Fellows of Jonathan Edwards

A (12) | B (28) | C (16) | D (11) | E (11) | F (16) | G (19) | H (21) | I (1) | J (6) | K (16) | L (19) | M (19) | N (11) | O (3) | P (14) | Q (1) | R (13) | S (23) | T (6) | U (1) | V (4) | W (11) | X (1) | Y (3) | Z (3)

Jeannie Suk


Bio:

Jeannie Suk, JE 95, would be happy to speak with students about legal education and legal academia. She is Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, where she has taught criminal law, criminal procedure, family law, and the law of art, fashion, and the performing arts. She previously served as a law clerk to Justice David Souter on the United States Supreme Court. She has received a Marshall Scholarship, a Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowship, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Her book, At Home in the Law, was awarded the Law and Society Association’s Herbert Jacob Prize. Her writing has also appeared in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Slate. She has given congressional testimony on law and innovation in the fashion industry. jsuk@law.harvard.edu

Matthew Suttor


Bio:

Matthew Suttor New Zealand-born composer Matthew Suttor is Professor and Director of the Laurie Beechman Center for Theatrical Sound Design and Music at Yale School of Drama. Often combining acoustic forces with music technology his operas have been produced at the Bard SummerScape Festival, Mozart Prague Festival, Guggenheim Works and Process series, BAM Next Wave Festival, and the International Festival of the Arts in New Zealand. Concert works, dance works, installations, and television scores have been commissioned by the Beinecke Library, Eastman School of Music, Folkwang Tanzstudio, Essen, Television New Zealand, Yale Institute of Sacred Music, and Yale Repertory Theatre. A Fulbright Scholar, Suttor received a doctorate in composition from Columbia University.

George Syrimis


Bio:

George Syrimis, lecturer in Comparative Literature and is interested in engaging in conversation about literature, film, theater, music and the arts. He specializes in modern Greek literature with an emphasis on its interaction with Anglo-American authors. His interests range from the reception of antiquity, gender and sexuality studies, religion and literature to politically engaged music. He enjoys cooking, listening to music, and talking, preferably all at once. He is especially interested in road trips, hiking, cycling, attending theater and dance performances with students in New Haven or in New York. george.syrimis@yale.edu