| Current Fellows |
2009-2010Joseph BauerkemperJeannine Murray-Román 2008-2010Sze-wei AngMaya Boutagou Greg Cohen Marcela Fuentes Travis Workman 2007-2009Fatima El-TayebKris Manjapra Sonali Pahwa Sarah Valentine 2006-2008Elsa ChenAlessandra Di Maio Eulàlia Moles Babli Sinha 2009-2010Joseph BauerkemperJoseph Bauerkemper received his PhD in American Studies from the University of Minnesota where his areas of specialization were indigenous literatures, intellectual history, and political theory. He spent the 2008-2009 academic year at the University of Illinois as a Chancellor's Postdoctoral Fellow in the American Indian Studies program. From a perspective deeply informed by indigenous studies, transnational cultural studies, intellectual history, and political theory, Joseph's current book project explores nationhood and history as narrated in the fiction and non-fiction of influential American Indian intellectuals including Anishinaabe writer Gerald Vizenor, Creek/Cherokee writer Craig Womack, Choctaw writer LeAnne Howe, and Laguna Pueblo writer Leslie Marmon Silko. Joseph has published articles in Studies in American Indian Literatures and American Studies. He also has two essays on Native cinema forthcoming in edited collections. Along with his research and writing, Joseph teaches American literature and transnational indigenous literature courses for the UCLA Department of English. Jeannine Murray-RománJeannine Murray-Román is a recent graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles department of Comparative Literature. Her current book project, "Performing in the Text: The Uses of Live Arts in Contemporary Caribbean Writing," places the Anglophone, Francophone and Hispanophone literary traditions of the Caribbean in conversation around the question of how performance practices inform the aesthetics and politics of contemporary Caribbean writing. She is currently working on Guillermo Cabrera Infante's practices of rewriting and the trope of the apocalypse in the Americas. In Winter 2010, she will teach Comp Lit 190, "The Hyperglossia of Oscar Wao," a course that uses Junot Díaz's novel as a starting point for exploring his literary interlocutors, such as Edwige Danticat and Alan Moore, as well as theories of the Caribbean and its diaspora. 2008-2010Sze-wei AngSze Wei Ang is a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Comparative Literature where she teaches classes focused on questions of race, religion, ethics, and the nation-state within the areas of Asian American literature and South East Asian Studies. She defended her dissertation at Cornell University in the summer of 2008 and has begun working on a book manuscript that traces how ethical claims converge or diverge within comparative multicultural contexts. Her research also attempts to understand the role of religion or religious discourse in racial formations within liberal democratic states.Maya BoutaghouDr. Maya Boutaghou is a French and Algerian citizen who speaks four languages (Arabic, English, French, and Spanish). She completed her dissertation in Comparative Literature at the University of Limoges (France) exploring the link between the emergence of the novel and the construction of national and cultural identity in four major colonized areas (Australia, Bengal, Egypt, and Mexico) at the end of the 19th century. While completing her dissertation, she taught for several years in Tunisia (University of Gabès) in the Department of French and Francophone Studies. She has given talks and published papers on Francophone-Anglophone postcolonial female writers such as Assia Djebar, Anita Desai, and Anada Devi. She wrote a novel (Voyage d'Alger) -hopefully to be published in the not too distant future- and is now involved in a new book-length research project, Emergent Female Voices. Currently she is a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Women's Studies.You can read online : « Langues, Corps, Histoire », article sur Assia Djebar et Anita Desai, Synergies-Inde, revue dirigée par le Professeur Jacques Cortès et Mme Vidya Vencatesan, nº2, 2007, p.355-364. Greg CohenGreg Cohen earned his Ph.D. in Romance Languages and Literatures from Harvard University in June, 2008. As an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, he is currently at work on a book manuscript titled Cinema, Spatial Thought, and the Ends of Modernity. Taking as its starting point the underlying tensions between non-urban geography and modern urban discourse in Argentine and Brazilian films of the 1960s and 70s, the study reappraises some of the foundations of critical theory's so-called spatial turn, particularly with respect to the wider-ranging critique of modernity during the period. More broadly, Greg's research explores the intersections between "minor" new wave cinemas, poststructuralist spatial theory, geographic discourse, and modernist architecture and urban design.At present, Greg also holds an appointment as Lecturer in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at UCLA, where he teaches an undergraduate course on Latin American cinema titled "Film Form and Revolution in the Latin American Sixties." In the spring, he will also offer an interdisciplinary graduate seminar titled "Minor Cinemas, Spatial Thought and the Transnational." Marcela FuentesMarcela Fuentes is a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the department of Theater at UCLA. She received her PhD in Performance Studies at New York University in May 2008. Her work explores contemporary cultural production in the Americas to analyze how artists and activists use a variety of media, the Internet, Closed Circuit TV, the street, and theatre, to challenge traditional notions of politics in relation to location, simulation, and embodiment. She is the co-editor, with Diana Taylor, of an anthology of readings in performance studies to be released in Spanish by Fondo de Cultura Económica (México). From 2004 to 2008, she served as Managing Editor of e-misférica, the biannual online journal published by the Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics. Marcela also works in theater, performance art, and independent radio as a director, producer, dramaturge, and performer.Travis WorkmanTravis Workman recently received his Ph.D. in East Asian Literature from Cornell University. His dissertation, Culture, Time, and Form in the Japanese Empire (1919-1945), considered various modes of transnationalism prominent in the Japanese empire, including cultural cosmopolitanism, Marxist internationalism, imperial nationalism, and minor literature. He was particularly interested in how discourses and literatures of the period dealt with questions of historical time, and how their ideas of historical time were informed by humanist universalisms. He is teaching one course in the Asian Languages and Cultures Department titled "Ideas of Culture in East Asian Studies," and another course in ALC and Comparative Literature titled "Empire and the Human Sciences."2007-2009Fatima El-TayebFatima El-Tayeb is an Andrew W. Mellon postdoctoral fellow and Visiting Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is housed in the Comparative Literature department She is also Assistant Professor for African American Culture and Film in the Department of Literature at UC San Diego. Originally from Germany, she was active in black, migrant, and feminist organizing there and in the Netherlands. She is a former member of the Amsterdam-based queer of color collective Strange Fruit, co-author of the movie Everything will be fine, and co-founder of the Black European Studies Project. Her first book, published in German, explored the relationship between race and national identity in early 20th century Germany. She has published a number of articles at the intersection of queer and feminist theory and diaspora studies, most recently “Urban Diasporas. Race, Identity, and Popular Culture in a Post-Ethnic Europe”, (JCAS Symposium Series 22 10/2006); “Experimentelle (Frei)Raeume: Materielle Realitaeten von Kuenstler/innen of Color,” in Ha/al-Samarai/Mysorekar (eds), re/visionen. Poskoloniale Perspektiven von People of Color auf Rassismus, Kulturpolitik und Widerstand in Deutschland (Muenster: Unrast 2007) and “Blackness and Its (Queer) Discontents,” in: Nagl/Lennox (eds), Remapping Black Germany (Amherst: UMass Press, forthcoming). She currently works on a book on the racialization of migrants and minorities in contemporary Europe and the queering of ethnicity as a minoritarian counterstrategy.Kris ManjapraKris Manjapra completed his dissertation in the Harvard History Department in June 2007. A student of modern intellectual history from a transnational perspective, his fundamental interest is in how genealogies of thought develop within global arenas, and amongst entangled histories. Kris Manjapra¹s research deals on modern South Asian and modern German thought, anti-colonial cosmopolitanisms of the interwar years, South Asian diasporic nationalism, the disenchantment of the world in Germany, and the modernist discourses that bridged the colonial divide and occupied colonial and European thinkers alike. His theoretical interests are in hermeneutics and postcolonial historiography. He has published an article on the travels of Indian anti-colonial thinkers to WWI Germany in the Journal of Global History (November 2006), and he is currently working on his book manuscript on Cosmopolitan Encounter between Indian Revolutionaries and German Radicals, 1905-1939.Sonali PahwaSonali Pahwa is a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Theatre department. She teaches a graduate seminar, “Ethnography of Theatre”, in that department, as well as “Language, Media and Community in the Arab World” in the anthropology department. She earned her PhD in sociocultural anthropology at Columbia University in 2007. She is currently working on a book manuscript titled Staging Difference: Nation and Generation in Contemporary Egyptian Theatre. Her areas of specialization include anthropology of performance, linguistic anthropology, transnational media, and the Arab world.Sarah ValentineIn May 2007, Sarah Valentine defended her dissertation, "The Poetry and Thought of Gennady Aigi" in the Slavic Department at Princeton University. The dissertation examines the poetry of Chuvash poet Gennady Aigi (1934-2006), his role in the late-Soviet Moscow avant-garde, and the problems associated with studying work such as his that lies on the canonical and political fringe. Currently, Sarah is a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow and Lecturer in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Her postdoctoral research considers the contribution of marginalized writers and artists to Moscow's avant-garde movements of the 1960s-1980s, and she is at work on the book-length study tentatively titled: Gennady Aygi and the Moscow Avant-Garde: The Politics of Difference in Late-Soviet Unofficial Art. This year Sarah will teach "Russian Literature through World Cinema" and "Russia and Asia" in the Slavic Department. Concurrently Valentine holds a Templeton Foundation grant for research at Princeton's Center for the Study of Religion, where she participates in the interdisciplinary "Cognitive and Textual Methods Seminar." Her research for this project explores the intersection of spirituality and social organization in Moscow avant-garde art of the same era. In addition to her academic work, Sarah writes and translates poetry. 2006-2008Elsa ChenElsa Hsiang-chun Chen earned her Ph.D. in Art History from the University of Leeds, UK. Her dissertation examined overlooked art exhibitions held since 1993 to commemorate the February 28 Incident, a massacre that occurred in 1947. The commemorations of the Incident in general were instrumental in laying the foundation for new Taiwanese nation building, which is claimed by some to have worsened already conflicted relations in Taiwan as well as in the troubled Pacific region dominated by China, Japan, and the US. Her postdoctoral research investigates how works by renowned contemporary immigrant Chinese American artists migrate transnationally in terms of their aesthetics, cultural signification, historical situations, and cultural reception. She is also initiating a research project with Prof. Griselda Pollock on how European and North American feminisms and feminist art histories have been encountered in Asian art worlds. Her recent publications include The Margins of Becoming: Identity and Culture in Taiwan, Harrison and Storm (eds.), (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2006); and two monographs Faces of Memory: the Issue of Self in Art (Taipei: Sanmin, 2005), and Translating Dialogue: Journeys between Art and Social Contexts (Taipei: ArtCo, 2004). Her curatorial project on transnational Asian migration in Taiwan/Asia, City of Swallows: Migration, Post/Colonial Memory, and New Taiwan Colour (2006), was awarded the 1st Prize of the Production Grants to Independent Curators in Visual Arts by the National Culture and Arts Foundation in Taiwan in 2005. Alessandra Di MaioAlessandra Di Maio is an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow and Visiting Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. She teaches migrant literature and culture in the Italian department and literature from the African diaspora in the department of Comparative Literature. She earned her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and her Italian doctorate in Literary Sciences at the University of Bari, Italy. She is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Palermo, Italy. Among her publications are the volumes Tutuola at The University: The Italian Voice of a Yoruba Ancestor (Rome: Bulzoni, 2000), the collection An African Renaissance (ed., Palermo: Eurografica, 2006), andEulàlia MolesEulàlia Moles is an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow and Visiting Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. She teaches Chicana and Catalan Transnational Feminist Discourses for the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and the Department of Chicana/o Studies. She earned her Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies from the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of California at Berkeley in December 2004, with a Designated Emphasis in Women, Gender, and Sexuality from the Women’s Studies Department. She is currently working on Envisioning Resistant Spaces Through Chicana and Catalan Decolonial Writings of the 1970s-1990s in Present Globalization, a comparison between the subalternities of Chicana and Catalan feminist and queer women writers who continue to resist histories of Castilian Spanish cultural and political imperialisms.Babli SinhaBabli Sinha is an Andrew W. Mellon postdoctoral fellow and Visiting Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. She teaches 20th century British and anglophone literature, film, and post-colonial theory in the Department of English. This year, her courses include “The Imperial Romance and Its Critics” and “Narrative in the British Modernist Novel.” She has recently published Fearing the close-up: the threat of spatial intimacy in Indian cinema of the 1920s ( New Delhi: Biblio, 2005). She is currently undertaking two projects: an article entitled “Empire Films and the Dissemination of Americanism” and a book, Entertaining the Raj: Cinema and the Cultural Intersections of Britain, the United States, and India in the Early Twentieth Century.For more information, please contact Laura Clennon via e-mail at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it . |

