To view all the gallery entries online, visit nanovic.nd.edu/gallery.
Pedro Aguilera-Mellado
Assistant Professor, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
CHAPTER
“De-metaphorization of ‘the Other’ in the Wake of Modern Biopolitics: A Reading of Jesús Carrasco’s La tierra que pisamos,” Rite, Flesh, and Stone: The Matter of Death in Contemporary Spanish Culture, Antonio Córdoba and Daniel García-Donoso (eds.), Vanderbilt University Press, 2021. ARTICLE
“Goya, o de la Ilustración como adumbramiento: Variaciones contemporáneas de Farideh Lashai a Los desastres de la guerra de Goya,” Romance Quarterly, Vol. 68, No.1, 2021.
Maurizio Albahari
Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology
LECTURE
“Whose Name Was Writ in Water: Mediterranean Crossings and Confines,” Italian Graduate Society, Mediterranean Displacement Project, and Graduate Student Association, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, February 22, 2021.
Rüdiger Bachmann
Stepan Family College Professor, Department of Economics Journal of Monetary Economics 117 (2021) 781–797
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect
ARTICLE
Journal of Monetary Economics journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jmoneco
“Zeitgespräch: Bidens Fiskalpolitik – ein Vorbild für Deutschland?,” Wirtschaftsdienst 6/2021, 414-417.
Worker churn in the cross section and over time: New evidence from Germany Rüdiger Bachmann a,∗, Christian Bayer b, Christian Merkl c, Stefan Seth d, Heiko Stüber c, Felix Wellschmied e,1 a
Department of Economics, University of Notre Dame, 3026 Nanovic Hall, Notre Dame, IN, 46556, USA Institute for Macroeconomics and Econometrics, University of Bonn, Adenauerallee 24-42, 53113 Bonn, Germany Chair of Macroeconomics, Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Lange Gasse 20, 90403 Nürnberg, Germany Research Data Centre (FDZ) of the German Federal Employment Agency (BA) at the Institute for Employment Research (IAB), Regensburger Str. 104, 90478 Nürnberg, Germany e Department of Economics, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, 28903 Getafe, Calle Madrid 126, Spain b c
d
ARTICLE
a r t i c l e
i n f o
a b s t r a c t
Article history: Received 3 August 2019 Revised 20 May 2020 Accepted 21 May 2020 Available online 23 May 2020
“Bestimmungsfaktoren von subjektiver Unsicherheit auf der Firmenebene,” ifo Schnelldienst, 6/2021 (16 June 2021).
Worker churn is procyclical in the German labor market. We study the plant-level connection of churn and employment growth using the new Administrative Wage and Labor Market Flow Panel from 1975 to 2014. Churn is V-shaped in employment growth. Through analyzing this pattern by worker skill, age, and tenure, we establish that churn is unlikely to result from plant reorganization but rather from uncertainty about match quality. In a dynamic labor demand framework with a time-to-hire friction, churn can be interpreted as a manifestation of idiosyncratically stochastic separation shocks. These shocks become larger and more predictable during booms, leading to procyclical churn.
JEL classification: E20 E24 E32 J23 J63
© 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Worker churn Employment growth Job flows Worker flows Labor demand Separation shocks Job-to-job transitions Aggregate fluctuations
Co-authors: K. Carstensen and M. Schneider
∗
Corresponding author. E-mail address: rbachman@nd.edu (R. Bachmann). We thank seminar participants at the Royal Economic Society Meeting, the Verein für Socialpolitik, the EES Conference, the 2nd IZA@DC Young Scholar Program, the 29th Annual Conference of the European Association of Labour Economists, the 2017 and 2019 Annual Conference of the Scottish Economic Society, the ZEW Research Seminar, the 6th DFG SPP 1764 Workshop, the 24th Annual Meeting of the Society of Labor Economists, the ECB/CEPR 2019 Labour Market Workshop, the Brown Bag seminar of the BMF, and the IMK seminar. We thank James Costain, Alexander Herzog-Stein, Andreas Kostøl, Jim Spletzer, and two anonymous referees for helpful comments. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FTP/2007–2013) / ERC Grant agreement no. 282740. Felix Wellschmied gratefully acknowledges support from the Ministerio de Economía y Competividad through research grants ECO2014-56384-P, MDM 2014-0431, and Comunidad de Madrid MadEco-CM (S2015/HUM-3444) and thanks the Department of Economics at ITAM for its hospitality. Heiko Stüber gratefully ac1
ARTICLE
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmoneco.2020.05.003 0304-3932/© 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Zeitgespräch
“Worker Churn in the Cross-Section and Over Time: New Evidence from Germany,” Journal of Monetary Economics (2021), Vol 117.
DOI: 10.1007/s10273-021-2934-1
Rüdiger Bachmann
Bidens Fiskalpolitik – ein Vorbild für Deutschland? Die US-amerikanische Regierung hat in relativ kurzer Folge drei Fiskalprogramme zur Konjunkturstimulierung verabschiedet: am 27. März 2020, bereits zu einem frühen Zeitpunkt in der COVID-19-Pandemie, den CARES (Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security) Act mit einem Umfang von 2,2 Billionen US-$, am 27. Dezember 2020 den Consolidated Appropriations Act 2021 im Umfang von 0,9 Billionen US-$, und schließlich dann am 11. März 2021 nach der Amtseinführung Präsident Bidens den American Rescue Plan Act im Umfang von 1,9 Billionen US-$. Zusammen entspricht dies einem fiskalischen Impuls von knapp einem Viertel des US-amerikanischen Bruttoinlandsprodukts (BIP). Darüber hinaus diskutieren Präsident Biden und die Demokraten im Kongress zurzeit ein Infrastrukturpaket, den American Jobs Plan, sowie ein Familien- und Bildungspaket, den American Families Plan. Deren Umfänge betragen weitere Billionen US-Dollar und beinhalten nicht nur klassische Infrastrukturvorhaben, sondern auch Programme zum Klimaschutz und zum Ausbau der Care Economy sowie familien- und bildungspolitische Maßnahmen wie einen Kindergartenanspruch für alle und Kündigungsschutz im Krankheitsfall. Die beiden noch ausstehenden Ausgabenpakete sollen durch höhere Unternehmensteuern, eine höhere Mindeststeuer und verschiedene steuerpolitische Maßnahmen im oberen Einkommenssegment bei der Bundeseinkommensteuer sowie durch zusätzliche Staatsschulden finanziert werden. Auf die Realisierungschancen dieser Pakete, die ja für die Frage wichtig sind, inwieweit die Biden-Politik Vorbild für die Fiskalpolitik in Deutschland sein kann, wird später einzugehen sein.
Co-authors: C. Bayer, C. Merkl, S. Seth, H. Stüber and F. Wellschmied
Abbildung 1 visualisiert die enorme fiskalische Expansion in den USA während der COVID-19-Pandemie. Selbst in der Großen Rezession 2008/2009 tat man nichts Ver© Der/die Autor:in(nen) 2021. Open Access: Dieser Artikel wird unter der Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Lizenz veröffentlicht (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.de). Open Access wird durch die ZBW – Leibniz-Informationszentrum Wirtschaft gefördert.
gleichbares. Abbildung 1 zeigt auch, dass die US-amerikanischen Haushalte im Durchschnitt in einem bisher nicht dagewesenen Ausmaß verfügbares Einkommen aufbauten, und zwar parallel zur fiskalischen Expansion. Trotzdem zeichnet sich in den USA auch eine sich verfestigende Langzeitarbeitslosigkeit sowie eine erhöhte Nahrungsmittelunsicherheit bei den ärmeren Haushalten ab, und das diente letztlich der politischen Rechtfertigung des American Rescue Plan Act durch die Biden Administration. Für die Beurteilung der ökonomischen Folgen des American Rescue Plan Act sowie die Abschätzung der konjunkturellen Wirkungen der beiden noch nicht verabschiedeten Programme illustriert Abbildung 1 darüber hinaus die erste gegenwärtig noch offene Grundfrage: 1. Wie werden die Haushalte mit ihrem zusätzlichen verfügbaren Einkommen umgehen? Handelt es sich gewissermaßen um eine „Kriegskasse“, die in kurzer Zeit für einen postpandemischen Konsumrausch ausgegeben werden wird? Oder wird das zusätzliche verfügbare Einkommen zur Reparatur der Haushaltsbilanzen verwendet, also letztlich ins langfristige Nettovermögen der Haushalte eingehen und erst allmählich nachfragewirksam werden? Wir kennen die Antwort noch nicht. Tritt eher das erste Szenario ein, wird für einige Zeit mit kräftiger Inflation, höheren Nominalzinsen und mit Angebotsrestriktionen zu rechnen sein. Gerade letztere stellen dann aber auch ein Problem für den American Jobs Plan und den American Families Plan dar, die zwar nicht konjunkturell, sondern langfristig motiviert sind, aber eben dann auf eine ohnehin bereits ausgelastete US-amerikanische Wirtschaft mit brummender Konjunktur träfen. Die zweite noch offene Grundfrage ist: 2. Wie schnell wird die Outputlücke bzw. die Arbeitslosigkeit in den USA abgebaut werden? Abbildung 2 zeigt die Entwicklung der Outputlücke1 sowie der Arbeitslosenrate während der Coronakrise im
Prof. Dr. Rüdiger Bachmann ist Professor an der University of Notre Dame in den USA.
414
1
Outputlückenschätzungen sind nicht unproblematisch und werden immer wieder kritisiert. Hier geht es aber um den Unterschied in der Outputlückenentwicklung nach der Großen Rezession gegenüber derjenigen während der COVID-19-Krise.
Wirtschaftsdienst 2021 | 6
Christopher Baron
Associate Professor, Department of Classics
BOOK PUBLICATION
The Herodotus Encyclopedia, Wiley-Blackwell, 2021.
Christine Baumeister
Robert and Irene Bozzone Professor and Associate Chair Department of Economics
ARTICLE
“Tracking Weekly State-Level Economic Conditions,” Review of Economics and Statistics, June 2021. Co-authors: Danilo Leiva-León and Eric Sims ARTICLE
“A Comparison of Monthly Global Indicators for Forecasting Growth,” International Journal of Forecasting, 37(3), July-September 2021, 1276-1295. Co-author: P. Guérin
Christine Becker
Associate Professor, Department of Film, Television, and Theatre
CONFERENCE PRESENTATION
“Authentically Atypical?,” Society for Cinema and Media Studies Conference, March 2021.
Judith Benz
Teaching Professor Department of German and Russian Languages and Literatures
CONFERENCE PRESENTATION
“Excavating the Treasure: Die Nibelungen. Ein deutscher Stummfilm (2021). Medievalism in the Works of Felicitas Hoppe,” 57th International Congress on Medieval Studies, May 2022. CONFERENCE PRESENTATION
“(Middle) Ageing Well: Lunete’s Evolution from Hartmann to Hoppe,” 56th International Congress on Medieval Studies, May 2021.
Martin Bloomer
Professor, Department of Classics
BOOK CHAPTER
“Children in Herodotus,” The Herodotus Encyclopedia, Christopher Baron (ed.), Wiley-Blackwell, 2021.
Tobias Boes
Professor, Department of German and Russian Languages and Literatures
BOOK PUBLICATION
Thomas Manns Krieg: Literatur und Politik im Amerikanischen Exil (German edition of Boes’ Thomas Man’s War, Cornell University Press, 2019), Göttingen: Wallstein Verlag, 2021. INVITED LECTURES
Series of appearances discussing Thomas Mann: Los Angeles, München (Germany), Dublin (Ireland), and Washington University (St. Louis).
Katie Bugyis
Assistant Professor, Program of Liberal Studies The Sr. Kathleen Cannon, O.P., Distinguished Lecture Series presents
CAMPUS EVENT
Organized campus visit, student workshop, and Sr. Kathleen Cannon, O.P., Distinguished Lecture by Lauren Groff, author of bestselling novel Matrix, which was inspired by Bugyis’ research on women religious in the Middle Ages.
An evening with
Lauren Groff Thursday, November 18 | 5:30 p.m. Patricia George Decio Theatre, DeBartolo Performing Arts Center Hear award-winning writer Lauren Groff speak about her latest novel, Matrix, a bold reimagining of the life of the medieval poet Marie de France as the abbess of a Benedictine monastery in England. Book signing to follow. Free but ticketed. More information at performingarts.nd.edu. photo credit: Eli Sinkus
Creative Writing Program Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism Gender Studies Program
Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Henkels Lecture Fund Medieval Institute Nanovic Institute for European Studies
Notre Dame Research Program of Liberal Studies Sr. Kathleen Cannon, O.P., Distinguished Lecture Series Post until 11.19.21
Theodore Cachey Jr.
Fabiano Collegiate Professor of Italian and Ravarino Family Director of the Center for Italian Studies and the Devers Family Program in Dante Studies Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
BOOK PUBLICATION
Dante’s “Other Works”: Assessments and Interpretations, University of Notre Dame Press, 2022. Co-editor: Zygmunt G. Barański CHAPTER
“Travelling/Wandering/Mapping,” The Oxford Handbook of Dante, Manuele Gragnolati, Elena Lombardi, and Francesca Southerden (eds.), Oxford University Press, 2021.
Meredith Chesson
Professor, Department of Anthropology
TECHNICAL REPORT
“Beautiful Things: Dressers and Delph Stories in Western Ireland,” Report for study participants, 2021.
Kathleen Sprows Cummings
William W. and Anna Jean Cushwa Director of the Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism and Professor Departments of American Studies and History
AWARD
2021 Sheedy Award for Excellence in Teaching
John Deak
Associate Professor, Department of History
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES
Collaborative Research Grant: For Project on How and Why the Habsburg Empire Collapsed after World War I.
JoAnn DellaNeva
Professor, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
BOOK PUBLICATION
The Story of the Death of Anne Boleyn: A Poem by Lancelot de Carle (Translated, edited, and with essays), ACMRS Press, 2021.
Diane Desierto
Professor of Law and Global Affairs
BOOK PUBLICATION
ASEAN Law and Regional Integration: Governance and the Rule of Law in Southeast Asia’s Single Market, Routledge, 2021. Co-editor David J. Cohen APPOINTMENT
Chair-Rapporteur of the United Nations’ Expert Group on the Right to Development (starting January 2022). APPOINTMENT
Visiting Professor of International Human Rights Law, University of Navarra, Spain, May 2022.
Kirk Doran
Henkels Family Collegiate Chair and Associate Professor Department of Economics
ARTICLE
“Governance for Good Jobs: The Need for Pro-Productivity Reforms,” American Affairs Fall 2021: Vol V, Number 3. Co-author: Brian Boyd
Stephen Fallon
Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, C.S.C., Professor of the Humanities Program of Liberal Studies
CONFERENCE PRESENTATION
“Milton and Monism, Again,” Renaissance Society of America Conference, April 2021.
Anne García-Romero
Associate Professor, Department of Film, Television, and Theatre
CREATIVE WORK
Imagined Theatres 6 (Introduction and English translations of six essays on Contemporary Chilean Theater), 2021. Co-editors: Alexandra Ripp, Mauricio Barría Jara, Pía Gutiérrez Díaz, David Rodríguez-Solás, and Adam Versényi
Korey Garibaldi
Assistant Professor, Department of American Studies
BOOK CHAPTER
“Desegregating the Digital Turn in American Literary History,” Editing the Harlem Renaissance, Joshua M. Murray and Ross K. Tangedal (eds.), Clemson University Press, 2021. ARTICLE
“When Pushkin’s Blackness Was in Vogue: Rediscovering the Racialization of Russia’s Preeminent Poet and His Descendants,” Slavic Review 80.2 (Summer 2021): 245 – 257. Co-author: Emily Wang, Department of German and Russian Languages and Literature and Nanovic Faculty Fellow
Patrick Griffin
Thomas Moore and Judy Livingston Director, Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies and the Madden-Hennebry Professor of History
APPOINTMENT
Elected to the American Antiquarian Society, July 2021. BOOK PUBLICATION
Ireland and America: Empire, Revolution, and Sovereignty, University of Virginia Press, 2021. Co-author: Francis D. Cogliano
Rev. Kevin G. Grove, C.S.C. Assistant Professor, Department of Theology
BOOK PUBLICATION
Augustine on Memory, Oxford University Press, 2021.
Perin Gürel
Associate Professor, Department of American Studies
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOWSHIP FOR RESEARCH IN TURKEY
For Book on the International History of Comparisons Made between Turkey and Iran.
Rev. Gregory Haake, C.S.C.
Assistant Professor, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
BOOK PUBLICATION
The Politics of Print During the French Wars of Religion: Literature and History in the Age of “Nothing Said Too Soon,” Brill, 2021.
Peter Holland
McMeel Family Chair in Shakespeare Studies and Associate Dean for the Arts Department of Film, Television, and Theatre
BOOK PUBLICATION
Shakespeare and Forgetting, Arden Shakespeare, 2021. BOOK PUBLICATION
Ghostly Fragments: Essays on Shakespeare and Performance, by Barbara C. Hodgdon (edited and introduction by Holland), University of Michigan Press, 2021. Co-editor: Richard Abel
Vittorio Hösle
Paul G. Kimball Professor of Arts and Letters Department of German and Russian Languages and Literatures BOOK PUBLICATION
Il Dialogo Filosofico, Editrice Morcelliana, 2021 (Italian edition of The Philosophical Dialogue: A Poetics and a Hermeneutics, University of Notre Dame Press, 2013). BOOK PUBLICATION
Gott als Vernunft, Springer, 2021 (German edition of God as Reason, University of Notre Dame Press, 2013). BOOK PUBLICATION
Chinese edition of Morals and Politics, University of Notre Dame Press, 2004.
Eileen Hunt
Professor, Department of Political Science
FELLOWSHIP
Carr-Thomas-Ovenden Fellowship in English Literature, Bodleian Library, University of Oxford, 2022-23. BOOK PUBLICATION
Portraits of Wollstonecraft, Bloomsbury Philosophy, 2021 (Anthology editor and contributing author).
Katie Jarvis
Carl E. Koch Associate Professor, Department of History
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOWSHIP
For Democratizing Forgiveness in Revolutionary France, 1789-1799.
Debra Javeline
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science
ARTICLE
“Global Distribution and Coincidence of pollution, Climate Impacts, and Health Risk in the Anthropocene,” PLoS ONE 16, July 2021. Co-authors: Richard Marcantonio, Sean Field, and Augustin Fuentes NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION GRANT
For “EAGER: SAI: A Study of Mitigation Decisions for America’s Costal Residential Infrastructure,” 2021-23. Co-recipient: Tracy Kijewski-Correa
Ian Ona Johnson
P.J. Moran Family Assistant Professor of Military History Department of History
BOOK PUBLICATION
Faustian Bargain: The Soviet-German Partnership and the Origins of the Second World War, Oxford University Press, 2021. AWARD
2022 Distinguished Book Award for First Book, Society for Military History.
Essaka Joshua
Associate Professor, Department of English
APPOINTMENT
Elected to Fellow, Society of Antiquaries of London.
Katharina Kraus
Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy
BOOK PUBLICATION
Kant on Self-Knowledge and Self-Formation: The Nature of Inner Experience, Cambridge University Press, 2020. INVITED LECTURES
Series of appearances discussing Kant on Self-Knowledge and Self-Formation: University of Chicago, Université Paris 8 (France), American Philosophical Association (Portland), and Society of German Idealism and Romanticism (New York).
Karrie Koesel
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science
BOOK PUBLICATION
Citizens & the State in Authoritarian Regimes: Comparing China & Russia, Oxford University Press, 2021. Co-editors: Valerie Bunce and Jessica Weiss PODCAST
“Patriotic Education,” Pekingology on Chinese Politics Podcast, Center for Strategic & International Studies, June 2021.
Ian Kuijt
Professor, Department of Anthropology
DOCUMENTARY
Uncertain Harvest, 2022. Co-creator: William Donaruma, professor of the practice in film making and creative director of the Office of Digital Learning
A. James McAdams
William M. Scholl Professor of International Affairs Department of Political Science
BOOK PUBLICATION
Contemporary Far-Right Thinkers and the Future of Liberal Democracy, Routledge, 2021. Co-editor: Alejandro Castrillón BOOK PUBLICATION
Global 1968: Cultural Revolutions in Europe and Latin America, University of Notre Dame Press, 2021. Co-editor: Anthony P. Monta AWARD
2021 Gold Medal, Catholic University in Ružomberok, Slovakia.
Margaret Meserve
Glynn Family Honors Associate Professor of History and Arts and Letters Director of the Glynn Family Honors Program
BOOK PUBLICATION
Papal Bull: Print, Politics, and Propaganda in Renaissance Rome, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021.
María Rosa Olivera-Williams
Professor, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH PROJECT
“The Rubén Darío: Critical Editions Project,” including workshop “Rubén Darío in the U.S.: Translation Challenges,” November 2022.
Alison Rice
Dr. Scholl Associate Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures Concurrent Associate Professor, Gender Studies
AWARD
Faculty Fellow of the Year, 2021-22.
Ingrid Rowland
Professor, School of Architecture and the Department of History
AWARD
2022 Grace Dudley Prize for Arts Writing, The Robert B. Silvers Foundation. DOCUMENTARY
The Basilica of San Clemente (2021). Created a documentary of the Basilica of Saint Clement in Rome.
Clemens Sedmak
Professor of Social Ethics, Keough School of Global Affairs, Concurrent Professor, Center of Social Concerns and Theology
APPOINTMENT
Director of the Nanovic Institute for European Studies, Keough School of Global Affairs, August 2021.
Sarah Shortall
Assistant Professor, Department of History
BOOK PUBLICATION
Soldiers of God in a Secular World: Catholic Theology and Twentieth-Century French Politics, Harvard University Press, 2021.
Sonja Stojanovic
Assistant Professor, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
CAMPUS EVENT
Facilitated multidisciplinary performances by French performance artist Clyde Chabot—the author, artistic director, and performer for the theatre company La Communauté inavouable— and interviewed her for the Nanovic Institute website.
Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi Associate Professor, Department of English
BOOK PUBLICATION
Savage Tongues, Mariner Books, 2021.
Warren von Eschenbach
Associate Director for Academic Affairs and Associate Professor of the Practice Technology Ethics Center
ARTICLE
“Transparency and the Black Box Problem: Why We Do Not Trust AI,” Philosophy and Technology 34, 1607-1622 (2021).
John Welle
Professor Emeritus, Department of Romance Languages and Literatures
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
“‘Trip dentro trip’: Andrea Zanzotto’s Meditations on English” at “Conglomerati: Andrea Zanzotto’s Poetic Clusters,” University of Oxford, November 2021. WEBINAR
“The Centennial of Andrea Zanzotto’s Birth: the Legacy of a Great Poet and the Presence of Dante in His Verses,” Istituto italiano di cultura of Chicago, October 2021. Co-presenter: Professor Armando Maggi
Susanne Wengle
Nancy R. Dreux Associate Professor, Department of Political Science
BOOK PUBLICATION
Black Earth, White Bread: A Technopolitical History of Russian Agriculture and Food, University of Wisconsin Press, 2021. ARTICLES
“Ordinary Russians were already worried about rising food prices. Then came war and sanctions” and “From sunflower oil to titanium, how the world will feel the costs of the Ukraine conflict,” The Washington Post, March 2022.
Sophie White
Professor, Department of American Studies
APPOINTMENT
Leverhulme Trust Visiting Professorship in Global French Empire Studies, University of Leeds, United Kingdom (2023-24). AWARD
2022 Deep South Book Prize, University of Alabama: the eighth book prize for Voices of the Enslaved: Love, Labor, and Longing in French Louisiana (University of North Carolina Press, 2019).
Catherine Zuckert
AWARD
Thomas W. Smith Distinguished Scholars in Residence School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership, Arizona State University, Spring 2021. Dans cette analyse très minutieuse de toutes les œuvres majeures de Machiavel (Le Prince, Les Discours, La Mandragola, L’Art de la Guerre, La Vie de Castruccio Castracani, Clizia, et Histoires Florentines), Catherine Zuckert montre de façon inédite que Machiavel livre un récit cohérent de la notion politique qui s’applique aussi bien à notre époque qu’à la sienne.
BOOK PUBLICATION
Selon Machiavel, les individus s’organisent politiquement pour protéger leur vie, leur famille et leurs biens des agresseurs violents. Mais, une fois ces sociétés organisées formées, cellesci se divisent en deux sortes d’« humeurs » opposées : le désir du peuple de ne pas être commandé ou opprimé ; et le désir des ambitieux et des avares de dominer et d’opprimer.
Machiavel adresse donc toutes ses œuvres aux dirigeants, qu’ils soient réels ou potentiels, car il voit qu’une foule sans direction peut être destructrice. Pour conserver leur position de gouvernant, il exhorte alors les dirigeants à utiliser ce désir du peuple de voir leur vie, leur famille et leurs biens protégés.
La Politique selon Machiavel, L’Harmattan, 2021 (French edition of Machiavelli’s Politics, University of Chicago Press, 2017). Trans. Lucien Samir Oulahbib
Catherine Zuckert est professeure émérite de science politique de l’Université Notre Dame (Indiana, États-Unis) et professeure invitée à l’École de pensée et direction civique et économique à l’université d’État d’Arizona (Arizona State University).
Catherine H. Zuckert
LA POLITIQUE SELON MACHIAVEL Traduction Lucien Samir Oulahbib
LA POLITIQUE SELON MACHIAVEL
LA POLITIQUE SELON MACHIAVEL
Catherine H. Zuckert
Professor Emerita, Department of Political Science
Photographie de couverture :
philosophiques
Niccolo Di Bernardo Dei Machiavelli. 45 € ISBN : 978-2-343-23602-5
Commentaires
Michael Zuckert
Professor Emeritus, Department of Political Science
CONFERENCE PRESENTATION
“The Meaning of Liberty: The Drafting and Ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment,” Constitutional Reconstruction: History and the Meaning of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments, October 2021. Co-presenters: Jeffrey S. Stutton, Jason Mazzone, and Christopher W. Schmidt AWARD
Thomas W. Smith Distinguished Scholars in Residence School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership, Arizona State University, Spring 2021.
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For more information about the Laura Shannon Prize in Contemporary European Studies, visit nanovic.nd.edu/prize.
THE LAURA SHANNON PRIZE in Contemporary European Studies
“Heroines and Local Girls: The Transnational Emergence of Women’s Writing in the Long Eighteenth Century” Pamela L. Cheek
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2019
Professor of French and Comparative Literature, University of New Mexico
JURY STATEMENT
“Pamela L. Cheek’s meticulously researched book on the evolution of European women’s writing into a distinct body of literature represents a ground-breaking contribution to the history of women’s writing and reading. In this geographically and intellectually ambitious work, Cheek deftly traces the development of transnational ‘ideational’ and actual communities of writing—and, importantly, reading—women, examining the networks and reciprocal influences of women authors and readers located in France, Germany, Holland and England. . . . A remarkably wide-ranging and scholarly account of the consolidation of women’s writing as a transnational category of literature, ‘Heroines and Local Girls’ is an indispensable reference point for writers and readers interested in reception politics, literary history and women’s writing.”
Winner, 2022 Award in the Humanities
“The Ruins Lesson: Meaning and Material in Western Culture” University of Chicago Press, 2019
Susan Stewart
The Avalon Foundation University Professor in the Humanities and Professor of English Princeton University
JURY STATEMENT
“A fascinating and exceptionally erudite investigation of the cultural meaning of ancient ruins in Western culture, ‘The Ruins Lesson’ considers a wide range of places, times, artifacts, personal objects, religious practices and artistic forms ranging from architecture to visual art (printmaking and painting) to poetry. Susan Stewart, a much-respected literary critic, here turns her attention to the material realm. She surveys the physical and visible remains from antiquity, in order to consider the ways these ruins came to represent the high achievements of past civilizations and how artists and writers came to imagine them as both compelling and problematic insofar as they embody a narrative of decay as well as one of lost grandeur. . . .”
Silver Medalist, 2022 Award in the Humanities
“Women at Work in Twenty-First Century European Cinema” University of Illinois Press, 2019
Barbara Mennel
The Rothman Chair and Director of the Center for the Humanities and the Public Sphere and Professor of Film Studies and German Studies, University of Florida
JURY STATEMENT
“Ranging across both arthouse and popular films from nearly two dozen European countries, Barbara Mennel’s ‘Women at Work’ illuminates the diverse representations of women’s labor in twenty-first century European cinema. This groundbreaking book embeds culture-specific approaches to working women within the broader contexts of global financial crises, neoliberal capitalism, precarity, migration and the ethics and economics of biotechnology. Admirably attentive to the diversity of European feminisms and cinematic idioms, Mennel explores both the transcending of female stereotypes and their durability. Many films she examines show how female economic empowerment often rests on the exploited domestic and reproductive labor of migrant women. A captivating overview of current European cinema, ‘Women at Work’ offers timely and discerning insight into the evolving meanings of feminism in contemporary Europe on both sides of the former Iron Curtain.”
Honorable Mention, 2022 Award in the Humanities
Edyta Bojanowska
Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures and Chair of the European Studies Council at the MacMillan Center, Yale University
Stephen M. Fallon
The Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, C.S.C., Professor of the Humanities, University of Notre Dame
Robin Jensen
The Patrick O’Brien Professor of Theology, University of Notre Dame
Siobhán McIlvanney
Professor of French and Francophone Women’s Writing, King’s College London
Lenart Škof
Professor of Philosophy and Religion and Head of the Institute for Philosophical Studies, Science and Research Center Koper (ZRS Koper), Slovenia
Members of the Jury, 2022 Award in the Humanities
For more information about the winners and the Laura Shannon Prize, visit nanovic.nd.edu/prize.