All News
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Doran Larson, the Walcott-Bartlett Chair of Ethics and Christian Evidences and Professor of Literature and Creative Writing, discussed the American Prison Writing Archive at the Association for the Study of Law, Culture and the Humanities meeting.
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Professor of Comparative Literature Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz presented the keynote address at the Women’s Classical Committee of the United Kingdom general meeting in London on May 18.
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An essay by Doran Larson, the Walcott-Bartlett Chair of Ethics and Christian Evidences and professor of literature and creative writing, appears in the November/December issue of Corrections Today.
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For his 2017 Emerson project, Marquis Palmer ’18 is filming a short documentary, based in his home city of Utica, about the experience of losing a loved one to the prison system.
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Witness in the Era of Mass Incarceration: Discovering the Ethical Prison, by Doran Larson, the Walcott-Bartlett Chair of Ethics and Christian Evidences, was recently published by Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.
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Doran Larson’s essay addressed Attorney General Jeff Sessions recently announced return to a pre-Obama policy of seeking maximum penalties for all drug crimes as well as the mismanagement of the prison system.
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Doran Larson, the Walcott-Bartlett Chair of Ethics and Christian Evidences, presented “The Prison Writer as Witness: Introducing the American Prison Writing Archive” at the Stockholm Criminology Symposium on June 19.
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From providing a virtual look at India’s sacred centers to collecting oral histories in post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans, Hamilton’s Digital Humanities Initiative (DHi) provides students an interdisciplinary — and often interactive — approach to collaborating with faculty.
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Hamilton Professor Doran Larson’s American Prison Writing Archive project has been awarded $262,000 by the National Endowment of the Humanities (NEH), the single largest NEH grant awarded solely to a Hamilton faculty member in 17 years.
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“I’d rather die than suffer another day as one of the obedient, silent ones,” said award-winning poet and writer Jimmy Santiago Baca during his public reading in the Chapel on March 1.
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