Faculty News
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Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies Claire Mouflard's article, "Noire n’est pas leur métier : solidarités intersectionnelles et militantisme antiraciste chez Rokhaya Diallo et Aïssa Maïga," was published in the edited volume Solid/taires :Féminismes et sororités dans les productions artistiques françaises et francophones edited by Ramona Mielusel and published with Brill
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Sharon Werning Rivera, the Sidney Wertimer Professor of Government, recently co-authored an article published by the Wilson Center.
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Alex Bádue, assistant professor of music and musical theatre scholar, presented “How Do You Measure a Year? Jonathan Larson and the Creation of the Musical Rent, 1995–1996” at the Library of Congress (LoC) this spring.
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Several articles by Assistant Professor of Art History Nadya Bair have recently been published in books and a journal.
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Assistant Professor of Hispanic Studies Jack Martinez-Arias recently published an article titled "Ante el realismo cíclico en los Andes: la narrativa especulativa de Edmundo Paz Soldán" in the peer-reviewed journal Confluencia: Revista Hispánica de Cultura y Literatura (Colorado State University).
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Professor of Africana Studies Donald Carter recently presented a paper titled “Navigating Diasporic Invisibility: The Perilous Worlds of the Unseen” during the International Interdisciplinary Conference.
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Nhora Serrano, associate director for digital innovation, learning and research, presented during the biennial Association for Computers and Humanities conference. She also published a review of Cherian George and Sonny Liew’s Red Lines: Political Cartoons and the Struggle against Censorship.
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Austin Briggs, the Hamilton B. Tompkins Professor of English Literature Emeritus, recently presented a plenary address at the opening session of the Ezra Pound International Conference.
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An article by Associate Professor of Biology Andrea Townsend and co-authors Caroline Chivily ’19 and Casey McAndrews ’21, among others, appears in the June issue of Molecular Ecology.
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“What happens when natural things — pollen in a gust of wind, a carnivorous pitcher plant, an armadillo’s thick skin — enter human history?” Thus begins the introduction to Natural Things in Early Modern Worlds, a new book conceived and co-edited by Assistant Professor of History Mackenzie Cooley.
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