Faculty and Staff Notes
Jody Kerchner Elected to ISME Board
Jody L. Kerchner, Professor of Music Education and Director of the PACE Division, was re-elected to her second term (2020-22) as Board Member of the .
Len Podis Publishes Essay
Len Podis, Emeritus Professor of Rhetoric and Composition, published the essay in the journal Research in African Literatures.
Professor Podis dedicated the piece to the memory of his longtime colleague, co-teacher, and coauthor, Yakubu Saaka, Professor of Africana Studies, who passed away in 2008.
Matthew Berkman Wins Award for Dissertation
Visiting Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies Matthew Berkman鈥檚 dissertation won an award from the American Political Science Association. Berkman鈥檚 dissertation, "Coercive Consensus: Jewish Federations, Ethnic Representation, and the Roots of American Pro-Israel Politics" is the winner of the association鈥檚 Walter Dean Burnham Dissertation Prize. 鈥淐oercive Consensus鈥 sets out to answer the question of how complete identification with the state of Israel came to characterize every major national Jewish organization in the highly consequential period following the Six Day War.
Charles McGuire Presents Paper
Professor of Musicology Charles McGuire presented the paper, "Patti vs. Butt on the British Stage, or the Legacy of an Operatic Star versus a Festival Star鈥 at the biennial conference of the .
Erika Hoffmann-Dilloway Publishes
Associate Professor of Anthropology Erika Hoffmann-Dilloway published "" in Signs and Society.
Ann Sherif Organizes Digital Exhibit
Professor of Japanese Ann Sherif organized the digital exhibit 鈥溾 in collaboration with Maxwell Mitchell 鈥20 and 91直播 College Libraries staff Megan Mitchell and Cecilia Robinson. The exhibit situates the art of Hiroshima native Shikoku Gor艒 in the context of antiwar, antinuclear, and social justice movements from 1945 to 2020. Structured around three books (Atom Bomb Poems, The Angry Jizo, and Hiroshima Sketches), the site guides visitors through the diverse art that Shikoku, in collaboration with grassroots networks of artists and writers, created to promote social justice. It includes guerilla art protesting the Korean War, poems against the nuclear arms race, a children鈥檚 book about war, cityscapes critiquing Hiroshima鈥檚 wartime past, and recent performing arts that trace this activist history. 鈥淧opular Protest鈥 was supported by a Mellon Foundation Digital Humanities grant. It is suitable for general audiences and for courses in history, Asian studies, art, politics, and peace studies.
Robert Bosch Coedits Conference Proceedings
Professor of Mathematics Robert Bosch 鈥85 coedited the Proceedings of the Bridges 2020 Conference, which was supposed to be held in Helsinki, Finland, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic took place virtually. The proceedings included a paper by Bosch and Aaron Kreiner 鈥19 on "" and a paper by Kreiner on "."
Chris Jenkins Writes Piece for the National Center for Institutional Diversity
Chris Jenkins, associate dean for academic support, wrote the piece 鈥,鈥 which was featured in Spark, the online magazine of the National Center for Institutional Diversity.
Evan Kresch Presents Papers
Assistant Professor of Economics Evan Kresch , "Another Seat at the Table: Municipal Council Size and Local Taxes in Brazil," on July 23 at the Virtual LAC Development Seminar .
Professor Kresch also presented "The Story of a Hurricane: Local Government, NGOs, and Post-Disaster Assistance" on July 28 at the 2020 .
Yumi Ijiri and Students Participate in Conference
Professor of Physics Yumi Ijiri and her summer research students, Emily Everhart '22 and Aidan Khelil '22, recently participated in the virtual , contributing a presentation titled, "Probing intraparticle and interparticle magnetic structures in chemically homogeneous manganese ferrite nanoparticle assemblies."