Stanford Emeriti/ae Council Autobiographical Reflections

Stanford University

The David B. Abernethy Emeriti/ae Lecture Series: Autobiographical Reflections features distinguished senior faculty members speaking about their lives, careers, and inspirations. Speakers reflect a wide range of teaching and research fields at Stanford, including the arts, humanities, social sciences, education, business, law, engineering, sciences, and medicine.

  1. 27 DE FEV.

    Phil Pizzo: The Threads That Connect a Life

    On February 27, 2025, Phil Pizzo, David and Susan Heckerman Professor and former Dean of the Stanford School of Medicine, treated an audience of emeriti/ae community members to an absorbing lecture entitled “The Threads That Connect a Life.” Pizzo narrates his story along two dominant themes – discovery and social justice – that have animated his life and career choices. Deciding to commit to education as the only way to escape a difficult early life in the Bronx, he is fascinated by experiments, studies philosophy and marine biology at a Jesuit college, makes his way through medical school, and pursues a passion for microbiology and infectious diseases at the National Institutes of Health. Marrying very young and coming of age in the tumultuous 1960s, he joins peace marches and becomes involved in HIV/AIDS advocacy and treatment especially for children. Never having been interested in academic administration, he is nonetheless enticed to become Stanford Medical School dean in 1995 and embarks on strategic planning and new thinking about education, research, clinical care, and physician-scientist training. Partial to entirely new beginnings, Pizzo next creates Stanford’s Distinguished Careers Institute, a new model for higher education focused on intergenerational learning, community, and opportunities for impact throughout the lifespan. And in his most recent life transition, he and his wife convert to Judaism, and he begins rabbinical school, later adding a program of spiritual care and counseling. Following the path of tikkun olam, “repairing the world,” Pizzo continues to seek social justice.

    1h
  2. 15/05/2024

    John Rickford: Speaking My Soul

    On May 15, 2024, John R. Rickford, the J. E. Wallace Sterling Professor of Humanities, Emeritus and Professor Emeritus of Linguistics, engaged emeriti/ae community members with a lecture and slide presentation, entitled “Speaking My Soul: Race, Life and Language.” Rickford dedicates the lecture to his colleague and good friend David Abernethy who had recommended him for a Danforth Fellowship in 1971 thus allowing him to go on to graduate school and pursue an academic career. The talk follows the structure of Rickford’s recently published memoir of the same title, leading his listeners through his life growing up in Guyana, South America, stories about his family and ancestors, student days at Queen’s College high school, attendance at UC Santa Cruz, wedding to wife Angela in 1971, and influential mentors that inspired him to pursue the field of sociolinguistics obtaining his PhD at University of Pennsylvania. He talks about leading “learning expeditions” as Stanford director of African and African American Studies to the South Carolina and Georgia Sea Islands, Jamaica, and Belize. He recaps the experience in 1990 of teaching with David Abernethy at a Stanford in Oxford summer program on “Britain in the Third World and the Third World in Britain.” Rickford discusses issues such as the use of African American Vernacular English, the life of Dennis Brutus, an anti-apartheid activist in South Africa (who lectured in the Oxford program), and the visit to Stanford of Frederic Willem de Klerk, President of South Africa. Rickford ends by remarking that he has had a life-long love affair with Stanford and plays a short video of the Stanford Chamber Orchestra performing “Hail, Stanford, Hail.”

    1h11min
  3. 15/05/2023

    Ann Arvin: Autobiographical Reflections

    On Apr. 19, 2023, Ann Arvin, the Lucile Salter Packard Professor of Pediatrics and Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, Emerita, a nationally recognized scientist, spoke to an emeriti/ae audience. She shared some of her experiences growing up on a farm and as a “faculty brat.” She commented on her undergraduate years at Brown University as a philosophy major, followed by an MD at the University of Pennsylvania, with just seven female students who found the patriarchy “alive and well,” but were active in seeking changes. Arvin noted that becoming an assistant professor in a Medical School clinical department brings with it the demanding and simultaneous new role of attending physician and “decider” in patient care.  She also reflected on the challenges of joining Stanford in 1978 as one of very few women faculty across campus, gravitating to each other and founding a Faculty Women’s Caucus to help bring about change. She described the excitement of her research career in molecular virology and infectious diseases, focusing on the varicella zoster virus (which causes chicken pox and shingles). Enticed into leadership through the University Fellows Program, Arvin served from 2006 to 2018 as Stanford’s Vice Provost and Dean of Research, and she offered perspectives on Stanford’s robust system of of interdisciplinary programs and institutes, envied by many peer universities. In response to a question, Arvin expressed pride in being a physician-scientist and the hope that this valuable and rewarding model will continue.

    1h5min
  4. 10/03/2023

    Paul Yock: Tales of a Medical Gizmologist

    On Feb. 15, 2023, Paul Yock, the Weiland Professor of Bioengineering and Medicine, Emeritus, treated an audience of emeriti/ae community members to a wonderful lecture, entitled “Tales of a Medical Gizmologist,” about his life and career. After a middle-class upbringing in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, he attended Amherst College and Oxford University, studying both science and philosophy, then attended Harvard Medical School and pursued a career as an interventional cardiologist first at UCSF followed by Stanford. He provided a fascinating “insider’s” perspective on the major role that Stanford has played in creating the large Bay Area medical technology ecosystem. Tracing the story from the 1980s when several faculty members who became health technology pioneers left Stanford due to a perceived lack of support for their innovation activities, he discussed the present environment where the university, and particularly the School of Medicine, is placing heavy emphasis on “translational” research bringing discoveries forward into patient care. This evolution was reflected in the inclusion of an early Medical Device Network as part of the “Bio-X” concept, the creation of innovation fellowships in 2001, the launch of many start-up companies from Stanford Biodesign, and the creation of the Bioengineering Department, uniquely housed in two schools. He discussed in some detail how the biodesign process is being taught and improved, for example by ensuring that consumers of health care are involved in the research phase. A beneficial fusion of entrepreneurship and scholarship was evident throughout this talk, in which Yock acknowledged his mentors and predecessors.

    1h7min
  5. 15/12/2022

    Clayborne Carson: Where Do We Go from Here? Martin Luther King, Jr.’s Still Unanswered Question for the World

    In a lecture on Nov. 15, 2022, Clayborne Carson, the Martin Luther King, Jr., Centennial Professor of History, emeritus, spoke in the Emeriti/ae Council’s “Autobiographical Reflections” lecture series. He traced the path of his early life growing up in Los Alamos, New Mexico, undergraduate and graduate studies at UCLA, becoming a “historian” rather unintentionally, and his almost fifty-year career at Stanford. He described his early interest in the civil rights movement, focused principally on young activists his own age, especially those in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which became the subject of his first book. Carson explains how he was asked by Mrs. Coretta Scott King to edit and publish her late husband’s speeches, sermons, and other writings, and became the founding Director of the King Institute at Stanford. He also spoke about his collaboration with PBS on the Eyes on the Prize documentary series which led him to write two plays about King’s life and teachings, which have been performed in China and in Palestine. Carson is continuing his online educational efforts by establishing the World House Project at the Freeman Spogli Institute, collaborating with international human rights advocates to realize King’s vision of a global community in which all people can “learn somehow to live with each other in peace.”

    1h5min

Classificações e avaliações

2,7
de 5
3 avaliações

Sobre

The David B. Abernethy Emeriti/ae Lecture Series: Autobiographical Reflections features distinguished senior faculty members speaking about their lives, careers, and inspirations. Speakers reflect a wide range of teaching and research fields at Stanford, including the arts, humanities, social sciences, education, business, law, engineering, sciences, and medicine.

Mais de Stanford