List of Brown University faculty

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This list of Brown University faculty includes notable current and former professors, lecturers, fellows, and administrators of Brown University, an Ivy League university located in Providence, Rhode Island. Among the awards received by faculty, fellows, and staff are seven Nobel Prizes, nine Pulitzer Prizes, and 17 MacArthur Fellowships.

Nobel laureates

Leon Cooper
Vernon L. Smith

MacArthur Fellows

Ibram X. Kendi
  • Susan E. Alcock – professor of Classics, director of the Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World; MacArthur Fellow (2000)
  • Shirley Brice Heath – professor-at-large; MacArthur Fellow (1984)[1]
  • Mari Jo Buhle – professor emerita of American Studies; MacArthur Fellow (1991)
  • Benedict Gross – associate professor of Mathematics (1982–1985); MacArthur Fellow (1986)
  • Stephen Houston – Dupee Family Professor of Social Science, professor of Anthropology; MacArthur Fellow (2008)
  • John Imbrie – professor emeritus of Geological Sciences; MacArthur Fellow (1981)
  • Jacqueline Jones – Clare Boothe Luce Visiting Professor (1988–1990); MacArthur Fellow (1999)[2]
  • Ieva Jusionyte – Watson Family University Professor of International Security and Anthropology; MacArthur Fellow (2025)
  • Robert Kates – university professor emeritus; MacArthur Fellow (1981)
  • John Keene – visiting assistant professor (2001–2002); MacArthur Fellow (2018)[3]
  • Ibram X. Kendi – visiting scholar and visiting assistant professor of Africana Studies (2013–2014); MacArthur Fellow (2021)[4]
  • Deborah Meier – senior fellow (1995–1997), Annenberg Institute; MacArthur Fellow (1987)[5]
  • David Mumford – professor emeritus of Applied Mathematics, recipient of the Fields Medal, MacArthur Fellow (1987)
  • David Pingree – university professor and professor of the History of Mathematics and of Classics, MacArthur Fellow (1981)
  • Gregory Schopen – Rush C. Hawkins Professor of Religious Studies, MacArthur Fellow (1985)
  • Jesse Shapiro – George S. and Nancy B. Parker Professor of Economics (2015–2021); MacArthur Fellow (2020)
  • John Edgar Wideman – Asa Messer Professor Emeritus of Africana Studies and Literary Arts; MacArthur Fellow (1993)
  • C. D. Wright – Israel J. Kapstein Professor of English; MacArthur Fellow (2004)

Pulitzer Prize recipients

David Kertzer

Applied sciences

Vicki Colvin
Subra Suresh

Humanities

Carlos Fuentes
Leela Gandhi
  • Amanda Anderson – Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Humanities
  • Shadi Bartsch – W. Duncan MacMillan II Professor of Classics
  • Shahzad Bashir – Aga Khan Professor of Islamic Humanities
  • Rey Chow – Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Humanities (2000–2009)[7]
  • Shaye J. D. Cohen – Samuel Ungerleider Professor of Judaic Studies and professor of Religious Studies (1991–2001)
  • Beshara Doumani – Mahmoud Darwish Professor of Palestinian Studies, president of Birzeit University
  • David Estlund – Lombardo Family Professor of the Humanities
  • James L. Fitzgerald – St. Purander Das Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Classics
  • Carlos Fuentes – professor-at-large in the Department of Hispanic Studies; widely considered the most influential author of the Spanish-speaking world since Jorge Luis Borges
  • Leela Gandhi – John Hawkes Professor of the Humanities and English
  • Dwight B. Heath – research professor of Anthropology; foremost anthropological researcher and scholar in field of alcohol studies
  • Stephen Houston – Dupee Family Professor of Social Science, professor of Anthropology
  • Adrienne Keene – Joukowsky Family Assistant Professor of American Studies; Native American academic and activist
  • David Konstan – John Rowe Workman Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Classics and of Comparative Literature (1987–2010)
  • Hans Kurath – professor of Germanics and Linguistics (1931–1946); known for publishing the first linguistic atlas, the Linguistic Atlas of New England, recipient of the Loubat Prize
  • Jacob Neusner – professor of Judaic Studies (1968–1989)[8]
  • Adi Ophir – Mellon Visiting Professor of Humanities and Middle East Studies
  • Dom Illtyd Trethowan – visiting professor in Theology
  • Peter van Dommelen – professor of Archaeology and the Ancient World and Anthropology

Africana studies

Chinua Achebe
George Lamming
Tricia Rose
  • Chinua Achebe – David and Marianna Fisher University Professor and professor of Africana Studies, Nigerian novelist, poet, and critic; author of Things Fall Apart, the most widely read book in modern African literature
  • Ama Ata Aidoo – visiting professor of Africana Studies and Literary Arts (2004–2009); Ghanaian novelist and playwright, one of Africa's best-known female writers[9][10]
  • George Houston Bass – professor of Theater Arts and Afro-American Studies[11]
  • Keisha N. Blain – professor of Africana Studies and of History
  • B. Anthony Bogues – Asa Messer Professor of Humanities and Critical Theory, professor of Africana Studies, director of the Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, professor of History of Art and Architecture
  • Michael Eric Dyson – assistant professor of American Civilization and Afro-American Studies (1993–1995)[12]
  • Lewis Gordon – professor of Africana Studies (1997–2004)
  • Matthew Pratt Guterl – professor of Africana Studies and American Studies
  • Wyclef Jean – visiting fellow in Africana Studies (2010–11)[13][14]
  • Ibram X. Kendi – visiting scholar and visiting assistant professor of Africana Studies (2013–2014)[4]
  • Adrienne Kennedy – visiting associate professor (1979–1980)
  • George Lamming – visiting professor of Africana Studies and Literary Arts; Barbadian author, In the Castle of My Skin, Natives of My Person
  • Judy Richardson – Distinguished Visiting Lecturer of Africana Studies
  • Noliwe Rooks – L. Herbert Ballou University Professor of Africana Studies
  • Tricia Rose (A.M. 1987, Ph.D. 1993) – Chancellor's Professor of Africana Studies, associate dean of the Faculty for Special Initiatives, director of the Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America
  • Greg Tate – visiting professor of Africana Studies (2012)
  • John Edgar Wideman – Asa Messer Professor Emeritus of Africana Studies and Literary Arts; two-time PEN/Faulkner Award winner

English and literary arts

Paula Vogel in 2010

History

Omer Bartov
Natalie Zemon Davis
Gordon S. Wood

Modern culture and media

Ariella Azoulay
  • Ariella Azoulay – professor of Comparative Literature and Modern Culture and Media
  • Tina Campt – Owen F. Walker Professor of Humanities and professor of Modern Culture and Media
  • Wendy Hui Kyong Chun – professor of Modern Culture and Media (2005–2018)
  • Tony Cokes – professor of Modern Culture and Media
  • Joan Copjec – professor of Modern Culture and Media
  • Mary Ann Doane – George Hazard Crooker Professor of Modern Culture and Media
  • Bonnie Honig – Nancy Duke Lewis Professor of Modern Culture and Media and Political Science
  • Robert Scholes – research professor of Modern Culture and Media; president, Modern Language Association; author, The Rise and Fall of English; co-author, The Nature of Narrative
  • Leslie Thornton – professor emerita of Modern Culture and Media

Philosophy

Martha Nussbaum

Natural sciences

Biology

Anne Fausto-Sterling
  • Elizabeth L. Brainerd – Robert P. Brown Professor of Biology and professor of Medical Science
  • David E. Cane – Vernon K. Krieble Professor Emeritus of Chemistry and professor emeritus of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, and Biochemistry
  • Anne Fausto-Sterling (Ph.D. 1970) – Nancy Duke Lewis Professor Emerita of Biology
  • Susan Gerbi – George D. Eggleston Professor Emerita of Biochemistry, professor of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology and Biochemistry (Research)
  • Judy Liu – Sidney A. Fox and Dorothea Doctors Fox Associate Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science
  • Kenneth R. Miller (Sc.B. 1970) – professor of Biology; supporter of evolution involved in numerous public debates and trials about the teaching of intelligent design in schools
  • Masatoshi Nei – professor of Biology (1969–1972); recipient of the Kyoto Prize in Basic Sciences (2013)
  • Wally Snell – assistant professor of Botany (1920–1921); associate professor of Botany (1921–1942); Stephen T. Olney Professor of Botany (1942–1945); athletic director (1943–1947); professor of Natural History (1945–1959)[19]

Neuroscience

John Donoghue
  • David Berson – Sidney A. Fox and Dorothea Doctors Fox Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, discovered third photoreceptor in the eye (in addition to rods and cones)
  • John Donoghue (Ph.D. 1979) – Henry Merritt Wriston Professor of Neuroscience, professor of Engineering
  • Michael J. Frank – Edgar L. Marston Professor of Psychology, director of the Center for Computational Brain Science
  • Leigh Hochberg (B.Sc. 1990) – L. Herbert Ballou University Professor of Engineering
  • Karla Kaun (Ph.D. 2007) – associate professor of Neuroscience
  • Diane Lipscombe – Thomas J. Watson, Sr. Professor of Science, professor of Neuroscience, Reliance Dhirubhai Ambani Director of the Robert J. and Nancy D. Carney Institute for Brain Science
  • Christopher I. Moore – professor of Neuroscience
  • Michael Paradiso (Ph.D. 1984) – Sidney A. Fox and Dorothea Doctors Fox Professor of Ophthalmology and Visual Science and professor of Neuroscience

Chemistry

Lars Onsager

Cognitive and psychological sciences

Judson A. Brewer
William Damon
  • Sheila Blumstein – Albert D. Mead Professor of Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences
  • Judson A. Brewer – director of Research and Innovation at the Mindfulness Center, and professor of Behavioral and Social Sciences
  • Mary Carskadon – adjunct professor of Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences
  • Russell Church – Edgar L. Marston Professor Emeritus of Psychology
  • William Damon – professor of Education (1989–1997)
  • Philip Lieberman – George Hazard Crooker University Professor Emeritus
  • Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson – author and psychoanalyst
  • William H. Warren – Chancellor's Professor of Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences

Earth sciences

Kim Cobb
  • Kim Cobb – professor of Environment and Society and professor of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences
  • Karen M. Fischer – Louis and Elizabeth Scherck Distinguished Professor of the Geological Sciences
  • Meredith G. Hastings – professor of Environment and Society and Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences
  • James W. Head (Ph.D. 1969) – Louis and Elizabeth Scherck Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the Geological Sciences
  • Timothy D. Herbert – Henry L. Doherty Professor of Oceanography, professor of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences
  • John Imbrie – professor emeritus of Geological Sciences
  • Amanda Lynch – Sloan Lindemann and George Lindemann, Jr. Distinguished Professor of Environment and Society and professor of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences
  • James M. Russell – chair of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences
  • Peter H. Schultz – professor emeritus of Geological Sciences, professor of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences

Medicine and public health

Ashish Jha
Megan Ranney

Physics

Sylvester James Gates
John M. Kosterlitz

Formal sciences

Computer science

Andries van Dam

Mathematics

Mary Cartwright
David Gale

Applied mathematics

David Mumford
Kavita Ramanan

Social sciences

Political science and international studies

Nadje Sadig Al-Ali
Stephen Kinzer
Ricardo Lagos
Arvind Subramanian

Economics

Mark Blyth
Oded Galor
Emily Oster

Sociology

Prudence Carter
Lester Frank Ward

Visual and performing arts

Unclassified

Deans

Dean of the college

Dean of the graduate school

Dean of the School of Public Health

  • Ashish Jha – dean of the School of Public Health (2020–)
  • Bess Marcus – dean of the School of Public Health (2017–2020)

Dean of the School of Engineering

  • Tejal A. Desai (Sc.B. 1994) – dean of the School of Engineering (2022–)
  • Lawrence Larson – founding dean of the School of Engineering (2011–2022)

Provosts

Presidents

References

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