色情视频

色情视频 faculty receive awards to advance research in humanities

The NEH awards are for research and programs at Hispanic-Serving Institutions.

Friday, January 12, 2024
(L to R): Walter Penrose , Jr., Amira Jarmakani, Erika Robb Larkins, Kristal Bivona.
(L to R): Walter Penrose , Jr., Amira Jarmakani, Erika Robb Larkins, Kristal Bivona.

New National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) grants for 260 projects across the country totaling $33.8 million have been awarded, and four faculty from the 色情视频 College of Arts and Letters (CAL) are recipients. 

Walter Penrose Jr., associate professor of history, and Amira Jarmakani, professor of women鈥檚 studies, are recipients of the . The award 鈥渟trengthens the humanities at Hispanic-Serving Institutions by encouraging and expanding humanities research opportunities for individual faculty and staff members,鈥 according to the NEH. 

Erika Robb Larkins, director of the Behner Stiefel Center for Brazilian Studies, and Kristal Bivona, co-director, received a award. This grant funds educational resources, programs, curricula, and other projects to enhance teaching and learning in the humanities. 

鈥淲ork in the humanities is central to the mission of our college and the university,鈥 said CAL Interim Dean Ronnee Schreiber. 鈥淭he Awards for Faculty supports our extraordinary CAL faculty who will use the funding to complete book projects based on crucial investigations of history and race. The Humanities Initiatives award will strengthen programming of the already flourishing Behner Stiefel Center for Brazilian Studies. We are extremely proud of these accomplishments.鈥 

Penrose will use the grant to continue research on his forthcoming book on Artemisia II, celebrated as one of the most virtuous of women from antiquity to the early modern period. 鈥淚n looking at the Amazons in 鈥榃onder Woman鈥 for a 2019 article that I wrote, I noted that the history of feminism was understood by U.S. historians to have begun in the 19th century,鈥 Penrose said. 鈥淟ooking further afield, my investigations revealed a different picture: feminism in Europe had roots going back to the 15th century Renaissance, when Christine de Pisan employed ancient examples of smart, capable, and powerful women such as Artemisia and Sappho to argue against the intense misogyny of her times.鈥

Inspiration for the book subject comes from Penrose鈥檚 longtime interest in feminism, instilled in him by his dissertation adviser at the City University of New York Graduate Center, Sarah  Pomeroy, whose groundbreaking work focused on correcting omissions of ancient women in the historical record.

Penrose intends to write the first ever monograph-length work exploring the life and legacy of Artemisia II 鈥 to correct the historical record of this powerful woman who lived in the fourth century BCE.

Jarmakani will work on her forthcoming book, 鈥淲eapons of Mass Dissemination: Apprehending Digital Anti-Muslim Racism,鈥 which investigates how viral memes, images, and stories that portray Muslims as a dangerous threat to the U.S. can perpetuate gendered, anti-Muslim racism. 

鈥淚 have long been interested in, and especially troubled by, the way that racist representations can have material, and even deadly, ramifications for those who are associated with them,鈥 Jarmakani said. 鈥淢y first and second books examine how orientalist representations in U.S. popular culture have helped fuel the war on terror, offering spurious justification for the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan by leaning on stereotypical tropes about terrorism and Islam as oppressive to women.鈥

In her new book project, Jarmakani, brings into conversation how big data technologies weaponize and fuel hate to spread disinformation on the internet.

Robb Larkins and Bivona鈥檚 project titled, 鈥淏uilding the Humanities through Brazilian Studies鈥 is a three-year curriculum development and public engagement project on the humanistic study of Brazil, foregrounding the cultural production of underrepresented authors, artists, filmmakers, and scholars. 

鈥淔unding from the NEH will enable us to advance our humanities curriculum through three main project components,鈥 Bivona said. 

鈥淔irst, we're collaborating with colleagues from across the university to create core classes focused on cultural production by Black and Indigenous Brazilians as well as courses that exemplify the important role of the humanities in fostering a deep understanding of environmental issues,鈥 Bivona said. 鈥淪econd, we will promote academic engagement that fosters the development of critical Brazilian studies via scholarly and creative events on campus. Third, we will disseminate project outcomes to the public through the expansion of the Center for Brazilian Studies鈥 award-winning digital humanities platform, the Digital Brazil Project.鈥

Collaborating in the project are Esme Murdock and Olivia Chilcote (American Indian Studies); Kishauna Soljour (Classics and Humanities); Daniela Gomes (Africana Studies); and Gillian Sneed (Art  and Design).

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