|
A New Emotion: Elevation
(July 3 through July
9)
Have you ever felt a sudden
feeling of warmth in your chest, or a quick tearing
of the eyes? If so, you might have experienced something
called “elevation.” Psychologist Jon
Haidt (UVA), who studies
moral emotions, says “elevation” helps
explain why we feel uplifted and inspired when we
observe others doing good deeds. In fact, he says,
this emotion actually makes us feel like a better
person. “Elevation” is an emotion Thomas
Jefferson observed, but Jon Haidt is the first to
label and study it.
Living Donor Transplants (July
10 through July 16)
Thousands of Americans who suffer
from liver disease die each year while waiting for
a transplant. It has been the case that these patients
must wait for an organ donor to die first. But surgeons
at the University of Virginia are trying to make it
safer for volunteers to donate half of their liver
to those in need. Dr. Carl
Berg (UVA) is the director
of hepatology and Dr. Tim
Pruett (UVA) is the director
of the medical center’s transplant department.
The Birth of the Modern Olympics
(July 17 through July 23)
With the Olympic Games set to
return to Athens this summer for the first time since
1896, perhaps this is a good time to revisit why the
games came back to life. The Olympics were the brain
child of Pierre de Coubertin, a French aristocrat
who wanted to usher in a new age of masculinity. French
scholar Wade Edwards (LU)
explains this seminal figure in modern sports. Also
featured: What are the Olympics all about these days?
Many would say that the games are too commercial,
and that corruption has eroded the Olympic spirit.
Robert Case (ODU) outlines
the case for reform of how host cities are selected.
Hawaiian Shirts
on Parade (July
24 through July 30) Elvis
Presley, Harry Truman, Hawkeye Pearce, and Magnum,
P.I. all shared an affection for the wild patterns
of the Hawaiian shirt. English professor Tim
Trask (Germanna Community College) discusses
the history and changing appeal of the shirt—from
rich man’s vacation purchase to counter-culture
fashion statement. Also featured: Do clothes make
the man? “Absolutely,” according to textiles
professor Isabel Jones
(VSU) who says fashion
has evolved from a strictly utilitarian piece of fur
to a powerful form of self-expression.
 |
Everyone’s a Critic…or
Can Learn to Be (July
31 through Aug. 6)
When Clive Barnes wrote drama
criticism for the New York Times, it was rumored he
could shut down a Broadway show with a bad review.
Knowledgeable criticism can lure people to the movies
or send them to bookstores in search of obscure novels.
Theatre professor Rick
Davis (GMU) offers a
few lessons to help all of us look at art more discriminately
to determine if it’s good or bad or somewhere
in-between. Also featured: Composer-in-residence John
Hilliard (JMU). He received
an enthusiastic “two thumbs up” for his
recent work “Mozart Rounded-Off,” in which
he completed an unfinished 1782 composition by Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart. |