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Affiliates Lunch Meetings and Public Lectures/Symposia
Fall 2003 – Spring 2004
Fall 2003
September
Thursday, 9/18, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) –
Emily Abruzzo, ’03, Princeton, School of Architecture.
“Shopping the Museum into the 21st Century.”
October
Thursday, 10/2, 12 p.m. – 185 Nassau --
Liz Lerman – founder and artistic director, Liz Lerman
Dance Exchange, and recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship. “Ferocious
Beauty, Tiny Monstrosities: The Human Genome.”
Tuesday, 10/7, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) --
Bruno Frey, Institute for Empirical Research in Economics,
University of Zurich. “Museums: Balancing Financial
and Social Profit”
Tuesday, 10/7, 4:30 p.m. (016 Robertson) PUBLIC
LECTURE – Bruno Frey (response by Daniel Kahneman).
“What Can Economist Say About Happiness?”
Friday, 10/24, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) --
Pierre-Michel Menger, Centre de Sociologie des Arts --“Work,
creativity and growth: the arts as a paradigm for designing
changes in the organization of work and employment”
November
Wednesday, 11/12, (438 Robertson) 12 to 2:00 p.m.
CACPS Advisory Committee Meeting
TBA -- Thea Petchler, University of Minnesota
and CACPS Affiliate – “Creativity in the Nation’s
Service: Embracing a New Paradigm in America ”
December
Thursday, 12/11, 12 to 2 p.m. (300 Wallace)
Mini-symposium on book markets, publishing and publics (2
hour session)
Thierry Rigogne, Princeton University, Department of History
– “Books and Markets in 18th Century France”
Hannah R. Johnson - Princeton University, Department of
English –“The Economics of Publishing: Popular
Nonfiction, Humanities Scholarship, and Issues of Credibility.”
Ed Tenner –“Technology and the Transformation
of Publishing: Authors, Readers and Markets.”
Paul Starr: respondent
Spring 2004
January
Thursday, 1/22, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) –
Bob Wuthnow, Princeton University, Sociology. “The Arts
and Religion.”
February
Thursday, 2/12, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) –
David Grazian, University of Pennsylvania, Sociology. “Popular
Culture as Public Policy: Urban Development and the Chicago
Blues.”
Thursday, 2/26, 12 p.m. (300 Wallace) –
Mini-symposium on art and innovation in the contemporary U.S.
(2 hour session)
Liz Engelman (McCarter Theatre) and Tamsen Wolff (Princeton
University, English) – “Innovation in the nonprofit
theatre in America.”
Alan Shockley, Princeton University, Department of Music
– “The Market for Contemporary Composition”
Ted Coffey, Princeton University, Department of Music
– “New Music, New Experiences, New Forms of
Distribution”
Steven Holochwost, Rutgers University, Department of Music
– “Contemporary Music Composition, Dissemination
and New Organizational Forms”
Paul DiMaggio: respondent
March
Thursday, 3/11, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) -
Antoine Hennion, Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation –
“Music Lovers and Other Sorts of ‘Amateurs’:
Towards a Pragmatic Sociology of Taste”
Thursday, 3/25, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) -
Richard Butsch, Rider University, author of The Making of
American Audiences from Stage to Television, 1750-1990. “Crowds,
Publics or Individuals: Examining American Audiences.”
April
Tuesday, 4/6, 12 to 2 p.m. (165 Wallace)
- CACPS Advisory Committee Meeting
Thursday, 4/22, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) -
Kim Babon, University of Chicago, Sociology – “Art
in the Urban Context – Controversies Over ‘Non-controversial’
Public Sculpture.”
May
Thursday, 5/6, 4:00 p.m. (001
Robertson) PUBLIC
LECTURE -- Forum on “"The Creation of the Media:
Political Origins of Modern Communications.” Speakers: Paul
Starr, Princeton University; Nicholas Lemann, Columbia
University; Eli Noam, Columbia University; Annabel Patterson,
Yale University; and Michael Schudson, University of
California, San Diego.
Thursday, 5/13, 12 p.m. (165 Wallace) -
Steven Tepper and Jesse Mintz-Roth, Princeton University,
CACPS – “Stop the Beat: Chicago, Raves and Conflict
Over Youth Culture”
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