Newsletter  Volume 3 Issue 16
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May 8, 2017
This issue of our newsletter is sent to members and friends of the Emory University Emeritus College (EUEC). I hope the newsletter will help keep you informed about our activities and help you feel connected with our members throughout the U.S.  On the left are links to our website and links to contact either me or the EUEC office.   
 
With best wishes,
Gray 

Gray F. Crouse
Director, EUEC
In this Issue:
DirectorMessage from the Director
  
 

Today is Commencement--a major day in the life of the University.  It is interesting that we celebrate this day not as an end to students' study at the University but rather as the beginning of their new lives.Similarly, at the Emeritus College we celebrate not the ending of one's life as a faculty member at Emory, but rather the beginning of a new phase of faculty life at Emory that in many ways can be more interesting and enjoyable.  I have just finished grading final exams in my class and assigning grades.  That is a task that I will not miss, along with getting emails from students wondering why they got a "B"--as a pre-med they wanted a higher grade.

 

Many thanks are due to Gretchen Schulz for stepping in at the last minute when our Monday speaker canceled, and giving a great presentation on evil in Shakespeare's plays.  That is not a theme for this period, although next Monday's presentation will be on violence and crime, albeit from a healthcare perspective.  There is of course a lot of attention given to violence and crime in the media, but very little of that from a healthcare perspective, which is why I am particularly interested in next Monday's Colloquium.

 

Also in this issue is the announcement of people chosen for two important administrative positions at Emory.  Of most interest to us is the new Provost, to whom EUEC reports.  Dwight McBride comes highly recommended and I am hoping that once he has a chance to begin to settle in here he can come and meet with us and see for himself what a vital organization we have!

 

In this issue, we learn more about one of our recent award winners and celebrate more new members.  There is a brief report of the retirement seminar that two of our members, Peter Sebel and Frank Gordon, gave last Thursday.  They did a great job and the recording of that seminar will soon be available.  Much thanks to both of them for this valuable service to our faculty colleagues.

 
I am very grateful to Herb Benario and Gretchen Schulz for help with proofing and editing.  
 
LCMay15TopLunch Colloquium May 15



Violence and Crime: The Healthcare Response

The Luce Center
Room 130
11:30-1:00



 
Angela F. Amar
, PhD, RN, FAAN, Associate Professor and Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education, Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing

Click here to read more below about this Colloquium

LCMay1TopLunch Colloquium May 1



"Something wicked this way comes":  The Problem of Evil in Shakespeare's Plays





Gretchen Schulz, Professor of English Emerita, Oxford College of Emory University

Click here to read more below about this Lunch Colloquium 
 
Bianchi Excellence Award


EUEC is extremely fortunate to have funds that can be awarded to members to support research.  Applications are due May 25 for the Bianchi Excellence Awards, and information about applying can be seen by clicking here.  The award provides members with financial support for ongoing intellectual activities by means of small, strategic grants to cover expenses incurred in pursuit of a broad range of projects.


AwardTopEUEC Distinguished Faculty Award--Russ Richey


In the next few issues, we will be presenting the nominating letters for our award winners.

Click here to read below about Russ Richey


Financing Your Retirement II:  Return of the Asset Allocators   May 4

Two of our own members, Peter Sebel, MB BS, PhD, MBA, Professor of Anesthesiology, and Frank Gordon, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Pharmacology, gave this retirement seminar to a large and appreciative audience.  They spoke about estimation of fixed and variable expenses, funding sources for retirement (investments/Emory retirement/Social Security), simulations of retirement outcomes, the issue of financial advisors and asset allocation--what is it and why do it? --and index funds--why average is good enough.  

A recording of this seminar was made and is available on the videos portion of our website.


New Provost and Business and Finance Vice Presidents

Dwight McBride (left) and Christopher Augostini

On May 3, Emory University President Claire E. Sterk announced two key University leadership appointments.  "I am thrilled to announce the appointment of Dwight McBride, PhD, as provost and executive vice president of academic affairs as well as the appointment of Christopher Augostini as executive vice president for business and administration," says Sterk.

"These two appointments will build upon Emory's exceptional leadership team. We look forward to working with Dwight and Chris, whose leadership and vision will help Emory realize its bold ambitions now and well into the future," says Sterk.  "Dwight and Chris share a passion for academic excellence and a compelling vision for Emory's future, its faculty, students and staff. I would like to thank the search committees for their hard work and dedication in this process."

 

Dwight A. McBride, PhD, will begin his tenure at Emory on July 1, 2017. Reporting to Sterk, McBride will serve as Emory's chief academic officer, directing and collaborating with deans from each of Emory's nine schools and colleges, with an emphasis on academic excellence and inclusivity.

 

"I'm thrilled and deeply humbled to be selected as Emory University's next provost," McBride says. "I've long been impressed with Emory and its reputation for research, clinical and teaching excellence. And throughout this search process with each successive visit to Atlanta and to campus, I fell a bit more in love with the institution and the incredible aspirations its constituents have for its future.

 

"I am delighted to be joining Emory's senior leadership team, and especially by the opportunity to work closely with President Sterk," he says. "Together, along with our faculty colleagues, we will ensure that Emory continues to advance its reputation for academic excellence."

 

McBride joins Emory from Northwestern University where he currently serves as dean of the graduate school and associate provost for graduate education, as well as the Daniel Hale Williams Professor of African American Studies, English and Performance Studies.

 

During his time as dean and associate provost, The Graduate School made unprecedented progress in diversifying Northwestern's PhD programs, oversaw a major increase to the base stipend rate and other forms of financial and academic support for PhD and MFA students, expanded professional development offerings for graduate students and postdoctoral fellows, and created the Office for Academic Affairs in the graduate school, which is responsible for maintaining the excellence of the degree programs.

 

In addition, McBride expanded outreach efforts to create a greater sense of community among graduate students and postdoctoral fellows, established the Office of Diversity & Inclusion within the school, and significantly increased the number of training grants and other sources of external funding to support graduate students and postdocs.

 

McBride received his undergraduate degree in English and African American Studies from Princeton University. He earned his master's and PhD in English from the University of California, Los Angeles. McBride previously served as dean of the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and on the faculty of the University of Pittsburgh.

 

An award-winning author of numerous publications that examine connections between race theory, black studies and identity politics, McBride is the founder and co-editor of the James Baldwin Review.  His work has received special citations from the Crompton-Noll Award Committee of the Modern Language Association, and his research has been supported by the Mellon Foundation, the Ford Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

 

McBride has served on the executive committee of the Association of American Universities (AAU) Association of Graduate Schools; the board of directors of American Colleges & Universities; and the GRE Board, among others.

 

Christopher Augostini will begin his tenure as Emory's executive vice president for business and administration on July 1, 2017. Augostini joins Emory from Georgetown University where he serves as senior vice president and chief operating officer.

 

Emory's Business and Administration Division is a broad-based group of nearly 1,400 staff members dedicated to enabling Emory to achieve its vision and goals. The division is organized to support an environment that fosters excellence in people, facilities, infrastructure and financial resources.

 

In his position, reporting to Sterk, Augostini will be responsible for Emory's fiscal and administrative affairs. His primary responsibilities include strategic financial planning and stewardship of Emory's resources to support the academic and operational missions for the university.

 

Before joining Georgetown University, Augostini served as chief of staff to the first deputy mayor of the City of New York under Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, as well as deputy budget director and director of intergovernmental affairs overseeing the city's efforts in Washington, DC, and Albany, NY. He has served in numerous positions within New York State, including principal budget analyst for the NYS Ways and Means Committee and program analyst for the NYS Assembly Higher Education Committee.

 

Augostini holds master's and bachelor's degrees in public affairs and policy from the State University of New York at Albany.

 

The complete Emory News report can be read by clicking here

 

 

A summary of the Faculty Council meeting of April 11 can be seen by clicking here.  Items discussed included the Faculty Club Task Force report, criminal background checks for new faculty hire, and a report from the Title IX/VII Working Group.


LCMay15BotLunch Colloquium May 15


Violence and Crime: The Healthcare Response

Angela F. Amar, PhD, RN, FAAN, Associate Professor and Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education, Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing

Victims of violence are unfortunately ever-present in healthcare today, and nurses are often the first to interact with victims, stepping into uncomfortable or difficult situations. To ensure patient and provider safety and enable the best possible outcomes, every nurse should be well versed in forensic and theoretical issues of violence. Perhaps no one has done more to ensure that that's the case than Angela Amar, an early pioneer in forensic nursing who has been instrumental in developing relevant nursing curriculum and establishing standards that have been accepted as applicable nationwide and worldwide. The book on the subject that she recently co-authored won two (that's right, not one, but two) Book of the Year Awards from the American Journal of Nursing in 2016.
 
Dr. Amar will share her experience with and expertise in this fast growing specialty that sits at the intersection of violence and health, facilitating connection among healthcare, social services, and criminal justice systems to assist victims, perpetrators, and their families to receive assistance, services, and resources. She will discuss the evolution of forensic nursing and its integration into nursing education at the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, across the United States, and globally.

About Angela Amar

Dr. Amar is an Associate Professor in the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing at Emory University. Her research focuses on traumatic experiences, especially violence, mental health responses to trauma, and aspects of forensic nursing. Research outcomes are the identification of victims and potential victims so that services and resources to manage and avoid experiencing trauma and violence are received. Dr. Amar received her BSN and MSN from Louisiana State University Medical Center and her PhD from the University of Pennsylvania. While at the University of Pennsylvania, she was a Fontaine Fellow and a Pre-Doctoral Fellow in the International Center for Research on Women, Children, and Families. She has received intramural funding at Boston College and external funding from Health Resource and Service Administration. She is certified as an Adult Advanced Practice Psychiatric nurse. Dr. Amar serves as Research Column Editor and on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Forensic Nursing. Memberships include Sigma Theta Tau International, International Association of Forensic Nurses, International Society of Psychiatric Nurses, and Nursing Network on Violence against Women, International.

Dr. Amar was recently awarded two 2016 American Journal of Nursing (AJN) Book of the Year Awards for her publication,  A Practical Guide to Forensic Nursing. Dr. Amar's book was awarded first place in the Critical Care/Emergency Nursing category and third place in the Medical-Surgical Nursing category. The book, co-authored by L. Kathleen Sekula, professor at Duquesne University School of Nursing, is a practical, evidence-based guide that helps nurses understand and apply forensic nursing science in their practices. It highlights sociocultural diversity and relevant legal, ethical, societal, and policy issues while including challenges and potential solutions in the practice area. It also introduces practical and theoretical perspectives on violence and provides valuable resources, including injury assessment and violence prevention strategies as well as an overview of relevant legal, ethical, societal, and policy issues.

"These recognitions are a reflection of Dr. Amar's sustained and significant contributions to nursing education and practice," said Linda McCauley, dean of the Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing. "Her work has established a national framework for preparing nurses to serve as the first line of defense for survivors of violence and trauma when they enter the health care system."

Dr. Amar played an integral role in developing course content and establishing national forensic nursing education standards for the International Association of Forensic Nursing. She also worked with the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) to establish the Advanced Forensic Nursing certification.        

Prior to joining Emory, Dr. Amar developed forensic nursing programming for Georgetown University and Boston College, and worked with key stakeholders, including Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (SANEs), law enforcement, social services, the Department of Public Health, non-profit and hospital-based violence programs, to develop an educational model for nursing schools nationwide.

Click here to return to top 
 

AwardBotEUEC Distinguished Faculty Award--Russ Richey


I am pleased to nominate Russ Richey, Dean Emeritus of Candler School of Theology and William R. Cannon Distinguished Professor of Church History, Emeritus, for the

EUEC Faculty Award of Distinction. Russ served as Dean of Candler from 2000-2006, followed by two years on the faculty, including holding the prestigious Cannon Chair of Church History. He has since returned to his home in Durham, NC, where he had served for many years on the faculty--and as Associate Dean--at the Divinity School at Duke University before coming to Emory. He is currently Research Fellow at the Center for Studies in the Wesleyan Tradition at Duke.

 

Although Russ now lives in Durham, he has been a member of the EUEC and has kept close ties with Emory, including continuing service as co-editor of the Emory-based online journal, Methodist Review. Since his retirement, he has offered a lecture at Candler which was the basis for a book, Formation for Ministry in American Methodism (General Board of Higher Education and Ministry, UMC, 2014); and a festschrift in his honor, based on lectures given for a "retirement" event at Candler and entitled The Renewal of United Methodism: Mission Ministry and Connection, was published in 2012 by the GBHEM.

 

But most impressive is Russ's extraordinary scholarly production since his retirement, in both public lectures and writing. His CV and his report on activities since 2016 offer details of his productivity and contributions but I highlight here some of the most important.

 

Books: In addition to the book and Festschrift mentioned above and several books published with the Methodist General Board of Higher Education and Ministry, Russ has published Denominationalism Illustrated and Explained (Wipf & Stock, 2013) and Methodism in the American Forest (Oxford University Press, 2015). Three other books, two co-authored, were published at the time of or shortly after his retirement.

 

Journal Articles: Since 2012 he has published at least six scholarly articles in journals or as book chapters plus various book reviews.

 

Papers, Lectures, and Talks: Since 2012 Russ has offered papers and lectures in a variety of church, academic, and professional meetings on an impressively regular schedule, averaging perhaps twelve a year. During this time he has also done consulting work in a number of ecclesial and academic contexts.

 

Finally, Russ was recently awarded a grant by the Louisville Institute for a new study, Why Methodism's Broken Heart? Kentucky, Ohio, and Indiana: 1816-1876.  It should be evident that Russ Richey "hit the ground running" when he retired, continuing at an admirable and even astonishing rate the high level of scholarship he had displayed during his academic career before he became Dean of the School of Theology; and he has maintained his high public visibility both academic and ecclesial. In doing this he has maintained ties and made contributions to Emory; and he continues to bring credit to Emory's reputation.

 

For these reasons, I think Russ Richey is an exemplary candidate for the EUEC Faculty Award of Distinction. I hope the Honors and Awards Committee will come to the same conclusion and give him this highly deserved award.

 

--Jon Gunnemann 

 


FABot
 

Eugene C. Bianchi

Professor of Religion, Emeritus
  


Gene Bianchi writes: "My cat Max and I are sending you the lowdown on my third book of poems, The Hum of It All: Poems from a Personal Journey.  You can read four poems and the Introduction and find out about our initial offering at a significant discount. Max and I are not in it for the money, (Parson's Porch Publishers contributes proceeds to the poor in Appalachia) just the fame and fun."

 
 
NewMemBotNew Members


New members are the lifeblood of any organization. Please make a special effort to welcome them to EUEC!

In transition:

Phyllis E. Kozarsky, MD, Professor of Medicine

Susan E. Shapiro
, PhD, RN, FAAN, Clinical Professor of Nursing

Theodosia Wade, BS, MA, Professor of Pedagogy in Biology, Oxford College   
 
Click here to return to top

LCMay1BotLunch Colloquium May 1


"Something wicked this way comes":  The Problem of Evil in Shakespeare's Plays

   

Gretchen Schulz, Professor of English Emerita, Oxford College of Emory University

 

When Sam Dixon, CEO and Artistic Director of Spivey Hall, was forced to cancel his presentation at our Lunch Colloquium on Monday, May 1, Gretchen Schulz volunteered to present on her favorite topic, a topic never more timely than now, when Emory is concluding the extensive programming with which the University has celebrated "The Year of Shakespeare," programming scheduled in support of the visit of the First Folio to our campus, our city, our state.  Given the date of the Colloquium, she considered offering something appropriate to "the merry month of May."  But given Emeritus College plans for a group visit to the Shakespeare Tavern to see their production of Richard III sometime in June (with the director of that production set to speak at a Colloquium soon thereafter), she decided to do something decidedly UNmerry.  She offered us a talk (that she first offered to a conference of interdisciplinarians a couple of years ago). It was entitled "'Something wicked this way comes':  The Problem of Evil in Shakespeare's Plays."

In the earlier talk--as in the updated version of last Monday--she argued that no one has ever been wiser about the problems we've taken to calling "wicked problems" than William Shakespeare--including the "wickedest problem of them all, the problem of wickedness itself."  So much of what happens in the world (and in the world as reflected in art) is awful-in ways that prompt us to ask "Why?"  And of course we most want an explanation when the awful can be traced to some human being--someone we might characterize as "evil."  According to Gretchen, Shakespeare's greatest villains and the plays they inhabit address this problem, raising questions about the nature of human nature and suggesting answers from a variety of perspectives that deserve designation as "interdisciplinary." She proceeded to discuss how Shakespeare "anatomizes" the "hard hearts" of his villains (the quote is from Lear) in Richard III, Macbeth, and Othello--positing (and portraying) causes for their behaviors that might well be labeled theological, psychological, sociological, even biological--if we were to use the labels we use today when discussing the evil characters we find in our own midst--and in our own drama. (She was, she said, thinking of Frank Underwood--from House of Cards--and his real-life counterparts, whoever they might be.)

After showing us a clip from a movie of Richard III in which Ian McKellen plays the infamous protagonist who announces he "is determined to prove a villain" in his opening speech, Gretchen first developed the theological interpretation of the man and the awful events for which he is (or seems to be) responsible--namely, the view the Tudors (who had followed Richard into power) promulgated, the view that God was actually the one responsible for Richard and all he did (and indeed for the whole bloody entirety of the Wars of the Roses), using Richard (as He had used all the other villains of that bloody period) to punish the Plantagenets for deposing and killing Richard II, back at the end of the 14th century. And, of course, according to this view, it was God who swept the Tudors into power, too.  But Gretchen went on to argue that the play does not itself insist on the theological interpretation of events that so many of its characters adopt.  From the get-go, from that first speech in which Richard introduces himself as a villain who is proud to be so, it's clear that there's a whole other interpretation of events possible here--a secular one that we'd call psychological today.  She referenced some of the ways Shakespeare develops Richard in psychological depth before concluding this portion of her presentation by pointing out that, after all, there's really no need for anyone to choose between the theological and psychological views of the play's characters and events. As she said,  

 

those critiquing the text of the play--and those mounting a production of the play--can have it both ways if they want to, can see it as suggesting that God is working through the psyches of the characters, that He gives Richard the inborn nature and the life-time of experience that make him feel and think and act in the awful way he does. If we want, we can see Fate and Free Will working together here--in the paradoxical way so many of us persuade ourselves it's possible for them to do.

 

Gretchen next showed us a clip from a production of Macbeth, the scene in which the witches greet Macbeth (and Banquo) and tell Macbeth (played by, you guessed it, Ian McKellen) that he "shalt be King hereafter."  As she said,  

 

It's often been observed that this play (and this title character) have a lot in common with Richard III (and Richard III). It also allows and rewards approaches through the disciplinary perspectives I've characterized as theological and psychological. But there's a big difference--a BIG difference. This time, Shakespeare has handled his material (and it is, again, supposedly historical material) so the play itself posits a point of view, indeed, seems to insist on the theological view that God is at work in the world of the play (as, by implication, in our own). And it insists on the further theological view that the Devil is at work in the world of the play, as well. And not just through characters who are portrayed as good or evil (with more or less psychological depth). No. In Macbeth, it's apparent from the very start that Good and Evil contend around, all around, the men and women of the play, as well as within them.

 

Yes, the Ghost of Banquo may be a figment of Macbeth's imagination, a construct of his guilty conscience, a psychological phenomenon. After all, Lady Macbeth (and the others at the banquet) do not see this ghost. But Banquo does see the witches--and converse with them, as Macbeth does. The witches are real. Evil is real--evil external to the characters. And God himself seems to be busy fighting that evil--even as many of the characters do--not using it to accomplish his divine purposes (as in Richard III). The battle in which Macbeth finally falls is clearly not portrayed as just one more secular struggle in the sequence of secular struggles that makes up Scotland's history. Those who win--like those who win at the end of Richard III--see themselves as winning with the help of God-- and they say so. But this time, the play itself seems to say the same--urges us to take the theological view--by which God and good men join together to defeat evil, this time--though it's pretty clear that evil will continue to be a problem, a "wicked problem," for God and good men in times to come.

Of course, Gretchen did acknowledge that the theological interpretation of the events of the play doesn't vitiate the value of a psychological interpretation.  Shakespeare does handle Macbeth--and Lady Macbeth--so we see deep into their psyches. But, she argued, what we see there is further evidence that we should take the play's theology seriously, for it's clear that both characters experience an inner version of the struggle between the forces of Good and Evil that is going on around them in the world of the play. Both are good enough to suffer awful guilt at the evil that they do.  But both devolve into people bad enough that we find it hard to object when Malcolm (who takes over at the end) characterizes them as a "dead butcher and his fiendlike queen" (5.8.69).

Gretchen began the final portion of her presentation by showing us a clip from Othello that shows just how devilish--and how devilishly attractive--its villain, Iago, can be--especially when played by someone as devilishly attractive as Kenneth Branagh. (Or someone as devilishly attractive as Ian McKellen--for Gretchen wants us to know that there is another fine version of Othello out there in which McKellen is playing the role.) As Gretchen explained, Othello is like Richard III and Macbeth in that it invites interpretation in terms of the orthodox theology of the time; it, too, suggests that the forces of Good and Evil contend in the world the characters inhabit and within the characters themselves. In fact, in this play, Shakespeare goes so far as to imitate the so-called Morality Plays of the Middle Ages, allegorical dramas in which characters symbolizing Good and Evil struggle for possession of the protagonist's soul.  Even an audience unfamiliar with those predecessor plays would soon realize that Shakespeare is here handling the characters and plot (and even the settings) in an almost allegorical (and theological) way, with Desdemona symbolizing Good, Iago symbolizing Evil, and Othello the man in the middle, who marries her (and all she stands for) at the start but then lets Iago convince him that she's a "fair devil" (3.34.475), so he allies himself with Iago instead (in a scene that's a parody of a marriage ceremony).  We watch in horror as this trusted Venetian general, sent to Cyprus to fight for Christian civilization against the threatening Turks, himself "turns Turk" (2.3.169) under the influence of the most "Turkish" character in the play, the real "fair devil," "honest honest Iago" (5.2.151), who is so good at seeming good, and making others seem evil--and making others do evil, too--as he makes Othello kill Desdemona, thinking all the time he's doing what's appropriate in a civilized Christian world. At the end of the play, when Othello realizes how the "demi-devil" Iago (5.2.297) has "ensnared [his] soul" (5.2.298), he attempts to reclaim his soul by punishing himself for the sin he has committed, calling upon the good still within him to kill the evil, by killing himself. And it's worth noting that Shakespeare has him characterize his suicide by associating that good with Venice and that evil with Turkey; he asks those listening to his final speech to remember and remind others of a better Othello in an earlier time, "in Aleppo once, / Where a malignant and a turbaned Turk / Beat a Venetian and traduced the state."  Then, he says, "I took by the throat the circumcised dog / And smote him--thus" (5.3.348-352). As he stabs himself, he is both the Venetian and the Turk, as both this play and its Morality Play predecessors suggests we all are, a mix of capacities for good and bad, but in these final moments, it does seem as if the Venetian emerges ascendant. And, in spite of everything, we probably agree with Cassio, who sums Othello up as "great of heart" (5.3.357).

But no sooner had Gretchen persuaded us that the play is a sort of Morality Play than she began to argue that it's much more than an updated version of a Morality Play. Yes, she said,  

 

it invites the theological interpretation I've just outlined, but it certainly invites, indeed insists on, a psychological interpretation, too. There's at least as much realism here as symbolism, and much of it calls the simplistic theological view of the characters and events into question.  The leads are all portrayed as so credibly complex in their thoughts and feelings that they don't slip easily into place in an allegorical drama. And nowhere is this more apparent than in Shakespeare's handling of Iago. He's made Iago a very different sort of villain than Richard III and Macbeth, very different, in fact, than any of the other villains he's created up to this point in his career.  How so?  Iago is a villain who doesn't believe he's a villain.

 

Of course, she explained, he understands that others in his world would label him a villain--if they were ever to discover he's not the "honest honest Iago" (5.2.151) he so successfully pretends to be. But he thinks that sort of thinking is just nonsense.  Traditional morality is a lot of hooey. And though he's quite willing to talk the talk--even walk the walk when it suits him--that's only ever a means to the end of his own satisfaction, an end he sees as good enough to justify any means at all, including means others might label evil. In short, he's a thoroughly Machiavellian character, and he voices his untraditional, amoral views with enough intelligence and intensity to constitute a real challenge to the orthodox old-think that's typical of the others in the play, those silly enough to believe that life is indeed a sort of Morality Play.

Forget good and evil. What Iago believes in is reason and passion. And it's reason that can make a man the king of the beasts with whom he is otherwise allied.  As we heard him explain to Desdemona's frustrated suitor, Roderigo, in the clip from the play, "If the balance of our lives had not one scale of reason to poise another of sensuality, the blood and baseness of our natures would conduct us to most prepost'rous conclusions. But we have reason to cool our raging motions, our carnal stings or unbitted lusts" (1.3.321-326).  Success in our ventures depends upon virtu, such as Machiavelli touts, not virtue. As Iago says, "Virtue? A fig! 'Tis in ourselves that we are thus or thus" (1.3.314-15). And no God (or devil) has anything to do with it.

As Gretchen said, it's a point of view that's plausible--dauntingly plausible--given how Shakespeare handles what happens in the course of the play. And it can be seen as confirming a philosophy that rejects theology and its moralizing vocabulary-asserting a world view that's Hobbesian, even Darwinian, far before their time.

The clock was ticking, so Gretchen concluded her presentation with her comments on Othello and Iago, though she said she had hoped to be able to talk about King Lear and its villains, as well--its villains, plural--five characters who are like Iago in refusing to see themselves as villains.  Questions and comments from the audience followed (as interesting as questions and comments from our audience always tend to be). And one question did finally allow Gretchen to make the main point she most wanted to make about Lear-namely that it's that very plurality of villains who reject the thinking that would label them villains, who again, like Iago, reject theology and its moralizing vocabulary, that make the play so grim.  After all, as she pointed out, in the world of Othello, Iago is an anomaly.  In the world of Lear, such Machiavellian men (and women) abound.  And those who think the "old-think," who hold dear the values we would characterize as "Christian" (though the play is set in pre-Christian Britain)?  Tragically, they do seem very like the "moral fool[s]" the more "modern" characters accuse them of being--"modern" characters like Gloucester's bastard son, Edmund, who, as a final brief clip from a film confirmed, has just such insidious appeal as too many of these Shakespearean villains (or is it "villains") have . .

--Gretchen Schulz 

ADDENDUM:

For those who might want to find and watch the full versions of the productions from which Gretchen drew clips, here is the relevant information, drawn from Wikipedia:

Richard III is a 1995 British drama film adapted from William Shakespeare's play of the same name, starring Ian McKellen, Annette Bening, Jim Broadbent, Robert Downey Jr., Nigel Hawthorne, Kristin Scott Thomas, Maggie Smith, John Wood, and Dominic West. The film sets the play in a fictional fascist version of 1930s Britain. The film's concept was based on a stage production directed by Richard Eyre for the Royal National Theatre, which also starred McKellen. The production was adapted for the screen by McKellen and directed by Richard Loncraine.  (Information about the film, including a transcript of the full screenplay on Ian McKellen's website can be seen by clicking here. Information on IMDb can be seen by clicking here.  The YouTube clip that Gretchen showed can be seen by clicking here.)

Macbethis a 1979 videotaped version of Trevor Nunn's Royal Shakespeare Company production of the play by William Shakespeare. Produced by Thames Television, it features Ian McKellen as Macbeth and Judi Dench as Lady Macbeth. The TV version was directed by Philip Casson. The original stage production was performed at The Other Place, the RSC's small studio theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon. It had been performed in the round before small audiences, with a bare stage and simple costuming. The recording preserves this style: the actors perform on a circular set and with a mostly black background; changes of setting are indicated only by lighting changes.  (The entire video can be seen on YouTube by clicking here.) 

 

Othello is a 1995 film based on William Shakespeare's tragedy of the same name. It was directed by Oliver Parker and stars Laurence Fishburne as Othello, Irène Jacob as Desdemona, and Kenneth Branagh as Iago. This is the first cinematic reproduction of the play released by a major studio that casts an African American 

actor to play the role of Othello.  (The YouTube clip that Gretchen showed can be seen by clicking here.  The IMDb listing, with a link to the Amazon Primer video, can be seen by clicking here.) 

 

Gretchen notes that you might also be interested in two other Othello's she likes very much, one with (you guessed it) Ian McKellen as Iago, the other with Frank Finlay as Iago (and Laurence Olivier as Othello, Maggie Smith as Desdemona).

Othello is a 1990 film produced by the Royal Shakespeare Company, starring Ian McKellenWillard WhiteImogen Stubbs, and Zoë Wanamaker. It is based on a stage production of William Shakespeare's play Othello, directed by Trevor Nunn, and later rethought for TV and filmed in a studio.   It was shot in a black box theater, so minimal props or scenery were needed.  (A description of this film can be found by clicking here.  It is not clear that this film is available anywhere, although a several minute clip of it can be seen on McKellen's website by clicking here.) 

 

Othello is a 1965 film based on the National Theatre Company's staging ofShakespeare's Othello (1964-66) staged by John Dexter. Directed by Stuart Burge, the film starred Laurence Olivier, Maggie Smith, Joyce Redman, and Frank Finlay, who all received Academy Award nominations, and provided film debuts for both Derek Jacobi and Michael Gambon.  (Information on the IMDb website can be seen by clicking here.)

 

And here is the info on the version of King Lear we saw a bit of:

King Lear is a 2008 television film based on the William Shakespeare play of the same name, directed by Trevor Nunn. It was broadcast on More4 in the UK on Christmas Day, and shown on PBS' Great Performances in the United States in March 2009. The production was filmed mainly at Pinewood Studios in England. It features the same cast and director as the 2007 RSC production, and started filming only a few days after the final performance at the New London Theatre, at Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire. The film was released on DVD in the UK and then in the US on 21 April 2009.  (The YouTube clip shown by Gretchen can be seen by clicking here.  More information on the film  can be seen by clicking here.)

 

The recording of this Lunch Colloquium is available on our videos page



WalkBotWalking the campus with Dianne

Our last stop took us on the outer fringes of campus....almost not really part of campus, but it's got Emory University's name, which makes it a part of the University community. The photo is Wesley Woods Towers.  It's really a lovely part of campus with garden areas, a creek and even some easy to maneuver walking trails.  This location of Wesley Woods includes the Geriatric Hospital, Wesley Woods towers, and Budd Terrace.  Here's a link for more information -- http://www.wesleywoods.org/healthcare/wesley-woods-center.html

I've provided a couple of additional photos to give you an idea of the beautiful area.  



Let's stay outside and take a walk closer to the Emeritus home (hint!).  This next place is so pleasant and picturesque and I'm sure many of you will recognize it.
   
 
   Where will you find this on the Emory campus?  




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Emory University Emeritus College

The Luce Center
825 Houston Mill Road NE #206

Atlanta, GA 30329

   

Emory University Emeritus College, The Luce Center, 825 Houston Mill Road NE #206, Atlanta, GA 30329
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