Robert A. Rees


Robert A. Rees is an educator, scholar and poet. Beginning in 1998 he was Director of Education and Humanities at the Institute of HeartMath in Boulder Creek, California. Currently, he is a Visiting Professor and Director of Mormon Studies at Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley.

Biography

Rees, a graduate of Long Beach Woodrow Wilson High School, received his B.A. from Brigham Young University and M.A. and PhD from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. For twenty-five years he taught at University of California, Los Angeles, where he also served as Assistant Dean of Fine Arts, Director of Continuing Education in the Arts and Humanities, and Director of Studies for three UCLA programs in England: at Cambridge University and at London's Royal College of Art and Royal College of Music. Taking early retirement from UCLA in 1992, Rees was a visiting professor at Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas, Lithuania.
Since returning from the Baltics, Rees has taught at the University of California, Santa Cruz; the University of California, Berkeley; and at Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley where he is currently a visiting professor of Religion and Director of Mormon Studies. He has also taught at the University of Wisconsin, Pepperdine, and California State University at both Los Angeles and Northridge. In addition, he has been a Visiting Scholar at the Center for Arts and Humanities at Claremont Graduate University and currently is a fellow at the Center for Advanced Research, Aorangi Molana Sanctuary, New Zealand. Rees has taught thirty-five different courses at the university level—in Literature, Communications, Religion, the Arts and Humanities.
From 1999 to 2011 Rees served as Director of Education and Humanities at HeartMath, a research and education Institute in the Santa Cruz Mountains. At HeartMath he authored or co-authored a number of studies on the heart-brain connection, emotional regulation and education.

Interfaith, Ecclesiastical and Humanitarian Work

Long active in interfaith work, Rees served as President of the University Religious Conference at UC Santa Cruz and on the Interfaith Councils in Santa Cruz and Marin County. He and his late wife, Ruth, served as education and humanitarian service representatives of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the St. Petersburg, Russia and Baltic States regions. From 1986-1992 Rees served as Bishop of the Los Angeles Singles' Ward.
Rees is co-founder and current Vice-President of the , a non-profit humanitarian organization that addresses children's malnutrition in the developing world. On behalf of the foundation, he has travelled to Guatemala, Columbia, Peru, the Philippines, Haiti and the South Pacific. Rees was also the Founder and a board member of Seima a humanitarian service organization in Lithuania and has served on the boards of a number of organizations, including SAFE, No Bully, San Jose State University's Center for Reaching and Teaching the Whole Child, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, the Sunstone Foundation, the Claremont Mormon Studies Council and the Bay Area Mormon Studies Council, among others.

Multimedia

In addition to his scholarly work, Rees wrote, directed and produced "Spires to the Sun: Sabatino Rodia's Towers in Watts." A documentary funded by the California Council for the Humanities which had its premier showing on Public Television Station KCET, May 1992, and was also shown on TELE-3, Lithuania, March 1993. He was also producer of "The Golden Angel Over the City," a documentary film for Lithuanian State Television. which aired in February 1996.
Rees is the co-author of a script entitled "Crucifixion of Innocents: The Life and Death of Dietrich Bonhoeffer," which was optioned by Artemis Films; co-author of an original screenplay entitled "A Perfect World"; co-author of a script, "Sabatino Rodia: the Artist Nobody Knows," for KCET Public Television in Los Angeles; executive producer of "I Hear Tell: Storytelling in American Cultures," a projected documentary film on storytelling funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities; designer, writer, and editor of a tele-course on the American Short Story, produced by Coastline Community College; and advisor on the award-winning film, "Families Are Forever," produced by the Family Acceptance Project, San Francisco State University. Currently he is co-writing a musical, "Clarissa and the American Dream" and a play on Ezra Pound.

Writing & Publications

Rees writes on a variety of subjects—literature, the arts, religion, Mormonism, culture, politics, education, humanitarian issues, feminism, LGBT issues, war and peace and social justice—and in a variety of genres—scholarly articles, personal essays, editorials, poetry, drama, film, reviews, midrash and blogs. He writes regularly for the Huffington Post, Sunstone Magazine, and Dialogue. Many of his articles, essays and poems can be found at robert-rees.org.
In addition to numerous articles, essays, poems, editorials, chapters, and reviews, Rees is the author, co-author, editor or co-editor of the following: