Graduate
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This
is a self-selective and thus not complete list. For the
Yale e-mail directory click
here.
Francesca Ammon received her B.S.E. in civil engineering from Princeton University and her Master of Environmental Design (M.E.D.) from Yale School of Architecture. In between, she spent several years working as a strategy consultant and developing an enduring love of travel. Her interests include 20th century urban history and the history and culture of the built environment. Having grown up in the Garden State, she also remains fascinated by all things New Jersey -- including, in particular, the city of Asbury Park.including, in particular,
the city of Asbury Park.
Aisha
Bastiaans received her B.A. in English and American
Literature and Africana Studies from New York University
in 1999. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Department
of American Studies and the Department of African-American
Studies at Yale University. Her teaching and research
interests include: race and gender in U.S. history and
culture, nineteenth and twentieth century African-American
literature, and cultural studies. Her doctoral dissertation
explores the relationship between race, gender, and representation
through analyses of literary and cinematic treatments
of the mulatta figure.
Kathleen Belew received her B.A. in Comparative History of Ideas from the University of Washington in 2005. Her interests include vigilante violence related to race- and class-based conflict; transnational violence and reconciliation; memory, collective identity and monument-building; and oral history, narrative and testimonies.
Ryan Andre Brasseaux is a Louisiana native whose research focuses primarily on Francophone North America, ethnicity, 20th century social and cultural history, vernacular music, folklore, ethnography, memory and oral history, and public humanities. Before coming to Yale, Brasseaux worked as a research associate for American Public Media?s American Routes and as a museum exhibit designer. He has presented invited lectures at Yale University, to the Fulbright Institute, and the 2004 (and forthcoming 2008) keynote addresses at
Nashville?s International Country Music Conference. He has also served as a Louisiana cultural expert for the Associated Press, National Public Radio, Public Radio International, National Film Board of Canada, Canadian Broadcast Corporation, and the Food Network. In addition, he is currently a festival presenter/workshop moderator for the National Council for the Traditional Arts. Brasseaux?s third book, Cajun Breakdown: The Emergence of an American-Made Music, is forthcoming by Oxford University Press. He holds a B.A. in anthropology and Francophone studies from the University of Louisiana, and a M.A. in anthropology from Louisiana State University.
La Marr Jurelle Bruce received his B.A. in African-American Studies and English, with honors, from Columbia University in 2003. At present, he is a third year Yale Ph.D. student in African-American Studies and American Studies who investigates iterations of Black “madness” in late- and postmodernity. He is interested in how notions of “madness” have been ascribed to Afrodiasporic subjects by colonial and neocolonial regimes-and in how Afrodiasporic subjects have appropriated “madness” for insurgent modes of seeing, knowing, being, and performing. La Marr is also a poet, novelist-in-waiting, co-editor of Maroon: The Yale Journal of African American Studies, and an occasional madman (appropriately enough). His hobbies include time travel, transcendental sex, nature documentaries, handwashing, and self-parody.
Amanda
Ciafone received her BA in American Civilization
from Brown University with a thesis on the transnationality
of Spanish-language television. She worked in the television
industry and taught bilingual education before coming
to Yale to study 20th century US social and cultural
history, media, and globalization.
Christine DeLucia studied History and Literature at Harvard College (2006), and Environmental History at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland (2007). Her interests include the built environment; Native American studies; cartography; polar exploration; war and landscape; theories of narration and memory.
Amina
El-Annan received her BA in English and Geography
at UCLA . She worked at KCET on "The Tavis Smiley
Show" and in urban planning before coming to Yale.
Her interests include postcolonial literature, third
world feminist theory, Islam and Modernity, Arab American
and Muslim American communities, and responses and representations
of September 11th in popular and literary culture.
G. Melissa García is a doctoral student in the American Studies program at Yale University. She is interested in transnational cultural studies and the Americas as an inclusive concept with a broad intellectual and geographic scope. She looks to interrogate competing narratives of gender, class, ethnic and racial formations by focusing on contemporary representations of social violence, particularly the cultural production around the Feminicidio on the Mexico-U.S. border and the Commission of Truth and Reconciliation in Peru.
She was born and raised in Guayaquil, Ecuador, and later moved to New York City where she received her B.A. from Hunter College in 2000.
Daniel
Gilbert is interested in the history of work and mass culture, and is a
member of the Working Group on Globalization and Culture. His dissertation is
titled "Expanding the Strike Zone: Baseball in the Age of Free Agency." Dan
graduated from Wesleyan University, where he studied music and social movements.
Megan
Glick. BA from Northwestern University in English and History (2002).
Current interests include the history and ethics of genetic science, the
construction of childhood, the war against fat, animal rights,
biocolonialism, disability legislation, and the rise of conservative
feminism. Her dissertation examines cultural, medical, and legal
constructions of humanness in the twentieth century, addressing questions of
race, nation, and the moral economy of embodiment.
Paul
J. Grant-Costa Ph.D. (Theoretical Linguistics) 1985:
Univ. of Connecticut; J.D. (International Law) 1989:
Univ. of Connecticut/Exeter Univ., Exeter, England. Intern,
1989: Directorate of Human Rights, Council of Europe.
Dept. Head of Historical Research, Mashantucket Pequot
Museum & Research Center. Research Interests: Native
communities in southeastern New England; Colonial America;
the Pequot war; King Philip's war; Local law and the
Native American; New England belief and superstition;
Native American/Black relations; federal recognition
of Native tribes.
Laura
Grappo Laura Grappo graduated from Wesleyan University with a BA in Women's Studies
(2001). Her interests include queer and feminist theory, contemporary global
ethics, anarchism, moral constructions of alterity, anti-colonial futures,
speculative fiction, and popular culture. Her dissertation focuses on the
notion of "homelessness" as a problematic site of queer and postcolonial
existence.
Gabrielle
Guise has a BA in English and Religion from
Dartmouth College and an MA in English from Columbia
University. She is interested in European American representations
of Native Americans in nineteenth century literature
and visual culture.
Perin Gurel is a Ph.D. Student in American Studies and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (Graduate Qualification). She received her B.A. in English and American Studies from University of California, Berkeley, where she was awarded the University Certificate of Distinction. Her academic interests include transnational feminist theory, the effects of globalization and neoliberalism on folklore and vernacular genres, and comparative studies of gender and sexuality, with special focus on the United States and Turkey. She is an affiliate of the Initiative on Race, Gender and Globalization and The Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Graduate Colloquium at Yale. Her current work, supported by a Yale Lesbian and Gay Studies (FLAGS) grant, is on Westernization and gay identity in contemporary Turkey. She has most recently published on the utilization of feminist rhetoric by the incumbent Muslim party during the country's 2007 national elections.
Sarah
Haley received
her B.A. in Political Science from Vassar College in
2001. Her interests include 19th and 20th century histories
of race and punishment, history of gender and sexuality
from 1865 to the present, 20th century radical social
movements, and prison studies.
Brandi
Hughes (joint with African American Studies)
graduated from the University of Virginia in 2001 with
a B.A. in Literature and American Studies. Interests
include: Late 19th and 20th century U.S. cultural and
social history with particular focus on historical remembrance,
racial identity, and Afro-Native communities following
Reconstruction.
Eli Jelly-Schapiro grew up in central Vermont. He received his B.S.F.S. in Culture and Politics from Georgetown University (2004), and his M.Sc. in Political Sociology from the London School of Economics (2006). His interests include the history of labor in settler-capitalist societies, and postcolonial studies. Before coming to Yale, Eli worked as an intern for Labor Notes magazine in Detroit.
Myra
Jones-Taylor (Joint with Anthropology) received her BA in American Studies from Northwestern University in 1997. As a fifth-year student, she is currently conducting ethnographic fieldwork for her dissertation on community efforts to improve quality and access to child care in the city of New Haven. She is also a member of the New Haven School Readiness Council, and on the Board of Directors for All Our Kin, a local organization created to support families by empowering and educating parents in an effort to provide all children with high-quality early care and education. Myra is married and has two children, ages four and two.
Jinan Joudeh received her BA in English from Duke University (2001) and an MA in English (Critical Theory) from the University of Sussex (2002). She is currently writing her dissertation on hoaxes and literature, focusing on the work of Edgar Allan Poe, Mark Twain and Henry James. Her other interests include modern literature and critical theory. ception' of deconstruction in the United States.
Leah
Mancina Khaghani (Joint PhD in African American
Studies) received her BA from the University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor in Political Science and English Literature.
Before coming to Yale, she worked in Washington, DC where
she was active in Middle Eastern American politics and
studied at Georgetown's Center for Contemporary Arab
Studies. Leah's general interests include postcolonial
studies, diaspora, race, nationalism and third world
feminism. Specifically, she explores issues pertaining
to the Middle Eastern community in the United States
and African Americans around issues of identity formation
and political mobilization.
Mark
Krasovic grew up in Piscataway, NJ, and recently
began to wonder why he never visited Newark in all that
time. This has led him to his dissertation, a study of
the multiple meanings and political uses of "urban
crisis." It's currently titled, "The Struggle
for Newark: Narrating Urban Crisis at the End of the
Twentieth Century." Mark majored in comparative
literature and anthropology at Rutgers and received a
masters in American Studies from Michigan State before
coming to Yale. He's most interested in cultural approaches
to recent political history, especially the decline of
the New Deal order and the ascendancy of a conservative
national politics. Other interests include the history
of education, film and television studies, and the writing
of history.
Hong Liang received her B.A. in English Language and Literature and M.A. in American Studies at Beijing Foreign Studies University. Upon graduation in 2000, she taught English language and US history courses in her alma mater. She was a Fulbright professional associate at Yale in 2004-05 to do research in US transnational and international history with a focus on cultural hybridity and modernity. She is interested in the interplay of race, class, and power in the Asian American experience, especially the experience of the Chinese students in the US during the exclusion era.
Ben
Looker received his B.A. in 2000 from Washington
University in St. Louis, with majors in Urban Studies
and Music, and his M.A. from Goldsmiths College, University
of London. He received a Fulbright to Canada in 2001-02
to research ethnicity and the arts in Toronto. Interests
include urban history and theory, empire and the city
in popular culture, the Black Arts Movement, and jazz
history and historiography.
Kari
M. Main. B.A. U.S. History, University of Puget Sound;
M.A. Winterthur Program in Early American Culture and
Museum Studies certification, University of Delaware,
1997; M.A. Thesis: Pursing the Things of This World:
Furniture made at the Brigham City Cooperative from 1874-1888.Dissertation
title: History, Memory, and Faith: Using the Past in
Utah-- my project examines the formation of three Salt
Lake museums as cultural constructions of interior landscapes
in which objects are arranged and interpreted for a variety
of ends that allow visitors to experience the past. Additional
Interests: Material culture, American religious history,
the intersection of faith and artifact, and the American
West.
Simeon
Man received his B.A. in History and American Ethnic Studies from the University of Washington (2005). His academic interests include Asian American history and cultural studies and U.S. cultural and intellectual history, with a focus on the transnational practices of Asian American radicalism and the intricacies of liberalism, race and empire.
Monica Muñoz Martinez received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Ethnic Studies with
Honors and a second concentration in American Civilization from Brown University
in 2006. Martinez is the recipient of the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship,
the CV Starr National Service Fellowship, the Karen T. Romer Undergraduate
Teacher Research Assistantship (UTRA), and received the Outstanding Honors
Thesis Award for her work entitled "No Se Dejan: The Legacy of Collaboration
And Leadership in Uvalde, TX". Her thesis investigates a working class
Mexican American school walkout in 1970 and reevaluates traditional
qualifications of leadership in grassroots activism. This history documents
the contributions of parents in the Mexican American Parents Association during
the school walkout by highlighting the collaboration between mothers and
students during the protest. Martinez will continue her research on Mexican
American social movements in the American southwest in the American Studies
program.
Uri
McMillan (joint with African-American Studies) received
his B.A. in English from Rice University. His academic
interests include 20th century Afro-American and American
literature, queer theory, film, and cultural studies.
His most recent research focused on 20th century narratives
of racial passing and the ways in which language and
racial/ same-sex desire expose the ultimate instability
of race and identity.
April
Merleaux received a B.A. in History from Reed College and an M.S. in Agriculture, Food, and Environment from Tufts University School of Nutrition Science and Policy. She studies the political and cultural aspects of farming and food, particularly in the twentieth century. She is interested in the global and local relationships between production and consumption, and various reform movements aimed at these processes. She is also interested in transnational histories; labor migrancy; children as workers and child labor reformers; the relationships among empire, race, labor, culture and economy. She is planning a dissertation on the cultural politics of sugar in the early twentieth century United States empire. She will examine sugar politics as they involved governance in the Philippines, Mexican workers in U.S. sugar beet production, and global plant exploration aimed at improving Louisiana's sugar cane diseases.
Alice
Rebecca Moore grew up in Idaho and Texas. She
received her MFA in Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism
from the Yale School of Drama and her B.A. from Wesleyan
University in Theatre and German Literature. Her interview
with Art Spiegelman and his collaborators, “The
Ephemeral Page Meets the Ephemeral Stage: Comix in Performance,” regarding
their Drawn to Death: A Three Panel Opera, appeared
in Theater 33:1 (2003). Alice has presented
her work at the conferences Thinking PhotographyAgain (Durham
Centre for Advanced Photography Studies) and Rendering
Race Visible: Centralizing the Effects of Racial Realities (University
of Chicago). Her research interests include U.S. visual
culture, the performance of masculinity, and the production
of cultural memory and amnesia. Alice has also worked
as a director, dramaturg, writer, and collector of oral
histories with various theater groups.
Madison Moore earned an Honors BA in French Literature from the University of Michigan (2006), where he wrote an undergraduate thesis on hip-hop style, class and ethnicity in a genre of French gay pornography. Before matriculating at Yale, Madison studied in Paris at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris (“Sciences-Po”) while conducting ethnographic research for the thesis. In 2005 Madison was awarded the Beinecke Fellowship for Graduate Study, and in 2006 the Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship. A classically trained violinist, fashion columnist and artist, Madison’s research interests engage with performance studies; modern and contemporary art; the global art market; luxury industries; mass culture and the everyday; the history and culture of New York City; and queer studies. Madison’s ongoing project is an ode to professional diva Victoria Beckham."
Dara Orenstein grew up in Modesto, CA and graduated from Harvard University in 1996 with a BA in African American Studies. After college she moved to New York City and held various jobs with public defenders and prisoners’ rights advocates. Two weeks before 9/11 she began a yearlong stint as an adjunct lecturer on critical race theory at CUNY’s John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and the experience inspired her to apply to graduate school. Now she is at work on a dissertation that combines a range of concerns — economy, geography, photography, law, and critical theory — to uncover the cultural and political history of foreign trade zones in the United States.
(Angela)
Naomi Paik grew up in West Texas, but moved
to New York as soon as she could, earning her B.A. in
Women's and Gender Studies and Asian American Studies
from Columbia University. Her interests include Asian
American literature and cultural studies, comparative
ethnic studies, critical race theory, the law and literature,
globalism/globalization, im/migration, feminist theory.
Nicholas Parrillo has been pursuing his Ph.D. jointly with a J.D. at Yale Law School, which he completed in 2004. His dissertation focuses on the relationship between the profit motive and the public/private distinction, particularly the importance of commissions and fees in the compensation of American public officials in the early republic and the replacement of those forms of compensation by fixed salaries. His historical and legal interests are in public administration, administrative law, contracts (especially government contracting), business organizations, and property. His publications include "The De-Privatization of American Warfare: How the U.S. Government Used, Regulated, and Ultimately Abandoned Privateering in the Nineteenth Century," Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities, vol. 19 (forthcoming 2007); and "'The Government at the Mercy of Its Contractors': How the New Deal Lawyers Reshaped the Common Law to Challenge the Defense Industry in World War II," Hastings Law Journal, vol. 57 (2005).
Lauren Pearlman (joint with African American Studies) graduated with honors from Wesleyan University with a B.A. in African American Studies (2004). She is primarily interested in the political and cultural legacy of the Black Power movement and the development of black consciousness in the post-Civil Rights era. Other interests include 20th century African American literature and intellectual history and the relationship between scholarship and activism. Before coming to Yale, she worked for a civil rights law firm in Washington, DC and with the Appleseed Foundation in their Austin, Texas office.
Miriam Posner (joint with Film Studies) is a native of San Jose, California, who graduated from Reed College in 2001. One of her interests is the ways that images help construct "official" knowledge, and especially knowledge about the body. Accordingly, her dissertation looks at ways that doctors have used media like film, photographs, X-rays, and PowerPoint to develop and communicate ideas.
Nicholas Parrillo has pursued his Ph.D. jointly with a J.D. at Yale, completed in 2004. His dissertation focuses on the relationship between the profit motive and American government service, in particular the importance of fees-for-service in the compensation of public officials in the early republic and their replacement by fixed salaries over the course of the 19th century. He is interested in the history of administrative law, contracts (especially government contracting), and property. His publications include "The De-Privatization of American Warfare: How the U.S. Government Used, Regulated, and Ultimately Abandoned Privateering in the Nineteenth Century," Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities, vol. 19 (forthcoming 2007); and "'The Government at the Mercy of Its Contractors': How the New Deal Lawyers Reshaped the Common Law to Challenge the Defense Industry in World War II," Hastings Law Journal, vol. 57 (2005), pp. 93-197.
José Jesse Ramírez received his BA in English from Santa Clara University in 2006. His undergraduate thesis, titled "The Ghosts of Radicalisms Past," is a political rereading of Allen Ginsberg and the Beat Generation. He plans to study U.S. social and cultural history, radical left-wing literature and politics, labor movements, racial and ethnic formation, and critical theory.
Emmanuel
Raymundo was
born in Manila and raised in New York City and Toronto.
Shana
L. Redmond (joint with African American Studies)
is currently a union member and organizer. She graduated
from Macalester College with a B.A. in Music and African
American Studies and is pursuing work encompassing identity
politics, transnationalism, cultural production and consumption,
and labor studies. Her first published essay can be found
in Unveiling the Real Terrorist Mind (Xlibris Co., 2002).
Yenisey Rodriguez I received a B.A. with honors in History from the University of Chicago (2006). I was recently awarded a Mellon and Ford predoctoral fellowship to pursue my graduate studies. I am interested in pursuing avenues of research pertaining to the experience of Caribbean migrants across the 20th century. I am particularly interested in exploring citizenship below the legal institutional level in order to consider how cultural and racial boundaries played a significant role in the shaping of migrant communities. By developing an understanding of U.S. immigration as a site of exchange and community formation I will be able to trace the political currents that have shaped Caribbean communities on the U.S. mainland. My overall research interests include how the experience of migrants is connected to problems of work and nationhood as part of a larger critique of labor reform and social justice. Other interests include 20th Century U.S. History, Latin American History, transnationalism, comparative race theory and labor history.
Robert
Sambat. (Joint with African American Studies).
B.A. in Women's Studies and English, Queens College,
City University of New York (Phi Beta Kappa), 1998. Professional
guitarist/ singer/ songwriter/ session musician/ recording
artist; commercial artist/ fantasy illustrationist/ political
cartoonist; fantasy/sci-fi writer/ historical novelist/
occasional poet / dancer. Graduate student advisor/member
of ANAAY (Association of Native Americans at Yale); founding
member/mediator of YGSNA (YAle Group for the Study of
Native America). Active member of the Black Rock Coalition
and vigorous supporter of local bands and music. Research
and teaching interests include: Federal Indian Law, Red
Power and the Resurgence of American Indian Identity
and Culture during the 20th Century; blues music -- its
history, meanings, and applications; phenomenological
approaches to music and performance; theories of racial
and gender formations; 19th century African American
and women's literature. Dissertation, entitled "Blood-Letting," focuses
on the history of blood quantum as a determinant of Indian-ness
and its relationship to self-determination and aboriginal
rights in Indian Country, with a particular emphasis
on the tribal nations of Connecticut.
Elizabeth W. Son is a Ph.D. candidate in American Studies. She received her B.A. in English Literature from Wellesley College (2000) and her M.Phil. from the University of Cambridge (2002). Her interests include Asian American cultural studies, performance theory, transnational gender issues, and trauma and memory in Asian diasporic cultural forms. Her essay, “The Spaces of Engagement of The Medea Project, Theater for Incarcerated Women,” appeared in e-misférica 3.1 (Summer 2006), the on-line journal of the Hemispheric Institute of Performance & Politics. Her dissertation research focuses on the transnational processes of remembering and negotiating the history of Japanese military sexual slavery in Asian and Asian American performances/embodied practices.
David Stein (Joint with African American Studies) was born and raised in Tucson, Arizona. At Wesleyan University, he majored in Black Studies and Sociology. He is a member of the imprisonment industrial complex abolition organization, Critical Resistance. His research focuses on how rehabilitative paradigms are deployed in order to sustain the imprisonment industrial complex in the United States. His greatest intellectual influence is the work of Sylvia Wynter. Other interests include "gangster" rap, eugenic logics, and the idea of borders.
Quan Tran graduated from UC Irvine with a double-major in Asian American Studies and Comparative Literature and a minor in German Studies. Her research curiosity hovers around cultural production in the Vietnamese diaspora and comparative colonial encounters through visual representation. Her creative energy finds its home on the pages of damau.org, a bilingual literary website, under her faux pseudonym trầntụêquân. She is also the new Graduate Assistant at Yale’s Asian American Cultural Center.
Van Truong grew up in South San Diego. She received her B.A. in Writing-Literature with a minor in Ethnic Studies from U.C. San Diego (1999). Before coming to Yale, she worked with various nonprofit arts and community development efforts in Los Angeles. Her research interests include comparative ethnic studies and literature, particularly related to issues of im/migration, diasporic identity/community formations, border studies, popular culture, and performance.
Charlie Samuya Veric, Ph.D. student in American Studies and member of the Working Group on Globalization and Culture, had been previously educated at the University of the Philippines and Ateneo de Manila University. He has edited the critical anthologies of two Filipino nationalist writers, titled Suri at Sipat: Araling Ka Amado (2004) and Anticipating Filipinas: Reading Bienvenido Lumbera as Critic (2006). Anticipating Filipinas is a finalist for the National Book Awards in the Philippines. His interests include postcolonial studies, cultural theory, and American literature in the longue duree. His most recent publications have appeared in American Quarterly, Common Knowledge, andRethinking History. He also writes and translates poetry.
Susie
Woo received her BA in art history from UC Irvine and her MA in Asian American studies from UCLA. Between academic programs, she worked at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art coordinating various outreach programs for teens and professional development programs for teachers. Her dissertation focuses on Korean War migrants, namely military brides and adoptees, who entered the U.S. after the war and before the Immigration Act of 1965. She is especially interested in how this particular group of women and children affected U.S. and Korean notions of race, kinship, citizenship and nation.
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