The H & S Pre-Doctoral Diversity Fellowship Program welcomes three new faculty members for this year on Wed. Oct. 7th from 4-5:15pm in Klingenstein Lounge. Refreshments served!
Come and meet the Fellows! All are welcome. We we will have an opportunity to learn about their scholarship and teaching and mingle.
Hayley Marama Cavino (Women’s and Gender Studies) is a doctoral candidate in Cultural Foundations of Education & Women's and Gender Studies at Syracuse University. Her dissertation, entitled “Becoming the Un/Broken Hearted: Settler Colonialismi, Māori Intimate Economy, & The Production of Sexual Violation in Aotearoa/New Zealand” combines decolonial and indigenous/postcolonial feminist theory to engage the problem of gender violence impacting Māori/indigenous peoples in New Zealand. Her teaching areas are intersectionality, women's and gender studies, indigenous gender relations, indigenous belonging and claims to nation, migration, globalization and development, and solidarity across difference. She affiliates tribally to Ngati Pukenga and Ngati Whiti (Aotearoa/New Zealand).
Eric M. Glover (Department of Theatre Arts) is a doctoral candidate in English at Princeton University who has completed all but his dissertation, an antiracist history of the US musical. Before earning a master's degree in performance studies at New York University, he earned a bachelor's degree in art history with a minor in English literature at Swarthmore College. His duties will be to advise on dramaturgy and teach a seminar that brings #blacklivesmatter to the deliberation and discussion of the US musical.
Ashley R. Hall (Department of Communication Studies) is a doctoral candidate in Communication Studies at the University of Pittsburgh. She received her M.A. in Speech Communication from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale and her BA in Communication Studies from Christopher Newport University. Her dissertation, tentatively entitled “Theorizing Rival Rhetorics of Black Maternities: Imagining Reproductive Life in Social Death,” combines rhetorical criticism, Black feminist theory, Black Queer studies and Afro-futurist & pessimist studies in a rhetorical (re)imagination of Black mothering and maternity in an anti-Black world. Her teaching areas are public speaking, rhetorical criticism, communication and culture, race and rhetoric and Black feminist theory. At her Master's program she received the Thomas J. Pace teaching award in addition to her PROMPT fellowship. During her time at PITT, she received summer grants to conduct archival research resulting in a public talk entitled,"Renegotiating Archival Absence: Black women, Agency, and the Issue of <Reproductive Freedom>", where she also held the K. LeRoy Irvis fellowship.
(Photo: Eric Glover)
Individuals with disabilities requiring accommodations should contact Brooke Hansen at kbhansen@ithaca.edu or (607) 274-1735. We ask that requests for accommodations be made as soon as possible.
https://www.ithaca.edu/intercom/article.php/20151002100418791