Skip to main content

Six new fellows to study 'Borders and Boundaries'


Painting by Gertrudes Chávez

Painting by Gertrudes Chávez Ponce, of her home in Atarque, New Mexico. Contributed by Vanessa Fonseca-Chávez as part of her project "Embodying 'Querencia' in the Eastern Arizona and Western New Mexico Borderlands."

|
July 02, 2019

The Institute for Humanities Research has awarded six fellowships to humanities scholars at Arizona State University.

Scholars will meet together regularly to share ideas and resources related to the 2019–20 fellows theme, “Borders and Boundaries.”

The theme seeks to provoke conversation around the following questions:

What functions do borders and boundaries serve? Who makes and guards them? Who confronts and crosses them? Who do they serve and who do they limit? How does our current attention to borders and boundaries in this age of globalization reflect new worries, and how does it echo old ones?

This timely topic will drive an accomplished group of faculty to pursue socially embedded research.

2019–20 Fellows

Anna Cichopek-Gajraj, associate professor, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Project: In Transit: Postwar Journeys of Jewish and Catholic Refugees from Poland (1940s–50s).

Vanessa Fonseca-Chávez, assistant professor, Interdisciplinary Humanities and Communication, College of Integrative Sciences and Arts. Project: Embodying “Querencia” in the Eastern Arizona and Western New Mexico Borderlands.

William Hedberg, assistant professor, School of International Letters and Cultures, The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Project: Utopia in Translation: Literature, Travel and Encounter in Early Modern East Asia.

Laurie Manchester, associate professor, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Project: From China to the USSR: The Return of the “True” Russians.

Miriam Mara, associate professor, School of Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies, New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences. Project: Literature and Food Sovereignty in Post Celtic Tiger Ireland.

Calvin Schermerhorn, professor, School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies, The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Project: 20 Generations Short: The Making of America’s Racial Wealth Gap, 1619–2019.

More Arts, humanities and education

 

Woman working on iron cast sculpture with people in the background observing

'Devils in the Metal': ASU vet leads iron cast workshop for former service members

Bruce Ward believes everyone has a symbol of strength or resilience, and they have an obligation to find it.    His happens to…

April 25, 2024
Portrait of ASU English professor Safiya Sinclair

ASU English professor wins Guggenheim Fellowship for poetry

The awards — and opportunities — keep piling up for Safiya Sinclair, an associate professor in Arizona State University’s…

April 25, 2024
A dancer poses on stairs

Graduate student creates community, connects with dancers of all ages

Editor’s note: This story is part of a series of profiles of notable spring 2024 graduates. For the last year, Arizona State…

April 25, 2024