Daniel Heller-Roazen is the Arthur W. Marks ’19 Professor of Comparative Literature and the Council of the Humanities at Princeton University. He is the author of The Fifth Hammer: Pythagoras and the Disharmony of the World (2011), The Enemy of All: Piracy and the Law of Nations (2009), The Inner Touch: Archaeology of a Sensation, which was awarded the Modern Language Association’s 2008 Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for Comparative Literary Studies, Echolalias: On the Forgetting of Language (2005), and Fortune’s Faces: The Roman de la Rose and the Poetics of Contingency (2003).
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