Divinity school

School Notes: Yale Divinity School
July/August 2007

Gregory E. Sterling | http://divinity.yale.edu

The Religious Right: end of an era?

Either the era of the Religious Right is over, or mainstream Christians should mount an aggressive challenge to make sure it is over. Those were two viewpoints on the Religious Right offered, respectively, by Washington Post columnist E. J. Dionne and former Colorado senator Gary Hart ’61BD, ’64LLB, during the May 3-4 "Faith and Citizenship" conference at the Divinity School. From the point of view of Dionne, the conference's keynote speaker, the breakdown of the Religious Right is "part of a larger decline of a certain style of ideological conservatism that reached high points in 1980 and 1994 and collapsed in 2006." He observed, however, that the reported demise does not signal a decline in evangelical Christianity but, rather, a new reformation among evangelicals who are "trying to disentangle their great movement from a political machine."

Hart, who was interviewed by Dionne at the conference's closing luncheon, assailed what he termed the Religious Right's "rigid, doctrinaire definition of Christianity" and threw out a challenge to the "traditional church." "Where is the mainstream church for the last 20 years on standing up to the Religious Right?" asked Hart. "The traditional church has to get more engaged. . . . It simply can't let a small group of one wing of Protestantism define what Christianity means."

Learning from the Lost Boys of Sudan

M. Jan Holton, the newly appointed assistant professor of pastoral care and counseling, believes the Lost Boys of Sudan have something to teach all of us. Holton has a special interest in using pastoral theology as a lens for exploring intercultural aspects of trauma and recovery, and much of her research has focused on the thousands of Sudanese boys orphaned and forced from their villages as a result of wars in the late 1980s. "The long-held tradition of care and obligation toward each other, passed down through generations, has served them in particularly positive ways to mitigate the effects of traumatic stress," says Holton, who joined the YDS faculty at the beginning of the 2006-07 academic year. "This offers us a powerful glimpse into the healing power of community, not only for the Lost Boys but for all of us. . . . We look at pastoral care as a pastor taking care of a congregation, and that is certainly a part of it, but it is also about who we are as people, as communities, taking care of each other."

Historian elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Margot E. Fassler, the Tangeman Professor of Music History with joint appointments at the Divinity School, the Institute of Sacred Music, the School of Music, and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, was elected in April as a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Fassler is a historian who works primarily with the musical and liturgical traditions of the Latin Middle Ages and of the United States. Her subspecialties are liturgical drama of the Middle Ages and Mariology. Her book Gothic Song: Victorine Sequences and Augustinian Reform in Twelfth-Century Paris has received awards from both the American Musicological Society and the Medieval Academy of America. She has edited a volume on the divine office and has just completed a book on the cult of the Virgin Mary at Chartres. She is currently preparing a book on the twelfth-century theologian, exegete, and composer Hildegard of Bingen. Psalms in Community, which she co-edited, is being reprinted by the Society of Biblical Literature. Under the auspices of a grant from the Lilly Endowment, Fassler continues to work with congregations and practitioners to make videos of sacred music in its liturgical contexts. Her most recent film is Joyful Noise: Psalms in Community.

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School of Drama
James Bundy, Dean
www.yale.edu/drama

Yale represented among Tony Award winners

The American Theatre Wing presented the 61st annual Tony Awards in New York City on June 10, and Yale alumni were among the winners. William Ivey Long ’75MFA won the Tony for best costume design for a musical (Grey Gardens) ; Scott Pask ’97MFA won for best scenic design for a play (The Coast of Utopia) ; and David Hyde Pierce ’81BA was honored as the best actor in a musical (Curtains). Other Yale nominations included Liev Schreiber ’92MFA for best actor; Santo Loquasto ’72MFA, Susan Hilferty ’80MFA, and YSD faculty member Jane Greenwood, each for costume design; Christopher Akerlind ’89MFA for lighting design for a musical; and Lynne Meadow ’71Dra and Judith Hansen ’04Dra, both for revivals of a play. August Wilson's Radio Golf, which had its premiere at Yale Repertory Theatre in 2005, was nominated as best play.

YSD alum helps plan NEA forum on disabled artists

Many people with disabilities continue to face significant barriers in achieving training and professional status in the arts, leaving them underrepresented in the arts world. Nico Lang ’05MFA, manager of community partnerships at Cornerstone Theater Company in Los Angeles, served on the task force to plan the second National Forum on Careers in the Arts for People with Disabilities. The task force, which included representatives from arts, disability, research, philanthropy, and education organizations, met at the National Endowment for the Arts in Washington, D.C., on April 19 and 20.

The National Forum will convene in August 2008 at the Kennedy Center in Washington and will bring together 250 people from many fields to review and evaluate progress concerning educational and career opportunities since the first forum took place in 1998; identify obstacles and strategies to overcome them; and develop a strategic plan to further advance arts careers.

Dean honored by Connecticut critics

The Connecticut Critics Circle honored YSD dean James Bundy ’95MFA for his artistic leadership of Yale Repertory Theatre by presenting him with the Tom Killen Award on June 4, in an event at the Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam. The Connecticut Critics Circle, an organization of theater reviewers from around the state, presents the Tom Killen Award annually to recognize outstanding contributions to Connecticut theater.

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