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Posted on 11/25/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Graduate Student Matthew Slaats (Architecture - Urban Planning) Concentrated on practices that envision new economic modalities in the global south, this project centers on researching the emergence of solidarity economies in Australia and at the same time building an…
Posted on 11/19/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Graduate Student Nicole Bonino (Spanish, Italian and Portuguese) The project “Migration and Ecocriticism in Latin American Literature” investigates the ways in which Latin American authors represent the effects of climate changes, the territorial modifications caused by…
Posted on 11/19/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Graduate Student Matthew Frakes (History) My dissertation project examines the emergence of the new global order that replaced the Cold War world. It investigates the debates over what role the United States and its European allies should play in shaping that order and…
Posted on 11/19/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Mona Kasra (Art) and Luke Dahl (Music & Electrical and Computer Engineering) This project explores how new recording technologies (immersive video, spatial audio, and motion capture) can be used to document, preserve, and transmit embodied cultural practices of…
Posted on 11/14/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient David Germano (Religious Studies) Overcoming historical discrimination and contemporary disadvantages, a powerful blossoming of writings by Tibetan women has emerged over the past few decades. These works include deep reflections on their own Tibetan cultural heritage…
Posted on 11/13/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Jessica Ann Levy (History) My book project, Black Power, Inc.: Corporate America, Race, and Empowerment Politics in the U.S. and Africa (University of Pennsylvania Press, under contract), analyzes the financial, ideological, and political investments made by a cohort of…
Posted on 11/13/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Graduate Student Meltem Yucel (Psychology) People differ on how fairly they think the resources are distributed. This difference often contributes to polarization of the public sphere and makes it harder to solve issues pertaining to inequality. Those who see the harm…
Posted on 11/13/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Jennifer Bair (Sociology), Richard Handler (Anthropology), and Yingyao Wang (Sociology) Talks on the Economy, Market, Politics and Organizations (TEMPO) is an interdisciplinary workshop of faculty and graduate students devoted to the development of empirical work…
Posted on 11/12/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Graduate Student Jeremy Sorgen (Religious Studies) Until now, ethicists have mostly told us what is right, while assuming that it is our responsibility to get there. This project uses empirical methods to develop an “adaptive framework” for observing cultural value…
Posted on 11/12/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Chad R. Diehl (History) As Japan built its empire in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, it enforced assimilationist policies that changed the lives of the people in its territories. This project explores the history of body culture among the indigenous…
Posted on 11/12/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Christopher Ali (Media Studies) This project will investigate and understand the global implications of 5G technology and the discourses of hype surrounding 5G. Specifically, it addresses the myths that industry and government create about 5G, the ways industries,…
Posted on 11/11/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Katia Dianina (Slavic Languages and Literatures) My project analyzes the spectacular return of the sacred to post-Soviet Russian public sphere following seventy years of forced secularization.  Contemporary Russia provides one of the most striking examples of…
Posted on 11/11/2019
Fall 2019 Grant Recipient Nizar F. Hermes (Middle Eastern & South Asian Languages & Cultures) It might seem odd that the poet who once penned the most imitated Arabic poem of all times is largely unstudied, if recognizable at all, in the western academy. Indeed, like most of the Maghribi…
Posted on 09/17/2019
Sarah Milov (History) Movements and Directions in the Study of Capitalism (MADCAP) is an interdisciplinary working group for the study of capitalism in all its global articulations and variations. MADCAP brings together scholars from History, Anthropology, Sociology, Politics, English, Media…
Posted on 09/17/2019
A three-day festival of documentaries from India, accompanied by discussions to encourage building communities of conversation across schools, departments and the Charlottesville community, hosted on UVa grounds. The films speak to architecture, art and domesticity into which politics are embedded…
Posted on 08/27/2019
Lise Dobrin, Associate Professor (Anthropology) On September 14, 2019, UVa will host a small group of researchers affiliated with universities in the Southeastern US (Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia) who share an interest in the study of language as it is…
Posted on 05/31/2019
Phoebe Crisman, Director (Global Studies) Designed to put artists at the center of social, political, economic and cultural transformation, the Black Power Station is a locally and collectively-owned Pan African arts center in Makhanda, South Africa that aspires towards global connectivity and…
Posted on 05/30/2019
Taryn Wiens, Master's Candidate (Landscape Architecture) Starting with an investigation of the management systems, techniques, and labor practices of four case-study landscapes, my research subverts the single-intervention model of landscape design by revealing each site’s ongoing formation…
Posted on 05/30/2019
María Esparza Rodríguez, PhD Candidate (Spanish, Italian & Portuguese) I plan to visit the National Public Health archive and the Hemeroteca Nacional de Mexico in Mexico City in order to review the registry of “public women,” a term which was used to refer to prostitutes. The book, created in…