Presented by The National Arts Journalism
Program,
the Center for Arts and Culture and Arts International
Columbia University
Graduate School of Journalism
Monday & Tuesday April 14-15, 2003
Support is generously provided by The
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Rockefeller Foundation.
Summary
| Schedule | View
publication
Conference
Summary
Mounting concern about Americas
image abroad has focused new attention on the use of art and culture
as a diplomatic tool. Reviving the official deployment of culture
to boost receptivity to American values has been the subject of
recent debate, with the chairman of the House Committee on International
Relations asking, "How is it that the country that invented
Hollywood and Madison Avenue has allowed such a destructive and
parodied image of itself?"
Over the past decade, funding for U.S. government-sponsored cultural
and educational programs abroad has fallen by over 33 percent. Although
the United States has largely dismantled the apparatus of cultural
diplomacy built up during the Cold War, September 11 and its aftermath
have challenged the wisdom of that move. At a time when many in
the international arena argue that diplomacy works best when backed
by force, can culture help as well to correct misperceptions and
to present a more nuanced image to critics of what is often deemed
American-inspired globalization? Or are current commercial exports
of U.S. culture an adequate representation of American society and
its values?
ARTS & MINDS will explore cultural diplomacys history,
viability and prospects. Prominent U.S. and foreign diplomats, policy
makers, historians, artists, arts administrators and journalists
will probe whether new arts programs might play a role in recasting
the U.S. image, explore the efficacy of American cultural diplomacy
during its Cold War heyday, and analyze the intensive cultural diplomacy
campaigns now being waged by foreign nations with a view towards
drawing lessons for U.S. policy. Special attention will be paid
to the outlook for U.S. cultural diplomatic initiatives in the Islamic
world.
Preliminary
Conference Schedule
DAY ONE: Monday,
April 14, 4:30-6:45 P.M
3:30-4:30 p.m.: Registration opens
4:30-5:00 p.m.: Conference Welcome: Michael Janeway,
director, National Arts Journalism Program; Ellen Lovell,
president and CEO, Center for Arts & Culture; Noreen
Tomassi, president, Arts International
Introduction: Andras Szanto, deputy
director, National Arts Journalism Program
5:00-6:45 p.m.: America®s Global Image: Short-Term
Branding or Long-Term Exchange?
How is the United States viewed by the rest of the world and to
what degree do perceptions and misperceptions of its culture shape
this image? Can public relations efforts improve foreigners® view
of American society and values or is a more long-term investment
required? Along with highlighting the range of American cultural
achievements, how can U.S. policy makers and arts institutions help
promote artistic exchange and cooperation as a means of encouraging
greater international understanding?
Plenary Presentation: "Cultural Diplomacy
and U.S. Security" by Helena Kane Finn, fellow
in diplomatic studies, Council on Foreign Relations, and former
acting assistant secretary of state, Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs, Department of State
Moderator: Hodding Carter, president, Knight
Foundation, and former State Department spokesman
Panelists: Andrew Kohut, director, The Pew
Research Center for the People and the Press; Richard Bulliet,
professor of history, Columbia University; Joshua Muravchik,
resident scholar, American Enterprise Institute; John Romano,
screenwriter and producer
DAY TWO: Tuesday,
April 15, 9 A.M.-4:30 P.M
9-9:30 a.m.: Welcome & Introduction: Michael
Z. Wise, NAJP research fellow and contributing editor, Architecture
Keynote Address: Trisha Brown, choreographer
and artistic director, Trisha Brown Dance Company
9:30-10:45 a.m.: Cultural Diplomacy in Historical
PerspectiveFrom 19th Century Worlds Fairs to the Cold
War
This panel of historians will trace and analyze the use of cultural
diplomacy over centuries, including the creation in 1938 of a division
of cultural relations in the State Department amid considerable
American ambivalence about such an endeavor. During the Cold War,
the United States flooded Europe with American orchestras, dance
groups, art exhibits and touring intellectuals. Many of these activities
were covertly funded by the Central Intelligence Agency. The panel
will explore this campaign as well as the use of black musicians
as unofficial U.S. envoys at a time when their civil rights were
under attack at home.
Moderator: Volker Berghahn, professor of history,
Columbia University
Panelists: John Brown, research associate,
Georgetown University, and U.S. Foreign Service cultural affairs
officer; Frank Ninkovich, professor of history, St. John's
University; Penny Von Eschen, professor of history, University
of Michigan; Michael Warner, historian, Central Intelligence
Agency
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.: The Cultural Diplomacy of Other
Nations
Well before the United States began to deploy culture as an instrument
of power abroad, European powers like Germany, Britain and France
had become old hands at cultural diplomacy. Many foreign governments
continue to support actively the showcasing of their national cultural
achievements as an integral part of their diplomatic strategy. This
panel will survey the activities of institutions like the Goethe
Institut, the British Council, the Alliance Française, and
the Mexican Cultural Institutes, and ask whether they hold lessons
for U.S. policy makers.
Moderator: Alexander Stille, author and editor,
Correspondence: An International Review of Culture & Society
Panelists: Peter Soetje, director, Goethe Institut,
New York; Jean-Rene Gehan, cultural counselor, French Embassy;
Andy Mackay, director, British Council USA; Arturo Sarukhan,
consul general of Mexico; Jeanne Wikler, general director
for cultural affairs, U.S., Consulate General of the Netherlands
12:30-1:30 p.m.: Lunch Break
1:30-3 p.m.: Can Cultural Diplomacy Improve Americas
Standing in the Islamic World?
The United States faces an epic challenge from Islamic fundamentalists
violently opposed to American power. Can greater efforts to convey
a more nuanced image of American culture help reach young people
and moderates in Islamic nations? What are the pitfalls in using
cultural initiatives in societies where the United States is a lightning
rod for such deep anger and resentment? How effective are recent
U.S.-backed efforts like the newly established Radio Sawa, which
uses Western and Arabic pop music as a lure for young listeners
to tune into news from Washingtons perspective?
Moderator: Caryle Murphy, religion reporter,
The Washington Post
Panelists: Peter Awn, dean, School of General
Studies, and professor of religion, Columbia University; Bert
Kleinman, senior managing consultant to Radio Sawa and Radio
Farda; Samer Shehata, professor of Arab studies, Georgetown
University; Faouzi Skali, founder and director, Fes Festival
of World Sacred Music
3:15-4:30 p.m.: Culture as a Tool of Statecraft:
Case Studies
Several U.S. ambassadors have regarded culture as an important aspect
of representing their country abroad and have pursued inventive
ways of using the arts for diplomatic ends. This panel will examine
how and why that was done, and will also look at cultural diplomacy
from the vantage point of a leading American artist who has lectured
abroad under the State Department aegis. Panelists will also discuss
whether the Cold War-era model of cultural diplomacy can be adopted
for use today, or if new circumstances make it preferable to create
a privately-funded entity better equipped to prevent propagandistic
distortions and avoid a U.S. government stigma with foreign audiences.
Moderator: Celestine Bohlen, culture writer,
The New York Times
Panelists: Richard Ford, Pulitzer Prize-winning
novelist; David Fraher, executive director, Arts Midwest;
David Denby, film critic, The New Yorker; Felix
Rohatyn, president, Rohatyn Associates, and former U.S. ambassador
to France; Cynthia Schneider, professor of art history, Georgetown
University, and former U.S. ambassador to the Netherlands
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