Dartmouth Events

Fact-Based Journalism in an Age of Suspicion

New York Times International Correspondent Alissa Rubin delivers the 2021 Bernard D. Nossiter ’47 Lecture.

Wednesday, May 19, 2021
5:00pm – 6:00pm
Virtual Event
Intended Audience(s): Public
Categories: Lectures & Seminars

Zoom Link - No Registration Required
https://dartgo.org/alissarubin
JOIN EVENT HERE

Speaker:
Alissa Johannsen Rubin

International Correspondent
The New York Times

Host:
Alexis Jetter

Lecturer
Dartmouth College

Bernard D. Nossiter ’47 Lecture

Lecture Info:
Have we lost our commonly held point of departure for thinking about current events, science, health care, and culture? As a country we do not agree on the fundamentals so often -- not always -- journalists are under attack even before they embark on their reporting. How can journalists preserve the credibility they have and gain back ground? New York Times International Correspondent Alissa Rubin offers lessons drawn from Bernard Nossiter and recent history.

Speaker Bio:
Alissa Johannsen Rubin has been a foreign correspondent for more than 20 years in the Middle East, Afghanistan, France and the Balkans. For the past 14 years she has worked for The New York Times and before that she worked for the Los Angeles Times. She won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for her reporting on Afghan women, the Michael Kelly Award for reporting in Afghanistan and Iraq and the 2015 John Chancellor Award. She has a BA in Renaissance Studies from Brown University and an M.A. in European History from Columbia University. She is finishing up a year at Harvard University where she has been a Nieman Fellow.

Host Bio:
Alexis Jetter is a veteran journalist, teacher and radio commentator with a focus on politics, science, activism and popular culture. She teaches journalism in the English Department and the Women’s and Gender Studies Department at Dartmouth College. Her articles have appeared in Vanity Fair, The New York Times Magazine, Vogue, Mother Jones, Science Times, Sports Illustrated, The Guardian (UK), Readers Digest, Health, Prevention, More, Ms., Harpers Bazaar, Life, The Village Voice, Columbia Journalism Review and The Nation, among others. She is also a Pulitzer Prize finalist with top national awards for her writings on education, science and social justice. She attended Brown University and received her BA in History from Evergreen State College in 1981. She also attended the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism for her Masters in Journalism in 1986.

Photo Credit: Robert Sloma

For more information, contact:
Joanne Blais

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.