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News from the Division of Languages and Literature

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Student sitting outdoors looking upward into the distance.

Bard College Student Samantha Barrett ’26 Wins 2025 PEN/Robert J Dau Short Story Prize

This award recognizes 12 emerging writers each year for their debut short story published in a literary magazine, journal, or cultural website, and aims to support the launch of their careers as fiction writers.
Student smiling and holding up an award certificate.

Bard College Celebrates Student Achievements at Undergraduate Awards Ceremony

The annual ceremony is a celebration of the incredible talent and dedication showcased by Bard students, as well as the unwavering support and guidance from esteemed faculty and staff at the College.
A person with blond hair and a blue blazer sits with a video game controller in hand

“Rebuilding the World Through Queer Video Games:” Bo Ruberg ’07 for YES Magazine

For Ruberg, the relationship between the physical world and the virtual space accessed within video games is complex, and the latter is no less real for being speculative, given that it offers players a chance to inhabit and interact with realities that a

Division of Languages and Literature News by Date

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April 2021

04-28-2021
Distinguished Writer in Residence Masha Gessen: How Vaccine Hesitancy Is Driving Breakthrough Infections in Nursing Homes
“A gap in vaccination rates between residents and staff means that long-term-care facilities remain particularly vulnerable to coronavirus outbreaks,” writes Gessen in the New Yorker. “As long as the virus is circulating in the community, an unvaccinated staff member can pick it up and bring it to the nursing home, where conditions may make the otherwise rare breakthrough infections more likely.”
Read more in the New Yorker
Photo: Masha Gessen. Photo by Lena Di
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of Languages and Literature,Written Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
04-20-2021
Bard Professors James Romm and Daniel Mendelsohn on Ancient Greece’s Army of Lovers
Comprising 150 male couples, Thebes’s Sacred Band was undefeated until it was wiped out in 338 B.C. The warriors’ valor, the Greeks believed, was due to the fact that no man would ever exhibit cowardice in front of his beloved. In the 19th century, their mass grave was found. Charles Ranlett Flint Professor of Humanities Daniel Mendelsohn pens this article in the New Yorker ahead of the publication of a new book by James H. Ottaway Jr. Professor of Classics James Romm, The Sacred Band: Three Hundred Theban Lovers Fighting to Save Greek Freedom (Simon and Schuster, June 2021). Read the Article
 
Bard faculty member and Princeton alum James Romm speaks with the Princeton Alumni Weekly about the new book and his work to bring the heroism of Ancient Thebes to light. Read the Interview
 
Photo: Image courtesy Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports, Directorate of the Management of the National Archive of Monuments, Department of the Historical Archive of Antiquities and Restorations
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Classical Studies Program,Division of Languages and Literature | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
04-13-2021
Masha Gessen: How can we continue to keep schools relatively safe from the coronavirus?
Public conversation about the pandemic has revolved around individual choice, autonomy, safety, and personal responsibility. Schools expose the shortcomings of this framing, writes Distinguished Writer in Residence Masha Gessen. “In late March, New York’s public high schools reopened for in-person instruction. Elementary schools have been offering some in-person instruction since December, middle schools since February. The country’s largest school district has managed to provide more in-school hours than many other districts that might have seemed better equipped for the task. But, nearly three months after vaccines became available to teachers, fewer than half—around sixty-five thousand, out of approximately a hundred and forty-seven thousand Department of Education employees—have received at least a first shot of the vaccine.”
Read more in the New Yorker
Photo: Masha Gessen. Photo by Lena Di
Meta: Type(s): Faculty | Subject(s): Division of Languages and Literature,Written Arts Program | Institutes(s): Bard Undergraduate Programs |
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