New York Institute for the Humanities

New York Institute for the Humanities Founded by Richard Sennett in 1976

The New York Institute for the Humanities is a forum for promoting the exchange of ideas between academics, professionals, politicians, diplomats, writers, journalists, musicians, painters, and other artists in New York City - and between all of them and the city.

05/27/2020

On episode 21 of our 2nd season, listen to an NYIH Vault recording of William Finnegan, New Yorker staff writer and Pulitzer prize winner, talking about his work-in-progress, Cold New World: Growing Up in a Harder Country, which was published in 1998.

05/19/2020

Novelist and Institute Fellow Ben Taylor talks about Here We Are, a memoir of his friendship with Phiip Roth. Taylor is the author of two previous memoirs--Naples Declared: A Walk Around the Bay, and The Hue and Cry in Our House, which received the 2018 Los Angeles Times/Christopher Isherwood Prize.

05/12/2020

NYIH Conversations brings you Honor Moore and Eric Banks on Episode 19. In addition to three collections of poetry, Moore is the author of several celebrated works of nonfiction, including The White Blackbird: A Life of the Painter Margaret Singer by Her Granddaughter and The Bishop's Daughter, a memoir of her father. Her newest book is Our Revolution: A Mother and Daughter Mid-Century. Here, she talks about the book, women's lives and second-wave feminism, writing a hybrid of biography memoir, and the experience of publishing a book in the middle of a pandemic.

05/05/2020

Congratulations to biographer Benjamin Moser for his Pulitzer Prize for SONTAG. On our latest episode of The Vault, he talks about the book, Sontag, and her world. Moser’s previous book, a biography of the Brazilian writer Clarice Lispector, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award

05/05/2020

Just in time for his Pulitzer win! Listen to Biographer Benjamin Moser on Season 2, Episode 18 of , as he talks with Robert Boynton about the making of his 2019 biography of Susan Sontag. Moser’s previous book, a biography of the Brazilian writer Clarice Lispector, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.

04/28/2020

Season 2, Episode 16 comes from our archives. Art Spiegelman, whose graphic novel Maus won a Pulitzer Prize in 1992, took part in the 2011 New York Institute for the Humanities symposium, “Second Thoughts on the Memory Industry.”

04/20/2020

Season 2, Episode 16 pays tribute to longtime fellow Deirdre Bair, who passed away on April 18, 2020. The author of six biographies and two memoirs, Bair received the National Book Award for her 1978 biography of Samuel Beckett. At a January 2020 NYIH luncheon, she discussed her final book, Parisian Lives: Samuel Beckett, Simone de Beauvoir, and Me, a Memoir, and looked back at her celebrated career.

04/14/2020

Now up -- Season 2, Episode 14, the opening session of the NYIH 1980 conference on Censorship and Writing, moderated by NYRB editor Robert Silvers, with a presentation by Aryeh Neier, and comments by Joseph Brodsky and Susan Sontag.

04/07/2020

On Epsiode 13 of Season 2, enter The Vault to hear Francine Prose talk about Anne Frank, the subject of her 2009 book, at the 2011 New York Institute for the Humanities symposium, “Second Thoughts on the Memory Industry.”

04/01/2020

Poet and NYIH Fellow Peter Filkins talks with Eric Banks about his exceptional involvement with the work of H.G. Adler, the Holocaust survivor who authored definitive fictional and ethnographic portraits of life in the camps. In 2019 Filkins published his biography of this extraordinary figure, a book that was preceded by his translation of the novelistic trilogy.

03/23/2020

Nothing can stop the the NYIH podcast team! In episode 12 of this season, listen to intellectual historian Eric Hobsbawm's 1995 talk "Inventing Your Own History" on how history is told in the post-Cold War world.

03/11/2020

New episode of The Vault! Elisabeth Young-Bruehl's 2011 talk about her book, Childism: Confronting Prejudice Against Children. The author of landmark biographies of Hannah Arendt and Anna Freud, Young-Bruehl was a long time member of the Institute.

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