The Sidney Harman Writer-In-Residence Program
JANE KRAMER
Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence, Fall 1999
"He spent the war in Dresden, and he remembers the bombings. He can smell the asphalt melting and the first corpses, and the piles of bodies waiting to be burned, but he says that he can't turn those memories into "commemoration" or else he'd have to talk about who bombed first and commemorate Coventry and Leningrad, and then he'd have to go on commemorating -- Sarajevo, Rwanda, Chechnya -- and in the end he wouldn't be any closer to the mystery of the Holocaust, or of any holocaust, or to the question that haunts him: "How did this happen in the middle of Europe in a "civilized" century?"
--From The Politics of Memory
Jane Kramer, the author and journalist, is the Fall 1999 Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence at Baruch College. Ms. Kramer is the European correspondent for The New Yorker and writes the celebrated "Letter from Europe" for the magazine. She is the author of eight books: Off Washington Square; Allen Ginsberg in America; Honor to the Bride; The Last Cowboy; Unsettling Europe; Europeans; Whose Art Is It?; and The Politics of Memory. She is currently finishing a book about a militia in the American West.
Ms. Kramer has won, among many other awards and prizes, an American Book Award, a National Magazine Award, a Front Page Award, and an Emmy Award; in 1993, she was the first American and the first woman to win the Prix Européen de l'Essai, Europe's most prestigious award for non-fiction. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the New York Institute for the Humanities, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, as well as a founding board member of the Committee to Protect Journalists. She has taught at Princeton and most recently was the Regents Professor at the University of California at Berkeley.
Born in Providence, Rhode Island, Ms. Kramer graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Vassar College and received a master's degree in English at Columbia University before starting her career in journalism. She spent a year at The Village Voice, joined The New Yorker in 1964--and stayed. She divides her time between Europe and New York, where her husband, the anthropologist Vincent Crapanzano, is a Distinguished Professor at CUNY's Graduate Center.
Return to Sidney Harman Writer-in-Residence home page.
Current Writers-in-Residence
- Fall 2008: Francine Prose
- Spring 2009: George Packer
Past Writers-in-Residence
- Spring 2008: Charles Simic
- Fall 2007: Sigrid Nunez
- Spring 2007: Mark Kurlansky
- Fall 2006: Susan Choi
- Spring 2006: Carol Muske-Dukes
- Fall 2005: Francisco Goldman
- Spring 2005: Ben Katchor
- Fall 2004: William Finnegan
- Spring 2004: Colum McCann
- Fall 2003: April Bernard
- Spring 2003: Anita Desai
- Fall 2002: Philip Gourevitch
- Spring 2002: Paul Auster
- Fall 2001: John Edgar Wideman
- Spring 2001: Agha Shahid Ali
- Fall 2000: Edward Albee
- Spring 2000: Lorrie Moore
- Fall 1999: Jane Kramer
- Spring 1999: Tony Kushner
- Fall 1998: Yehuda Amichai
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