William Vernon HarrisFBA (born 13 September 1938) is a British-American classicist who wasWilliam R. Shepherd Professor ofHistory atColumbia University until December 2017. He is the author of numerous groundbreakingmonographs on theGreco-Roman world, is aFellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts & Sciences, and was awarded the Distinguished Achievement Award by theAndrew W. Mellon Foundation in 2008.[1]
William V. Harris was born on 13 September 1938 inNottingham,England. He attendedBristol Grammar School (1949–1956) and then was an Open Scholar inClassics atCorpus Christi College, Oxford. He earned first class in Classical Moderations in 1959, then first class inLiterae Humaniores in 1961. From 1961 he pursuedgraduate studies as a State Student at Oxford, spending the year 1961–1962 in Rome (where he worked with J.B. Ward-Perkins), and was then the T.W. Greene Scholar in Classical Art and Archaeology. His dissertation supervisor was M. W. Frederiksen, and he received his D.Phil. in 1968.[citation needed]
From 1964 to 1965 Harris served asLecturer inAncient History atQueen's University, Belfast. In 1965, he joined the faculty of Columbia University where he chaired the History Department from 1988 to 1994. In 1995 he was awarded the William R. Shepherd Professorship in History at Columbia.[1] Beginning in 2000, he was director of Columbia's Center for the Ancient Mediterranean, which he co-founded.[1] In 2002 he became a Fellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts & Sciences,[2] and in 2008 he was awarded the Distinguished Achievement Award by theAndrew W. Mellon Foundation.[3] In 2011 he was elected a Corresponding Fellow of theBritish Academy.
Harris's work first attracted wide attention with his 1979 bookWar and Imperialism in Republican Rome, 327-70 BC, which contradicted several received doctrines about the nature of Roman imperial expansion across the Mediterranean world. One reviewer wrote: "In the process of evolving his interpretation, he treads on the toes of a majority of the living scholars (and a large number of deceased ones) who have interested themselves in this problem."[4] The book has remained continuously in print. He then turned towards social history and published in 1989 what is probably his most controversial book,Ancient Literacy, in which he maintains that while the Greeks and Romans created deeply literate cultures, the mass of the Greek or Roman population remained illiterate. In the same period Harris began to work extensively on economic history, publishing a series of papers about slavery, money and other issues that were collected inRome's Imperial Economy (2011). During his two three-year terms, covering 1988 to 1994, as the elected chair of the Columbia University History Department–he was acting chair again in 2005–the department moved to correct its gender imbalance. In the 1990s he began to work intensively on psychological aspects of ancient history, and in 2001 he publishedRestraining Rage: the Ideology of Anger Control in Classical Antiquity. Columbia College's undergraduates awarded this book its Lionel Trilling Award.
In October 2017, aColumbia University doctoral student, identified asJane Doe, filed suit in theU.S. District Court for Southern New York against Harris and the trustees of Columbia University, alleging that Harris had repeatedlysexually harassed her throughout the years 2014 and 2015.[5][6][7] The complaint also alleges that when the student rejected Harris's advances, he disparaged her to colleagues and fellow graduate students and that, as a result, the student withdrew from Columbia for the 2015–2016 academic year.[8] The student claimed that university administration was aware that Harris had a history of harassment towards female students but had taken no steps address the situation.[5] The complaint was brought underTitle IX and theNew York City Human Rights Law.[7] On 30 October the university notified History Department faculty and graduate students via email that Harris "agreed with the university to withdraw from his teaching, advising and other student-related activities". It called the allegations in the lawsuit "a subject of considerable discussion and concern". A representative for the university said Harris remained an employee.[7]
Two women,Wayne State University associate professorJennifer Sheridan Moss andDuke University professorJennifer Knust, came forward in December 2017 to report similar incidents with Harris in the 1980s when they were graduate students at Columbia. They and four unidentified women have indicated they are willing to testify in the lawsuit. Moss said she has successfully sought help in preventing Harris from retaliating against her fromRoger S. Bagnall, then a Columbia professor and now professor emeritus atNew York University. According to theNew York Times, Bagnall said he "was aware of Dr. Harris's reputation for pursuing and harassing young women". He said: "even in the mid-80s, that just wasn't acceptable".[9]
After Harris had stepped down from his teaching and student-related duties in October 2017, he retired voluntarily on 18 December as part of the settlement in the lawsuit filed in October.[10] Columbia University stated that he would not be granted emeritus status or involved in any University activities.[11] Harris has retained his status as afellow of theAmerican Academy of Arts and Sciences and theBritish Academy.[12][13]