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Summer 2010 Faculty

EMEL AKÇALI
Turkey and Cyprus, Visiting Assistant Professor
Ph.D., Paris IV—Sorbonne, France
M.A., Galatasaray University, Istanbul, Turkey
B.A., American University of Paris, France

Emel Akçali is currently a lecturer at the Political Science and International Studies Department at the University of Birmingham in the U.K. Professor Akçali worked as a reporter for a major Turkish newspaper before returning to academia. Her research interests include: contemporary theoretical debates in geography and in international relations, non-Western and alternative globalist geopolitical discourses, and ethno-territorial conflicts in the age of globalization. The author of numerous articles and book chapters, her book on the politics of Cyprus will be published in 2010 with Harmattan, Paris. 

MARCO ANTONSICH
Italy, Visiting Assistant Professor
Ph.D., University of Colorado, Boulder, U.S.A.
Ph.D., Università di Trieste, Italy
M.A., Università Cattolica, Milan, Italy
B.A., Università Cattolica, Milan, Italy

Marco Antonsich is a research fellow at the School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Birmingham in the U.K. Professor Antonsich specializes in the politics of identity and his research interests include: territory, identity and belonging in the age of globalization, multiculturalism, cosmopolitanism and trans-nationalism, as well as European identity and processes of regionalization in Europe. The author of several books and critical articles, Professor Antonsich’s is currently at work on a grant project entitled: ‘I (don’t) belong here’: Exploring territorial belonging in the U.K.

AHRON BREGMAN
U.K./Israel, Visiting Professor of Political Science

Ph.D., King’s College, U.K.
M.A., B.A., The Hebrew University, Israel

Author of both academic and non-academic books on Israel and the Israeli-Arab conflict, Dr. Bregman has also written numerous articles for both the British and Israeli press. He has been a consultant for the Atlas of World History; Associate Producer/Consultant for the BBC TV documentary series The Fifty Years War: Israel and the Arabs; and lecturer at universities in the U.K. in addition to being parliamentary assistant and speechwriter for the Israeli Parliament.

GREGORY BARZ
U.S.A., Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology, The Blair School of Music

Ph.D. Brown University, Ethnomusicology
M.A., University of Chicago, Music
B.M., North Carolina School of the Arts, Music

Greg Barz is an associate professor of ethnomusicology in the Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University, with appointments in Anthropology and the Divinity school. He is the producer of the 2007 Grammy-nominated album, "Singing for Life: Songs of Hope, Healing, and HIV/AIDS in Uganda", released by Smithsonian Folkways that draws on his field recordings in East Africa of the music of HIV+ women’s groups. His research in Uganda was supported by a senior research fellowship with in Fulbright African AIDS Research Program. Barz’s most recent research involves documenting the role of music on the radio broadcasts that led to the Rwandan genocide in the 1990s. He is author or editor of 8 books including most recently Singing for Life: Music and HIV/AIDS in Uganda (NY: Routledge).

DAVIDE BOLGE'
Switzerland, Adjunct Lecturer in Graphic Design
Advanced diploma, CSIA Lugano, Switzerland
Davide Bolgé is creative director and owner of 4th Floor Design. Established in 1998, 4th Floor Design is a small company highly specialized in brand building, corporate design and visual communication arts.

GIUSEPPE CAPPIELLO
Italy/USA, Professor of Italian Language and Literature
B.A., State University of New York, USA
Dottore in Lettere, Università di Padova, Italy
In addition to teaching on Long Island, in New Jersey, and at Rutgers University where he also completed coursework for the doctoral program, Professor Cappiello has coordinated foreign language symposia in the U.S. and England, and has conducted special foreign language workshops at the NATO base in Vicenza, Italy, in conjunction with the Universities of Maryland and Boston. He is a certified teacher in the states of New York and New Jersey and a member of the following associations: AATI, MLA, ACTFL, and the National Honors Society for Romance Languages.

JACK CARAVELLI
U.S.A., Visiting Professor of Political Science

Ph.D., Georgetown University, USA
M.A., Georgetown University, USA
B.S., Georgetown University, USA

Dr. Caravelli, currently Senior Fellow at the U.K, Defence Academy, is a leading expert on nonproliferation issues. He began his career in the Central Intelligence Agency in 1982 where he served in various managerial, staff and research positions.  In 1966, he joined the White House National Security Council Staff as Director for Nonproliferation, serving as the President’s chief advisor on nonproliferation issues in the Middle East and Russia. He became Deputy Assistant Secretary of Energy in 2000, serving there until 2005. He also serves on Oxford University’s program on terrorism and intelligence. Dr. Caravelli is the author of Nuclear Insecurity: The Threat from Rogue Nations and Terrorists.

DIANNE CARMODY
U.S.A., University Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice, Old Dominion University
Ph.D., University of New Hampshire Sociology/Criminology
M.A., University of New Hampshire Sociology.
B.A., University of New Hampshire Psychology / Spanish

Dianne Carmody is a university Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice at Old Dominion University (O.D.U.). She is also the Director of the O.D.U. Center for Family Violence Education and Research. Within the community, Dr. Carmody serves on the Board of Directors of Samaritan House, the largest shelter for victims of domestic violence in Virginia. Her research publications focus on the media portrayal of crime and criminals, juvenile offenders, the criminal justice response to wife assault, school violence, and rape victimization. Her publications have appeared in the Journal of Marriage and the Family, Justice Quarterly, Violence and Victims and The Journal of Quantitative Criminology.

NATALIA CARRETTA
Italy, Adjunct Lecturer in Modern Languages
Dottore in Lingue e Letterature Straniere, Università di Bologna, Italy
Natalia Carretta has taught Italian as a Foreign Language in Italy at all levels. Currently she also teaches in other private language schools in Lugano.

ANNAMARIA CERETTI
Italy, Adjunct Lecturer in Modern Languages
Dottore in Lingue e Letterature Straniere, Università Bocconi, Milan, Italy
Annamaria Ceretti has taught Italian as a Foreign Language since 1974 both in England and, at an executive level, in the U.S.A., She has also taught English in Italy. Teaching preparations were undertaken at the Università Italiana per Stranieri in Perugia, Italy, and at Dartmouth College, U.S.A., under Professor John Rassias. Dr. Ceretti is a member of the American Association of Teachers of Italian (AATI) and American Association of Italian Studies (AAIS).

FABRIZIO L. DELLA CORTE
Switzerland, Adjunct Lecturer, Computing and International Management

Ph.D., candidate (ABD), University of Lugano, Switzerland
M.B.A., Golden Gate University, U.S.A.
B.S., Sonoma State University, U.S.A
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Fabriziio della Corte has extensive cross-cultural international experience. Before entering academia, he was director and senior manager for various international high technology companies in both California and Europe. He has in-depth experience in information technology project management and new product marketing management. His current interests and experience focus on product marketing management, product strategy, entrepreneurship, innovation management, business development and international management.

CYNTHIA CROLIUS
U.S.A., Adjunct Lecturer in Studio Art

B.A,. University of Pennsylvania

Ms. Crolius is a professional gilder specializing in the restoration of 17th-19th century objects using only traditional gilding methods, tools and materials.  Her clients include leading New York and Connecticut-area art and antique dealers, museums, interior designers and private collectors.

BILL DENISON
USA, Visiting Artist in Residence
B.A., Washington College, U.S.A.
A successful commercial photographer and sole proprietor of Bill Denison Photography which has institutional, educational, and corporate clients, Professor Denison has collaborated with designers and art directors to satisfy a diverse array of client needs. He is an expert in 35mm, medium, and large format cameras, both digital and film, as well as Photoshop and other computer imaging programs.

WASIQ N. KHAN
U.S.A., Assistant Professor of Economics
Ph.D., American University, U.S.A.
M.A., University of Texas, U.S.A.
B.A., University of Virginia, U.S.A.

Dr. Khan has taught classes in microeconomics, international trade, labor economics, the economics of development, and the economics of globalization. His recent research centers on the economics of global migration and the effectiveness of foreign food aid. A consultant at the World Bank with a focus on HIV/AIDS relief and mitigation efforts in sub-Saharan Africa as well as on social development issues in the Middle East and North Africa, Dr. Khan also serves on the Board of Trustees of a non-governmental organization known as Partners for Development which administers public health and agricultural development projects in Bosnia, Cambodia, and Nigeria.

VIJAY KRISHNA
India/USA, Visiting Professor of Marketing Communications
Ph.D., Ohio University, U.S.A.
M.B.A., Osmania University, India
M.S., Ohio University, U.S.A.
B.S., Nizam College, India

Professor Krishna is currently Professor of Advertising and Chair of the Advertising Program, Indiana University, U.S.A.  He has taught courses in integrated marketing communications, media planning, advertising, empirical research methods, public speaking and mass media and behavioral effects.  Research interests are in the area of advertising, mass media, new technologies and communication.  An active conference participant, invited lecturer, and award recipient for excellence in teaching and scholarship. Professor Krishna has authored several books, numerous book chapters and peer reviewed articles in professional journals. He also serves on the editorial board of the  Journal of Communication and The Kentucky Journal of Communication.

JOSHUA LONG
U.S.A., Assistant Professor of Social Sciences
Ph.D., University of Kansas, U.S.A.
M.A., Northern Arizona University, U.S.A.
B.S., Texas State University, U.S.A
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Joshua Long is a broadly trained human geographer whose research and teaching interests include sense of place studies, urban and rural landscapes, social theory, and sustainable food networks. He has held teaching positions at three institutions before arriving at Franklin, including Mount Holyoke College, the University of Kansas, and Northern Arizona University. In 2008, he received the University of Kansas’ highest award for graduate instruction: the Carlin Graduate Teaching Award. Long’s publications reveal a strong belief in an interdisciplinary approach to the study of people and place. 

CHRISTOPHER MATTHEWS
Ireland, Assistant Professor of Literature and English Composition
Ph.D., University of Durham, U.K.
Postgrad. Cert. Ed., University of Keele, U.K .
B.A., University of Ulster, N. Ireland

Professor Matthews' most recent book of poems, Eyelevel 50 Histories, was published in the United States by CavanKerry Press. His poetry is published in Irish, British, and American journals, including the American Scholar and the Hudson Review. He was a fellow at both the International Writers’ Program of the University of Iowa and a writer-in-residence at the Island Institute, Sitka, Alaska in 2004. Professor Matthews was in residence at the Robert Frost Institute in summer, 2005. His teaching and scholarly interests range from Shakespearean drama and seventeenth-century English literature to Modernism and Nietzsche. His doctorate on the poetics of Ezra Pound led to research presentations on Pound at University College London and the University of Maine at Orono, U.S.A.

ROBERT H. MCCORMICK, JR.
U.S.A., Professor of Literature and English Composition
Doctorat de 3ème cycle, Université de Paris IV, Sorbonne, France
M.A., Indiana University, U.S.A.
B.A., De Pauw University, U.S.A
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Robert McCormick ha an early research interest in the novels of Victor Hugo and Emile Zola. Professor McCormick taught for three years in the History and Literature Department at Harvard where he was awarded a “Certificate of Distinction in Teaching Undergraduates.” Continuing in-depth research on the novels of Maryse Condé and other Caribbean writers. Research Fellow at the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute at Harvard in 1997. Several articles on Condé: one published by Oxford University Press recently as well as one published by MaComère in December 2004. Two more articles on Condé’s novels: one published in African and Black Diaspora (January 2008) while one in Research in African Literature will appear in August 2008. He published a long interview with Condé in summer, 2000 in World Literature Today. Professor McCormick is the founder and organizer of “Caribbean Unbound,” a conference on Caribbean literature and culture held on campus in the spring of 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2009. In 2007, Maryse Condé was the keynote speaker.

LUCA MOSCATELLI
Switzerland, Adjunct Lecturer, Italian and French
Dip. Phil 1 (Romanistik), Universität Zürich, Switzerland
Master di specializzazione formativa (CMC2, CHQ, INT3, Istituto Universitario Svizzero di Pedagogia)

Expert in French and Italian language and literature acquisition, Professor Moscatelli is an Associate Professor at the Scuola Specializzata Superiore di Tecnica and at the Scuola d’Arti e Mestieri in Bellinzona, Switzerland, where he is responsible for all cultural activities for the professional sectors of the schools. He is also Coordinator for French Language and Literature for the Dipartimento Istruzione e Cultura, section Maturità Professionale Tecnica, in Ticino, Switzerland, a member of the CAM administration board, and a journalist for the Swiss Television Broadcasting Corporation.

MORRIS MOTTALE
U.S.A., Professor of Political Science

Ph.D., York University, Canada
M.A., B.A., San Diego State University, U.S.A.

Dr. Mottale’s main teaching and research interests are in international relations, comparative politics, Middle Eastern politics, international political economy, strategic studies, energy, and mass communication. He has taught in the United States, Canada, and England, and has been a research scholar at universities in North America, Europe, and the Middle East, including the Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Dr. Mottale has published articles and reviews on international and Middle Eastern politics and is the author of several monographs and books. 

SAMIR RICHARD MOUSSALLI
U.S.A., Visiting Professor of Management and International Business
Ph.D., Auburn University, Alabama, U.S.A.
M.B.A., Auburn University, Alabama, U.S.A.

M.S.E., The University of Michigan, U.S.A.
B.S., California State University, Fresno, U.S.A.
Dr. Moussalli is currently the Frank A. Professor of Management and International Business and the Dean of the School of Business and Professional Studies at Huntingdon College. Dr. Moussalli's teaching experience spans more than 20 years. He is the recipient of the Global Excellence Award (2005, 2006), and co-author of a Best Paper Award in 2004. He teaches classes in International Business, Human Resources, Organization Behavior and Quantitative Methods, and he is a member of the Board of Reviewers of the Journal of Global Business and Technology.

ERIK O. NIELSEN
U.S.A./Canada, President of the College/Professor of Archaeology
Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College, U.S.A.
M.A., B.A., State University of New York, U.S.A.

Dr. Nielsen’s prior institutional affiliations have included Bowdoin College (Maine); the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome (Stanford University); Trinity University (Texas); and the University of Evansville (Indiana). A classical archaeologist, principal scholar and Director of the Etruscan archaeological excavation at Poggio Civitate, Vescovado di Murlo (Siena, Italy), he is an Elected Foreign Member of the Istituto Nazionale di Studi Etruschi ed Italici, a member of the Board of Trustees of the Etruscan Foundation, serves on the Editorial Board for the archaeological journal The Etruscans, and has been a consultant to Time-Life publications for their archaeological series on the Etruscans. Dr. Nielsen is currently involved in the design and renovation of an Italian-State-funded archaeological museum near Siena.

ALEX JAMES NOVIKOFF
U.S.A., Visiting Assistant Professor
Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
M.Phil., Cambridge University, U.K.
M.A., University of York, U.K.
B.A., New York University, U.S.A
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Alex Novikoff is currently on the faculty of Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee, Professor Novikoff has also taught at St. Joseph's University (PA.), The University of Pennsylvania, Temple University, and Rosemont College. A medievalist with a wide range of teaching and research interests, Novikoff has presented a number of papers at professional conferences in the areas of the twelfth-century Renaissance, medieval Spain, and Jewish-Christian relations. He is also the recipient of a number of awards and honors. His recent translation of Jean-Claude Schmitt's The Conversion of Herman the Jew: Autobiography, History and Fiction is being published by the University of Pennsylvania Press (Middle Ages Series) in 2010.

JOHN POLICH
U.S.A., Visiting Professor of International Management
Ph.D., Stanford University, U.S.A.
M.A., Stanford University, U.S.A.
B.A., Arizona State University, U.S.A.

John Polich is an educator with 15 years experience as administrator and teacher in mass communication, journalism, public policy, business administration, marketing, and advertising across traditional and new media. He taught at Fordham University and at Golden Gate University, where he was associate dean and full professor. His teaching has been enriched by consulting in the United States and abroad, and industry experience including research director for The New York Times Company and others. Professor Polich has worked at Roy Morgan International, Australia and Informa Research Services where he integrated two acquisitions, Market Trends Seattle and Barry Leeds of New York, into the Los Angeles-based company.  His commentary has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Advertising Age and Adweek.

CRAIG R. PRENTISS
U.S.A., Visiting Professor
Ph.D., University of Chicago, U.S.A.
M.A., University of Chicago, U.S.A.
B.A., Bates College, U.S.A.

Craig Prentiss is currently on the faculty of Rockhurst University, Kansas City, Missouri and teaches in the department of Theology and Religious Studies. An accomplished scholar, his book Debating God’s Economy: Social Justice in America on the Eve of Vatican II came out with Penn State University Press in 2008. His most recent research examines the way religion is represented by playwrights in the time period including the Harlem Renaissance, the Great Depression, and World War II. The recipient of a National Endowment for the Humanities Faculty Fellowship during 2008-2009 academic year, Professor Prentiss was also honored with the Daniel L. Brenner Award for Outstanding Faculty Scholarship by Rockhurst University in Spring 2009.

ERICH PRISNER
Germany, Associate Professor of Math and Computing
Ph.D., Universität Hamburg, Germany
Graduate Degrees, Universität Tübingen, Germany

With teaching and research experience at institutions which include the University of Louisville, the University of Maryland, University College (Schwäbisch Gmünd), the Technical University of Cottbus (Germany), the Technical University of Berlin, and Franklin College, Dr. Prisner has published extensively on intersection graphs and graph-theoretic operators, including a book on graph dynamics. A recipient of numerous research awards and grants, he has also been particularly active in integrating information technology in his teaching.

PATRICK SAVEAU
France, Associate Professor, French

Ph.D., New York University, U.S.A.
M.A., University of Oregon, U.S.A
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Maîtrise d’anglais Université Jean Moulin, Lyon, France
Dr. Saveau is a specialist of Serge Doubrovsky, the first open practitioner of autofiction. In the numerous articles he has published on this writer, he has explored topics as varied as autofiction as a genre, judeity, memory and trauma, masculinity and sexuality. His current book project tentatively entitled Serge Doubrovsky ou un moi fiché à l’an 40 focuses on the haunting presence of this dark period of French history in all of this author’s autofictions. He teaches both in the French and in the Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies (CLCS) departments. He is a member of the Women in French (WIF) organization and the Société d’Etude de la Littérature Française du XXème siècle.

MELVIN SCHLEIN
U.S.A., Professor of Political Science and History
Ph.D., B.A., Rutgers University, U.S.A.
M.A., Johns Hopkins University, U.S.A.

Formerly Assistant Director of the Bologna Center of the School of Advanced International Studies of Johns Hopkins University from 1969 to 1973, Dr. Schlein specializes in European politics, international relations, international law, and political theory. He organized and participated in conferences for USIS throughout Italy and lectured for the Milan city government on U.S. foreign policy. An active member of the European Union movement since 1969, Dr. Schlein holds professional membership in the International Political Science Association and the American Society of International Law.

MICHAEL FORD SHANAHAN
U.S.A., Adjunct Instructor in International Management

J.D., University of Denver, U.S.A.
M.B.A., University of Denver, U.S.A.
B.A., University of New Hampshire

Professor Shanahan most recently served in the United Sates Army as an attorney in the Judge Advocate General branch where he provided legal assistance in the areas of international law, military justice and contract law. He also served as Deputy District Attorney in Boulder, Colorado where he prosecuted felony crimes. His business experience includes consultancies for the aviation industry, founding a start-up internet marketing company, and launching a real estate development company. His academic interests include business strategy, emerging environmentally friendly markets, global environmental policy, and U.S./comparative constitutional law.

MARTIN STACK
U.S.A., Visiting Associate Professor of Management
Ph.D., University of Notre Dame, U.S.A.
B.A., University of Missouri-Kansas City, U.S.A.

Currently Associate Professor of Management at Rockhurst University, Kansas, where he teaches courses in international management, competitive strategy, managerial economics, and communications for managers, Dr. Stack is widely published in professional journals, particularly on the subjects of the brewing and healthcare industries. His international experience includes direct research of the Chinese beer industry and the Indian radiology labor market.

JOHN STEINBREDER
U.S.A., Visiting Instructor of Communication

B.A., University of Oregon, U.S.A.
A.A., Franklin College, Switzerland

A veteran sports journalist, Professor Steinbreder's articles have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Time, Forbes, The Wall Street Journal, Golf Digest and Sports Illustrated.  He was Senior Writer at Golfweek and special contributor to ESPN Television and Fortune magazine.  He has written seven books in the area of golf and hockey, has edited custom magazines for The Ryder Cup, and has received numerous awards and citations for his sports journalism, including two first-place awards from the Golf Writers Association America.

BRIAN STANFORD
Great Britain, Professor of Art History and Studio Art
M.C.S.D. (Chartered Designer), The Chartered Society of Designers, U.K.
A.T.D. University of Southampton Institute of Education, U.K. National Diploma in Design (Special Level), Ravensbourne College of Art and Design, London, U.K
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Professor Stanford’s previous positions include Head of the Art Department at St. John’s College, Hampshire, Lecturer at Hampshire Further Education Committee, and Professor at Fleming College, Switzerland. He has been with Franklin College since its inception in 1970 and is the former Director of the Summer Program in St. Ives, Cornwall, England. A practicing painter, Professor Stanford has had one-man exhibitions in Britain, Switzerland, Italy, and the U.S.A., including, in 1990, an exhibition with Suzanne Bollag in Zürich. He was commissioned to design eight sets for a Swiss television production (TSI) entitled Writers in America directed by Matteo Bellinelli. His main academic interest is the illusion of identity in modernist painting. Professor Stanford has works in private collections in Switzerland, Italy, Great Britain, United States, Holland, Belgium, Saudi Arabia, and Brazil.

CAROLINE WIEDMER
Switzerland, Associate Professor of Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies

Ph.D., Princeton University, U.S.A.
M.A., Princeton University
, U.S.A.
B.A., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, U.S.A.
Former affiliations with Princeton University, the University of Washington, the ETH in Zürich and the University of Zurich. She is the author and editor of a number of books, including The Claims of Memory: Representations of the Holocaust in Contemporary Germany and France (Cornell University Press), Inventing the Past: Memory Work in Culture and History (Schwabe Verllag Basel) and Motherhood and Space: Configurations of the Maternal in Politics, Art and the Everyday (Palgrave Macmillan). She has received research fellowships from the University of London, the Center for Gender Studies of the University of Basel, Princeton University, Stanford University, the Collegium Helveticum at the ETH in Zürich and the Center for Advanced German and European Studies of the Freie Universität of Berlin. She is the co-founder and board member of the Swiss Cultural Studies Association. Her research interests include memory studies, gender, film, spatiality, and the workings of narrative and discourse in multiple domains of cultural and intellectual life. She is currently at work on a book manuscript comparing notions and implementations of gender equality in higher education in the U.S. and Europe.

ARMANDO ZANECCHIA
U.S.A., Dean of Natural and Social Sciences
Professor of International Management and Political Science

Ph.D., University of Oregon, U.S.A.
M.A., Old Dominion University,
U.S.A.
B.S., Old Dominion University, U.S.A.
Armando Zanecchia is currently serving as Dean of Natural and Social Sciences at Franklin College. He previously held the position as Dean of Academic Affairs of Franklin College from 2000 until 2007. Dean Zanecchia's prior institutional affiliations include: Berkshire Community College, University of Oregon, Old Dominion University, and Golden Gate University. He was a Summer Fellow at the Cooperative Institutes of Moscow, Gomel (Belarus), and Poltava (Ukraine) and he has done scholarly and consulting work in Europe, Central America and Asia as well as research and training in the former Soviet Republics and Nepal. His research interests include financing sustainable, community-based economic development, international organizational analysis, institutional strategic planning, and issues of labor and capital mobility in global markets. He has been a grant recipient from the Massachusetts Department of Food and Agriculture, National Endowment for the Humanities, the Eurasia Foundation, and the US Department of Education to conduct research and training seminars abroad. He has served on a number of foundation, NGO and private investment company advisory boards.

CLARICE ZDANSKI
U.S.A., Adjunct Lecturer of Art History
Ph.D., M.A., University of Chicago, U.S.A .
B.F.A., University of North Carolina, U.S.A.

Dr. Zdanski is a specialist in the art of the Venetian High Renaissance, in particular that of Giulio Campagnola, a contemporary of Giorgione. Her current research interests include the travel diaries of Samuel Butler that are related to his journeys through the Swiss Alps, especially in the Ticino region. She has written various publications in art history. Currently she teaches translation of academic texts, advanced grammar, and composition at the Istituto Universitario di Lingue Moderne in Milan as well as art history at Franklin College.

 


New Work
Professor Floyd Parsons publishes Thomas Hare and Political Representation in Victorian Britain

New Work
Professor Joshua Long publishes Weird City: Sense of Place and Creative Resistance in Austin, Texas