NEH 2011 Summer Institute: America Engages Eurasia at Columbia University
that I participated in back in June 2011.
As I am preparing for my Moldova Study Abroad course, I am drawing from the materials and resources I was able to obtain while at the institute.
So I thought "better late, than never," and I am posting about this workshop from a year and a half ago!
While at the institute, I participated in seminars all day and worked at the Columbia law library all night, accessing books and materials for my research project.
The Co-Directors did an amazing job organizing this Institute.
Each morning we had speakers, who approached the topic from a wide range of disciplines/perspectives. During the working lunches we had the opportunity to get to know fellow Institute scholars, the speakers, or meet with special luncheon guests. Lunch was followed by discussion/panel of discussants on the morning's topics. The Co-Directors had each of our interests/backgrounds/topics constantly in mind -- and during the breaks and over lunch -- they would be scurrying around to scholars, giving them someone's contact information or a book or suggesting one of the guests they should be sure to meet or a library/venue they should be sure to visit. It was truly impressive. The Co-Directors were constantly thinking about ways for each of the scholars to make the most of the Institute and their research time in NYC. Constantly. I very much appreciated the format of the working lunches -- assigning table hosts -- making sure that we each were sitting at different tables every day. Scholars were selected as table hosts pursuant to their research interests and those of the visiting speakers/discussants/luncheon guests for the day. This provided an excellent opportunity to network and to have more extensive discussions about the topics covered during the formal sessions.
I also was impressed by the cohort of scholars selected to participate in the Institute. Such diversity -- from graduate students to Full Professor/Chairs, from all regions of the US, from all kinds of institutions (or no institutional affiliation), from countries in Eurasia and from the US, from a variety of disciplines.... We learned perhaps as much from each other as from the speakers/discussants. I have participated in inter-disciplinary workshops and panels in the past, and sometimes it has been more of a challenge than one might expect to maintain a collegial environment when scholars approach the same topic from different methodological/pedagogical perspectives. Our group always maintained a collegial, friendly, thoughtful dialogue. Everyone showed a great deal of respect for each of the scholars, and each scholar was valued as having something to contribute from his/her perspective/experience.
It was truly a pleasure -- to be in seminars all day and at the library all night -- to be able to "eat, sleep, and drink" my research project during the Institute. While it was a hardship that I could not bring my family to join me for all/part of the institute at the university housing, in the end, I think the sacrifice was worth it, in terms of the late nights and early mornings I was able to spend, un-interrupted, working on my research -- as well as the opportunities to socialize with institute participants outside of our seminars.
The American Girl Doll Store on 5th Avenue....yes, I stopped by to pick up a treat for Peggy |
Institute participants took the LIRR out to Long Beach, where we enjoyed a lovely reception at the condo of one of our Institute Co-Directors |
New York Public Library. We had a private tour through a fabulous exhibit of NYPL collection in honor of the 100 Year Anniversary of the library |
NYPL. I am now a card-carrying member! |
Butler Library at night. This is where most of our seminars were held. My dorm was right next door. |
on the stacks at Butler Library. Shelves and shelves of books about Moldova. In Romanian, Russian, French, German, and even English. |
My dorm (Carman Hall) is the tall building behind the modern building in the foreground |
Columbia University |
Among the stacks at Columbia's law library. Added to my PPT slide (when we discuss this case in Law and Politics) |
NYC subway stop at 116th St |
Columbia University |
Eloise at the Plaza |
Grand Central Terminal |
At the Lehman Social Science library |
I stopped by the Moldovan mission to the UN |
my shelf, at the law library |
NEH Summer Institute on Eurasian Studies participants and Co-Directors, on the balcony of the Columbia Faculty House, where we enjoyed our daily working lunches |
At the Romanian Consulate. I was able to borrow books about Moldova at the Romanian Cultural Institute library (next door) |
UN Security Council Chamber |
Outside UN HQ |
Outside UN HQ |
Columbia University's law school |
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