Welcome, 2024-25 Fellows!
Faculty Fellows
Lisa Anne Auerbach, professor of Art, is curious about agency and voice in a cacophonous world. Her current project revolves around a Chicago woman who adopted a pedestrian bridge over a highway as a venue for political speech, using social media platforms to amplify messages painted on bedsheets. What can be learned from her practice and from her transformation from animal rights activist to covid victim?
Susan McWilliams Barndt is a professor of Politics. She will use the fellowship year to work on a project about the unlikely 1960s alliance between the Hells Angels and the Merry Pranksters.
M. Bilal Nasir, assistant professor of Asian American Studies, will use the "Connections" year to examine overlapping histories of racism, solidarity politics, and the question of in/commensurability of distinct traditions and forms of life in twentieth and twenty-first century Los Angeles. His work traces the origins of the War on Terror to the post-WWII era, querying connections between anti-Muslim racism and other forms of racial domination (e.g. anti-Black racism, anti-immigrant racism, settler colonialism).
Karen Parfitt is a professor of Neuroscience and Molecular Biology and studies molecular mechanisms of synaptic communication. During her fellowship year she will focus on the how mental health disorders, particularly bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder, have influenced the artistic temperament of writers. The availability of drugs that manipulate synaptic connections, and possible genetic treatments on the horizon, raise important questions regarding whether these technologies will help or hinder the production of art.
Colleen Ruth Rosenfeld is professor of English at Â鶹´«Ă˝ and the author of Indecorous Thinking: Figures of Speech in Early Modern Poetics (Fordham University Press, 2018). Her essays on style and epistemology have appeared in PMLA, ELH, and Modern Philology. She is writing a book manuscript entitled “Seeing Things Otherwise,” in which she argues for the creative and critical value of variation through readings of William Shakespeare’s Sonnets and Pablo Picasso’s Las Meninas (after Velázquez).
Friederike v. Schwerin-High is a professor of German and coordinator of the German program in the department of German and Russian at Pomona. Her project investigates connections between modes of meaning-making in literary texts and the aesthetics of the use of verse. In particular, it explores links between the prevalence of blank verse (iambic pentameter) in eighteenth-century German plays, including translated plays, written for stage production and the political commentary encountered in those plays.
Student Fellows
Emrys King is a Mathematics and Spanish double major interested in the connections between STEM and the humanities. His thesis research is in the history of statistics and its origins as a tool deeply interrelated with eugenics. Tracing the early development of both statistics and eugenics in Britain and the United States, he aims to examine the extent to which mathematical concepts are connected to the biases of their inventors.
Erubey López is a Linguistics major and Spanish minor studying how phonetic qualities of speech inform language attitudes. Through analyzing sociolinguistic interviews with speakers of Yucatán Spanish and Yucatec Maya, Erubey explores how language contact can affect both phonetic systems and social perception of Spanish dialects. Considering the systemic anti-indigeneity that has persisted in México and beyond, he hopes to illuminate language revitalization efforts while exploring the role of language in constructing social identity.
Emilio Esquivel Márquez is a Philosophy major studying Baruch Spinoza’s (1632–1677) metaphysics. He will be thinking about Spinoza’s doctrine of mind-body parallelism and the medieval theories of distinction with which Spinoza articulates it. He will study how Spinoza twists Cartesian and Neoplatonist vocabulary toward a dehiscent ontological commitment to what Denise Ferreira da Silva calls "difference without separability," resonant with contemporary work in olfaction, ecology, affect, and flesh.
Clara Meyers is an English major studying works of literature at the intersections of autobiography, fiction, and theory. Examining the treatment of memory and history in autofictional texts, she considers how the genre of autofiction illuminates and responds to gaps in historical archives. Her research draws on feminist and postcolonial theory to consider the potential of personal narrative to enact social and historical criticism.
Ananya Ramkumar is a Biology and English double major hoping to examine representations of wholeness and parthood across multiple literary genres and traditions. She plans to study collective and individual experiences of unity and fragmentation in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, one of Chaucer’s source texts The Jataka Tales, and Virginia Woolf’s The Waves. By putting in conversation texts from different time periods and linguistic traditions, she hopes to explore the possibility of interconnection.
Daniel Velazquez is a Chicano/Latino Studies major with a focus in Music History and Cultural Studies. Daniel is working to trace the history of Latino involvement in House and Dance music subcultures in 1970s-1990s Chicago with the non-profit "Latinosindahouse” at their Inaugural conference. In doing so, Daniel seeks to articulate the importance of nightlife in finding joy, purpose, and community within Black, Brown, and Queer nightlife subcultures, centering the “underground” as a historical site of world-building and relief.
Postdoctoral Fellows
Ernesto R. Gutiérrez Topete is a Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Linguistics and Cognitive Science Department. His scholarship focuses on the phonetics of bilingualism, and this year he plans to work on research on the production and perception patterns of Spanish-English bilingual, especially as it relates to code-switching practices as well as exposure to accented speech.
Maga Miranda Alcázar is a Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Chicana/o-Latina/o Studies. As a fellow in the Humanities Studio, they intend to work on a manuscript based on their ongoing ethnographic research, which explores efforts to foster transnational networks of domestic workers across North America. Their research examines the intersections of labor migration, border dynamics, and the complex realities of digital connectivity, examining both the opportunities and challenges these networks present for domestic workers, who are overwhelmingly gendered and racialized subjects in globalized labor markets.
Karla Cordova is an economist whose research centers on labor and public economics, with interests in migration, gender, and ethnicity. As a Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Economics Department, Karla will continue her research on the impacts of the Secure Communities—a policy linking federal immigration enforcement with local law enforcement in the US—on child maltreatment within Hispanic households. She will also explore how local unemployment shocks contribute to academic achievement gaps among school-aged children. Karla is originally from Caborca, Sonora, Mexico.
Past Humanities Studio Fellows
2023-24: Joy
Faculty Fellows
Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, is a multi-instrumentalist and historical musicologist specializing in early modern performance practice, rhetoric, and musical symbolism engaging occult philosophy. His fellowship project investigates musical renderings of Petrarchan dolendi voluptas, a rhetorical principle juxtaposing joy and sorrow, in German Baroque Passion works. Malachai aims to recontextualize a popular instrument within this repertoire: the viola da gamba, which seventeenth-century alchemists claimed emits Paracelsian “spiritual medicine”—ecstatic joy dispelling Saturnine melancholy.
Esther Hernández-Medina is an assistant professor in the Latin American Studies Program and the Gender and Women’s Studies Program. Her project, “Joy as Resistance,” explores the ways in which joy can fuel and sustain social movements. Her research draws from her work as a feminist activist in the Dominican Republic; from the work of Josefina Báez, the founder and director of an international group devoted to art and self-care; and from the work of organizer and sociologist Marshall Ganz, her professor and mentor at the Harvard Kennedy School.
Marc Los Huertos is a biogeochemist with the Environmental Analysis Program. His fellowship project explores how joy (and awe) can be used to develop a research and teaching program that reflects a “way of understanding” and celebrates/provokes collective action to maintain and promote agency in the Earth’s biodiversity and vulnerable human communities.
Ami Radunskaya is a mathematician and teacher whose current research applies dynamical systems theory to problems in physiology and medicine. She hopes to collaborate with her fellow Fellows on an interdisciplinary exploration of the manifestations of Joy and the mechanisms behind our experiences of Joy. She looks forward to intentionally focusing on understanding what Joy is on a deeper level, bringing to bear her expertise in mathematical modeling and problem-solving, as well as indulging for a while in self-reflection.
Cherene Sherrard-Johnson is the E. Wilson Lyon Professor of the Humanities and Chair of the English. While on fellowship at the Humanities studio, she is working a short book project called Floating. Through a buoyant, “joyful” practice involving reverie, reading, and visual inquiry, Floating tells a story about human fascination with coral by imagining its ecosystem as conceptual model for connection and community in the Black diaspora.
Tomás Summers Sandoval is an associate professor of History and Chicane/Latine Studies. This year he’s exploring joy through two research projects, both based in oral history: an exhibit on popular music & youth in Pomona from 1955-75; and a book on the history of Latinos in the US war in Vietnam.
Student Fellows
Zaid Al Zoubi is an international student from Jordan studying economics and media studies on the critical studies track. Through his research he hopes to explore the different forms of Arab joy in media, with a specific focus on self-representation in film. As a highly politicized people, he argues that Arab joy is based in bliss, which is the discomforting joy that comes from seeing one’s pain represented, rather than pleasure, which refers to euphoric “happy” joy. Through theoretical study of representation, joy, and textual analysis of film, Zaid hopes to use his research to reimagine how Arab representation could look like.
Malia Battafarano is a Spanish major and Math minor on the pre-health track. Her research interrelates feminist theory, disability studies, and poverty within the picaresque genre of Spanish literature, particularly JosĂ© Cela’s La familia de Pascual Duarte. She will examine the figure of the pĂcaro to underscore the corporeality of these marginalized experiences, marked by isolation and dehumanization. Drawing on her experience working with the disability community, she proposes joy as a form of resistance.
India Claudy is an English major concentrating on language and mortality in 20th century American literature. Exploring novels with narration by dead characters, she aims to interrogate the ways in which language takes effect posthumously in stories and in life. She anticipates discussing themes of gender, inheritance, storytelling, and faith. Grounding her research in motifs found in the natural world, she hopes to probe the underlying linkages of all living things and how literature and language can both unveil and complicate those linkages.
Sam Hernandez is a Philosophy major and English minor researching poststructuralist political philosophy and its consequences for large-scale revolutionary change. Drawing from a range of critical theory, the project situates political discourse in contemporary culture, exploring avenues of change toward radical futures and finding ways of living in the meantime. Sam also plans to incorporate literature as an affective vehicle of conceptual philosophy, both in its ability to distill and communicate philosophy as well as its capacity to catalyze and expand philosophical reflection.
Yaru Luo is a Physics and English double major studying the language of protest. Her research aims to trace a relationship between dissent and joy by understanding the everyday autonomy, community building, creative agency, resistance, intergenerational conflict, and merry making of marginalized communities in subjugated conditions. She will pull from protest essays, Black feminist theory, fictional renderings of dissent, and dissenting opinions to imagine joy as radical.
Bella Pettengill is a Studio Art and Cognitive Science double major. Through her multimedia body of work consisting of painting, fiber arts and printmaking, she seeks a mutual understanding with the spaces and people around her. Looking to her own family and community, she investigates the construction of personal mythologies through the visual language of cartoons, homes, textiles, and other heirlooms.
Postdoctoral Fellows
Ernesto R. Gutiérrez Topete is a Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow joining the Linguistics and Cognitive Science Department. His scholarship focuses on the phonetics of bilingualism, and this year he plans to work on a comparative study that analyzes the extent to which phonetic theories are able to account for pronunciation patterns observed in bilingual speakers due to exposure to accented speech.
Omer Shah is a cultural anthropologist whose research explores recent attempts by the Saudi state to transform the holy city of Mecca into a global laboratory for urban problems of crowd management and logistics. As a Chau Mellon Fellow in the Department of Anthropology, Omer will work on transforming his dissertation research in a more expansive book project, one that focuses on the circuits and circulations of these more secular knowledges in and out of Mecca.
2022-23: Human//Nature
Faculty Fellows
Aimee Bahng is an associate professor of Gender and Women's Studies researching Pacific environmental histories and futures. While on fellowship at the Humanities Studio, she hopes to complete her book manuscript, currently titled "Settler Environmentalism and Pacific Resurgence." The project builds on her recent studies in environmental law and centers Native Pacific women as stewards of land, water, and relational practice.
Michael Green is an Associate Professor of Philosophy. He is working on Thomas Hobbes’s (1588-1679) theory of human nature.
Amanda Hollis-Brusky is Professor and Chair of Politics. She will use the fellowship year to analyze collective action at the state level in the wake of the United States Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade in 2022. Consistent with the studio’s theme of Human | Nature she is particularly interested in polarized conceptions of science and pseudoscience mobilized by blue and red state legislatures to justify radical action protecting or restricting abortion rights across the United States.
Gizem Karaali is a professor of mathematics. She will use the fellowship year to explore the intertwinings of humanity, nature, and human nature in the context of mathematics, with the intent to contribute to a broader, deeper understanding of the phenomenon as one of the creative endeavors of our species.
Evan Kindley is a visiting assistant professor of English at Â鶹´«Ă˝. His research during this fellowship year will focus on the curious persistence of an ancient poetic mode – the pastoral – in an era of ecological and political crisis, with particular attention to the poets of the New York School and their responses to the emergence of the modern American environmental movement in the 1960s and 70s.
Zhiru Ng is professor and department chair of Religious Studies, and also program coordinator of Asian Studies. She will use the fellowship year to explore the Buddhist mountain as both sacred geography and environmental conservation in Southwest China, with a focus on how apocalyptic eschatology can be localized temporally and geographically to address societal issues.
Adam Pearson is an experimental social psychologist and Associate Professor of Psychology. His research explores how group identities and social dynamics impact how people perceive and respond to climate change and other environmental challenges. He plans to use the fellowship year to develop a new project exploring public perceptions of climate inequities within the United States and their implications for decision making and public policy.
Student Fellows
GiGi Buddie is a Tongva Indian and Mescalero Apache Theatre Performance major, dramaturgically researching how eco-drama theatre can be a tool for climate activism and resistance. Through her thesis performance of If nobody does remarkable things by Emma Gibson, she aims to uncover relational complexities between humans and the natural world, with a goal of strengthening their relationship, creating accessibility and feasibility for action, and highlighting multiple narratives of climate resilience.
Sofi Gardenswartz is an American Studies major and Politics minor. Her research focuses on the role of climate change in catalyzing migrant movements. She intends to map the migratory impacts of climate change with the goal of aiding humanitarian support. She also loves to cook, and enjoys using her culinary passions to foster conversations about border cuisines and food movements, which she hopes to incorporate into her research.
Christina Marsh is an Environmental Analysis major concentrating in Geology. Her research focuses on the politics and prejudice surrounding the education of African American children as it relates to environmental and geoscience education. Christina will pull from both works by fiction and nonfiction experts in Black feminist theory, de- and postcolonial literature as well as environmental education in order to imagine and explore what type of science education is necessary to ensure a better future.
Maggie Merrill is an English major and Classics minor concentrating on the figure of “Nature” in Early Modern and Medieval literature. By interrogating how individuals become extensions of the natural world, she aims to understand “Nature” as a form of transformation. Grounding her research in queer and feminist theory, she hopes to underscore subversive changes in identity and unveil nuances surrounding possession, gender, and sexuality, reimagining constructions of autonomy and the self within “Nature’s” realm.
Sammy Shrestha is a Politics and American Studies double major, researching gender abolition and queer expression on social media for their American Studies undergraduate thesis. Examining the very definition of gender abolition and if the concept can meaningfully contribute to queer discourse, they consider social media as a site of queer expression and exploration for young people.
Carrie Zaremba is an Anthropology major researching cultural landscapes of colonial ruins in the Inland Empire. Her project considers how people interact with nature to develop a sense of place in an environment entrenched in settler fantasy and ongoing militarism. Adopting a multispecies ethnographic methodology, she seeks to situate the human/nature binary within a framework of imperial decay as a departure point for promoting insurgent ecologies, spatial justice, and radical futurity in the region.
Postdoctoral Fellows
Maddalena Poli is the Rand Postdoctoral Fellow in Asian studies. She will use the fellowship to research collections of ancient Chinese manuscripts (produced around 300 BCE) that have been recovered from tombs in contemporary China. Among these, we are discovering the most ancient discussions of history, human nature, legal systems, which reach us unedited and allow us to look straight at the world of textual production in ancient China.
Rev. Nikia S. Robert, PhD is a religious scholar whose expertise engages the intersections of race, gender and class with an emphasis on the criminalization of Black motherhood and religious responses to the U.S. criminal system. Dr. Robert is the founder of Abolitionist Sanctuary, which helps churches to advance a faith-based abolitionist movement with Black women and mothers at the center. As a Chau Mellon Fellow in the Religious Studies department, Dr. Robert will work closely with the Inside/Out program and completing her first manuscript.
Omer Shah is a cultural anthropologist whose research explores recent attempts by the Saudi state to transform the holy city of Mecca into a global laboratory for urban problems of crowd management and logistics. As a Chau Mellon Fellow in the Department of Anthropology, Omer will work on transforming his dissertation research in a more expansive book project, one that focuses on the circuits and circulations of these more secular knowledges in and out of Mecca.
2021-22: Movement(s)
Colin Beck is Associate Professor of Sociology. He is interested in both how revolutions occur and how revolutions have been studied. During the fellowship year, he analyzed 50 years of revolution studies to identify what knowledge has been gained and what has been lost, with a particular focus on Black revolutionaries.
Angelina Chin is Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies. She used the fellowship to examine various Chinese diasporic intellectual movements in Hong Kong and overseas since World War II and explore the changing meanings of identity, home and belonging for people who left mainland China.
Heidi Nichols Haddad is an Associate Professor of Politics. She used the fellowship year to conceptualize various factors—including the idea of the city, city authority and federalism, municipal governance structures, and local culture and economics—that affect city “localization” of global human rights norms.
Esther Hernández-Medina is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology. She used the fellowship to work on her project about the Dominican feminist movement and its 20-year-plus fight defending the three “causales:” three extreme situations where the majority of the population agrees that abortion should not be penalized (when the woman’s life is in danger, when she has been the victim of rape or incest, and when the fetus is not viable outside the womb).
Joti Rockwell is an Associate Professor of Music and a core faculty member in American Studies. He devoted his year as part of the Humanities Studio to theorizing motion in music, with particular attention given to ideas of movement in, of, and with the pedal steel guitar.
Tony Jin was an Anthropology and Romance Languages and Literatures double major. In his ethnographic research, he was interested in Chinese queer individuals/activists and their daily tactics and strategies. Noting the Euro-American origins of queer theory, he looked at the transnational (re)production, articulations, alliances of “queer politics,” and the queer imaginaries in the local context of the People’s Republic of China.
Luke Meares was a politics and media studies double major, researching the ways digital life has shifted community building and historical archiving for rural, queer people. By examining disparate aspects of the cybersphere such as algorithms and their emotive elements as well as identity formation between digital and real-life worlds, he contemplated how digitization has mediated the oftentimes less than hospitable life of rural, queer people and their histories.
Laila Ruffin was a Public Policy Analysis major with a concentration in Gender and Women's Studies. Laila's work was grounded in the interdisciplinary fields of Gender and Women’s Studies, Public Policy, and Geography (critical geographies and domestic geopolitics especially), looking at strategies for survival considering relation to land and identity, and how this dictates one's movements.
Alice Shinn was an English and Environmental Analysis double major investigating how fiction can function as a worldmaking vehicle that allows for the exploration of what a de- and postcolonial future would look like. By examining the fine line between “metaphorizing” the environment and reifying our struggle against the climate crisis in works of postcolonial ecocriticism and ecofiction, she worked to demystify imagined realities that have––until recently––been found only in theory.
Ruby Simon was a History major concentrating on the United States. She researched how communities in Brooklyn, New York responded to the relocation of industrial jobs out of the city beginning in the 1950s. By examining the experiences of those who remained in the borough during a period of migration out of it, she explored what it meant to stay put in a moment defined by movement.
Nick Yi was an American Studies major interested in critical race and digital media studies. He researched how race "moves" between the physical and digital, "real" and imaginary, and how racial knowledge is produced and reproduced by computer logics. His thesis focused on role-playing games as a site of racial meaning-making.
M. Bilal Nasir was a Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Intercollegiate Department of Asian American Studies at Â鶹´«Ă˝. He used the fellowship year to work on his book manuscript, which examines the targeted surveillance of Muslim Americans in Los Angeles, CA, to probe the secular formations of racial governance in the US counterterror state, as well as social movements rooted in Islamic traditions of critique concerned with the abolition national security and policing.
Rev. Nikia S. Robert, PhD is a religious scholar whose expertise engages the intersections of race, gender and class with an emphasis on the criminalization of Black motherhood and religious responses to the U.S. criminal system. Dr. Robert is the founder of Abolitionist Sanctuary, which helps churches to advance a faith-based abolitionist movement with Black women and mothers at the center. As a Chau-Mellon Fellow in the Religious Studies department, Dr. Robert worked closely with the Inside/Out program and on completing her first manuscript.
2020-21: Indigeneities
Alfred Cramer is an Associate Professor in the Music Department and an affiliate of the Linguistics & Cognitive Science Department. He is a music theorist particularly interested in the ways linguistic, technological, and societal contexts give meaning and expression to musical sounds. This year he will be working toward an account of the complicated ethics of Woody Guthrie's song "This Land Was Made for You and Me."
Zayn Kassam is the John Knox McLean Professor and Chair of Religious Studies. She is interested in exploring whether and in what ways the experiences of migrant Muslims relate to the forced dislocations of indigenous peoples, and what these tell us about the structures of settler colonialism. What theoretical and political processes are at work in the erasure and control of indigenous and migrant Muslim populations and how might a decolonized, non-assimilationist home be imagined?
Victoria Sancho Lobis is the Sarah Rempel and Herbert S. Rempel ’23 Director of the Benton Museum of Art and Associate Professor of Art History. During the fellowship year, she plans to conceive a permanent collection publication or series of publications related to the Benton’s Native American art holdings, which number approximately 6,000 objects and represent over one hundred indigenous North American cultures.
April J. Mayes is an Associate Professor of History, teaching courses in Latin American and Caribbean history. She will use the fellowship year to develop a project-based, research class in which students will learn and apply Indigenous and non-Indigenous methodologies and theoretical frameworks to access California Indigenous histories as recorded in birth, baptismal, and death records archived in California Missions.
Char Miller is the W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History. This fellowship year, COVID allowing, he will be collaborating with Tongvan elders and archivists at the Claremont Colleges Library to recover the histories of Indigenous people who have been dispossessed and marginalized in Southern California by locating relevant primary sources.
Malak Afaneh is a rising senior at Â鶹´«Ă˝ double majoring in Politics and Middle Eastern Studies, with a passion for working within the intersections of law, social justice, and policy. Through examining the utilization of Palestinian embroidery, or tatreez, as a form of healing and visual resistance to settler colonialism, Afaneh hopes to document the ways indignity and identity can be uplifted through creative mediums.
Hutchinson Fann is a Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (PPE) major researching theories of property acquisition and their application to society. By studying libertarian and Marxist theories of property, he aims to look closely at different conceptions of “self-ownership." He then uses these ideas to evaluate the ethics and efficacy of estate taxes.
Ahana Ganguly is an English major interested in experimental nonfiction and the essay. Her thesis is a hybrid creative project about the way disgust functions as a boundary-drawing force in private spaces. Drawing on affect theory and indigenous studies, she is examining what the American fine arts museum allows and disallows.
Lucy Onderwyzer Gold is a Religious Studies major. Her research examines the experience of interpersonal violence, particularly among diasporic or “stateless” people. Many accounts by survivors of traumatic violence articulate a common sense of being suddenly and permanently alienated from human community. Examining essays by the writer James Baldwin, as well as Holocaust survivor and intellectual Jean Améry, she asks: how does the experience of victimization differ for individuals whose belonging in human community has always been already under threat?
Amy Igri Lowndes is studying Politics and Studio Art. She is researching the resurgence of traditional methods of governance in Indigenous communities in her native Alaska. Stressing community accountability, restorative justice, and cultural revitalization, she asks: how can traditional methods of jurisprudence help us to build a prison-free future? She draws upon Indigenous Futurisms, abolitionist scholars, and Iñupiaq knowledge systems.
Gabby Lupola is a History Major with a thematic track of the Transpacific, researching the Chamorro sovereignty movement of the late 20th century. Through analyzing its connection to a legacy of Native resistance on island as well as solidarity with other Indigenous movements in the Pacific & continental U.S., she aims to contextualize a centuries long fight for self-determination as it adapts to a globalized, modern world. Her work is directly inspired by & hopes to contribute to growing Pacific Islander scholarship.
Anam Mehta is an Environment Analysis major studying and learning from the disruption of the Anthropocene as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic and Global Climate Change. Through making kin with both living and nonliving, he aims to find threads and tangles in new spatial formations, fixes, and relations that can allow us to situate ourselves on Land and adapt to long term crisis and collapse.
M. Bilal Nasir is currently a Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Intercollegiate Department of Asian American Studies at Â鶹´«Ă˝. He will use the fellowship year to work on his book manuscript, which examines the targeted surveillance of Muslim Americans in Los Angeles, CA, to probe the secular formations of racial governance in the US counterterror state, as well as social movements rooted in Islamic traditions of critique concerned with the abolition national security and policing.
RosalĂa Romero is the Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Art History. During the fellowship year, she will explore concepts and representations of “indigeneity” in the radical art of Mexican anarchist groups in the early twentieth century.
2019-20: Post/Truth
Aimee Bahng is an Assistant Professor of Gender & Women’s Studies. Currently at work on a book manuscript titled “Transpacific Ecologies,” she will be thinking about “truth” not only vis-à -vis the political stakes of how we produce knowledge, but also “trust,” as it has contoured environmental discourse around stewardship as well as forms of governance over life itself, such as the “trust territories” of the mid-twentieth century.
Oona Eisenstadt is the Fred Krinsky Professor of Jewish Studies and Professor of Religious Studies. She specializes in continental philosophy and Judaism, with a special interest in two postmodern Jewish philosophers—Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida. She has also focused extensively on religious themes in literature for children and young adults.
Amanda Hollis-Brusky is an Associate Professor in the Politics Department. For the fellowship year, she will be exploring the relationship between lawyering, lying (or what Stephen Colbert called “truthiness”) and the growth of presidential power in the United States. Specifically, she will examine how executive branch lawyers have creatively interpreted the constitution, statues and treaties to enable the Imperial Presidency.
Colleen Ruth Rosenfeld is an Associate Professor in the English Department, specializing in early modern poetry and poetic theory, form, style, and epistemology. She will be thinking about the value of fiction in an era of post/truth. If, as Philip Sidney declared in the Defence of Poesy (1580), the poet “never lieth” because he “nothing affirms,” what are the criteria by which we evaluate poetic knowledge? And what is the relation of those criteria to determinations of truth and falsehood?
Tomás Summers Sandoval is an Associate Professor of Chicanx-Latinx Studies and History. He will use the fellowship year to explore the tensions between the meaning-making processes we use to construct our “truths” about the past and historical fact, grounded in his examination of the impact of the Vietnam War in Latinx America.
Heather Williams is a Professor of Politics and also serves in the Programs in International Relations and Environmental Analysis. Her work on post/truth focuses on the politics of water in Inland Southern California. Specifically, her current study examines the slippage between everyday assumptions that growing cities are served by a clean, ever-normal and state-managed hydroscape, and the observable reality that fire, flood, traveling toxins, and homelessness are changing the way water moves through river basins, what water carries with it, and how states police and regulate human use of river courses.
Oliver Dubon is majoring in music with a concentration in music composition. His thesis is a half-hour song cycle setting various philosophical texts defining the word “truth.” Oliver hopes to spend his time in the studio exploring ways artists such as himself engage with other disciplines in order to make art that has something important to say.
Ethan Kostishak is an Anthropology and Middle Eastern Studies double major, researching the possibilities of queer transnational solidarity. Through examining the grassroots organizing work of the LGBT Lebanese group, Helem, and the queer Palestinian group, al-Qaws, they aim to articulate what it means to have multiple "truths" of queer praxis, and how al-Qaws and Helem have historically responded to different queer realities.
Rachel Marandett is a Religious Studies major with a concentration in religio-political violence and a minor in Middle Eastern Studies. Her senior thesis focuses on employing the field of Genocide Studies and constructions of religious identity to reframe understandings of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. She plans to use her fellowship year to explore the role that living in a post/truth society shaped by media narratives has on contemporary understandings of this conflict.
Olive Maurstad is an English major writing her thesis on speculative fiction by trans and genderqueer authors. She’s studying how these works create models of realness, authenticity, and artificiality, both on a personal and narrative level, and how the interaction of those concepts in the literature complicates the idea of a “true” self.
Skye Mitchell is a Media Studies major whose thesis will explore how the hidden imperatives of music streaming algorithms—specifically Spotify—are altering the ways in which music is created, curated and consumed, and how the rise of hyper-personalized, automated cultural curation might engender a form of “post-truth” social fragmentation.
Hans Zhou is a double major in Environmental Analysis (with a concentration in Race, Class, and Gender) and Classics whose thesis will examine how Asian American neighborhoods experience gentrification and other environmental justice issues. By analyzing various walking tours organized by community members to highlight their stories of oppression and activism, he is hoping to explore the “truths” of urban development in relation to the production of space.
Cristina T. Bejarano is a Mellon Chau Postdoctoral Fellow in the Anthropology Department.
RosalĂa Romero is the Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in Art History. During the fellowship year, she will explore the “post-truth politics” of U.S. and Mexican anarchist groups at the turn of the twentieth century by reflecting on anarchist art that utilized “untrue” representations, interpretations, and imitations.
2018-19: Fail Better
Gizem Karaali is an Associate Professor in the Department of Mathematics. During the 2018-19 "Fail Better" fellowship year, she investigated failure both in mathematics and mathematics instruction. Among her animating questions: “What kinds of failures can be desirable?” “What makes some failures better than others?” And: “Who gets to fail?”
Jordan Kirk is an Assistant Professor of English. His project for the 2018-19 "Fail Better" fellowship year centered on an exploration of the Canon’s Yeoman’s Tale in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, exploring his “poetics of failure” in search of a new understanding of the whole of the Tales, the preeminent work of medieval English letters.
Joanne Nucho is a Mellon Chau postdoctoral fellow, and will joined the Pomona faculty as an Assistant Professor of Anthropology in July 2019. During the fellowship year she focused on the urgent material problem of “failed” infrastructure and the political discourses that shape the future of the built environment.
Michael O’Malley is a Professor and Chair of the Department of Art. In addition to his sculpture work that engages explicitly with the topic of failure, he embarked on a series of writings that “untangle some of the hunches and questions” he had “about the many tendrils of failure.”
Friederike von Schwerin-High is an Associate Professor of German & Russian. During the fellowship year she continued her exploration of success and failure relating to epistemology (knowing another person), ethics (telling another person’s story), and aesthetics (telling a story well) in works of fiction that explore the dynamics of friendship.
Julie Tannenbaum is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Philosophy. Her project explored cases of “moral failure,” in which one does not deserve blame for one’s action but is nevertheless morally responsible for harming others. How can such individuals be helped to come to terms with what they have done?
Peter Brown majored in Politics and English, writing theses that focused on the work of Hannah Arendt and Toni Morrison. He used his time in the Studio “to think more carefully with those whom historical archives and current governments alike have failed to account for”—exploring how our structures have failed us.
Jacob Lubert worked on a senior thesis for Classics in which he used the phrase “learning through suffering” as a tool both by which to explicate the literary content of Aeschylus’s Oresteia trilogy and to analyze the psychology involved in both viewing and acting in the drama.
Natalie McDonald was a History major with a Late Antique-Medieval Studies minor who used the fellowship year to investigate the dynamics of gendered power structures in Middle Eastern, Caribbean, and Indian women’s service in the British army during WWII. What happens when such stories fail to survive in collective memory?
James McIntyre wrote a thesis in Philosophy complicating accounts that characterize indoctrination as education which restricts the learner’s freedom, augmenting them with an alternative account based upon the doctrine of fallibilism: that we should always keep in mind that many of our most cherished beliefs could be false.
Natalie Slater’s Environmental Analysis thesis examined the recent breakdown of Rome’s fountains and aqueducts, symbols of society’s conquest over nature, using them to examine notions of progress, modernity, and animacy versus inanimacy in the face of global climate change—and searching for moments of hope within environmental and political breakdown.
Candice Wang, a double major in Neuroscience and Religious Studies, examined hymnals, Christian storybooks for girls, and illustrated Bibles, translated into various Chinese dialects, held by the Honnold-Mudd Library. Through textual, visual, and historical analyses, she studied the translation and transmission of representations of Christianity in late imperial China.
Cristina T. Bejarano was a Mellon Chau Postdoctoral Fellow in the Anthropology Department. As a member of the Humanities Studio, she explored how the nature/culture divide “fails” in the Anthropocene in order to shed light on the complex relationships between bodies and environments, especially in the context of long-term exposure to toxic substances.
Sheetal Gandhi was a Mellon Chau postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Theatre and Dance. During the fellowship year she consciously engaged with her body’s own failures to reimagine and reinvent what her dancing body is capable of.