Edward Baron Turk
John E. Burchard Professor of the Humanities; professor, Foreign Languages and Literatures Section
areas of expertise: french, literature, language, books and authors, humanities
Edward Baron Turk is the John E. Burchard Professor of the Humanities. He is the author of Marcel Carné and the Golden Age of French Cinema, which won prizes in both the United States and France, and of the critically acclaimed Hollywood Diva: A Biography of Jeanette MacDonald.
He is also the author of Baroque Fiction-Making, a study of early 17th-century novel writing, and of numerous articles on French literature, cinema and theater. He is currently preparing a new book on contemporary French theater and performance. Turk, who was knighted by the French government, is a chevalier in France's Order of Arts and Letters. He is also one of the prime architects of the Comparative Media Studies graduate program, steering it into existence in the late 1990s.
He is also the author of Baroque Fiction-Making, a study of early 17th-century novel writing, and of numerous articles on French literature, cinema and theater. He is currently preparing a new book on contemporary French theater and performance. Turk, who was knighted by the French government, is a chevalier in France's Order of Arts and Letters. He is also one of the prime architects of the Comparative Media Studies graduate program, steering it into existence in the late 1990s.

Ian Condry is a cultural anthropologist who specializes in contemporary Japan with a focus on media, popular culture, and globalization. His first book Hip-Hop Japan: Rap and the Paths of Cultural Globalization was published in October 2006 from Duke University Press. It is an ethnography of the Japanese rap music scene, exploring issues of race, gender, language, popular music history, and cultural politics primarily through the perspectives of Japanese musicians. Through fieldwork starting 1995-97, Condry focused on the "genba" (nightclubs, or "actual site") of Japan's hip-hop scene. He argues that the paths of cultural globalization lead through specific sites of performance, such as nightclubs and recording studios. Such locations help us more deeply understand the dialogue between global/local, producer/consumer, artist/industry.
Kai von Fintel does research in natural language semantics, pragmatics, philosophy of language and intersections thereof. His particular interests are in conditionals, modality and presupposition.
Gilberte Furstenberg was born and educated in France where she received her Agregation. She taught English at the University of Paris-Nanterre, then moved to the United States where she became a correspondent for the French news magazine L'Express. Her next career move brought her to MIT where she has been teaching French for the last 20 years.
James R. Glass obtained his SM and PhD degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from MIT in 1985 and 1988, respectively. After starting in the Speech Communication Group at the MIT Research Laboratory of Electronics, he has worked since 1989 at the Laboratory for Computer Science, now the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL).
Norvin Richards received his PhD in 1997 from MIT and is associate professor in the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy at MIT.