Fall/Winter 2023 Issue
Fall/Winter 2023 Issue
These public-school educators teach, lead, counsel, nurture and care.
Professor Julio Ramirezs outsized impact on Alzheimers research and the lives of his students.
Over the past 50 years, women have served as leaders across campus, pioneers into the unknown, champions of change and advocates for a better future. Their stories reflect the ever-evolving 51郊利 community and forge a path for generations to come.
The cast and crew of the new Disney + and Hulu series, SamA Saxon visited 51郊利 in September and urged vigilance against rising authoritarianism.
The Well
The Union
Alumni
J. Blanton Belk: Its an unfinished world, and its still in the making by J. Blanton Belk Jr. 46 (2020, Pediment Publishing). The memoir by the founder of Up With People is a narrative that encapsulates the upheavals of the 1960s, weaving together Cold War tensions, civil rights struggles and anti-Vietnam War sentiment. Belks remarkable vision to channel the youthful energy of that era into a positive force for change is at the heart of this story.
Tell It True by John Pruitt 64 (2022, Mercer University Press) follows the shocking murder of an African American serviceman who is gunned down on a rural Georgia road in July 1964. The murder ensnares a wide range of characters, including the journalists who cover it, the lawmen who must solve it, the civil rights leaders who capitalize upon it, the politicians who exploit it, and the Atlanta magnate who fears its impact on the New South image he desperately wants to protect.
Exploring the Philosophy of R.G. Collingwood: From History and Method to Arts and Politics by Peter Skagestad 68 (2021, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc). The book sheds light on the profound contributions of Robin George Collingwood, a pivotal figure in 20th century philosophy. By exploring Collingwoods expansive body of work encompassing various philosophical domains, including knowledge theory, metaphysics, art, history, and social and political philosophy, Skagestad underscores Collingwoods enduring relevance in the contemporary world.
Business Development Stories and Lessons: Forty Five Years of Tech Industry Tales by Allen C. Shay 76 (2023, self-published) shares valuable insights and stories from Shays extensive career as a tech industry entrepreneur and business development executive spanning 45 years. The book is a practical guide aimed at assisting both business development professionals and entrepreneurs in enhancing their chances of success.
Lights on Lancaster: How One American City Harnesses the Power of the Arts to Transform its Communities by John R. Gerdy 79 (2023, Top Reads Publishing, LLC) offers an insightful exploration of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, showcasing the citys distinctiveness in fostering a thriving arts culture. Gerdys work serves as an inspiring blueprint, demonstrating how communities can embrace and harness the transformative power of the arts.
The Plinko Bounce by Martin Clark 81 (2023, Rare Bird Books) is a riveting legal thriller that follows Andy Hughes, a dedicated public defender, as he grapples with a high-profile murder case in rural Virginia. Clark, lauded as the thinking mans John Grisham by the New York Times, paints a vivid portrayal of a flawed justice system and its intricate workings, exposing the complexities and moral dilemmas faced by those within it.
Under This Forgetful Sky by Lauren Yero 07 (2023, Atheneum Books for Young Readers), is set in a dystopian future and intricately weaves a poignant narrative of love and societal inequality. The star-crossed romance between Rumi and Paz unfolds amidst the harsh backdrop of a divided world, making readers both ache and hope for their survival in a world plagued by environmental devastation and social disparities.
Add yourself to the shelf!
To submit your book for this column, as well as to E.H. Little Librarys 51郊利iana Room, please send a signed copy to:
51郊利 Journal
Box 7171, 51郊利
51郊利, NC 28035-7171
Africana Studies
Takiyah Harper-Shipman has received a Fulbright Teaching and Research Award for the 2023-2024 academic year. She will be spending that time in Senegal.
Art
John Corso-Esquivel was one of three guest speakers for the Cranbrook Academy of Art symposium, Shared Histories: 25 Years of Cranbrook Fiber. He delivered a talk entitled, Crafting Identity: Exploring Subjectivity in Fiber Art Studies, 19972023.
Joelle Dietrick exhibited her project Chasing the Sun at the Shirley Project Space in Brooklyn from September through November. She also presented the project on a panel titled Artist as Agent in the Age of Climate Crisis at the 2023 SECAC conference at Virginia Commonwealth University in October.
Biology
Karen Bernd and Cindy Hauser (chemistry) were awarded an NIH AREA award for $410,141 to support their research project titled, Identifying correlations between the physico-chemical properties of waterpipe tobacco smoke and its impact on lung cell health, as a function of shisha flavor and smoking topography. The three-year project continues their collaborative laboratory project providing biomedical research experiences for approximately 40 students, including stipends, software and research supplies. The award also provides support for their professional development efforts to continue and expand inclusive recruiting and mentoring approaches.
Communication Studies
Amanda R. Martinez and her honors thesis advisees (Class of 2020), Daniel Bunson (Communication Studies) and Mariana Crespo (Sociology), coauthored a chapter, Grounded in Community: Sustainability and Collective Actions, in the recently published book, Strategic Social Media as Activism: Repression, Resistance, Rebellion, Reform (Routledge).
Computer Science
Mark Sample and Raghu Ramanujan were selected for the National Humanities Centers Responsible AI initiative. They received funding to develop a team-taught course in the humanities that explores the ethical use and irresponsible misuse of AI in the arts, literature, and in our daily lives. That course, Critical AI Studies, launches in spring 2024. Meanwhile, Samples digital poem One for Grundy was published in the Spring 2023 issue of the digital art and poetry journal Taper.
Dance
Alison Borys Fostering Love: Mothering as a Practice was published in Dancing Motherhood, written and edited by Ali Duffy (Routledge, 2023).
Economics
Caleb Stoups paper, Macroeconomic Research, Present and Past, was just published in the Journal of Economic Literature.
English
Brenda Flanagan won a Fulbright Specialist Award to collaborate with teachers to develop curricula in post-colonial African Literature in Cape Town, South Africa, in the fall of 2023.
Cynthia Lewis has published a literary essay, What Happened to the Apple-Ipecac Pie?: The Coen Brothers and Shakespearean Tragedy, in the Spring 2023 edition of Literary Matters.
Alan Michael Parker had two stories published and a third longlisted for a prize. Ellas Letter to the Editor of the Universe, was an Editors Choice selection at LITRO, Speculative Fiction was published by Necessary Fiction (UK), and Miniatures, was longlisted for the FISH Flash Prize (UK). Three of Parkers cartoonsArlo the ants To-do list, Business Attire Makes Pam Feel Like a Sausage, and Monica Gave Him The Lookwere accepted into a juried show, Comic Crossing: The Art of the Graphic Narrative, at Livermore Arts in California. His 75th cartoonweekly, since January of 2022has been published in Identity Theory.
Ann Fox led a recent session of Drawing Together, a monthly virtual meet-up where members of the world-wide Graphic Medicine community gather to draw, support one another and share. Fox also has been appointed to the national steering committee for the proposed National Disability History and Culture Museum, a project to create a museum about American disability history and culture as part of the Smithsonian Institution.
German Studies
Burkhard Henke has been appointed chief reader for the AP German Language and Culture exam. Chief Readers help develop the test, then plan and oversee the scoring (or reading) of the free-response section of the test.
History
Rose Stremlau and Hilary Green participated in a roundtable on Teaching the History of Sexual Violence in the Age of #MeToo at the recent meeting of the Organization of American Historians. Stremlau has been appointed to the North Carolina Historical Marker Commission.
Latin American Studies
Russell Crandall reviewed the book The War on Drugs: A History in the Summer 2023 issue of the Bulletin of the History of Medicine. Crandalls new book is Forging Latin America: Profiles in Power and Ideas, 1492 to Today (Rowman & Littlefield, 2023).
Britta Crandall and Russell Crandall also have published The Monroe Doctrine Turns 200. Why Wont It Go Away? in the summer issue of Americas Quarterly.
Music
Two of Jennifer Stasacks works for womens chorus were performed by MUSE Cincinnati Womens Choir on their 40th Annual Spring Anniversary Concert, Hope is an Action. Closing the first half of the program was Stasacks SSAA/piano arrangement of Holly Nears Something About the Women, MUSEs first commissioned arrangement for womens chorus (1987). The second half of their program included Wage Peace, Stasacks setting of Judyth Hills poem in response to 9/11.
Physics
Kristen Thompson coauthored GNOMES II: Analysis of the Galactic diffuse molecular ISM in all four ground state hydroxyl transitions using AMOEBA in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia.
Anthony Kuchera was awarded a three-year grant from the National Science Foundation ($210,000) titled Collaborative Research: RUI: Study of Neutron-Rich Nuclei and Neutron Detector Response. He and his students will continue their participation in the Modular Neutron Array Collaboration and perform experiments at Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams. Another three-year grant from the National Science Foundation ($362,494) titled Collaborative Research: Equipment: MRI Consortium: Track 2 Development of a Next Generation Fast Neutron Detector will allow Kuchera and his students to build part of a neutron detector with other members of the MoNA Collaboration to ultimately be used at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams.
Michelle Kuchera and Raghu Ramanujan were awarded a three-year grant from the National Science Foundation ($599,836) titled Elements: Portable Machine Learning Models for Experimental Nuclear Physics. This work will continue to support the efforts of their ALPhA (Algorithms for Learning in Physics Applications) group, where students will apply cutting-edge AI tools to address important problems in nuclear physics.
Political Science
Katherine Berschs book, When Democracies Deliver: Governance Reform in Latin America, won the 2023 Herbert A. Simon Book Award from the American Political Science Association Public Administration Section. Bersch also published Neoliberal Reform of Transport Institutions in Brazil, Argentina, and Chile: The Tortoise Beats the Hare in State Making and Nation Making in Latin America and Spain.
Psychology and Neuroscience
Julio Ramirez has been appointed to the editorial board of The Neuroscientist, which is a prestigious journal publishing state-of-the-art reviews at the interface of basic and clinical neurosciences. The international editorial board is composed of Nobel Prize laureates and experts from top institutions from around the world.
Public Health
Kata Chillag and colleagues from The Evaluation Center, Western Michigan University, were awarded a contract from the Council for State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) to lead a multi-site evaluation of electronic case reporting for public health surveillance/ data modernization. This project will involve collaboration with CSTE, CDC, the Association of Public Health Laboratories, and other public health agencies.
Sociology
Gayle Kaufman received a grant from the Russell Sage Foundation for their research with colleagues at Purdue and Ball State universities on Attitudes about Parental Leave-Taking for Single and SameGender Parents. Kaufman also published an article with Molly Bair 19 entitled Gender, LGB status, and attitudes toward traditional wedding practices in the Social Science Journal.
Aarushi Bhandari published an article with Rebekah Burroway of Stony Brook University: Hold the phone! A cross-national analysis of womens education, mobile phones, and HIV infections in low- and middle-income countries, 19902018 in Social Science and Medicine.
Gerardo Mart鱈 presented his Presidential Address in Philadelphia at the Annual Meeting of the Association for the Sociology of Religion, an international scholarly association committed to the advancement of theory and research. Drawing on his current Lilly Endowment funded research on religiously-motivated antiracism, his plenary lecture was titled, Racial Justice and Racialized Religion: Are White Progressive Christians Getting It Right? The address will be published in Sociology of Religion: A Quarterly Review.
Theatre
Sharon Green was awarded a fellowship from the Eugene ONeill Foundation to spend two weeks as a Travis Bogart artist-in-residence at Tao House, ONeills former residence in Danville, California. While there she worked on her documentary play, Teaching and Learning in Pandemic Times based on interviews with K12 teachers, and did a preliminary reading of excerpts for the Foundations Board of Directors. Greens article, Pandemic Pedagogy: Snapshots from a Year of COVID-impacted Teaching in Three Artefacts, was published in a special issue of the journal, Performance Matters. The special issue is titled, The Syllabus is the Thing: Materialities of the Performance Studies Classroom.
Writing Program
Fangzhi He published an article, Negotiating Polycentric Power Dynamics in China through Digital Multimodal Composing, in TESOL Quarterly.