomas L. Friedman, a three-time Pulitzer Prize
winner, best-selling author and foreign affairs columnist for The
New York Times, will participate in the first "Conversation," to
be held from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Sept. 17 in the university's Graham
Chapel.
Seyla Benhabib, the Eugene Meyer Professor of
Political Science and Philosophy at Yale University, and Bruce Blair,
president of the Center for Defense Information in Washington, D.C.,
will join Friedman and three Washington University faculty as they
discuss "What Kind of International Borders Will Exist in the 21st
Century?"
James V. Wertsch, Ph.D., Washington University's
Marshall S. Snow Professor in Arts & Sciences, will moderate the
first "Conversation," and Leila N. Sadat, J.D., professor of law,
and Satadru Sen, Ph.D., assistant professor of history in Arts &
Sciences, will round out the panel.
"The idea of 'Conversations' is to gather some
of the top minds in the country to reflect on key issues that will
affect not only the future of the university and the community,
but also the world," said Edward S. Macias, Ph.D., executive vice
chancellor and dean of Arts & Sciences. "They will not be formal
lectures, but more an opportunity for a mixture of scholars to discuss
important questions that should lead to some exciting interactions."
In selecting the first "Conversations" topic,
Wertsch pointed out that international borders no longer control
the flow of information, ideas, money or goods as they once did
suggesting that the nature of these borders may be changing.
"For some, this means that nation-states will
disappear and their borders become irrelevant. Others see qualitatively
new forms of borders emerging, borders such as those between civilizations
or between rich and poor; still others assert that the current form
and location of international borders will remain largely intact,"
said Wertsch, who is director of Washington University's International
and Area Studies Program and professor of education in Arts & Sciences.
"This 'Conversation' will focus on these issues and their implications
for local and global relations in the century ahead."
"Each 'Conversation' is designed to explore
an issue that one would hope is of enduring importance, say 25 or
50 years from now," said Iver Bernstein, Ph.D., professor of history
and one of the organizers of the series. "The tone will be informal,
without prepared papers, just a moderator and a set of questions
to focus the conversation; each is designed to be easily understood
by a lay or non-specialist audience."
The three other "Conversations" topics, which
will be held from 10 to 11:30 a.m. in Graham Chapel, are: "The Future
of Freedom," Nov. 13; "Public Intellectuals," Feb. 12; and "Modern
Human Origins," March 26.
For more information, call (314) 935-6820.
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