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Maya Thompson

Bachelor of Fine Arts in Communication Design

Parsons School of Design

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Maya Thompson is a designer and visual storyteller passionate about using design for social impact. Throughout her time at Parsons, she explored the intersection of art, technology, and activism, creating campaigns that amplify underrepresented voices. Maya’s senior thesis focused on inclusive design solutions for public spaces, reflecting her commitment to accessibility and equity. She looks forward to a career in user experience and brand strategy, where she hopes to continue making design a tool for positive change.

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Opening Remarks


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Dr. Dwight A. McBride

President, The New School

President McBride welcomes graduates, faculty, families, and friends to this momentous occasion, reflecting on the transformative journey of the graduating class and the university’s commitment to innovation, creativity, and social change.

Maya Thompson

Bachelor of Fine Arts in Communication Design

Parsons School of Design

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Maya Thompson is a designer and visual storyteller passionate about using design for social impact. Throughout her time at Parsons, she explored the intersection of art, technology, and activism, creating campaigns that amplify underrepresented voices. Maya’s senior thesis focused on inclusive design solutions for public spaces, reflecting her commitment to accessibility and equity. She looks forward to a career in user experience and brand strategy, where she hopes to continue making design a tool for positive change.

Bachelor of Fine Arts in Communication Design

Parsons School of Design

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Maya Thompson is a designer and visual storyteller passionate about using design for social impact. Throughout her time at Parsons, she explored the intersection of art, technology, and activism, creating campaigns that amplify underrepresented voices. Maya’s senior thesis focused on inclusive design solutions for public spaces, reflecting her commitment to accessibility and equity. She looks forward to a career in user experience and brand strategy, where she hopes to continue making design a tool for positive change.

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90th Annual University Commencement Program
Friday
, 
May 
16
, 
2025
, 
3:30PM 
 (
EDT
)

Ninetieth ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT CEREMONY
MAY 18, 2026

Barclays Center

Barclays Center

Schedule
Speakers and Honorees
Distinguished Teaching Awards
Doctoral Candidates
Graduating Students

THE NEW SCHOOL

THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH

COLLEGE OF PERFORMING ARTS
EUGENE LANG COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS
PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN

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Program

PROCESSIONAL


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Candidates for Academic Degrees

THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH

Descripton

COLLEGE OF PERFORMING ARTS

EUGENE LANG COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS

PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN

9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Faculty and Platform Party

Faculty marshal

Dr. Bryna Sanger, University Professor Emeritus and former Deputy Provost

the faculty

University Senior Leadership

The trustees

Candidates for honorary degrees

DISTINGUISHED UNIVERSITY TEACHING AWARD RECIPIENTS

OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN SOCIAL JUSTICE TEACHING AWARD RECIPIENTS

Student presenters

the president

LAND AND LABOR ACKNOWLEDGMENT


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Linfei Yang

As we begin, we want to acknowledge that The New School’s New York City campus is located upon the unceded homeland of Indigenous people, including the Lenape people. We honor the Lenape people, their elders, past, present and future generations throughout the diaspora. 


We also acknowledge that the labor used to develop land and generate wealth throughout this country has been at the expense of enslaved people of the African diaspora. 


As New School community members, it is our shared responsibility to make visible the social, economic, and political history that frames our current realities. 


We offer this acknowledgment even as we continue to do the work of educating, engaging, innovating and advancing. As we celebrate today, our vision for a future that fully embraces the human dignity of all people is ever-present.


Descripton

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Izzy Durso with Nadav Beary, McQuay Morton, and Kadar Prescod

Izzy Durso with Nadav Beary, McQuay Morton, and Kadar Prescod

Performing "Young Hearts Run Free" By Candi Station

WELCOME ADDRESS


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Joel Towers

Joel Towers

President and University Professor

Description

PRESENTATION OF DISTINGUISHED UNIVERSITY TEACHING AWARDS


PRESENTATION OF AWARDS FOR OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS IN SOCIAL JUSTICE TEACHING


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Richard Kessler

Richard Kessler

Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs

2026 Distinguished University Teaching Awards

Peter Hoffman, Associate Professor of International Affairs, New School for Social Research
Alison Kinney, Assistant Professor of Writing, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts
Arthur Levy, Part-Time Assistant Professor, College of Performing Arts
Mimi Maxmen, Part-Time Associate Teaching Professor, Parsons School of Design
Kali Mincy, Part-Time Lecturer, Parsons School of Design
Wilson Valentin-Escobar, Assistant Professor of Public Humanities and American Studies, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts


2026 Awards for Outstanding Achievements in Social Justice Teaching ‌

Alexandra Délano Alonso, Professor of Politics and Global Studies, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts
Ted Kerr, Part-Time Assistant Professor, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts

STUDENT COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Introduction

Alexander Yellen

 Chair, Alumni Council

Undergraduate Speaker

Simone Handelman Duffy

Candidate for Bachelor of Fine Arts in Design History and Practice, Parsons School of Design, and,

Bachelor of Arts in Culture and Media, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts

Graduate Speaker

Nia Calloway

Candidate for Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing, The New School for Social Research

MUSICAL PERFORMANCE


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Izzy Durso with Nadav Beary, McQuay Morton, and Kadar Prescod

Performing "Tell Me Something Good" By Chaka Khan

CONFERRAL OF HONORARY DEGREES


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Name

Joel Towers

President and University Professor

RIchard Kessler

Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs

Joel Towers, President and University Professor

Linda E. Rappaport

Chair, Board of Trustees

Meg Crane

Doctor of Humane Letters, Honoris Causa

Presented by Professor Lucille Tenazas, Henry Wolf Professor of Communication Design, Parsons School of Design

Raven chacon

Doctor of Music, Honoris Causa

Presented by Professor Arturo O'Farrill, Professor of Music and Bill Evans Fellow, College of Performing Arts

James WInes

Doctor of Design, Honoris Causa

Presented by Professor Paul Goldberger, Joseph Urban Professor of Design, Parsons School of Design

Taylor Mac

Doctor of Fine Arts, Honoris Causa

Presented by Jermaine Hill, Dean of the School of Drama, College of Performing Arts

COMMENCEMENT ADDRESS


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Taylor Mac

Her Excellency Ms. María Fernanda Espinosa Garcés,

Theatre Artist

PRESENTATION OF CANDIDATES FOR DEGREES


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Name

LINDA E. RAPPAPORT

Chair, Board of Trustees

Chair, Board of Trustees

Richard Kessler

Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs

The New School for Social Research

T. Alexander Aleinikoff

Executive Dean

College of Performing Arts

Stephen Brown-Freid

Executive Dean

Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts

Dr. Christoph Cox

Executive Dean

Parsons School of Design

Anne GaInes

Executive Dean

CONFERRAL OF DEGREES


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Name

Richard kessler

Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs

Joel Towers

President and University Professor

CLOSING REMARKS


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Joel Towers

Joel Towers

President and University Professor

President McBride welcomes graduates, faculty, families, and friends to this momentous occasion, reflecting on the transformative journey of the graduating class and the university’s commitment to innovation, creativity, and social change.

RECESSIONAL


9:00 AM - 9:30 AM

Dr. Dwight A. McBride

President, The New School

The Platform party will formally process off the stage

Honorary Degree Recipients 

Meg Crane

Designer and Inventor of the Home Pregnancy Test

Parsons School of Design

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In the late 1950s, Meg Crane moved to Manhattan to study fashion illustration and graphic design at Parsons. It was an exhilarating, frightening, and affirming time for her. Parsons’ encouraging faculty gave her the courage to begin her life in design. A varied freelance career preceded her position with Organon Pharmaceuticals, where she was hired to work on a line of cosmetic products they had recently acquired.


It was in their laboratory one day that Meg noticed a row of test tubes suspended over a mirrored shelf and learned that they were pregnancy tests Organon had performed for doctors and their patients. She was immediately struck by the idea that she could design a test that a woman could do by herself. At home. Privately. She developed a prototype she called Predictor, but the company was adamantly opposed to distributing it. Ten years later, despite an extraordinary amount of controversy, home pregnancy tests were on the drug store shelves.


Meg became co-founder of the advertising firm Ponzi & Weill with her life partner, Ira Sturtevant, working on a wide range of consumer products and pro bono projects.

raven chacon

Musician, Composer, and Installation Artist

Schools of Public Engagement

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Raven Chacon is a composer, performer, and installation artist from Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation. As a solo artist, Chacon has exhibited, performed, or had works performed at LACMA, The Renaissance Society, the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Borealis Festival, SITE Santa Fe, Chaco Canyon, Ende Tymes Festival, and Swiss Institute Contemporary Art New York. As a member of Postcommodity from 2009 to 2018, he co-created artworks that were presented at the Whitney Biennial, documenta 14, and Carnegie International 57 as well as the two-mile-long land art installation Repellent Fence.


A recording artist for 24 years, Chacon has appeared on more than 80 releases on various national and international labels. In 2022, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Music for his composition Voiceless Mass. His 2020 Manifest Destiny opera Sweet Land, co-composed with Du Yun, received critical acclaim from the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, and the New Yorker, and was named 2021 Opera of the Year by the Music Critics Association of North America.


Since 2004, Chacon has mentored more than 300 Native American high school composers in the writing of new string quartets for the Native American Composer Apprenticeship Project (NACAP). Chacon has received a  United States Artists Fellowship in Music, a Creative Capital award in Visual Arts, a Native Arts and Cultures Foundation artist fellowship, the American Academy’s Berlin Prize for Music Composition, the Bemis Center’s Ree Kaneko Award, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award (2022), a position as the Pew Fellow-in-Residence (2022), and a 2023 MacArthur Fellowship.


His solo artworks are part of the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Smithsonian’s American Art Museum and National Museum of the American Indian, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Getty Research Institute, the University of New Mexico Art Museum, and various private collections.

James Wines 

Artist and Architect

Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts

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James Wines is a visual artist, architect, product designer, and writer. He is also a

retired professor of architecture from Penn State University, with a teaching emphasis on the integrative arts. Educated at Syracuse University, he was the founder (in 1970) of SITE New York, a multidisciplinary practice whose work includes buildings, public spaces, environmental art works, master plans, landscapes, interiors, exhibitions, video productions, and graphic designs. SITE’s main focus is on the aesthetic, sociological, and environmental aspects of the building arts. As the organization’s continuing president and creative director, he has originated and built more than 150 art, architecture, and design projects in the United States, Italy, France, England, Austria, Canada, Spain, Qatar, Türkiye, Dubai, China, and Japan. 


Wines has delivered lectures for colleges, universities, and professional conferences in 59 countries and written seven books; including DE-ARCHITECTURE (Rizzoli International) 1987 and GREEN ARCHITECTURE (Taschen Verlag) 2000. In addition, there have been 22 monographs and museum catalogues published on his drawings and projects for SITE. 


He is the winner of 25 art and design awards, including the Smithsonian Institution’s 2013 National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement, the 1995 Chrysler Award for Design Innovation (USA) and the 2011 ANCE Award for an International Architect (Italy). Wines was honored in 2002 with a large retrospective exhibition at the Centre FRAC in France, jointly sponsored by Centre Pompidou in Paris and Museé des Beaux Arts in Orleans. His graphic work has been shown in more than one hundred and fifty museums and galleries in the USA, Europe, and Asia. An exhibition of his graphic works, bridging from 1970 to the present, was on view in 2013 at the Atrium Gallery of City College of New York. Drawings and models can be found in numerous public and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum, Frac Centre-Val de Loire, The Louvre, Victoria and Albert Museum, Australian National Gallery, Tokyo National Gallery, Art Institute of Chicago and others. Professor Wines lives and works in the Battery Park area of New York City. Among recent projects, he created a Willi Smith fashion installation for Cooper Hewitt Museum in New York and new stores for Virgil Abloh’s ‘Off White’ company in Korea and Japan. He has also been designing a Confucian cemetery in Korea, hospitality projects in the United States, a private house in Temecula, California, and lighting products for Foscarini in Italy. There was an April/May/June 2021 ‘Drawings for SITE’ retrospective at Tchoban Museum für Architekturzeichnung in Berlin.

 

He continues to research environmental issues in art and architecture, theories of public space and writes on these subjects for design publications internationally. He has recently completed the transfer of SITE research and visual documentation archives to Columbia University’s Avery Library.

retired professor of architecture from Penn State University, with a teaching emphasis on the integrative arts. Educated at Syracuse University, he was the founder (in 1970) of SITE New York, a multidisciplinary practice whose work includes buildings, public spaces, environmental art works, master plans, landscapes, interiors, exhibitions, video productions, and graphic designs. SITE’s main focus is on the aesthetic, sociological, and environmental aspects of the building arts. As the organization’s continuing president and creative director, he has originated and built more than 150 art, architecture, and design projects in the United States, Italy, France, England, Austria, Canada, Spain, Qatar, Türkiye, Dubai, China, and Japan. 


Wines has delivered lectures for colleges, universities, and professional conferences in 59 countries and written seven books; including DE-ARCHITECTURE (Rizzoli International) 1987 and GREEN ARCHITECTURE (Taschen Verlag) 2000. In addition, there have been 22 monographs and museum catalogues published on his drawings and projects for SITE. 


He is the winner of 25 art and design awards, including the Smithsonian Institution’s 2013 National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement, the 1995 Chrysler Award for Design Innovation (USA) and the 2011 ANCE Award for an International Architect (Italy). Wines was honored in 2002 with a large retrospective exhibition at the Centre FRAC in France, jointly sponsored by Centre Pompidou in Paris and Museé des Beaux Arts in Orleans. His graphic work has been shown in more than one hundred and fifty museums and galleries in the USA, Europe, and Asia. An exhibition of his graphic works, bridging from 1970 to the present, was on view in 2013 at the Atrium Gallery of City College of New York. Drawings and models can be found in numerous public and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum, Frac Centre-Val de Loire, The Louvre, Victoria and Albert Museum, Australian National Gallery, Tokyo National Gallery, Art Institute of Chicago and others. Professor Wines lives and works in the Battery Park area of New York City. Among recent projects, he created a Willi Smith fashion installation for Cooper Hewitt Museum in New York and new stores for Virgil Abloh’s ‘Off White’ company in Korea and Japan. He has also been designing a Confucian cemetery in Korea, hospitality projects in the United States, a private house in Temecula, California, and lighting products for Foscarini in Italy. There was an April/May/June 2021 ‘Drawings for SITE’ retrospective at Tchoban Museum für Architekturzeichnung in Berlin.

 

He continues to research environmental issues in art and architecture, theories of public space and writes on these subjects for design publications internationally. He has recently completed the transfer of SITE research and visual documentation archives to Columbia University’s Avery Library.

Taylor mac 

Theatre Artist; Commencement Speaker

The New School for Social Research

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St. Taylor Mac is a theatre artist who prefers to write a bio in the first person. Hello. I’m also a theatre artist who longs to be rid of the usual bios, which are lists of achievements. Here’s something different.


In case you don’t know, my pronoun is judy (only capitalized when at the start of a sentence, like a normal pronoun). A few people have claimed I use it as a joke. They are uninformed. It’s not a joke, which doesn’t mean it isn't funny. It’s a personalized pronoun for someone whose gender (professionally and personally) is constantly changing. My gender isn’t male or female or non-binary (which oddly creates a binary between people who are non-binary and people who are binary). My gender is “performer” (one day I’ll get it on the passport) and continually changing. It’s also an art piece and as annoying to navigate as it is delicious. You too may change yourself.


Here’s something a bunch of us theatre folk are considering in terms of change: How can we make wondering the center of dramatic action, rather than centering the achievement of goals that are inherent in conflict? Sarah Ruhl says most theatre is made in the form of a male orgasm. That seems accurate, in terms of theatre usually engorging to catharsis. But may we add that the radical queer understands a male orgasm may be varied, multiple, and circular? All this to agree: There’s more than one way to engage with others.


There was once an acting teacher who said, “When your character is alone on stage, their action is one of three things:  praying, figuring out, or recalling.” Wise as that craft may be, may we transform this triumvirate into a truncation, one which offers an expansion? While the method acting teacher is interested in showing how people are, some of us are—also?—interested in using theatre to explore possibility. Could we turn our craft into a vagary of wondering? In other words, how do we become less knowing and more Socratic?


And are these actions reserved only for when we’re alone? Or singular? Or hierarchical? Here’s a funny thing you start to wonder about as you climb the ladder: If access to the tower means no access to the street, maybe, baby, it ain’t worth it.


I also wonder: Would an isolated child really dream toward theatre if it meant spending even more alone time? Though, is a character ever alone? Even when rehearsing a one-person show, the ancestral makers are present. So, rather than being in a tantrum-tower-building, isolating, your-turn-my-turn conflict, how might we wonder WITH them?


A start may be to rid ourselves of numbers. Twenty-four hours. Two hundred people. Eight acts.  Five-character play. Ninety-minutes. Are all these numbers ways to disengage from the challenge of content? Does form do the same?


Judy’s been a form queen. I love a hand-painted map, one that’s personalized, researched, detailed, figurative, metaphorical, and imperfect. Essentially: Stack the genres, layer the forms, delight in the human warbles, throw in a little direction, notice the image is faded, get lost, damp, realize it’s grown something that might be harming you, try to clean it, hope it worked, realize it hasn’t, choose to make use of the harm, find a different way, repeat with variation, and call it theatre.


And . . .  I wonder if it’s time to consider that form, style, aesthetics, pace, duration, craft, and process may not be content? Gosh forbid. We haven’t yet achieved enough critical mass of agreement that they are content. Don’t give up yet, Taylor Mac. There is more work to be done before derailing this holistic approach by sabotaging doubt. Commit, gyrl.


Still . . .  there is a nagging question: Are we all behaving like Virgos, obsessing over categories, stratagems, and lists in order to ground our nomadic insecurities with an organizing principle chained to want?


Here’s a biographical detail for this bio: I’m a Virgo. Though I don’t believe in astrology. Most of the people I hold dear are astrology nuts. It’s hard to hold firm to a belief when dearness gets in the way.


Another dear thing which keeps getting in the way of belief:  How can we be quiet while still freeing ourselves from the Puritan dominance over expression? Another way to ask it: How may we maintain our gentle souls in a tough place full of so many rules and mountains?  Must the tender queens be “fierce” to chisel a place for themselves in the world? In order to survive? Must they be queens, rulers with subjects?  May they not be tender? Must they pull up their bootstraps and emerge from dark caves, ready for battle? Must they brag and promote and grow, grow, grow, simply to be considered?


There’s a Stoic middle-aged consideration for ya.


Speaking of middle age and bragging and promoting . . . back to the bio. Some theaters, producers, and playbills have rules about bios: no jokes; don’t thank anyone; get rid of the personal; forget the philosophy; 100-word count; and simply list.  And perhaps, in a world of so many themes, a list is kinder. Must we be challenged everywhere? Shall we manifesto ourselves into corners, even in the playbill? Shall we exhaust the reader with questions before the show has even begun?


And a different framing: Is the “list” similar to the peaceful and important work of the calling of the names—a way of saying, “This happened!  You may not have been there to witness, but it happened!  Recognize!” And if the title of a play fails to provide you with the information that it was a sideshow musical about the gentrification of Coney Island—starring Bridget Everett, Tigger!, Dirty Martini, Bianca Leigh, and Ruby Lynn Maher, where Julie Atlas Muz choreographed Basil Twist’s puppets to watch on as Taylor Mac performed a naked, though painted green, de-tucking—perhaps it is enough to wonder with nothing more than its title: Red Tide Blooming.


In case all this might be true (that a list in a bio is more virtuous), below is the traditional biographical list of shows (rituals), competitive kindnesses (awards), and debt (gratitude). It’s essentially an engorging toward catharsis. Feel free to read it and decide for yourself which gives you the context you need to open your heart (perhaps none of these . . . oh, no, then we’ll have to put our hopes on the show). Or as the drag queen with extra makeup time once said, “Yes, and . . .”


Theatre artist St. Taylor Mac is a MacArthur “genius”, a Pulitzer Prize Finalist, a Tony nominee for Best Play, and the recipient of an International Ibsen Award, a Kennedy Prize, a Doris Duke Performing Artist Award, a Guggenheim, a Drama League Award, a New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award, two Obies, and two Bessies and has the great honor of having Sainthood bestowed by the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence (naming St. Taylor Macalong with judy’s fellows Matt Ray, Machine Dazzle, Niegel Smith, and Faye Driscoll Our Theatrical Luminaries of Queer Synesthetic Sensorial Delights. Mac’s patronage being hybridity, thus St. Taylor Mac is the Patron Saint of Hybridity).


Works by St. Taylor Mac include Prosperous Fools (a Juvenalian satire on cultural philanthropy longing to be a comédie-ballet about liberation); Sea Songs for the Butt Pirates, Widow’s Watch, and End of the Earth (a sing-along hang about queer sea towns, meant for pubs); Good Morning, Beauty (a song cycle consideration of long-term queer relationships for orchestra and voice, with lyrics by Mac and music by Jake Heggie); Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (a musical inspired by John Berendt's nonfiction novel, with a book by Taylor Mac and music by Jason Robert Brown), Bark of Millions (a parade trance extravaganza of 55 songs—and counting—for the living library of the deviant theme with lyrics by Mac and music by Matt Ray), Joy and Pandemic (a realism play about an abstract art school); The Hang (a jazz opera passion play about the final hours of Socrates with lyrics by Mac and music by Matt Ray); The Fre (a queer children’s play about loving after bullying, set in a ball pit); Gary:  A Sequel to Titus Andronicus (a tragedy determined to become a comedy); A 24-Decade History of Popular Music (a 24-hour performance art concert about communities building themselves as a result of being torn apart); Hir (an absurd realist play about a changing America); The Walk Across America for Mother Earth (an anarchist adaptation of Three Sisters about activism, with music by Ellen Maddow); The Lily’s Revenge (a flowergory manifold about a flower who wants to be the center of the story, with music by Rachel Garniez); The Young Ladies Of (a paternal mystery); The Be(A)st of Taylor Mac (a ukulele confessional about the War on Terror); Red Tide Blooming (a freak-show musical about gentrification); and The Last Two People on Earth (a two-man cabaret for seagulls about the joy of singing, created with Mandy Patinkin, Susan Stroman, and Paul Ford). 


Films include Whitman in the Woods (directed by Noah Greenberg, streaming on All Arts) and Taylor Mac’s 24-Decade History of Popular Music (a concert doc directed by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, streaming on Max).  


Occasionally Mac acts in plays by others. Most notable: the title role in Sarah Ruhl’s Orlando (Signature Theatre, directed by Will Davis); the title role in The Foundry Theatre’s Good Person of Szechwan (La Mama and The Public Theatre, directed by Lear DeBessonet); and Puck/Egeus in A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Classic Stage Company, directed by Tony Speciale).

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Student Speakers

Simone Handelman Duffy

BFA in Design History and Practice, Parsons School of Design

BA in Culture and Media, Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts

PARSONS SCHOOL OF DESIGN

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Hailing from Toronto, Canada, Simone Handelman Duffy is an interdisciplinary bio-artist and writer whose work engages critical theory, media, and emerging technology. She is the recipient of the 2025 and 2026 Student Research Awards, a Eugene Lang Capstone Grant, and recently spoke at the Eugene Lang Dean’s Honor Symposium. She has worked as an Academic Fellow for "Introduction to Critical Theory", serves as an intern at the Museum of the Moving Image, and founded The Formal Analysis Circle, a registered student organization.

NIA CALLOWAY 

MFA in Creative Writing, The New School for Social Research 

Parsons School of Design

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Nia Calloway is a multi-disciplinary artist and educator who traverses the worlds of writing, theatre, poetry, music, dance, and the healing arts. Driven by the desire to relate the natural world, supernatural phenomena, and the cosmos to our bodies, Nia’s art serves to reorient our stories around Black femme bodies, our planet, and collective healing. Originally from Houston, Texas, Nia is a second-year MFA Creative Writing student at The New School.
 

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Doctoral Candidates

THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH

Doctor of Philosophy

Schools of Public Engagement

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Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Anthropology


11:00 AM — 1:30 PM

Volkan Eke

Games of the Emperor: The Lost Princess, Broke Capitalist, Soul Economy and The Lost World. An Anthropology of Right Wing Gamers

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Sonia Zhang

Experiments with Loneliness: Social Robots and the Reimagining of Relatedness in Japan

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Clinical Psychology


11:00 AM — 1:30 PM

Hally Bernstein

Mentalization and Early Childhood Trauma in the Clinical Perinatal Population

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Jordana Douglas

Complexities of Trauma: A Mixed Methods Examination of Storytelling, Family Connectedness, and Intergenerational Trauma in Black Families

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Scott McKernan

How Does Discrimination Confer Risk for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder? An Examination of Trauma Relevant Risk Factors

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Christina A Panas

Barriers to Belonging: Transnormative Pressures and Community Connectedness Among Gender-Expansive Adults

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Tonya Pavlenko

Navigating Sex, Power, and Expectations: Bi+ Women's Experiences of Sexual Emotion Work with Partners of Different Genders

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Heleen Raes

Beware of Boredom: How Boredom Shapes Long‑Term Relapse and Recovery in AUD

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Nadia Rahman

Intergenerational Communication about Historical Trauma in South Asian American Families

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Nicole Ross

Cultural Adaptation and Pilot Implementation of Group Problem Management Plus (PM+): A Brief, Task-Sharing Psychological Intervention to Support Elite Athletes Retiring from Sport

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Ellen Yom

“It Felt Like It Was a Commodity to Be Asian”: Experiences of Asian American Egg Donors

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Cognitive, Social, and Developmental Psychology


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Rebecca Dolgin

The Prevalence of Misunderstanding in Social Media and Factors that Predict Aligned Comprehension

11:00 AM — 1:30 PM

Asteya Percaya

Rethinking Dehumanization: The Dual Character of Humanness and the Representation of Corrupted Minds

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Economics


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Ricardo D. Hernandez Cheleuitte

Laboratories of Empire: Three Essays On Puerto Rico's Economic History Through Monetary, Fiscal, and Commercial Experimental Policies, 1900-1902

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Christopher Robin Herdelin

Three Essays on Monetary Policy, Income Distribution, and Conflict Inflation

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Hanin Haitham Khawaja

The Architecture and Governance of the International Monetary System

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Tato Khundadze

Machine Learning for Macroeconomic Analysis: Model Discovery, Recession Forecasting, and Optimal Policy Design

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Armando Andres Alvarez Navas

Value, Prices, Endogenous Money, and Financial Instability

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Mohamed Obaidy

Essays on External Constraints, Structural Change, and Convergence in Africa: 1960-2019

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Samuel Owusu

Pathways to Decarbonization in Africa: Economic Drivers, Green Innovation, and Critical Mineral Endowments

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Gabriel Ricardo Padró Rosario

Three Essays on Resilience and Disruptions

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Philosophy


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Agnese Di Riccio

Social Imaginaries at the End: Imagination, Nature, and Practices under the Environmental Crisis

11:00 AM — 1:30 PM

Paul John Gorre

A Plea for Heresy in Philosophy

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Mikhail Iglin

Hegel and Plato: Dialectic of Fracture and the Fracture of Dialectic

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Mariam Matar

For the Love of the World; Mapping the Common World in Contested Geographies of the Camp

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Sarah Schweig

Measures of Disorder: Poetry and Aesthetic Corruption in the Age of AI

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Miranda Young

Survivor Narration Towards Abolition: Theorizing Narrative Subjectivities After Violence

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Politics


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Jiyoung Cho

Multiple Mobilities in the Promise of Peaceful Prosperity: The Politics of Infrastructure in and beyond the Tumen River Tri-borderlands and Baekdudaegan

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Anastasiia Kalk

Boundary Critique: A Political Theory of Commune from Charles Fourier to Nadezhda Krupskaya

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Orsolya Lehotai

The Transnationality of Illiberal Statecraft: Ontological Security and the Case of Hungarian Asylum Seekers in Canada after 2010

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Dion Nania

Contesting Prison Work: Race, Labor and the National Prison Strikes of 2016 & 2018

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Çağla Orpen

Kemalist Turkey in the Global Authoritarian Paradigm

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Alexandra Panzarelli

Ever Onward to Victory: The Role of Charismatic Leadership in Chavismo Survival in Venezuela 

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Clover Araminta Reshad

The Unhappy Poor: A Political Theory of Resentment

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Robert Shaver

Favors, Privileges and Immunities: The Cobden-Chevalier Network and The Creation of Liberal Commercial Diplomacy

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Greg Yudin

The Politics of Polls: Representation and Democracy in the Age of Public Opinion Polling 

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Public and Urban Policy


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Sandra Rincon Corrales

What Will Hold Us Together or Bring Us Apart? Cash-plus Programs and Social Cohesion Promotion in Urban Protracted Displaced Contexts

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Monise Valente da Silva

Faith in the Fight and a Foot on the Ground: Housing Struggles and the Socio-Spatial Politics of Squatting in Southern Brazil

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Liat Eisen

The Role of Incentives for Urban Development: The Case of Privately Owned Public Spaces in NYC and Tel Aviv

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Maria Belen Fodde

Eating Informally. Food Provision and Its Governance in an Informal Settlement of Argentina

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Anan Maalouf

Incapability, Irrelevance, or Disinterestedness? Exploring Municipal Capacities of Arab Cities in Israel by Examining Public Transportation Development Practices and Policies

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Alquena Reed

A Ceiling at the Floor: Workforce Development Policy and the Attitudes Shaping Black Women’s Skills and Labor Value in Frontline Healthcare

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Rita Sandoval Spearman

Poverty as a Gendered Experience: The Case for Gender-Sensitive Research and Policy

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Michael Stack

Negotiating Equity Within the Growth Machine: Port Covington and Development Politics in Baltimore

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Andrea Patricia Llinas Vahos

Replicating Zero Idleness Policies for Women's Recidivism, Critical Praxis Co-Production within Latin American Assemblage Models. A Guatemala Case Study

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Sociology


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Bizaa Zeynab Ali

Platform (In)visibility and Creative Ambivalence in Global Cultural Production: The Impact of Digital Media Platforms on Creative Labor in Pakistan

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Udeepta Chakravarty

Predicaments of 'the People': Representation, Embodiment, and Assembly

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Julián Alberto Gómez-Delgado

Disassembling the State: The Technopolitics of Privatization and Citizenship in Colombia, 1930-2010

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Bettine Fee Josties 

Choreographies of Digital Labor: An Ethnographic Study of TikTok Dance Content Creation

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Franziska König-Paratore

The Afterlives of Borders: De-bordering, Memory Activism and Urban Transformation in Berlin’s Schlesischer Busch, a Former Berlin Wall Site, 1989–2024

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Ignacia Castellon Ramirez

NEXT EPISODE IN 5 SECONDS: Binge-Watching and the Reorganization of Lived Time

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Hasan Tombus

Life-Cycle of a Populist: Populist Trajectory in Turkey

10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Taebum Yoo

American Landscapes of Oxymoron: Commemorating Vicious Victims and Virtuous Villains

New School Board of Trustees

Doctor of Philosophy

Schools of Public Engagement

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Board of Trustees


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Linda E. Rappaport, Chair

Rhea Alexander, BFA Environmental Studies '87, MA Media Studies ’17, Associate Professor of Strategic Design and Management, Parsons School of Design

Gregory M. Bernstein

Asmita Bhatia

Franci J. Blassberg, Vice Chair

Steven H. Bloom

Dominique Bluhdorn

Christopher J. Castano

Jamie Drake

Douglas D. Durst

Quinn Shore Fertig, BFA Candidate, Fashion Design and Fashion Business, Parsons School of Design

Susan L. Foote, Vice Chair

Julia Foulkes, Professor of History, Eugene Lang College

Ted Goldthorpe

Nancye Green, BFA Architectural Design ’73

Joseph R. Gromek

Jeffrey Gural

William E. Havemeyer

Monique D. Jefferson, MS Human Resources Management ’03

Sheila C. Johnson

Sasa Li, BFA Integrated Design ’15

Caitlin D. McKoy, PhD Philosophy ‘03

Daniel T. Motulsky

Robert H. Mundheim

David R. Poma, MA Economics ’02

Timothy L. Porter

James Rothstein

Josh Sapan

Stanley P. Silverstein

Elliot Stein, Vice Chair

Imre Szijarto, PhD Candidate, Sociology, New School for Social Research

Joel Towers

Kay Unger, Fashion Design ’68

Lilian Shiao-Yen Wu

Bruce Yablon

Chair

Day 1 — [Month] [Day]

Life Trustees


10:30 AM — 11:00 AM

Beth Rudin DeWoody, BA Liberal Arts ’75

Susan U. Halpern, MA Urban Policy Analysis and Management ‘76

Philip Scaturro

Tomio Taki

Title if Applicable

Candidates for Academic Degrees

Candidates for Academic Degrees

The New School is pleased to present the candidates for academic degrees. Please enjoy this interactive experience when viewing our graduates. The list of degree candidates includes students who earned degrees in December 2025, as well as students earning degrees in May 2026 and August 2026. Scroll or search through the list of graduates and click on their slide.


Graduates who have been recognized for academic honors are noted with a symbol next to their name. While our August 2026 graduates are recognized at the ceremony today, they will earn honors in their final semester this summer. 


Honors and Academic Symbols:

BA/BFA Candidate #
Departmental Honors !
Honors Candidate ^
Honors Graduate *
Fall Graduate +
Winter Graduate ~

Describe graduate slides here. Include detail for honors.

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STUDENT SPEAKERS
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DOCTORAL CANDIDATES
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