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Chemistry Seminar Program

Student Hosted Colloquia Kick Off Seminar

Thursday, September 28th
Professor Carl Djerassi
"Sex and Reproduction: ready for divorce?"
Djerassi
4:15pm - 5:15pm
Braun Lecture Hall
S.G. Mudd Chemistry Building
Stanford University




This seminar is free and open to the public. All Stanford University Chemistry students are encouraged to attend this special event.

About Djerassi
Carl Djerassi, emeritus professor of chemistry at Stanford University, is one of the few American scientists to have been awarded both the National Medal of Science (for the first synthesis of a steroid oral contraceptive--”the Pill”) and the National Medal of Technology (for promoting new approaches to insect control).

A member of the US National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences as well as many foreign academies, Djerassi has received 20 honorary doctorates together with numerous other honors, such as the first Wolf Prize in Chemistry, the first Award for the Industrial Application of Science from the National Academy of Sciences, the Erasmus Medal of the Academia Europeae, the Perkin Medal of the Society for Chemical Industry, the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Chemists, and the American Chemical Society’s highest award, the Priestley Medal.

For the past 18 years, he has turned to fiction writing, mostly in the genre of “science-in-fiction,” whereby he illustrates, in the guise of realistic fiction, the human side of scientists and the personal conflicts faced by scientists in their quest for scientific knowledge, personal recognition, and financial rewards.

In addition to 5 novels (“Cantor’s Dilemma;” “The Bourbaki Gambit;” “Marx, deceased;” “Menachem’s Seed;” “NO”), poetry (“The Clock runs backwards”), autobiography (“The Pill, Pygmy Chimps, and Degas’ Horse”) and memoir (“This Man’s Pill”), he embarked in 1997 on a trilogy of “science-in-theatre” plays. “AN IMMACULATE MISCONCEPTION,” first performed at the 1998 Edinburgh Fringe Festival and subsequently (1999 - 2004) in London, San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Vienna, Munich, Cologne, Sundsvall, Stockholm, Sofia, Geneva, Seoul, Tokyo, Lisbon and Singapore, has been translated into 11 languages and broadcast by BBC Radio on its World Service in 2000 as “Play of the Week,” in 2001 by the West German and Swedish Radio, and in 2004 by NPR in the USA. “OXYGEN” (co-authored with Roald Hoffmann) premiered in April 2001 at the San Diego Repertory Theatre, in September at the Mainfranken Theater in Würzburg and in November at the Riverside Studios in London and was broadcast by both BBC World Service and the West German Radio in December 2001. It has been translated into 10 languages. “CALCULUS” premiered in 2003 in San Francisco followed by a London production in 2004 as well as performances in Vienna, Munich and Berlin.

A chamber opera version (music by Werner Schulze) premiered in May 2005 in the Zurich Opera (Studiobühne). Among his “non-scientific” plays, “EGO,” premiered at the 2003 Edinburgh Festival Fringe and under the title “THREE ON A COUCH” in London (2004). A German translation of “EGO” was broadcast by the WDR in 2004, followed by its Austrian theatrical premiere in 2005 and a major German tour (Landgraf) in early 2006. The London premiere of his fifth play (“PHALLACY”) with a science vs. art theme occurred in 2005 with a German radio version to be broadcast in early 2006 by the WDR. His newest play, “TABOOS” will open in London in 2006.

He is also the founder of the Djerassi Resident Artists Program near Woodside, California, which provides residencies and studio space for artists in the visual arts, literature, choreography and performing arts, and music. Over 1400 artists have passed through that program since its inception in 1982.

Djerassi and his wife, Diane W. Middlebrook, a biographer and Professor Emerita of English at Stanford University, live in San Francisco and London.

Questions
Please contact Patricia Dwyer at 650-723-4770.

 

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