The Chronicle

October 15, 1999: Volume 47, Number 6

The Chronicle

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Faculty, Staff Works Listed

Brenda Wineapple, Washington Irving Professor of Modern Literary and Historical Studies, has recently published two essays. The first, "Freud's Lying Dream," appears in the collection, That Obscure Subject of Desire: Freud's Female Homosexual, edited by R. Lesser and E. Schoenberg (Routledge). The second, "Hawthorne Family Values; or, the Biographical Imperative," appears in Biography and Source Studies, edited by Frederick Karl (AMS Press), as the lead article and discusses biographical method as it is applied, and misapplied, by Nathaniel Hawthorne's family.

Robert Sharlet, Chauncey Winters Professor of Political Science, recently published several articles and essays, and a chapter. These include: "Constitutional Implementation and State-Building: Progress and Problems of Law Reform in Russia," Chapter 4 in State-Building in Russia ed. by G.B. Smith (M.E. Sharpe, 1999); "Russian Constitutional Change: An Opportunity Missed," in Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization, Vol. 7, No. 3 (1999); "The Fall of the Soviet Empire and A New Era" and two other essays in Milestones of the 20th Century (Grolier, 1999); and "Pravovye transplantatsii I politicheskie mutatsii: Retseptsiia konstitutionnogo prava v Rossii ...," in Konstitutionnoe pravo, No. 2 (27) (1999), a Russian law journal published in Moscow.

Pilar Moyano, associate professor of Spanish, delivered a paper titled "Utopia/Antiutopia: la desmitificacion de lo revolucionario en la narrativa actual centroamericana," at the XIX Encuentro Internacional de la Universidad de Cantabria, Santander, Spain. At this conference she was elected member of the Board of Directors of the Asociacion de Licenciados y Doctores Espanoles en los Estados Unidos (Spanish Professionals in America, Inc.).

John Fox, visiting professor of anthropology, has two manuscripts, "Community Kingdoms: Maya Highlands," and "Utatlan: A Galactic Capital" edited for publication in a volume by Oxford University Press.

Rebecca Fisher, international students assistant, has completed a joint, two-year project with Prof. Michael Aung-Thwin of the University of Hawaii. With a grant from the U.S. Department of Education, they created an interactive CD-ROM titled, "The Making of Modern Burma." The CD-ROM is on display at the East West Center in Hawaii as part of a Burmese exhibit.

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