English — 鶹Ʒ Mon, 15 Jul 2024 15:56:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Delali Kumavie /faculty-experts/delali-kumavie/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 18:46:37 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=173831 Delali Kumavie earned her doctoral degree in English from Northwestern University in 2020. Prior to coming to Syracuse, she was a postdoctoral fellow at the Mahindra Humanities Institute at Harvard University, and a predoctoral fellow at the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African American and African Studies at the University of Virginia. Professor Kumavie’s teaching and research interests are situated at the intersection of Global Black Literature, Studies in Science and Technology, Global Migration, and Black Ecologies. Her current book project,Aerial Geographies: Mapping Aviation in Global Black Literature, analyzes how the sites of air travel—air space, the technology of the airplane, and the infrastructure of the airport—construct, reimagine, and disrupt the figuration of blackness in the world. It argues that the air, the airplane, and the airport are crucial sites for examining not only the contours of Black travel and mobility but also Black life and death. Reading beyond the silos of national boundaries, the book shows that air travel, aviation technologies, and infrastructure must be viewed within the instantiation and persistence of global racial structures.

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Carol W.N. Fadda /faculty-experts/carol-w-n-fadda/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 18:43:10 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=173830 Biography and Research Interests

Carol W.N. Fadda grew up in Beirut, Lebanon where she earned her B.A. and M.A. from the American University of Beirut. She graduated from Purdue University in 2006 with a Ph.D. in contemporary American Literature. Her research interests in Arab and Muslim American Studies, American Studies, critical race and ethnic studies, and transnational studies interrogate structures, logics, and manifestations of US empire, militarization, and exceptionalism that determine the lives of racialized communities in the US and abroad. Her first bookContemporary Arab-American Literature: Transnational Reconfigurations of Citizenship and Belonging(NYU Press, 2014) engages an array of Arab American literary and visual texts from the 1990s onwards that contest negative representations of Arabs and Muslims in the US. In it, Fadda emphasizes feminist, anti-assimilationist, and transnational modes of Arab American and Muslim American belonging that contest the conceived boundaries of the US nation-state and transform hegemonic forms of national membership and citizenship.

Her current book-length project,Carceral States and DissidentCitizenships: Narratives of ResistanceinanAgeof“Tǰ”highlights US global carceral practices by focusing on Arab and Muslim narratives and testimonials of incarceration and confinement coming out of the “War on Terror.” Her study extends to legal and historical documents, literary texts, visual documentation, and political discourse emerging from secret and extra-legal incarceration sites including the Guantánamo Bay and Abu Ghraib prisons.

She is the recipient of an NEH summer grant, a Future of Minority Studies Fellowship, and a Syracuse University Humanities Center Fellowship. Her essays on gender, race, ethnicity, war trauma, cross-racial solidarities, and transnational belonging have appeared in a variety of journals and edited collections.

She serves as the editor of theat Syracuse University Press.

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Silvio Torres-Saillant /faculty-experts/silvio-torres-saillant/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 18:37:11 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=173829 Biography

Silvio Torres-Saillant, Professor in the English Department, is Dean’s Professor of the Humanities in the College of Arts and Sciences, where he formerly headed the Latino-Latin American Studies Program, served as Director of the Humanities Council, and held the post of William P. Tolley Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Humanities. His books includeThe Once and Future Muse: The Poetry and Poetics of Rhina P.Espaillat[with Nancy Kang] (University of Pittsburgh P. 2018),Caribbean Poetics(2nd ed. Peepal Tree Press 2013; 1st. ed. Cambridge University P. 1997),An Intellectual History of theCaribbean(Palgrave 2006),El tigueraje intelectual(2nd ed. Mediabyte 2011; 1st ed. CIAM/Manati 2002),Elretorno de las yolas(2nd ed. Editora Universitaria Bonó 2019; 1st ed. LaTrinitaria/Manatí 1999), andThe Dominican Americans[with Ramona Hernández] (Greenwood 1998).

He co-founded La Casita Cultural Center, an off-campus unit of the College of Arts and Sciences conceived as a bridge of communication, collaboration, and exchange between the school and the Latino population of the city while promoting the Hispanic heritages of Central New York. Before coming to SU, he founded the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute, an interdisciplinary research at the City College of New York, and taught in the English Department of Hostos Community College, CUNY. As a visitor, he has taught at Amherst College, Harvard University, the Universidad de Cartagena, and Colombia’s Universidad Nacional. He lectures widely in Europe, Latin America, the Caribbean, and the United States.

A member of the Editorial Board of the University of Houston’s Recovering the US Hispanic Literary Heritage Project, he is Associate Editor ofLatino Studies(Palgrave) and has edited the New World Studies Series for the University of Virginia Press.

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Ethan Madarieta /faculty-experts/ethan-madarieta/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 18:29:17 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=173828 Ethan Madarieta euskal-amerikarra da. He earned his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature with a graduate Minor in Latina/o Studies and a Certificate in Holocaust, Genocide, and Memory Studies from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2020. Professor Madarieta’s research and teaching interests lie at the intersection of Latin American, Latine/x, Black, and Indigenous studies with specializations in Latin American, Latine/x, and Pan-American Indigenous theory and literatures. His research and teaching engage memory studies, queer and trans* studies, Latine/x, Black, and Indigenous studies, and critical race and ethnicity studies. His current book project, tentatively titledThe Body is (Not) the Land: Memory, Translation, and the Territorial Aporia, thinks through conceptions of sovereignty, Indigenous presence, and precedence in the literatures and political performances (such as the ongoing hunger strikes) of Mapuche Indigenous peoples of Wallmapu [Chile and Argentina]. Through these sites, the book considers how and when Indigenous bodies and land intersect, and in what ways state and Indigenous conceptions of the body and land are distinct and overlapping.The Body Is (Not) the Landattends to the ontoepistemological underpinnings of Indigenous territorial precedence as body-territorial relation and pursues the possibilities of restitution beyond juridical means.

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Chris Hanson /faculty-experts/chris-hanson/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 18:25:11 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=173825 Biography

After completing a BA in Media Studies at Carleton College, Chris Hanson worked for a number of years in video game, esports, and software development, and later assisted with the planning and production of an educational series and content for PBS. Chris returned to academia in Los Angeles and received his MA and PhD in Critical Studies at the University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts. His first book.(Indiana University Press, 2018), examines the function of time in digital and analog games, and he is currently completing a book about game designer Roberta Williams.

He serves as an advising faculty member for the Goldring Arts Journalism Program in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, and he co-teaches the Newhouse course “Esports and Media” with Professor Olivia Stomski (Newhouse). Chris has also taught courses in the Renée Crown University Honors Program and for Project Advance. He serves as the faculty advisor for the university’s Gaming Club and Esports Club, and assisted with the planning and development of Syracuse University’sand thein Bird Library.

Areas of Supervision

Game studies, game and esports industry studies, television studies, genre, emerging media, avant-garde film and video, and temporality.

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Will Scheibel /faculty-experts/will-scheibel/ Tue, 22 Feb 2022 18:21:06 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=173823 I’m Professor of Film and Screen Studies in the Department of English and Chair of the department. A specialist in U.S. film history, I am primarily interested in stardom and performance, genres and modes of popular storytelling (horror, film noir, melodrama), and Classical Hollywood cinema. One of my central research questions asks, how do legendary Hollywood figures (filmmakers, stars, proprietary characters) achieve legibility as classic-film icons?

​Currently, I am writing a book under contract with Wayne State University Press about the Universal Classic Monsters (Dracula, Frankenstein’s Monster, The Wolf Man, etc.). Exploring the impact of film circulation and paratextual material on the creation of a canon, this project undertakes a kind of monster-hunt across time: from the studio period, when the serialization of horror films made Universal Pictures synonymous with the genre, to the franchise era, when the Universal monsters gained afterlives as brand ambassadors for a media conglomerate. The book is tentatively titledMonsters in the Movie Lab: Universal Pictures and Classic Hollywood Horror.

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