05/05/2026
HAPPENING TODAY: The humanities today are under pressure from across the political spectrum.
Join us in-person for a session where three scholars step back from these external defenses and discuss the core of what humanists do and what they think are the best practices for doing it. This is the first of an ongoing series.
05/04/2026
The humanities today are under pressure from across the political spectrum.
Join us in-person TOMORROW for a session where three scholars step back from these external defenses and discuss the core of what humanists do and what they think are the best practices for doing it. This is the first of an ongoing series.
04/29/2026
Join us TOMORROW in-person or online for an event with Historian Ada Ferrer who will talk about the intersection between family, memoir and history, and her forthcoming book, Keeper of My Kin: Memoir of an Immigrant Daughter (Scribner 2026).
For more information visit: https://rifkindcenter.org/rifkind-center-events/2026/4/30/book-talk-keeper-of-my-kin
04/23/2026
Join us in-person or online for an event with Historian Ada Ferrer who will talk about the intersection between family, memoir and history, and her forthcoming book, Keeper of My Kin: Memoir of an Immigrant Daughter (Scribner 2026).
For more information visit: https://rifkindcenter.org/rifkind-center-events/2026/4/30/book-talk-keeper-of-my-kin
04/14/2026
Join us in-person this THURSDAY for Harold Aram Veeser, English Professor and 2025-2026 Rifkind Fellow who will read from and discuss his book in progress, a memoir of male anorexia confessions.
While current hospital records show that more males than ever are presenting with eating disorders, few male anorexic memoirs have appeared. In Manorexia, he seeks to correct this record, offering a first-hand account of his sixty-year long pursuit of thinness and muscularity.
For more information visit: https://rifkindcenter.org/rifkind-center-events/2026/4/16/manorexia-how-anorexia-and-bodybuilding-helped-me-navigate-locker-rooms-gyms-jails-and-other-male-spaces
04/09/2026
Join us in-person for an event with Harold Aram Veeser, English Professor and 2025-2026 Rifkind Fellow who will read from and discuss his book in progress, a memoir of male anorexia confessions.
While current hospital records show that more males than ever are presenting with eating disorders, few male anorexic memoirs have appeared. In Manorexia, he seeks to correct this record, offering a first-hand account of his sixty-year long pursuit of thinness and muscularity.
For more information visit: https://rifkindcenter.org/rifkind-center-events/2026/4/16/manorexia-how-anorexia-and-bodybuilding-helped-me-navigate-locker-rooms-gyms-jails-and-other-male-spaces
03/23/2026
Join us this THURSDAY, March 26, for a book talk on Middlemen: Literary Agents and the Making of American Fiction (forthcoming in April from Princeton UP) that takes readers behind the scenes to show how agents influence what we read. Weaving together archival research, data analysis, and interviews with scores of publishing professionals, it shows the work of agents—eighty percent of whom are in fact women— as advocates, matchmakers, negotiators, and tastemakers, who balance artistic values with the commercial imperatives of publishing conglomerates.
Laura B. McGrath is an Assistant Professor of English at Temple University. Prior to that, she worked as the Associate Director of the Literary Lab at Stanford. She has written on books, publishing history, and data for academic venues as well as for The Atlantic, The Nation, and the Los Angeles Review of Books.
For more information visit: https://rifkindcenter.org/rifkind-center-events/2026/3/26/booktalk-middlemen
03/16/2026
Join us for a book talk on Middlemen: Literary Agents and the Making of American Fiction (forthcoming in April from Princeton UP) that takes readers behind the scenes to show how agents influence what we read. Weaving together archival research, data analysis, and interviews with scores of publishing professionals, it shows the work of agents—eighty percent of whom are in fact women— as advocates, matchmakers, negotiators, and tastemakers, who balance artistic values with the commercial imperatives of publishing conglomerates.
Laura B. McGrath is an Assistant Professor of English at Temple University. Prior to that, she worked as the Associate Director of the Literary Lab at Stanford. She has written on books, publishing history, and data for academic venues as well as for The Atlantic, The Nation, and the Los Angeles Review of Books.
For more information visit: https://rifkindcenter.org/rifkind-center-events/2026/3/26/booktalk-middlemen
10/15/2025
TOMORROW: Join us for for a talk that provides an introduction to computer vision's origins in military surveillance, an overview of its development under late capitalist regimes of exploitative micro-labor, and an orientation to how computer vision works.
This vision has relied on extracting history, and Associate Professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, Sonja Drimmer, argues that it is the responsibility of scholars in the humanities to be knowledgeable about the forms this extraction takes.
For more information visit: https://rifkindcenter.org/rifkind-center-events/2025/10/16/stripmining-history-how-the-ai-industry-extracts-the-past