Women's and gender studies — 鶹Ʒ Thu, 25 Jul 2024 16:11:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 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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William Robert /faculty-experts/william-robert/ Wed, 22 Dec 2021 19:58:55 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=167859 Research and Teaching Interests:

William Robert teaches and writes about intersections and interactions of religion and performance. He is especially interested in limit-experiences and limit-crossings as performances of religion. He pays particular attention to mysticism, sexuality, and animality as sites where these experiences and crossings happen, focusing on case studies in ancient Greek and medieval Christian contexts. And he considers how such performances of religion can affect how we figure and refigure religion. To do so, he combines historical, textual, philosophical, and corporeal approaches to studying religion with queer theory and performance studies.

Education:

PhD Religious Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2005 MA Religion, University of Chicago Divinity School, 1999 MA Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities, University of Chicago, 1997 BA Philosophy and Literature, Davidson College, 1996

Academic Positions:

Associate Professor, Department of Religion, Syracuse University, 2016–presentAffiliated Faculty, Department of Women’s and Gender Studies
Affiliated Faculty, Programs in LGBTQ Studies and in Medieval and Renaissance Studies
Assistant Professor, Department of Religion, Syracuse University, 2011–16 Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Religion, Syracuse University, 2010–11 Humanities Postdoctoral Faculty Fellow, Department of Religion, Syracuse University, 2006–10 Instructor, Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Louisiana State University, 2005–06

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Kishi Ducre /faculty-experts/kishi-ducre/ Wed, 22 Dec 2021 19:32:08 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=167868 Research and Teaching Interests

Environmental Sociology; Environmental Justice Research Methodology; Race, Class, and Gender Stratification; Geographic Information Systems & Spatial Analysis; Theater of the Oppressed and African American Research Methods.

Selected Publications

Racialized Spaces and the Emergence of Environmental Injustice (in) Echoes of Poisoned Well: Global Memories of Environmental Justice. Edited by Silvia Washington, Paul Rosier, and Heather Goodall. forthcoming

Addressing Environmental and Food Justice toward Dismantling the School-to-Prison Pipeline: Poisoning and Imprisoning Youth, (co-edited with Anthony K. Nocella and Johnny Lupinacci) Palgrave McMillan, 2016

“Race(ing) to the Baby Market: The Political Economy of Overcoming Infertility” in Motherhood 2.0: Consumption, Communication, and Mothering in the Twenty-first Century (editors Jennifer L. Borda, Anne T. Demo, and Charlotte H. Krolokke), University of Alabama Press, 2015

A Place We Call Home: Gender, Race, and Justice in Syracuse, Syracuse University Press, 2012

“Extending Timeline of Environmental Justice Claims: Redlining Map Digitization Project” (co-authored with Eli Moore) Environmental Practice Journal 13 (4), December 2011: 325-339.

“Katrina as Postscript to Racialized Spaces in Louisiana” in Seeking Higher Ground: The Race, Public Policy and Hurricane Katrina Crisis Reader (editors Manning Marable, Ian Steinberg, and Kristen Clarke-Avery), Palgrave MacMillan, 2008

Books

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PJ DiPietro /faculty-experts/pj-dipietro/ Sun, 21 Feb 2021 21:12:03 +0000 /?post_type=faculty-experts&p=173758 Decolonial Feminism; Trans* Studies; Afro-Latinx/Latinx/Chicanx Feminist Theories; Feminist and Socio-Political Philosophy; Native and Indigenous Philosophy.

Dr. DiPietro works at the intersection of decolonial feminism, hemispheric Latinx studies, and trans* studies. With a transdisciplinary approach, they engage anthropology, human geography, and philosophy. They collaborate with various organizations and collectives committed to social justice, including the Democratizing Knowledge Collective at Syracuse University, the Association for Jotería Arts, Activism, and Scholarship (), the decolonial philosophy collaborative, and thetravesticollectives Damas de Hierro and. DiPietro has received a Tinker Foundation Scholarship and an Andrew Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Humanities. They are one of the co-editors ofSpeaking Face to Face: The Visionary Philosophy of María Lugones(SUNY 2019), andTrans Philosophy(forthcoming Fall 2024, University of Minnesota Press). Their single-author bookSideways Selves, The Decolonizing Politics of Transing Matter Across the Américasis forthcoming in 2024 with the University of Texas Press.

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