Past Events

Journalist and Filmmaker
October 28, 2016
"An Iranian Odyssey: Maziar Bahari and the Iranian Regime"
FiveThirtyEight Blogger
October 27, 2016
“How can you vote for that candidate?: Understanding America’s voters”
Ukrainian Journalist
October 26, 2016
“Creating Trustworthy Media in a World of Distrust.”
Editor, POLITICO
October 24, 2016
"A Q&A with Politico Editor Susan Glasser”
Language Columnist – Wall Street Journal
October 24, 2016
"On the Word Beat: Linguistic Sleuthing in the Digital Age”

Ben Zimmer is a linguist, lexicographer, and all-around word nut. He is the language columnist for The Wall Street Journal and former columnist for The Boston Globe and The New York Times Magazine. He is the recipient of the first ever Linguistics Journalism Award.

Zimmer has worked as the executive editor of Vocabulary.com and the Visual Thesaurus. He was also editor for American dictionaries at Oxford University Press and as a consultant to the Oxford English Dictionary. His writing about language has appeared in The AtlanticThe New York Times Sunday ReviewThe New York Times Book ReviewForbes, and Slate. He has been interviewed widely about words and language, including on ABC World News, NBC’s “Today Show,” NPR’s Morning EditionMSNBCCNNCBS NewsU.S. News & World Report, and BBC Radio 4.

Zimmer studied linguistics as an undergraduate at Yale University and linguistic anthropology as a graduate student at the University of Chicago. He conducted linguistic fieldwork in Indonesia, and taught courses on language and culture at UCLA, Kenyon College, and Rutgers University. He received several research fellowships, including ones from the National Science Foundation, the Fulbright Program, and the Ford Foundation.

In 2005, in his capacity as a research associate at the University of Pennsylvania’s Institute for Research in Cognitive Science, he began contributing to Language Log, a group blog on language and linguistics. His writing for Language Log has been anthologized in two collections: Far from the Madding Gerund (William, James 2006) and Ultimate Blogs (Vintage, 2008). Publishers Weekly said that Zimmer’s writing in Ultimate Blogs “reads like a wonderfully expansive and more self-aware William Safire column.”

In 2006, Zimmer became editor of American dictionaries at Oxford University Press, coordinating work on lexical reference material published by OUP for the American market. He edited dictionaries and thesauruses for print and online use, working on such titles as Oxford College DictionaryPocket Oxford American DictionaryPocket Oxford American Thesaurus, and Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus. While at OUP he wrote a weekly column for the publisher’s blog on language and lexicography entitled “From A to Zimmer.”

In 2008, Zimmer became executive editor of the Visual Thesaurus, an online destination for word lovers. He edited the online magazine about language and the creative process, updating it daily with fresh content. The content included his regular column Word Routes, tracing the origins of words and phrases. He also worked behind the scenes with the Visual Thesaurus team to develop a range of online features, such as the Visual Thesaurus Spelling BeeVocabGrabber, and the vocabulary-building activities available on Vocabulary.com.

In 2009, Zimmer began writing guest columns for On Language in The New York Times Magazine while William Safire was on hiatus. After the passing of Safire in September 2009, Zimmer wrote a tribute in the Magazine to his three decades of language commentary, “The Maven Nevermore.” In March 2010, Zimmer was introduced as Safire’s successor. His final column appeared in February 2011. In December 2011, he debuted as language columnist for The Boston Globe. In June 2013, he began a new language column for The Wall Street Journal called “Word on the Street.”

In October 2014, the Linguistic Society of America announced that Zimmer would be the recipient of the society’s first ever Linguistics Journalism Award, for “the journalist whose work best represents linguistics” during the past year.

Zimmer is the Chair of the New Words Committee of the American Dialect Society and has served on the society’s Executive Council. He organizes the selection of the ADS Word of the Year at the society’s annual conference and writes the quarterly feature “Among the New Words” for the journal American Speech. He is also a member of the Dictionary Society of North America.

He is currently working on a book, to be published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, examining how new technology developments are transforming the ways we use and interpret language.

Zimmer lives in Jersey City, NJ, with his wife Maria and son Blake.

October 15, 2016
A Conversation with Christine Gross-Loh and James Hamblin of The Atlantic

On October 15th, TEDxYale will present its fifth annual flagship conference. Through the theme, Mind the Gap, audience members will explore solutions to the barriers, disparities, and incongruities within themselves, among communities, and across the world.

Speakers range from economists, musicians, and health-journalists to engineers, crime-fighting philosophers and tech CEOs. Our mission is to connect the world’s best ideas with the Yale-New Haven community.

General Counsel and Executive Vice President at The New York Times Company
October 6, 2016
Defending the Press: A Conversation with The New York Times' Chief Counsel, Kenneth Richieri
Photojournalist
September 28, 2016
Representations of the Forever War
Reporter, Los Angeles Times
September 27, 2016 to October 6, 2016
Chewing the Fat - Racial Justice and Food: Richard Marosi, Los Angeles Times

Richard Marosi reports from the U.S.-Mexico border for the Los Angeles Times. He was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 2015 for his series on Mexican laborers and in 2013 for his stories on the fate of thousands of immigrants who were deported from the U.S. to Mexico in recent years. Marosi has delved deeply into Mexico’s drug wars, producing a groundbreaking series on the Sinaloa cartel and sharing an Overseas Press Club Award in 2009. In the early 2000s, his corruption investigations in Southeast Los Angeles County contributed to the indictment or ouster of a dozen politicians and city officials. Marosi is a Southern California resident but remains loyal to the Giants, 49ers and Warriors of his native San Francisco Bay Area.

Journalist and Author of “La Cache” and Laura Marris, Translator of the Novel
September 27, 2016
The author and translator will read passages and discuss this prize-winning novel.

This event is being co-sponsored by The Department of French, The Yale Center for the Study of Antisemitism, and the Whitney Humanities Center.