Newsletter  Volume 5 Issue 17
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Upcoming Events



Lunch Colloquium
Marilynne McKay
TUESDAY, May 28, 2019


WEBCAST ONLY
Marilynne McKay
TUESDAY, May 28, 2019





Lunch Colloquium
Bradd Shore
TUESDAY, June 11, 2019


WEBCAST ONLY
Bradd Shore
TUESDAY, June 11, 2019


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May 20, 2019

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
 
        
We are one week past Commencement, and so in some ways it seems that summer has already begun. Our summer Lunch Colloquium series began the day after Commencement, and we had a great start with Cindy Willett. Thanks to Gretchen's article below, you can read about her talk if you missed it. There are two aspects of our Lunch Colloquiums that in my view make them really special: the great talks from interesting people and the equally interesting questions and responses from the audience. All of our speakers have enjoyed their time with us because of the lively and stimulating interaction with our members. I don't think there is any place else on campus where speakers will have an audience that is so diverse and engaged.
 
Those of you who know Marilynne McKay are already aware that we have a treat in store for next week. If by some chance you have not yet met Marilynne, you can read about her in this newsletter and get prepared for an entertaining (and also useful) Lunch Colloquium next week.
 
One of the highlights of Commencement was the presentation of the Thomas Jefferson Award to Jag Sheth, and you can read about that below. We also welcome two new members, but also note the passing of two members, Arthur Wainwright and Gary Smith. We also note the publication of an article by Oded Borowski; please let me know about your activities. This is a community that wants to celebrate each other's accomplishments, but we can't do that if we don't know about them!
 
 
I am very grateful to Gretchen Schulz, Ann Hartle, and Marge Crouse for help with editing and proofing.  
LCMay28TopLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, May 28


 
 
Taking Your Skin Outdoors: Sun, Bugs, and Poison Ivy

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



Marilynne McKay, Professor of Medicine (Dermatology) Emerita





LCMay14TopLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, May 14

  
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Comic in the Midst of Tragedy's Grief with Tig Notaro, Hannah Gadsby, and Others
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cynthia Willett, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Philosophy
 
 
NewMemTopNew Members




FATopFaculty Activities



InMemTop


We note the recent deaths of two members, Arthur Wainwright and Gary Smith


LCMay28BotLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, May 28


Taking Your Skin Outdoors: Sun, Bugs, and Poison Ivy

Marilynne McKay, Professor of Medicine (Dermatology) Emerita


Your skin is a living, protective barrier between you and the environment, but summertime brings special challenges. When it's warm outside, we tend to wear less clothing and stay outside longer, exposing our skin to a spectrum of UV rays, insects, and allergenic plants. Dr. McKay will share what your dermatologist would like you to know about new sunscreen recommendations, insect repellents, and poison ivy precautions so you'll have a great time outdoors this summer--minus the blistering and peeling, nasty bites, and itchy rashes that could make your skin wish you'd paid closer attention to this lecture.  

 

About Marilynne McKay

 

There is perhaps no better way to introduce Marilynne (for those of you who might not know her) than to quote from John Bugge's nomination letter for the 2017 EUEC Faculty Award of Distinction:

 

She richly deserves it - for her achievements in her career as an Emory physician both before and after retirement; for her second career as a woman of the theater (actor, director, critic); and for her liberal service to the ongoing mission of this Emeritus College, not least through the quality of her intellectual contributions to the collective life of the mind it exists to promote. 

 

A graduate of the University of New Mexico with an MS from Oklahoma State University, Marilynne worked as a medical research technologist before deciding to enroll in medical school at the University of New Mexico.  Fittingly, as a dermatologist, she followed the sun with an internship in San Diego and a residency in Miami, coming to Emory as an assistant professor in 1980.  Here she rose to Chief of Dermatology at Grady Memorial Hospital and was later appointed Executive Director of Continuing Medical Education.  Her publications include articles and book chapters on vulvar disorders for generalists, as well as for specialists in dermatology, gynecology, and psychiatry.  She co-edited a classic textbook, Obstetric and Gynecologic Dermatology, and was elected President of the International Society for the Study of Vulvovaginal Disease.  Acclaimed as an informative and entertaining lecturer, she won the Teaching Exhibit Gold Award at the American Academy of Dermatology Annual Meeting in 1987, and she organized (and for six years directed) the forum on teaching techniques at the American Academy of Dermatology.  In 1999, Marilynne "semi"-retired, moving back to her hometown of Albuquerque, where she soon found herself chairing the dermatology department at Lovelace Health System.

 

Maybe her second career as a theater person officially began when she enrolled in a Master's Program in Directing in the Department of Theatre and Dance at UNM; it was an avocation she'd been preparing for most of her adult life, in the painstaking and even theatrical preparedness behind her award-winning teaching style in medicine.   

In 2005 she returned to Atlanta with her husband, Dr. Ronald Hosek, planning to combine her interests in medical teaching with her passion for the performing arts.  That same year she was invited to deliver Emory's seventh annual Mary Lynn Morgan Lecture on Women in the Health Professions, in which she reflected on her own experiences in teaching and doing clinical medicine; with typical drollery she titled her address, "The Vulva Monologue."   I had the good fortune to be able to share a stage with Marilynne in a performance of Wit, Margaret Edson's play about a woman dying of ovarian cancer, which is set in a patient's room of a large university hospital.  Marilynne directed the production and played the leading role; everything in the production went so well because she so seamlessly melded her own performance with her long experience in medical practice. Her talents as a director have been acknowledged by her appointment as a judge for the annual Suzi Bass Awards, which celebrate outstanding work from twenty Atlanta professional theaters in twenty-six performance categories.  Meanwhile, she continues to put in at least a full day of work each week in the Department of Dermatology at Grady Hospital, where - no surprise here - in 2010 she received the Emory Dermatology Teaching Award for the quality of her instruction of residents.  Finally, there is a certain dramatic flourish, I suppose, in the fact that Marilynne is that rare being, a Baker Street Irregular, a member of a society that, in the words of the novelist Lyndsay Faye, "present[s] a mysterious face to outsiders, wreathed in gaslit fog and draped in the obscuring mists of the moors, . . . an invitation-only concern."  In 2015 her essay on "Dressers to Professors: A Spectrum of Canonical Doctors" appeared in a collection directed at Holmes-and-Watson fans entitled Nerve and Knowledge: Doctors, Medicine and the Sherlockian Canon, illustrating yet another facet of her post-retirement versatility.

Finally, I want to take note of Marilynne's exemplary service to the Emeritus College in several ways.  The first is the public-relations work she's done and continues to do on behalf of the national meeting of AROHE, the Association of Retirement Organizations in Higher Education, to be held at Emory in October and sponsored by the Emeritus College.  Here she has demonstrated another set of skills entirely - artistic creativity in drafting, layout, and web-page design, along with a formidable aptitude in management.  In addition, several of her resourceful suggestions have been the inspiration for the Interdisciplinary Seminars held in the Emeritus College each year, while her participation in them has been a source of delight.  And finally, she has contributed that most essential quantum of all to the work of the Emeritus College (it is the thing that distinguishes her above all else) - a boundless and energetic enthusiasm for the life of the mind.

   

Marilynne has also given two recent Lunch Colloquiums for us--"The History of White People" and "Doctors in the Sherlockian Canon."

 

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LCMay14BotLunch Colloquium--Tuesday, May 14

The Comic in the Midst of Tragedy's Grief with Tig Notaro,
Hannah Gadsby, and Others



Cynthia Willett, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Philosophy


A funny thing happened . . .
 
Yes, a funny thing happened on Tuesday, May 14, when Cynthia Willett, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Philosophy, kicked off our summer set of lunchtime presentations with a talk entitled "The Comic in the Midst of Tragedy's Grief, with Tig Notaro, Hannah Gadsby, and Others"--a talk in which, she had explained as we prepared the promos for the talk, she'd be drawing from a book she has written with her sister, Julie Willett, that's due out in the fall, a book entitled Uproarious: How Feminist and Other Subversive Comics Speak Truth. So what was the funny thing that happened? The funny thing was that the talk entitled "The Comic . . ." drawn from a book entitled Uproarious was UNfunny--was, in fact, dead serious--was a thought-provoking analysis of the ways that comedy can help us deal with both individual and collective pain and sorrow.
 
I (Gretchen, the person who recruited Cindy to speak to us) admit I had envisioned something rather different. I had assumed that she'd be using clips from the stand-up comics she named in her talk's title (and the "others" she named there, as well), "feminist" and "subversive" women, according to the title of the upcoming book. And I had anticipated that clips of such women performing might indeed be found to be "uproarious"--by the women in the room, at least--if not by the men--though I also anticipated that reactions by the men might be amusing, in their own way.
 
In my ignorance of these comics and their new kind of comedy, I had NOT anticipated the clip in which Tig Notaro would proclaim "Hello, I have cancer." Or that in which Hannah Gadsby, tears in her eyes, would excoriate the "self-deprecating humor" she'd been using for years to charm audiences into accepting her masculine appearance and lesbian lifestyle. As Cindy explained, the latter clip was a trailer for the Netflix film of a show Gadsby had performed all over the world, a show called Nanette that has been described as "a comedy arguing against comedy" in which, as Gadsby has put it herself, "I'm a comedian that's not funny." And anyone who has seen Boyish Girl Interrupted, the HBO film of the show that Tig Notaro did after she'd had a double mastectomy, a show in which she performed bare(non)breasted, would have to agree she's "a comedian that's not funny," too. Except, of course, she is. As is Hannah Gadsby. It's just a very different kind of comedy from what's been familiar to us, even from comics we might have considered "cutting edge" in their willingness to deal with serious subject matter.
 
In the course of her presentation, Cindy placed this in the context of the kinds more familiar, the kinds long associated with, for example, "moments of joyful forgetting" of the serious, "relief" from the painful, or, perhaps, moments of remembrance, but remembrance in which the time that has passed allows "a measure of transcendence from grief," a "view sometimes phrased as 'comedy is tragedy plus time.'" Also in the category of the familiar are kinds of comic schtick in which the "sorrow" Mark Twain described as "the secret source of humor" is neither forgotten in "comic relief" nor distanced in "stoic transcendence" but is, instead, allowed to infuse the (ostensibly) funny, as in the "self-deprecating humor" Gadsby now rejects as "self-humiliating" or the "cruel ridicule" of different others that too often masquerades as wit.
 
What's emerging now, in the work of Notaro and Gadsby (and other woman comics Cindy and her sister deal with in their book, like Wanda Sykes and Margaret Cho) is "a radical new approach to humor" in which those who have too often been its "targets" become its "agents," using it to express, not suppress, the pain of their own experiences and that of those who identify with them. And here's the even more important point. They also use their humor to enable others, others who are not like them, to recognize and even share their pain. In some cases, this odd sort of comedian, so "not funny" in traditional ways, "channels rage" in "angry truth-telling," attacking the prejudices that plague our society as a whole as well as them and "their kind" as individuals. In some cases, it's souls (as well as chests) that are bared, as the speaker reveals suffering that has its basis in the human condition ("the heartache and the thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to," as per Hamlet) rather than in any societal ill. But in all cases, it seems possible that the result of this "new formula for comedy that speaks truth"--via angry social critique and/or personal revelation that rends the heart--may be nothing less than a transformation of the world we live in. As Cindy put it in the conclusion of her talk, the result may well be "collective catharsis of toxic stereotypes for [a more] inclusive society."
 
If you'd like to know more about this new kind of comedy you can find much enabling you to do that online. You can rent or buy the full film versions of Notaro's and Gadsby's shows that I mentioned above, Notaro's Boyish Girl Interrupted and Gadsby's Nanette. And clips from both are available free on YouTube. Also free on YouTube are clips that combine bits from those shows and others with bits from TV interviews, among which I'd especially recommend "Tig Notaro is Awesome," and another we're just dubbing Hannah Gadsby.  And, if you'd prefer to read rather than watch and listen, you might enjoy this article on Tig in Rolling Stone, an article that quotes her at length, and this article on Hannah that quotes her at length as well (with a focus on comments about the new show she's taking on the road right now). (Note that if you're in New York in July, you can see her Off Broadway there and then.)
 
Of course, you can also just wait until Uproarious, the book by the Willett sisters, is available this fall, as it will be both in print from the University of Minnesota Press and digitally, through open access, an option made possible by a Digital Publishing in the Humanities subsidy that Emory awarded Cindy in support of this special project on the important functions of the unfunny funny.
 
--Gretchen Schulz
 
 

NewMemBotNew Members

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

Members in Transition

 
Mary Galinski, PhD, Professor of Medicine, Infectious Diseases, and Global Health; Faculty atEmory Vaccine Center and Yerkes National Primate Research Center; Director, International Center for Malaria Research Education & Development
 
Weirong Shang, PhD, HCLD, Associate Professor, Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility
 
 
 

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FABotFaculty Activities


Oded Borowski 

Professor Emeritus of Biblical Archaeology & Hebrew

 

Oded writes:

 

 

An article titled "An Iron Age 'Steamer' from Tel Ḥalif" that I co-authored was just published in Israel Exploration Journal 69/1.  The article describes a fragment of a clay vessel discovered in summer 2016 at Tel Halif (Israel) in an area used for food preparation and that now is interpreted as part of a food steamer. If this interpretation is correct, we have the first physical/archaeological evidence for food steaming in 8th century BCE Judah.  Until now it was assumed that early Israelites/Judahites steamed their food, but no evidence existed.

 

 

 

Jagdish Sheth

Charles H. Kellstadt Professor of Marketing

 

 

 
Jag Sheth received the Thomas Jefferson Award at Commencement.  About this award, from the Provost website:  "To honor faculty and staff who have significantly enriched the intellectual and civic life of the Emory community, the Thomas Jefferson Award, named and endowed by the Robert Earl McConnell Foundation, is presented annually at Commencement.  The award honors a member of the faculty or staff for significant service to Emory University through personal activities, influence, and leadership, usually over the course of many years."

 

From Emory News:

 

This year's Thomas Jefferson Award winner is more accustomed to giving than receiving. Professor Jagdish Sheth, the Charles H. Kellstadt Chair in Marketing, is the 2019 winner of an award that honors a faculty or staff member who has significantly enriched the intellectual and civic life of the Emory community.

 

Sheth has combined intelligent inquiry, entrepreneurship and philanthropic zeal to build a career that includes publishing more than 350 research papers and books in various areas of marketing, including consumer behavior and marketing for emerging markets. In addition, he serves on the boards of the Community Foundation of Greater Atlanta and the World Affairs Council of Atlanta, and he has been active advising international governments and policy makers including the U.S. Department of Transportation and the government of Singapore.

 

For Sheth, who has won a number of honors, the Jefferson Award holds particular meaning.

 

"This award is really special because it is selected by a committee of university-wide peers," says Sheth. "Also, it is special because the Jefferson Award reinforces that the mission of an academic is to unlock the potential of others."

 

Helping others find that potential is a passion of Sheth's and has fueled his research and teaching. Erika James, the John H. Harland Dean of Goizueta Business School, and seven others across campus detailed the breadth of Sheth's work and activities in a six-page nomination letter. The impact was not lost on the judges, all of whom are prior award winners.

 

"The committee was deeply impressed by the local, regional and international contributions Professor Sheth has made through his distinguished career at Emory," says Carol J. Rowland Hogue, Jules & Uldeen Terry Professor of Maternal and Child Health, professor of epidemiology and director of the Women's and Children's Center.

 

Adds Hogue, the 2017 Jefferson Award recipient: "He was nominated by leaders all across Emory University for his 'demonstrated energy, curiosity, continuous learning, advancing scholarship, generous mentorship and development, academic and social integrity, unbounded generosity, and selfless attention to personal and community development in the extended Emory global environment' over the span of his 25-year career at Emory." 

 

The personal nature of Sheth's commitment to students also impressed the committee. "Through his compelling teaching and mentorship, Professor Sheth's passion for preparing future generations of scholars and leaders is broadly known throughout Emory and beyond," says the Religion Department's Bobbi Patterson, 2015 award winner. "[In naming him] a Jefferson Award winner, we celebrate his creative and widely-recognized scholarship, service on countless Emory committees, the development of strong international relationships, and generous creation of awards for alums and faculty."

 

Generosity and global impact

 

For many across campus, Sheth's generosity is well-known.

 

"Jagdish Sheth is a visionary leader and beloved mentor, colleague, teacher and supporter of many important initiatives at Emory.  He and his wife, Madhu Sheth, and the Sheth Family Foundation, have been most generous in so many ways and we have become a better institution and better informed as individuals as a result," notes Holli A. Semetko, Asa Griggs Candler Professor of Media & International Affairs, who served as Emory's vice provost for international affairs and director of The Halle Institute for Global Learning from 2003 to 2013.

 

"For example, with the Sheth Lecture in Indian Studies, Emory and Atlanta communities have hosted amazingly talented individuals in film, literature, politics, business, religion, spirituality and more," says Semetko. "With Jag and Madhu's support for the South Asia Collection at the Carlos Museum and with the gift of volumes of India's Supreme Court decisions to Emory's Law School library, we see the gift of knowledge generate benefits across Emory and the larger Atlanta community, and more."

 

James Curran, dean of the Rollins School of Public Health, echoes Sheth's global impact. 

 

"Jag Sheth is an incredible university leader who inspires us all to expand our global vision and act boldly to grasp opportunities," Curran says. "His persistent vision is enacted through persuasion, incentives, education and offering prestigious recognition of faculty, colleagues and alumni. He has been and remains a model global faculty member."

 

Sheth is also known to many as a friend.

 

"He is the full package - top scholar, highly respected in global public and private sectors, leader in pedagogy and education institution governance, generous with his advice and mentorship, highly respected by world leaders, and a strong servant to Emory University and each institution he has engaged," says fellow faculty member Benn Konsynski, the George S. Craft Professor in Information Systems & Operations Management at Goizueta. "I am proud to call him a friend." 

 

As the 57th recipient of the Jefferson Award, Sheth is the first faculty member from the Goizueta community to win the award - a fact that adds even more heft to the honor. 

 

"Anything that is unprecedented always feels like another major milestone in life's journey," notes Sheth, who turned 80 last year. "It means that the business school is an integral part of the university. It also means that the 'One Emory' vision of the new leadership is successfully implemented with respect to diverse faculty talent and expertise. Most importantly, this award will pave the way for others to be recognized for their talent and dedication to Emory and scholarship."

 

 

 

 

 

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InMemBotIn Memoriam

 
 

Arthur W. Wainwright, Professor Emeritus of New Testament.

 

Arthur William Wainwright passed away on Saturday, April 27. He was born in Leeds, England on October 14, 1925, the son of Doris and Alfred Wainwright.  He attended Cross Flatts Council School and Leeds Grammar School.  He won a scholarship to Corpus Christi College, Oxford, where he studied classics and philosophy. After a year at Oxford he served as an underground coalminer under the Bevin Scheme from 1943 to 1947. He completed his studies at Oxford and candidated for the Methodist ministry, studying theology at Wesley House, Cambridge, after which he was appointed for a year to the Yeovil circuit.  He was assistant tutor at Handsworth Theological College from 1953 to 1957, being ordained into full connection in 1955. He served at Oxford Hall in the Manchester and Salford Mission from 1957 to 1962 where he was chaplain to Methodist students at the University and the College of Technology. For three years he served in the Wantage and Abingdon circuit, and in 1965 he joined the faculty of the Candler School of Theology at Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia where he taught New Testament until his retirement as emeritus professor in 1994.

 

Wainwright authored several academic books, including The Trinity in the New Testament (SPCK, 1962) and Mysterious Apocalypse (Abingdon, 1993). He also edited the two-volume critical edition of John Locke's A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistles of St. Paul (Oxford, 1987).

 

Ever since he arrived in the United States, he attended North Decatur United Methodist Church. In 1959 he married Betty Ward, a Methodist deaconess in Manchester.  He is survived by her, their sons Martin and Philip, their grandchildren, Elizabeth, Alexandra, William and Thomas and their daughters-in-law, Christine Wainwright and Janet Donohoe.

 

Note:  Arthur's son, Philip, is currently Vice Provost for Global Strategy and Initiatives at Emory. 

 

 

 

 
 
Gary R. Smith, Professor Emeritus of Law  
 
Gary Smith died April 17 after a two-year battle with cancer.  He is survived by his wife, Janie, and son, George (ELS '09).  Plans for a celebration of his life and his choices for memorial gifts will be forthcoming. In lieu of flowers, condolence messages may be sent to 8 Gould Lane, Jekyll Island, GA 31527.
 

Gary Smith received his BA in 1967 and JD in 1969 from the University of Kentucky and his LLM in 1970 from New York University.  Before becoming an Emory faculty member in 1972, he practiced in Atlanta with Powell, Goldstein, Frazer & Murphy.  At Emory Law, he taught classes in torts, evidence, medical malpractice litigation, workers' compensation, and specialized interdisciplinary courses in law and medicine.  He was appointed Professor Emeritus in 2009.

 

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WalkBotWalking the Campus with Dianne


Our last walk took us to the brand new Student Center.  It occupies the space where the old Dobbs University Center (the DUC) used to be.   The new building is beautiful on the outside, and I'm really looking forward to getting a peek inside.  Until then, click the link below to learn about the newest building on campus. 


Where to next?  Let's go inside for a moment and get some exercise on an interesting staircase.  Just don't go too fast, you might get dizzy!

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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