Newsletter  Volume 3 Issue 5
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November 28, 2016

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
 
Next week we will have the last Lunch Colloquium of the year.  We will certainly end the year on a high note, as EUEC Member Ron Schuchard will be talking with us about his award-winning work on T. S. Eliot.  Most of you are probably aware of the work that Ron has done on Eliot, but if not, you can read below and understand what a treat we have in store for us.  Such a treat, in fact, that his talk will occupy most of our Holiday Party time.  There will be holiday cookies and beverages and a chance to contribute to Toys for Tots, but Ron's visit will be our primary gift to ourselves. And why not? If we were to put him in a red hat he'd look just like you know whom (see the picture below).  For those of you unable to attend, please note that we will be webcasting the Colloquium, but the webcast will not be recorded. 
 
A full house enjoyed our last Lunch Colloquium with Marilynne McKay.  You can read about it below and also follow the provided link to hear it for yourself.  Among the other information in this issue is a notice about the passing of our dear friend and fellow member, Dana White.

I am very grateful to John Bugge, Herb Benario, and Gretchen Schulz for help with proofing and editing.  
 
LCDec5TopLunch Colloquium December 5



'Putting all of Tom together": Adventures and Revelations in Editing T. S. Eliot's Prose, 1974-2016

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



LCNov21TopLunch Colloquium November 21





Doctors in the Sherlockian Canon


 

 




Marilynne McKay

Professor of Medicine (Dermatology) Emerita

Click here to read below about this Colloquium

HolPartHoliday Party December 5


The main event of our traditional Holiday Party will be the great privilege of hearing Ron Schuchard talk about his work on T.S. Eliot (while we enjoy some holiday cookies and beverages). We will also, as usual, be collecting toys to contribute to Toys for Tots.  If you want to bring a toy to contribute to that effort, it would be most welcome.

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Medicare Open Enrollment ends December 7


Although you will likely keep the same medical plan you currently have for next year, if you currently have a Part D Prescription Drug Plan you should check to determine if there is a better plan for you next year, given the drugs you currently take.  To do that check, you can go to https://www.medicare.gov/find-a-plan/questions/home.aspx, fill in your location and the drugs you take, and you will then be shown a list of plans in your area and the costs for your drugs. You should do that check before the end of open enrollment on December 7.


A summary of the October 25 meeting of the University Senate can be read by clicking here


InMemTop


We note the passing of EUEC Members Dana F. White, Goodrich C. White Professor Emeritus of American Studies, and  Alfred Joseph Grindon, Professor Emeritus of Pathology.

Click here to read more below.

NewMemBotNew Members
 

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

Joseph P. Cadray, Jr., PhD, Senior Lecturer Emeritus of Educational Studies

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LCDec5BotLunch Colloquium December 5


"Putting all of Tom together": Adventures and Revelations in Editing T. S. Eliot's Prose, 1974-2016 

Ronald Schuchard, Goodrich C. White Professor of English, Emeritus
 
Ron Schuchard writes, "my stories of editing T. S. Eliot's prose are inextricably related to my friendship with Valerie Eliot, his second wife, whom I met in London in December 1974 when I was an Assistant Professor at Emory. Over the next thirty-eight years, until her death in 2012, I was privileged to meet with her on many occasions and eventually to be invited to help her with 'putting all of Tom together': first as editor of his unpublished Clark Lectures at Cambridge University, published as The Varieties of Metaphysical Poetry (1993), and subsequently as General Editor of the eight-volume Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot: The Critical Edition, now nearing completion. At the time of his death in 1965, Eliot had collected only 99 pieces of his prose in volume form as his personal canon; before he died, he instructed Valerie, his literary executor and junior by thirty-eight years, not to allow any biography or editions of his letters and uncollected prose. When she persuaded him, a Nobel laureate, not to place that burden on her, he relented by saying that if any edition was to be done she must do it, keeping his papers restricted until completed. She made that vow, the drama and unfolding of which informs an important dimension of the relation of modern literary scholarship, executorship, and publishers. For my part, the main story lies in initial access to Eliot's personal archive and to his day papers in the Faber and Faber archive as his publisher for forty years, and in the search throughout the US and the UK to recover scores of lost or fugitive prose pieces in private and institutional collections. What slowly became clear was that 90% of what has been written about Eliot over the past half-century has been written without a knowledge of 90% of what he wrote. The question I shall attempt to answer in the Colloquium is in what ways and to what extent the Complete Prose may change scholarly and public perceptions of his life and work."
 
About Ron Schuchard
 
EUEC Member Ronald Schuchard, Goodrich C. White Professor of English Emeritus, came to Emory University in 1969 after completing his graduate work at the University of Texas, Austin. He is the author of numerous studies of modern authors, particularly T.S. Eliot and W.B. Yeats. His book, The Last Minstrels: Yeats and the Revival of the Bardic Arts, was published by Oxford University Press in 2008. His Eliot's Dark Angel (Oxford University Press, 1999), won the Robert Penn Warren--Cleanth Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism and the annual SAMLA Studies Award for the best book published by a member of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association. He is the editor of T.S. Eliot's Clark and Turnbull Lectures, The Varieties of Metaphysical Poetry (Faber & Faber, 1993; Harcourt, Brace, 1994; Harvest, 1996), and co-editor with John Kelly of The Collected Letters of W.B. Yeats, Volume 3 (Oxford University Press, 1994); Volume 4 (2005), which won the Modern Language Association's Morton N. Cohen Award for a Distinguished Volume of Letters, and Volume 5 in the same series, appearing in 2008. He has been a Visiting Fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford, Trinity College, Dublin, Queen's University, Belfast, and the Institute of English Studies, University of London, where he has been elected a permanent Senior Research Fellow. He is currently serving as General Editor of the multi-volume edition of The Complete Prose of T.S. Eliot, published by Faber and Faber and The Johns Hopkins University Press.
 
Professor Schuchard is a faculty advisor to the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library (MARBL) and devotes much time to developing the outstanding archive of twentieth-century Irish and English manuscript collections. He is the founder-chairman of the Richard Ellmann Lectures in Modern Literature, inaugurated by Seamus Heaney in 1988. He is the former director of Emory's British Studies Program at University College, Oxford, and of the Yeats International Summer School in Sligo, Ireland. He is an Honorary Member of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association and of the T. S. Eliot Society of St. Louis, and an active member of the Modern Language Association, the Association of Literary Scholars and Critics, the American Conference for Irish Studies, the International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures, the International Association of University Professors, American PEN, and the Grolier Club of New York. In addition to serving on the editorial boards of Yeats AnnualTexas Studies in Literature and Language, and The Recorder: Journal of the American Irish Historical Society, he is a member of the advisory boards of The Correspondence of Samuel Beckett and the W.B. Yeats Drama Foundation. In 2012, he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences and in 2015 he was awarded a Modernist Studies Association Prize for a Distinguished Edition. As recently announced, he was awarded a Heilbrun Distinguished Emeritus Fellowship for 2016-2017. His research has been supported by ACLS, NEH, Fulbright, and Guggenheim fellowships.
 
You can click here to read an article in The chronicle of Higher Education about his work on T.S.Eliot.
 
 
 
LCNov21BotLunch Colloquium November 21


Doctors in the Sherlockian Canon

On Monday, November 21, at the penultimate session of this fall's series of Lunch Colloquiums, Dr. Marilynne McKay, Professor Emerita of Dermatology in the School of Medicine, gave us the skinny on a subject other than her area of academic expertise, but one on which she's an expert nonetheless, "Doctors in the Sherlockian Canon."  As she explained at the start, she's a long-time member of the Baker Street Irregulars (which is not the humongous collection of crazies some might suppose but a prestigious literary society dedicated to the study of all things Holmes in which membership is granted by invitation only--and granted to only a privileged and productive few--facts this girl reporter had to discover by some detective work of her own when modesty prevented Marilynne from pointing them out herself).  Work for the BSI has kept Marilynne especially busy this past year. She recently contributed a chapter to a book sponsored by the society, Nerve & Knowledge: Doctors, Medicine, and the Sherlockian Canon, and even more recently presented on the same subject at a national conference, so, luckily for us, and busy-ness aside, when the Lunch Colloquium planning committee extended our invitation, she was primed to share the results of her research with us, as well.

 

Of course, as she pointed out at the start, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was himself a doctor, as is Doyle's second-most-famous creation, Holmes' friend and foil, Dr. Watson.  This most of us in the audience knew--given that most of us had raised our hands when Marilynne asked if we'd read some, even all, of the Holmes material. But what most of us didn't know was that Doyle had modeled Holmes himself on Dr. Joseph Bell, Doyle's Professor of Surgery in Edinburgh where he'd received his training. And why was he a good model for Holmes?  Well, Wikipedia confirms what Marilynne offered as the answer to that question:

 

In his instruction, Joseph Bell emphasized the importance of close observation in making a diagnosis. To illustrate this, he would often pick a stranger and, by observing him, deduce his occupation and recent activities. These skills caused him to be considered a pioneer in forensic science (forensic pathology in particular) at a time when science was not yet widely used in criminal investigations.

 

 

 

 

 

Bell was pleased with his fictional avatar, pleased enough that he wrote an introduction to the first of the novels in the Sherlockian canon, A Study in Scarlet.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Before moving on to discuss the many other doctors that play some sort of part in creating and/or inhabiting the canon, Marilynne took time to place the variety of their professional practices in the context--the decidedly complex context--of the medical world-that-was from the early 19th century on.  As she explained, the three primary categories of "doctor" were "physician," "surgeon," and "apothecary," with "bone-setters, herbalists, midwives, and chemists" making up a fourth, catch-all category of much less highly regarded but still much used "others."  Physicians were the most highly regarded of all--in that earning the title (and the right to be called "Dr. So-and-So") required a medical doctorate from Oxford, Cambridge, Edinburgh, or a foreign university and also licensure by the Royal College of Physicians (granted when one passed an oral exam).  Surgeons trained as apprentices to experienced practitioners of their bloody craft for many years and took university courses, too, but were not required to take a university degree. And they were known as "Mr. So-and-Sos" only, and not as "Drs." For them, licensure meant acceptance into the Guild of Barber-Surgeons or, a little later in time, acceptance into the College of Surgeons (of London, Edinburgh, etc.). Apothecaries, then as now, were medical professionals, pharmacists, who formulated and dispensed medicines to physicians, surgeons, and patients.  But then, as not now, they also provided simpler sorts of medical care for patients, doing some hands-on doctoring such as general practitioners do today, especially in villages where physicians and surgeons weren't readily available. Of course, they trained for the work, in long apprenticeships, and also earned licensure, by the Society of Apothecaries.

 

Marilynne proceeded to discuss examples of doctors in all these categories (and then some) from the four novels and fifty-six stories that comprise the Sherlockian canon.  And she discussed real-life figures on whom some of the characters were based, as well (for even then, the events of this hugely popular body of material often could be described as "ripped from the headlines"). Among the real-life figures who influenced Doyle's work were two still familiar to us today--Dr. Livingstone (we presume) and the journalist who found him in deepest darkest Africa, Henry Morton Stanley.  (And by the way, Stanley was correct to address Livingstone as "Dr." since he had earned licensure by the Royal College of Physicians of Glasgow after study at universities in Glasgow and London, though he didn't live the life of a practicing physician and is most often described as a missionary and explorer.)

 

Should you wish to know more about the fifty-or-so fictional doctors who appear in the Sherlockian canon (some clients, some victims, some criminals), or more about their real-life counterparts, or more about the doctor who created the former from the latter, and from his own experience, of course, I'd suggest you browse around the wealth of material available on the internet. (I've had a  wonderful time doing just that.) Or just ask Marilynne to join you over coffee (or something stronger) sometime--and get her talking (for longer than our Colloquium timetable would allow) about this fascinating subject on which, it's clear, she knows a lot more than "the skinny" aforementioned.  Indeed, one might say that her body of knowledge on Doyle and Holmes is absolutely obese--and a good deal deeper than skin deep.

 

 --Gretchen Schulz 

 

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FABotFaculty Activities


John Bugge 
Professor Emeritus of English
 


EUEC Member John Bugge taught a course at OLLI in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales in September and October.  On November 5, 2016, he delivered a paper at the South Atlantic Modern Language Association annual meeting in Jacksonville, Florida.  The title was "Re-Inventing the Canterbury Tales:  Hypertext and the General Prologue."  On November 11, 2016, he attended the semi-annual meeting of GA-HERO (Georgia Higher Education Retirees Organization) at the University of Middle Georgia in Macon.  He is the Vice-President and Treasurer of GA-HERO. 


Herbert W. Benario
Professor Emeritus of Classics   
 
The Classical Association of the Middle West and South, Southern Section, had its biennial meeting in Decatur, at the invitation of the Emory Classics Department, on October 27 to 29.  EUEC Member Herb Benario presided over one of the sessions and delivered a paper entitled "Johann Gottfried Seume and Tacitus."  Herb was president of the organization from 1968 to 1970.
InMemBotIn Memoriam


We have just learned of the death of EUEC Member Dana F. White on November 24, 2016, due to injuries sustained in an automobile accident.  Dana was Goodrich C. White Professor Emeritus of the Liberal Arts in the Graduate Institute of the Liberal Arts at Emory University and was the author of The Urbanists, 1865-1915 (1989), co-editor of Olmsted South: Old South Critic/New South Planner (1979), and a contributor to scholarly journals, as well as to the popular press.  Born in New York City November 18, 1934, he was Jesuit-educated at Fordham Prep and at Fordham University where he earned his B. A. in 1956. He traveled west to Laramie, Wyoming, where he received an M. A. in American Studies. After serving in the United States Army, he continued his studies at The George Washington University, earning a Ph.D. in 1970. Combining his love of cities with his studies of urbanism, Dana taught urban history at the State University of New York at Buffalo and spent a year as a fellow at the Smithsonian Institution before coming to Atlanta in the fall of 1970 to teach jointly at Emory University and Atlanta University.  Dana served as consultant for exhibitions at the Atlanta History Center, the Ivan Allen Jr. Braves Museum, and Emory's Woodruff Library.  Together with fellow urban historian Tim Crimmins, Professor White conceptualized, wrote, and narrated the award-winning eight-part documentary series The Making of Modern Atlanta.  In 2012, he was the speaker at one of our Lunch Colloquiums, on "A Dozen Seasons of Teaching Baseball and American Culture," and on July 10, 2015, Matt Bernstein gave a Lunch Colloquium on work he was doing in collaboration with Dana on Christine Smith (Gilliam): Atlanta's Film Censor, 1944 to 1962

You can read the complete obituary by clicking here.







EUEC Member Alfred Joseph Grindon, MD, 78, died Wednesday, Nov. 16, 2016. Born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri, Al met his wife, Joan Wavering, while attending the St. Louis University School of Medicine. He later specialized in Clinical Pathology and Transfusion Medicine, serving at the NIH and Johns Hopkins Hospital. From 1977 to 2000, he was Director of Blood Services at the American Red Cross in Atlanta. He was also Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Emory University, and taught at Grady Memorial Hospital. He served on the Board of Directors and Executive Committee of the American Association of Blood Banks. He received blood banking's highest honors, the AABB's John Elliot Award and the Red Cross's Charles Drew Award.
 
His complete obituary can be read by clicking here.

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WalkBotWalking the campus with Dianne


  
The empty-soda-can art from our last walk is located in the Mathematics and Science Center building on the main campus (in case you didn't know, that building also houses a small planetarium!).  As for the can art, I'm sure some sort of mathematical equation was used to create the image, and as I mentioned before, you can only see the woman's face if you are a distance away; otherwise, it simply looks like a bunch of empty cans hanging on the wall.




Since the weather is getting cooler let's go indoors for a bit.  The two photos below are close-up details of items I've come across in this particular building.  My only hint is that the exterior of the building is generally considered to be somewhat ugly by quite a few people:

Where will you find these on Emory's 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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