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  • Divided Society/Divided Self

    DIVIDED SOCIETY/DIVIDED SELF

    The New York Academy of Sciences, NY
    Dec 4 2007

    Speakers: Richard Bulliet, Columbia University's Middle East Institute;
    Seamus Dunn, The University of Ulster, Coleraine, Co.

    Derry, Northern Ireland; John Harbeson, City College and The Graduate
    Center at CUNY; Susan G. Lazar is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at
    Georgetown University School of Medicine; Avishai Margalit, Institute
    for Advanced Study in Princeton; Dan Rather How do ancient historical
    conflicts remain potent elements in the collective unconscious of a
    society, and later lead to sectarian or ethnic violence? The Armenian
    genocide in the early part of the twentieth century had its roots in
    centuries-old religious conflicts whose political consequences set the
    stage for one of the most brutal oppressions in human history. More
    recently, conflicts between Christians and Muslims in Somalia and
    Ethiopia have led to murderous civil wars. The Palestinian/Israeli
    conflict feeds on ethnic, religious and political divides. In the case
    of Serbia and Bosnia, neighbors who had once lived in harmony have
    been injected with the virus of warlike mythologies, which equates
    otherness to evil. In Rwanda, the ideology of mass murder took the form
    of ancient tribal identifications, with roots in human morphology. Man
    has been confronted with the specter of civil war from the beginnings
    of recorded history, when Sparta and Athens fought for hegemony in the
    Peloponnesian Peninsula. This early conflict, recorded by Thucydides,
    was a struggle of ideology (between democratic Athens and the warrior
    society of Sparta) as well as geography and economics. How does
    the intra-psychic world of the individual, characterized by its own
    civil wars between pleasure and repression, between socialization and
    individuality, between conscience (or superego) and drive (libido),
    set the stage for these most brutal of human conflicts? More soldiers
    were killed in America's Civil War than in both World Wars combined.

    If a conflicted individual is his own worst enemy, to what extent
    does the power of civil conflict derive from the degree to which it
    feeds on both individual and societal unrest?

    Richard Bulliet is Professor of History at Columbia University's
    Middle East Institute. He specializes in Middle Eastern history,
    the social and institutional history of Islamic countries, and the
    history of technology. His publications include The Patricians
    of Nishapur: A Study in Medieval Islamic Social History, The
    Camel and the Wheel, Islam: The View from the Edge, The Case for
    Islamo-Christian Civilization, and the forthcoming Cotton and Climate
    in Early Islamic Iran. He co-edited The Encyclopedia of the Modern
    Middle East, co-authored The Earth and its Peoples: A Global History,
    and conceived and edited The Columbia History of the Twentieth Century.

    Seamus Dunn is Professor Emeritus at The University of Ulster,
    Coleraine, Co. Derry, Northern Ireland. Before retirement from
    the university he was Professor of Conflict Studies and Director
    of the Centre for the Study of Conflict, a research centre within
    the university. It was established initially to carry out research
    studies in relation to the long-lasting conflict in Northern Ireland,
    but was also-inevitably-much involved with other conflicts around
    the world. He was also a member of the committee that founded an
    international research centre within the University of Ulster, called
    INCORE, under the auspices of the United Nations University.

    John Harbeson is Professor of Political Science at City College
    and The Graduate Center at City University of New York. He teaches
    and writes in the areas of comparative politics and international
    relations, with a particular focus on sub-Saharan Africa. He has been
    a Jennings Randolph Senior Fellow at the U.S. Institute of Peace,
    and a Visiting Fellow at Princeton's Center of International Studies.

    Professor Harbeson completed two tours of duty with the U.S. Agency
    for International Development while on leave from the teaching, most
    recently as Regional Democracy and Governance Advisor for Eastern
    and Southern Africa from 1993-1995.

    Susan G. Lazar is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Georgetown
    University School of Medicine, George Washington University School
    of Medicine, and The Uniformed Services University of the Health
    Sciences, as well as Supervising and Training Analyst at the Washington
    Psychoanalytic Institute. She is the co-author of A Concise Guide
    to Psychodynamic Psychotherapy, and has published extensively on
    the cost-effectiveness of psychotherapy, stemming from her work
    as a consultant to the Clinton White House Task Force for National
    Health Care Reform. She is the Executive Director of the Fund for
    the Erevna International Peace Center, which supports the Erevna
    International Peace Center, an ecumenical international peace center
    being constructed on land donated by the Government of the Republic
    of Cyprus.

    Avishai Margalit is George Kennan Professor at the Institute for
    Advanced Study in Princeton and recipient of the 2007 EMET Prize. He
    is a founder of "Peace Now," the Israeli peace movement calling for
    recognition of the rights of Palestinians to self-determination in
    their own state, alongside Israel. Dr. Margalit received the 2001
    Spinoza Lens Prize, awarded by the International Spinoza Foundation
    for "a significant contribution to the normative debate on society."

    He is a frequent contributor to The New York Review of Books and
    the author of Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies
    (with Ian Buruma), which addresses currents in radical anti-Western
    thought in the Islamic world.

    Dan Rather (moderator) has covered virtually every major event in the
    world in the past 50 years. His resume reads like a history book,
    from his early local reporting in Texas on Hurricane Carla to his
    work covering the assassination of President John F. Kennedy; the
    civil rights movement; the White House and national politics; wars
    in Vietnam, Afghanistan, the Persian Gulf, Yugoslavia and Iraq. From
    his first days as the Associated Press reporter in Huntsville, Texas,
    in 1950, Rather has more than earned his reputation as the "hardest
    working man in broadcast journalism." Mr. Rather was anchor of the
    CBS Evening News from 1981 to 2005 and reported for the news magazine
    60 Minutes. He is now anchor and managing editor of Dan Rather Reports.

    http://www.nyas.org/snc/calendarDetail.a sp?eventID=11083&date=12/4/2007%206:30:00%20PM
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