Pericles Lewis
Pericles Lewis, Douglas Tracy Smith Professor of comparative literature at Yale University,[1] was the founding President of Yale-NUS College, a liberal arts college in Singapore that is jointly governed by Yale and the National University of Singapore.[2][3] He currently serves as Vice President and Vice Provost for Global Strategy of Yale University, with the responsibility of "sustain(ing) and augment(ing) Yale's international presence as a leader in liberal arts education and a world-class research institution."[4]
Pericles Lewis | |
---|---|
Vice President and Vice Provost for Global Strategy of Yale University | |
Assumed office 2017 | |
Founding President Yale-NUS College | |
In office July 1, 2012 – July 1, 2017 | |
Succeeded by | Tan Tai Yong |
Personal details | |
Born | Canada | September 13, 1968
Alma mater | University of Toronto Schools (high school) McGill University (Bachelor degree in English Literature) Stanford University (A.M. in Comparative Literature) Stanford University (Ph.D in Comparative Literature) |
Biography
Lewis was born in Canada on September 13, 1968.[5] He is the grandson of Canadian Member of Parliament Andrew Brewin. He attended high school at the University of Toronto Schools and received his bachelor's degree in English Literature from McGill University in 1990. He received the degree of A.M. in Comparative Literature in 1991 and his Ph.D, also in Comparative Literature, in 1997 from Stanford University.[2][6] He travelled extensively in Asia as a young man.[7]
Academic career
He was appointed Assistant Professor at Yale in the Departments of English and Comparative Literature in 1998, promoted to Associate Professor there in 2002, and full Professor in 2007.[8] He was director of Undergraduate Studies for the Yale literature major from 2000 to 2006, and Director of Graduate Studies of Yale's Comparative Literature Department from 2006 to 2010. He was the recipient of the McGill Graduates' Society Award for Student Service (1990), a Whiting Fellowship (1997), the Heyman Prize (2000), a Morse Fellowship (2001), and the Yale Graduate Mentor Award (2004). He is best known for his books Modernism, Nationalism, and the Novel, The Cambridge Introduction to Modernism and Religious Experience and the Modernist Novel.[2] He is also an editor of the third and fourth editions of the widely used Norton Anthology of World Literature (2012; 2018) [9]
He was the Project Director of the Yale Modernism Lab, an online website for research work in the development of Modernism in literature.[10]
Yale-NUS
He was appointed President of Yale-NUS, a liberal arts college affiliated with both Yale and the National University of Singapore, by a joint search committee; the appointment was announced on May 30, 2012, effective July 1, 2012.[2][11] Before appointment, Lewis was a key planner of the new college's curriculum, and supervised the hiring of core faculty.[2] The College's first students matriculated on July 2, 2013 and graduated on May 29, 2017.[12] As President, Lewis advocated the concept of residential liberal arts education as "building a community of learning."[13]
Publications
Books
- The Cambridge Companion to European Modernism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011. ISBN 9780521199414
- Religious Experience and the Modernist Novel. New York : Cambridge University Press, 2010. ISBN
- The Cambridge Introduction to Modernism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. ISBN 9780521828093.
- Modernism, Nationalism, and the Novel. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 2000. ISBN 9780521661119
- Review by Alan Munton; The Modern Language Review, Apr., 2003, vol. 98, no. 2, p. 443-444
Articles
- “Proust, Woolf, and modern fiction.” Romanic Review 99 (2008): 77–86.
- “The Reality of the unseen: Shared fictions and religious experience in the ghost stories of Henry James.” Arizona Quarterly 61.2 (Summer 2005): 33–66.
- “Christopher Newman’s haircloth shirt: worldly asceticism, conversion, and auto-machia in The American.” Studies in the Novel 37 (2005): 308–28.
- “Churchgoing in the Modern Novel.” Modernism/Modernity 11 (2004): 667–94.
- “James’s Sick Souls.” Henry James Review 22 (2001): 248–58.
- “‘His Sympathies were in the Right Place’: Heart of Darkness and the discourse of national character.” Nineteenth-Century Literature 53 (1998): 211-44. (Reprinted in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness: Modern Critical Interpretations, 2008).
- “The ‘True’ Homer: myth and enlightenment in Vico, Horkheimer, and Adorno." New Vico Studies 10 (1992): 24–35.
Books edited
Norton Anthology of World Literature New York: Norton, 2012. Ed. Martin Puchner et al.
References
- Pericles Lewis appointed the Smith Professor of Comparative Literature, Yale News, March 7, 2019
- Karin Fischer, "Yale Scholar Will Be First President of New Institution in Singapore" The Chronicle of Higher EducationMay 30, 2012
- "'Not the job' of Yale-NUS College to tell students what to think" AsiaOne May 30, 2012
- Pericles Lewis appointed VP for global strategy and deputy provost for international affairs, Yale News, July 16, 2016
- LC Authority File
- Lewis web page at Yale
- Ng, Jing Yng. "A People President". Archived from the original on 2012-08-14. Retrieved 2012-09-04.
- Norton
- "Yale’s Pericles Lewis to be inaugural Yale-NUS president" Yale News May 30, 2012
- http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/yale-nus-colleges-pioneer-batch-of-students-graduates
- Lewis, Pericles. "Building a Community of Learning at Yale-NUS".