Nolte Hall


Photo credit: Amy Sheppard

Fellowship Recipients, 2007-08


Fall 2007

Stuart Albert
Strategic Management and Organization, Carlson School of Management
“Principles of Timing”

Kenneth Mark Anderson
Asian Languages and Literatures, College of Liberal Arts
“Imperial Difference: Japan and the State of Exception in the Pacific”

Dan L. Burk
Law School
“True Names: Ownership and Control of Knowledge Representation”

David Chang
History, College of Liberal Arts
“Hawaiian Global Geographies in the Age of High Imperialism”

Michael Eble
Studio Art, Humanities, UM Morris
“Washed Away: Observations on Louisiana Coastal Erosion and its Implications on Cajun Culture”

Michael Gaudio
Art History, College of Liberal Arts
“Making Liberal Learning in Early Modern Europe”
Working with J. B. Shank

Susan D. Jones
Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, College of Biological Sciences
History of Science and Technology, Institute of Technology
“Domesticating Anthrax, Globalizing Biomedical Knowledge”

Ellen Messer-Davidow
English, College of Liberal Arts
“The Spider's Web: The Judicial Discourse of Racial Discrimination”

Joachim Savelsberg
Sociology, College of Liberal Arts
“Collective Memories of Atrocities: The Formative Role of Trials and Truth Commissions”

J. B. Shank
History, College of Liberal Arts
“Making Liberal Learning in Early Modern Europe”
Working with Michael Gaudio

Spring 2008

Elizabeth Beaumont
Political Science, College of Liberal Arts
“A Republic of Rights: Reclaiming the Public Sources of Constitutional Change”

Leo C. Chen
Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature, College of Liberal Arts
“Real Time: Cinematic Time and Documentary Reality”

Maria Damon
English, College of Liberal Arts
“Text, Textile, Exile”

Jigna Desai
Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, College of Liberal Arts
“Planet Bollywood: The Globalization of Indian Cinema”

Sumanth Gopinath
Music, College of Liberal Arts
“Ringtones, Or, the Auditory Logic of Globalization”

Erin Kelly
Sociology, College of Liberal Arts
“Rethinking Clockworks: Work, Careers and the Life Course”
Working with Phyllis Moen

Phyllis Moen
Sociology, College of Liberal Arts
“Rethinking Clockworks: Work, Careers and the Life Course”
Working with Erin Kelly

Marynel Ryan
History, Social Sciences, UM Morris
“Locating the Household in the Modern Production of Knowledge”

Arun Saldanha
Geography, College of Liberal Arts
“The Philosophical Geography of Race”

Hoon Song
Anthropology, College of Liberal Arts
“Cybersuicide and Martyrdom: Sovereignty and Biological Citizenship in Contemporary South Korea”

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