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Kahn Liberal Arts Institute

The Louise W. and Edmund J. Kahn Liberal Arts Institute supports collaborative research among Smith faculty, staff and students, Five College faculty, and visiting scholars—all without regard to the traditional boundaries of departments, programs and academic divisions. Each year the institute supports long- and short-term projects that are proposed, planned and organized by Smith College faculty. Kahn Fellows work together on topics that are broad enough to encompass a variety of disciplinary perspectives and fo­cused enough for a meaningful investigation.

Kahn Institute Updates

“Hauntings” Applications Due October 18

Hauntings,” the 2025–26 long-term Kahn project organized by Alex Callendar, Art, and Jennifer DeClue, Women and Gender Studies is now accepting faculty and staff applications.

Reading Group on Methods to Study Digital Society

Eszter Hargittai ’96, the Fall 2024 Neilson Professor, is holding a reading group on "Methods to Study Digital Society" for faculty, staff, and graduate students.

Workshop: Optimizing Your Digital Presence

For Students: Wednesday, October 23, 6–8 p.m., Campus Center 205. Register Here
For Faculty and Staff: Tuesday & Wednesday, October 29 & 30, 5–8 p.m. Kahn Institute, 21 Henshaw.

 

About the Kahn Institute

In 1998, a group of faculty members proposed the idea of a liberal arts institute as an innovative way to provide intellectual as well as physical space for scholarly development. Their goal was to create an imaginatively designed and managed institute, outside the curriculum but creatively linked to it, to give faculty, students and outside experts a place to collaborate on research projects of broad scope. They also envisioned a rich series of public events related to these projects to enhance the intellectual life of the college. 

A generous bequest from Louise Wolff Kahn ’31 substantially augmented the Louise W. and Edmund J. Kahn Fund for Faculty Excellence, making it possible to establish the Kahn Liberal Arts Institute in 1998. The institute opened in September 2000 on the third floor of Neilson Library and is now located at 21 Henshaw Avenue.

Staff

Communications/Publicity & Project Manager

Lauren Anderson
413-585-4021

Administrative Coordinator

Christine Reynolds
413-585-3721

Lauren Anderson 
Communications/Publicity and Project Manager, Kahn Institute

Alexis Callender
Assistant Professor of Art

Danielle Carrabino
SCMA Curator of Painting and Sculpture

Jean Ferguson
Director of Learning, Research and Technology

Susan Fliss
Dean of Libraries, ex-officio

Christophe Golé
Professor of Mathematical Sciences; Faculty Director of the Clark Science Center

Suzanne Gottschang 
Professor of Anthropology and of East Asian Studies; Director of the Kahn Institute

Colin Hoag
Assistant Professor of Anthropology

Jessica Nicoll
Director & Chief Curator of the Smith Museum of Art, ex-officio

Christine Reynolds
Administrative Coordinator, Kahn Institute

Sujane Wu
Professor of East Asian Languages

About the Director

Suzanne Gottschang is a medical anthropologist whose work contextualizes how individuals navigate governance and knowledge systems at the intersections of health, science, and medicine. Her research and writing are rooted in China and the US and cross anthropology, East Asian studies, gender studies, public health, and science and technology studies. Her current research focuses on the increasing prevalence of chronic diseases in horses and how horses, their caregivers, and veterinarians deal with the uncertainties of treatment and care by drawing on experiential and anecdotal knowledge and practices as well as those of evidence-based veterinary medicine.

Her book, Formulas for Motherhood in a Chinese Hospital, is the first ethnography about how a Chinese hospital’s staff, new mothers, and their families navigated the UNICEF-WHO Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative’s policies and practices to promote breastfeeding at a time of unprecedented social and economic change. Relations between biomedical practices and heightened expectations of femininity and sexuality demanded by consumer culture, alongside international and national agendas to promote maternal and child health, revealed new agents of maternal governance emerging at the very moment China’s economy heats up. The ethnography provides insight into how women’s creative pragmatism in a rapidly changing society leads to their views and decisions about motherhood. Gottschang has published in such journals as Medical Anthropology Quarterly, Technology and Culture the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 

She is committed to collaborative projects in her research, writing, and teaching – ranging from a three-year collaborative research project on everyday technologies in East Asia at Hong Kong University to coaching a student team in Smith College’s Engineering Design Clinic.

Research Without Boundaries

“The Kahn Institute is unique. No other college has anything quite like it—an incubator for cross-disciplinary research, debate and colleagueship, and a haven for free speech.”
Marjorie Senechal, Kahn Institute founding director

Marjorie Senechal

“My experience in my Kahn project was totally life changing!”
Maggie Olszewski ’23, A.B., English Language & Literature and Film & Media Studies

Maggie Olszewski ’23 smiles against a blue-gray sky

”We demonstrated the power of live engagement, of being present to one another, of challenging and extending our minds in the moment we shared.”

–Andrea Hairston, Louise Wolff Kahn 1931 Professor Emerita of Theatre and novelist

Andrea Hairston

Contact Kahn Liberal Arts Institute

21 Henshaw Avenue

Smith College

Northampton, MA 01063