A hearty thank you to everyone who came out to the welcome reception for UCHI’s 2018-2019 academic year and a big welcome to all the new graduate, faculty, and visiting fellows at both the Humanities Institute and Humility & Conviction in Public Life!
Author: Morariu, Megan
Forms of Authoritarianism Program
Publishing NOW: Peter Catapano
Peter Catapano, Editor, Opinion Section, New York Times
October 2, 2018 4-5pm, with reception to follow
Catapano began his career at The Times as an assistant to The Times Editorial Board in 1998. He became a copy editor in 2000 for The New York Times News Service and joined the Opinion section as an editor in 2005, where he began developing projects specifically for the web.
Catapano has created and edited some of the most popular New York Times online series — The Stone, Anxiety, Happy Days, Menagerie and Home Fires — which helped launch the careers of several writers. He received a Publisher’s Award in 2008 for his work in pioneering the online series.
Catapano has edited and published more than 1,000 pieces in The Times, and has worked directly with both beginners and highly accomplished thinkers and writers, including Arthur Danto, E.O. Wilson, Frans de Waal, Peter Singer, Simon Critchley, Thomas Nagel, Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Pico Iyer, Phil Klay, Roy Scranton, Steven Pinker, Siri Hustvedt and Oliver Sacks.
In 2015, Catapano was asked by Dr. Sacks to edit his final essays in The Times chronicling his illness and death, which were collected in “Gratitude” — now a best-selling book by Knopf.
Catapano’s The Stone, established in 2010, is the longest-running online series in Opinion, and draws millions of readers each year. In 2015, Liveright published “The Stone Reader: Modern Philosophy in 133 Arguments,” an anthology of essays from the series. Catapano has sold more than 15,000 copies. Since 2012, about half of the American Philosophical Association’s public philosophy awards have been given to essays published in The Stone. The series has helped bring philosophical thought back into the national conversation.
Publishing NOW: Andrew Beck and Andrew Weckenmann
Publishing NOW : Christine Smallwood
Christine Smallwood,
New York Times
October 15, 2018, 4 pm
Christine Smallwood is a writer and critic living in New York. Her reviews, essays, and short stories have been published in Harper’s, The New York Times Magazine, T: The New York Times Style Magazine, The New Yorker, Bookforum, The Paris Review, n+1, and Vice. She holds a PhD in English Literature from Columbia University and is a core faculty member of the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research.
Former fellow Dimitris Xygalatas featured in UConn Today
Publishing NOW:George Thompson
George Thompson, CLAS Publisher-in-Residence Visit to UConn,
October 23-26
George Thompson will be returning to campus October 23-26 to continue the CLAS publisher-in-residence program, thanks to the support of Dean Davita Silfen Glasberg, UConn Humanities Institute, and Ken Foote of the Department of Geography.
George has visited UConn regularly since 2015. His visits are aimed at helping colleagues with their publishing projects. George is particular good at helping faculty develop book projects, but can help with all aspects of academic publishing across a wide range of fields.
George will be available for both group and one-on-one meetings.
If you would like to set a time for faculty in your department to meet with George, please contact Stephanie Beron at Stephanie.beron@uconn.edu or (860) 486-3656 to schedule an appointment.
Available times are listed online at https://goo.gl/dWefva:
If you haven’t had a chance to meet, George has been a professional editor since 1984, beginning his career at Johns Hopkins University Press as an acquisitions editor. At JHUP, George developed the geography and environmental studies list, including the “Creating the North American Landscape” series. In 1990, George founded the Center for American Places, which he directed and served as publisher until November 2010, when he founded his own imprint. Books developed and published under George’s care have won more than 100 book awards, honors, and prizes, including best-book recognition in 31 academic fields. George is also the editor, co-editor or author of five books of his own and has served as publisher-in-residence at a number of universities. More information is available here http://www.gftbooks.com/about.html
The Encounters Series featured in “Humanities for All” The National Humanities Alliance’s website
“Humanities for All” highlights The Encounters Series as one of its featured projects. read more here
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