Archived Faculty and Staff Accomplishments

Archived Faculty & Staff Accomplishments

November 2024

Lise Abrams, Peter W. Stanley Chair of Linguistics and Cognitive Science, co-authored two poster presentations at the 65th annual meeting of the Psychonomic Society, held November 21-24 in New York. These posters, and were collaborations with colleagues at Rhodes College and the University of Florida, respectively.

Aimee Bahng, associate professor of gender and womens studies, traveled to the in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, for a leadership workshop with directors of humanities centers around the country. Bahng also traveled to the in Baltimore, where she presented her work on Coral Futures: Banking on Resilience and chaired another panel on Sovereign Exposures: Cultures of Health on Toxic Grounds, which will be developed into a series of published essays in Masculine Toxicities.

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, was a featured soloist (viola da gamba, violone, and tenor viol) in the Warner Bros. major motion picture , with music by Hildur Gu簸nad籀ttir and starring Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga. Additionally, the documentary film , featuring Bandy as a nyckelharpa soloist in Grant Fondas original score, premiered at the Cambridge Film Festival. Bandy was also featured as a viola da gamba soloist in Bear McCrearys score to (all episodes), which premiered on November 22 on streaming platforms worldwide.

Bandy presented the paper Musical Theologies of Time and Memory in Buxtehudes Jesu dulcis memoria (BuxWV 57) at the fall meeting of the , held at La Sierra University (Riverside, California).

In San Diego and Cardiff-by-the-Sea, California, Bandy performed with Bach Collegium San Diego and GRAMMY簧-nominated tenor Nicholas Phan, in a also recorded for later release in Phans international media project . On November 2 in Pasadena, California, Bandy played baroque double bass in Con Gioia Early Music Ensembles program , directed by Preethi de Silva and featuring works by Christoph Graupner, J. A. Hasse and J. S. Bach. On November 15 and 17, Bandy joined the 91做厙 Choir for their fall performances directed by Donna M. Di Grazia, David J. Baldwin Professor of Music, as a member of the instrumental ensemble Harmonologia 91做厙, performing on G violone, viola da gamba and modern double bass. He also contributed the program note for Dieterich Buxtehudes Ad Manus from Membra Jesu nostri (1680).

Bandy programmed and led a for SoCal Viols (chapter, Viola da Gamba Society of America), held November 2 in South Pasadena, California.

Colin J. Beck, professor of sociology, published an article co-authored with Mlada Bukovansky: Streets and Elites: Corruption Grievances in Contemporary Revolutions in Political Power and Social Theory.

Graydon Beeks, emeritus professor of music, performed as continuo harpsichordist in three arias by Johann Sebastian Bach in a November 2 concert by Con Gioia in Pasadena, California.

Ralph Bolton 61, emeritus professor of anthropology, presented a paper at the annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association in Tampa, Florida. His presentation was part of a session organized by the Association of Senior Anthropologists titled Dynamic Reciprocity in Ethnographic Research: Explorations in Giving Back and Collaborative Praxis. In his paper Beyond Reciprocity: Solidarity? An Ethnographer's Commitment to Friends, Colleagues and Community in Peru, Bolton urged anthropologists to move beyond mere reciprocity to solidarity with the people whose cultures they study.

Paul Cahill, associate professor of Spanish, published a journal article, Mejor esto que nada: Employment and Exploitation in Pablo Garc穩a Casados Dinero, in .

Cahill presented a paper, Multilingual Memory in Reyes Mates Relatos de un viaje por los campos de exterminio, at the 17th biennial Lessons and Legacies Conference: Languages of the Holocaust, held at Claremont McKenna College and the University of Southern California from November 14-17.

Eileen J. Cheng, professor of Asian languages and literatures and faculty director of Oldenborg Center, delivered a paper, Aesthetics of the Ephemeral in Eileen Changs Wartime Memoir, Written on Water at the annual PAMLA conference in Palm Springs, California, on November 7.

Erin Michelle Collins, registrar, was voted in as president-elect of the Executive Board for the at the 2024 Annual Meeting in Seattle. She served as secretary of the Executive Board November 2022-November 2024. Collins will serve as president-elect beginning November 2024 and then as president November 2025 through November 2026. The mission of PACRAO is to provide its members opportunities to learn, engage, collaborate, inform, gather, contribute and promote the best practices and general advancement of higher education and our professions.

Virginie A. Duzer, professor and chair of Romance languages and literatures, participated in the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Associations annual conference in Palm Springs, California, discussing the use of AI in French advanced literature classes in general (and the peculiar case of her fall 2023 Surrealism class) November 10.

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, was a panelist at the Teaching and Learning Center panel discussion Supporting Student Thesis and Independent Research at the Claremont Colleges Library on November 11.

Garcia gave a talk titled The linear targeting problem at the conference Advances in Operator Theory with Applications to Mathematical Physics at Chapman University on November 18.

Esther Hern獺ndez-Medina, assistant professor of Latin American studies and gender and womens studies, presented the paper La Contraofensiva Conservadora Anti-G矇nero y Anti-LGTBQ en la Rep繳blica Dominicana (The Anti-Gender and Anti-LGTBQ Conservative Backlash in the Dominican Republic) on November 6 at the ) in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. On November 14, Hern獺ndez-Medina presented the paper The Right to a Complete Life: The Feminist Movement and the Conservative Backlash in the Dominican Republic at the in Detroit as part of the panel The Right-wing War on Women and Gender, and Feminist/LGBQ+ Responses in Latin America with colleagues from Brazil, Argentina and Bolivia.

Ben Keim, associate professor of classics, delivered two lectures in Buenos Aires, Argentina. On November 8 he delivered a conference paper, The Rhetoric of Honor in Xenophons 插紳硃莉硃莽勳莽, at the triennial meeting of the International Xenophon Society; on November 11 he delivered an invited paper, Xenophon and the Fourth-Century Politics of Athenian Honour, at the second Sokratikoi logoi, Platonikoi logoi conference hosted by the Pontificia Universidad Cat籀lica Argentina.

Talya Klein, visiting assistant professor of theatre, was selected to present her research at the first annual Intimacy Directors and Coordinators Summit in Minneapolis, Minnesota, this coming April. Her presentation is titled The Balanced Badass: Having Your Own Back During Difficult Conversations.

Jun Lang, assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures, delivered a talk titled Toxic Language in Chinese Online Communication: Shifting Meanings and Usages for the panel Language, Culture, and Linguistics at the 121st Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association (PAMLA) Annual Conference in Palm Springs, California, on November 9.

Andrew Law, assistant professor of philosophy, had three articles accepted for publication: Reasons-Responsiveness and the Demarcation Problem (with co-author Taylor W. Cyr) in Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Time Travel, Foreknowledge, and Dependence: A Response to Cyr in Faith and Philosophy and The Fixity of the Past, the Fixity of the Independent, and Local-Miracle Compatibilism in Theoria.

Joyce Lu, associate professor of theatre and Asian American studies, performed with Pangea Playback Theatre Company, directed by Hannah K. Fox, as part of a residency at the University of Oregon hosted by the Division for Equity and Inclusion.

郭喝s project was featured in a trailer filmed and edited by Lola Salgado. Sustenance was supported by a Neighborhood Engagement Arts Residency Grant from the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs.

Richard McKirahan, Edwin Claremont Norton Professor of Classics and professor of philosophy, was one of three invited presenters at the annual (Zoom) meeting of the Society of Ancient Greek Philosophy on November 16. The title of his paper was Introducing Philolaus. Philolaus was a Greek philosopher who until recently has received only a little attention. McKirahan presented a version of the same paper in a colloquium at the University of California at Santa Barbara on November 22.

McKirahan was elected as a member of KOMVOS-node, which describes itself as a think-act, because it undertakes initiatives for the implementation of actions that, taking advantage of the dynamic of Hellenism, will have immediate effect on Greek society, throughout the improvement of the everyday life of Greeks, through the improvement of the economic, cultural, and scientific level.

Susan McWilliams Barndt, professor of politics, published Why Study the Humanities When People Are Dying? in the peer-reviewed journal Public Humanities on November 6.

On November 15, McWilliams published two pieces on the 2024 election: Thinking With the Enemy in a forum on in The Chronicle of Higher Education and We Just Watched the Last Television Election in a forum on in Current.

McWilliams was featured in an article in Newsweek about . On November 7, she appeared on on Fox 26 to discuss the same subject and she was also quoted in a November 11 Psychology Today article that asked the question:

McWilliams spoke at a Claremont McKenna College Open Academy Forum on Should SCOTUS be reformed? She also gave a talk to students at Williams College on interpretive methods in political science. On November 22, McWilliams served as a discussant at the Baldwin At 100 conference at Claremont McKenna, in honor of James Baldwins 100th birthday.

Char Miller, W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History, guest edited the Journal of Arizona Historys . He commissioned and edited the contributions, including a co-authored article for which Lisa Crane, Western Americana Manuscripts Librarian at The Claremont Colleges Library, was the lead author. Miller also contributed two essays, and .

Miller was appointed to the inaugural board of editors for Journal of Texas History.

Miller co-organized the ninth annual meeting of the Eastern Sierra History Conference and presented on his new book Burn Scars: A Documentary History of Fire Suppression, From Colonial Origins to the Resurgence of Cultural Burning. Miller also shared insights on the book in a .

Thomas Muzart, assistant professor of Romance languages and literatures, chaired the panel Utopian and Dystopian Imaginaries in the Francophone World at the 121st Annual Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association Conference on November 8.

Jeff Noh, visiting assistant professor of English, delivered an invited lecture titled Floppy Disk Counterfactuals: The Korean War Orphan in Octavia E. Butlers Unfinished Novels as part of the visiting speaker series at Loyola University Chicagos Department of English on November 13.

Dan OLeary, Carnegie Professor of Chemistry, co-authored the review article In Memoriam: The Life and Scientific Accomplishments of Frank A. L. Anet (1926-2024), which was featured on the cover of the . A UCLA chemistry professor, Anet built some of the first high-field nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometers, now standard equipment in chemistry laboratories worldwide, and used the instruments to discover bedrock principles in organic chemistry and magnetic resonance.

Alexandra Papoutsaki, associate professor of computer science, co-authored an article titled in the CSCW issue of the Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction with collaborators from UC Irvine.

Karen Parfitt, professor of neuroscience, published a paper in the journal Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience with Jessica Phan 19, Jiwon Yi 17, Julia Foote 18, Asia Ayabe 15, Kevin Guan 15, and Theodore Garland Jr. (UC Riverside). The title of the paper is and includes senior thesis data from these alumni.

Mary Paster, professor of linguistics and cognitive science, presented a talk titled Language and food as sites of shaming and resistance at the Food x Language International Conference at Ca Foscari University of Venice in Venice, Italy.

Paster published a peer-reviewed article co-authored with Jackson Kuzmik 20: Vowel hiatus resolution in Kikuyu in Pushing the Boundaries: Selected Papers from the 51st-52nd Annual Conference on African Linguistics.

Lina Patel, lecturer in theatre, shot a guest-starring role in ABCs hit show Will Trent in Atlanta.

Patel was named director of Rogue Machine Theatres next New Play Festival.

Frances Pohl, emerita professor of art history, published a short essay titled in the online publication Panorama: Journal of the Association of Historians of American Art.

Pamela Prickett, associate professor of sociology, published the coauthored article (with Stefan Timmermans, UCLA, and Mirian Martinez-Aranda, UC Irvine) in Mortality.

Pricketts recent book The Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City Angels made three best of 2024 lists: , and AirTalk Host Larry Mantles favorite L.A. books at .

Colleen Ruth Rosenfeld, professor of English, published the essay Shakespeares Canvas in a special issue of Shakespeare Survey 77 dedicated to Shakespeares poetry, edited by Hannah Crawforth and Elizabeth Scott-Baumann.

Larissa Rudova, Yale B. and Lucille D. Griffith Professor of Modern Languages and professor of Russian, gave a guest lecture, Out of the Closet: Russian YA Writers Exploring Gender Issues, at the Institute of German Literature, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany, on November 4. She also delivered a guest lecture, Queer Characters and Familial Ties in Mikita Frankos Fiction, at the Institute of Slavic Studies, University of Wrocaw on November 6.

Rudova presented a paper, The School Uniform: What does this Object of Materiality Represent?/Die Schuluniform: Was verk繹rpert dieses Objekt der Materialit瓣t? at the online research colloquium (Kinderliterarisches Kolloquium), The Things of Childhood: Materiality of/in the Culture for the Young/Die Dinge der Kindheit. Materialit瓣t (in) der Kultur f羹r Kinder on November 15.

Adolfo J. Rumbos, Joseph N. Fiske Professor of Mathematics and Statistics, published an article, , co-authored with Emer Lopera (Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Manizales, Colombia) and Leandro Rec繫va (Cal Poly 91做厙) in Electronic Journal of Differential Equations on November 11.

Monique Saigal Escudero, emerita professor of French, discussed her book with visitors at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., on November 3-4.

Saigal Escudero presented A Hidden Child of the Holocaust Shares Her Story to young students at Fauquier Hospital in Warrenton, Virginia, on November 7. Also in Warrenton, she presented A Holocaust Survivor Tells Her Story to retired teachers at Bethel United Methodist Church. She presented A Hidden Child of the Holocaust Shares Her Story at Oldenborg Center on November 15.

Igor Santos, visiting professor of music, had his composition carve performed by the Flannau Duo on November 13 at Triton College in River Grove, Illinois, and November 8 at the 12th NIU New Music Festival in DeKalb, Illinois. Carve was also recently performed by the International Contemporary Ensemble at the Polyaspora Festival in Washington, D.C. (Peabody Conservatory), as part of a program curated by George E. Lewis and Felipe Lara, moderated by Alejandro L. Madrid. Santos also received performances of two other duos anima and flautandoby Ensemble Dal Niente at the National Association of Schools of Music in Reston, Virginia.

Gibb Schreffler, associate professor of music, published the article in the Fall 2024 issue of American Music. This research article is the third and final piece of a project begun during Schreffler's previous sabbatical, the earlier-completed companion pieces of which were an and the documentary film .

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, published a book, , and wrote an opinion piece, in MindMatters on November 15.

Jessica Stern 12, assistant professor of psychological science, co-authored a paper examining the push-and-pull of family dynamics during adolescence. The paper was published in the journal . She also co-authored a reviewing psychologist Mary Mains concept of conditional strategies in children and adults, published in the journal Attachment & Human Development.

Stern was recently quoted in in an article about the distinction between empathy and compassion. She was also interviewed about her research on teens empathy for podcast.

Keri Wilson, assistant professor of biology, published the article in Hormones and Behavior. She and her colleagues demonstrate for the first time that receptors for oxytocin and vasopressin, which regulate parental sensory processing, are lateralized in the auditory cortex in males with higher expression in the left versus the right cortex.

Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages & literatures, and Jonathan Becker 24 led an online workshop titled AI Optimization in the Teaching of Spanish and Portuguese at the 2024 conference of the Latin American Association of Computer Assisted Language Learning (LatinCALL) on November 9. Xiao and Cecilia Wade 25 gave an online presentation titled AI in Second Language Learning: A Review at the 2024 conference of LatinCALL on November 10.

Xiao joined a team at the University of Maryland on a research project titled Does dynamic writing sequence facilitate written word production in Chinese L2? The findings were presented at the poster session of the 2024 Psychonomic Society Conference on November 23.

Samuel Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History, contributed Second Thoughts on Confucianism in Wartime Japan, 1937-1945 to New Horizons in Confucianism: Essays in Honor of Tu Weiming, a festschrift for Tu Wei-ming (Harvard University), published by Lexington Books.

October 2024

Tricia Avant, academic coordinator and gallery manager of art, had a drawing included in HYENA, a recent publication honoring the legacy of women in surrealism. The launch occurred at in Los Angeles on October 3.

Aimee Bahng, associate professor of gender and womens studies, presented new research on Coral Futures: Banking on Resilience as an invited speaker to a Mellon symposium at UC Daviss Department of Asian American Studies. The roundtable was followed by a performance lecture by artist Astria Suparak: Asian Futures, without Asians on October 24.

Kim Bruce, emeritus Reuben C. and Eleanor Winslow Professor of Computer Science, was presented the Most Notable Paper of 2012 award for his co-authored paper Grace: the absence of (inessential) difficulty at the 2024 Association for Computing Machinery international symposium in Pasadena, California, on October 25. The prize recognizes a paper from the 2012 Onward! symposium that has had a significant impact on computing a decade after its publication.

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, gave a talk titled What can chicken McNuggets tell us about symmetric functions, positive polynomials, random norms, and AF algebras? at the Claremont Colleges Analysis Seminar on October 3.

Garcia published a paper, What is the Bateman-Horn conjecture? in the November 2024 issue of Notices of the American Mathematical Society.

Ernie Gonz獺lez, Jr., lecturer in theatre, received a Best Featured Actor in a Play nomination for the 2024 Orange Curtain Review Awards for his performance of Manny/Sancho Panza in at South Coast Repertory Theatre in Costa Mesa, California. He was also nominated for a Best Supporting Performer Los Angeles Area Broadway World Award for the same role and production.

Emiliano Huet-Vaughn, associate professor of economics, co-authored a policy brief,

Christine Inzer, administrative assistant for the Office of Stewardship, published her first graphic novel on October 15. The graphic memoir is an exploration of her mixed Japanese American identity and has received starred reviews from Kirkus and the School Library Journal.

Malkiat S. Johal, professor of chemistry, gave an invited research seminar titled Quantatative Analysis of Protein-Ligand Interactions and Lipid Bilayer Modifications using the Quartz Crystal Microbalance at Cal State Long Beach on October 9.

Kirk Jones, professor of physical education and head athletic trainer, was honored as the 2024-25 recipient. Jones has developed programs for prevention and treatment of athletic injuries and conditioning and nutritional programs for 21 varsity, intramural and club sports as well as the college community.

Tom Le, associate professor of politics, gave a lecture on Japanese politics to military personnel at the Air University (Air Force) on October 1, a talk on Japan-South Korea relations and provided graduate student advising at USC on October 2, a talk at Claremont McKenna College on politics and political writing October 5, and a talk on Japanese politics to military personnel at Pacific Air Force on October 14.

Le participated in the Institute for Global Affairs Fellowship workshop October 15.

Le co-published an article titled Russia and North Koreas treaty exposes blind spots in the security community in East Asia Forum with international relations students Annalise Chang 27 and Munique Tan 25 on October 24.

Jon Moore, lab coordinator and associate professor of biology, presented a talk titled A Rich Long-Running Inquiry-Based Introductory Dictyostelium Chemotaxis Teaching Lab at the 2024 International Dictyostelium Conference on October 14 in Durham, North Carolina.

Nikki Moore, visiting assistant professor of geology, along with coauthors Conner Toth, Wendy Bohrson, Anita Grunder, and Nolan Clark 23, published the research article in GSA Bulletin on October 30.

Adam Pearson, professor and chair of psychological science, was an invited keynote panelist for a discussion on challenges and future directions for climate activism and public engagement at the Society for Environmental, Population, and Conservation Psychology (American Psychological Association Division 34) 3rd Annual Global Conference on Psychology for a Resilient Future: Adaptation, Mitigation, and Coping in a Changing World. Xuwen Hua 23 and Pearson co-authored and presented a conference talk at a plenary session titled What doesnt kill you makes you stronger: Lay beliefs about life adversity impact judgments of climate vulnerability and resilience. This work began as a senior thesis. Hua was the only non-graduate/postdoctoral-level or faculty speaker of over 30 invited conference speakers.

William Peterson, emeritus professor of music and College organist, performed music of J.S. Bach on the Hill Memorial Organ in Bridges Hall of Music. The program included Bachs Prelude and Fugue in C Major (BWV 545), the Sonata in D Minor (BWV 527) and four chorale preludes from Great Eighteen Organ Chorales.

Peterson presented a paper, Constructing Cultural Markers of Czechoslovak Solidarity, 1918-1928, in a panel at the 2024 Virtual Convention of the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES) on October 18. The panel was titled Liberation from Uncertainty and Instability in Eastern Europe.

Kathy Guillen Quispe, assistant director of international student & scholar services, wore a couple of hats at the 2024 NAFSA Region XII Conference in Orange County, California, on October 19-23. She began the conference by co-leading the F-1 Student Advising for Beginners workshop. She also served on the conference planning committees special events and local arrangements team and volunteered to mentor seven new advisors in the field of international student advising. Additionally, Quispe had a session with members of the Southern District which she will chair starting January 2025.

Larissa Rudova, Yale B. and Lucille D. Griffith Professor in Modern Languages and professor of Russian, delivered a guest lecture, Disrupting the Canon of Childrens and Young Adult Literature: Meet Mikita Franko, at Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) in Munich, Germany, on October 28.

Monique Saigal-Escudero, emerita professor of French, gave a presentation titled A Jewish Holocaust Survivors Remarkable and Unfolding Story of Survival though Desperate Actions and the Kindness of Strangers in the chapel of the Claremont Center for Spiritual Living.

Gibb Schreffler, associate professor of music, was awarded Honorable Mention for the Helen Roberts Prize for his article in Journal of the Society for American Music at the 69th Annual Meeting of the Society for Ethnomusicology on October 26. The Roberts Prize recognizes the most significant article published by a member of the Society for Ethnomusicology.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, published a paper on p-hacking, HARKing, and the replication crisis, , in International Higher Education.

Smith wrote four opinion pieces: (MindMatters, October 7), (MindMatters, October 8), (MarketWatch, October 21) and (MindMatters, October 22), with the MarketWatch piece being the most read article on MarketWatch in October.

Smiths talk AI Systems Are Still Faux Intelligence, was selected for the OReilly AI Academy, which has 2.8 million active subscribers.

Luis Edward Tenorio, visiting assistant professor of sociology, published two papers: in Law & Social Inquiry and in Law & Society Review.

Tenorio published the chapter Detained Homemaking: The Liminal Homemaking of Sexual and Gender Minority Central American Unaccompanied Youth, in the edited volume Kids in Cages: Surviving and Resisting Child Migrant Detention published with University of Arizona Press.

Valorie Diane Thomas, emerita Phebe Estelle Spalding Professor of English and Africana Studies, published a chapter titled Breath. Fugitivity. Wild Horses.: Black Ecocritical Feminist Strategies for Healing in a Predatory Empire, in Practicing Liberation: Transformative Strategies for Collective Healing and Systems Change, (North Atlantic Books, 2024), edited by Tessa Hicks Peterson and Hala Khouri.

Thomas delivered the keynote lecture How to Implement Belonging in Your Organization and Curriculum at the HERD Institute Equine Facilitated Psychotherapy and Equine Facilitated Learning retreat held at Green Chimneys in Brewster, New York.

Samuel Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History, delivered The Japanese Turn in the Art, Architecture and Cuisine of Europe and the United States, 1860-2020 in the California Society of Culinary Historians fall lecture series at the Richard J. Riordan Central Library in downtown Los Angeles on October 12. Food historian Charles Perry introduced Yamashita and moderated the post-lecture discussion.

September 2024

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, played viola da gamba and violone basso continuo in a rare , with violinist Andrew McIntosh, baroque harpist Maxine Eilander and keyboardist Ian Pritchard. The performance, which included 15 scordatura violin tunings on four violins (one tuning for each Mystery of the Rosary), was presented September 14 at Shigemi Matsumoto Recital Hall at Cal State University Northridge on the series ChamberMusic@CSUN, sponsored by the Colburn Foundation and the CSUN Foundation.

On September 27 in Lyman Hall, Bandy performed as a viola da gamba soloist with Cornucopia Baroque on the Friday Noon Concert Series.

Allan Barr, professor emeritus of Chinese, gave invited talks on literary translation at several Chinese universities: Shanghai Normal University on September 3; Zhejiang University, Hangzhou Normal University and Zhejiang International Studies University on September 10, 11 and 12; and Sichuan International Studies University on September 26.

Graydon Beeks, emeritus professor of music, collaborated with his Cornucopia Baroque Ensemble colleagues September 27 as harpsichordist in a program of music by Johann Krieger, George Frideric Handel and Georg Philipp Telemann on the Friday Noon Concert Series. Other faculty performers were Alfred Cramer, violin, Malachai Komanoff Bandy, viola da gamba, and Jason Yoshida, theorbo, who were joined by Aki Nishiguchi, oboe and recorder, Eva Lymenstull, viola da gamba, and Roger Lebow, cello.

Shannon Burns, assistant professor of psychological science and neuroscience, published a paper in Nature Communications about the neural dynamics underlying social interaction titled Hyperscanning shows friends explore and strangers converge in conversation.

Paul Cahill, associate professor of Spanish, published a journal article, , in Per穩frasis: Revista de Literatura, Teor穩a y Cr穩tica and a book chapter, Viral Variation(s): Juan Eduardo Cirlot and the Poetics of Permutation, in , Bloomsbury, edited by Claire Correo Nettleton and Louise Mackenzie.

Karla Cordova, Chau Mellon postdoctoral fellow in economics, was awarded the 2024 Professional Development Grant for Emerging Scholars Studying Poverty and Economic Mobility among Latino Populations from the National Research Center on Hispanic Children & Families.

Alfred Cramer, associate professor of music, joined in a September 13 with a presentation, Klangfarbenmelodie: Phantasy for Violin & Piano, op. 47. He argued that Schoenbergs concept of Klangfarbenmelodie (melody of tone-color) provides an important structural and interpretive framework for his music. The presentation included a demonstration on two different violins, one strung in early-20th-century fashion. The celebration was held at the Westside Conservatory of Music in Los Angeles, near the Brentwood neighborhood where Schoenberg lived for the last 16 years of his life.

Malte Dold, assistant professor of economics, published the article in Journal of Economic Methodology on September 28. The article was co-authored with Elias van Emmerick 21.

Robert Gaines, Edwin F. and Martha Hahn Professor of Geology, with colleagues from Harvard, described a new species of fossil sponge, which is named for the artist James Turrell 65. The paper was published in the journal Royal Society Open Science on September 18.

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, published an editorial, A Word From, in the September 2024 issue of Notices of the American Mathematical Society.

Dean Gerstein, director of sponsored research, presented a paper (virtually), Assessing Research Culture: The Grants Development Ecosystem Inventory, at the plenary session of Building a Sustainable Research Culture, the 2024 Annual Meeting of the NORDP MSI Consultants program, at Florida Memorial University, Miami Gardens.

Esther Hern獺ndez-Medina, assistant professor of Latin American studies and gender and womens studies, guest co-edited and wrote the introduction for the book along with Sharina Ma穩llo-Pozo. The book is volume 35 of the series Advances in Gender Research (editors Vicky Demos and Marcia Segal) and was published by Emerald on September 6.

Jade Star Lackey, professor of geology, presented and at the Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America on September 2225. Lackey was also a co-author on three other presentations with two current and two former 91做厙 students, and he served as a session convener.

Genevieve Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, was a guest performer at Oakland University (Michigan) where she performed solo, four-hand and two-piano works in .

Piano Spheres posted Lees entire on YouTube. The San Francisco Classical Voice gave her a glowing for this recital.

Jonathan Lethem, Roy E. Disney 51 Professor of Creative Writing, had a two-volume omnibus edition of two of his novels, Motherless Brooklyn and The Fortress of Solitude, included in The Everymans Library.

Joyce Lu, associate professor of theatre and Asian American studies, read the part of Anne in a staged reading of American Hunger by Nikhil Mahapatra in the Jean-Claude Carri癡re New Works Festival, produced by EnActe Arts at the Hammer Theatre in San Jose, California.

Lu appeared in a public service announcement for Alzheimers Los Angeles.

Alessia Lupo Cecchet, visiting assistant professor in media studies, received recognition for her experimental film , which won second place at the juried exhibition organized in Aosta, Italy, by ArteAlta Foundation and third place at the 32nd Annual Emerald Coast National Juried Art Exhibition, organized by the Mattie Kelly Arts Center Galleries (Niceville, Florida). Watch the .

Cecchet will have a at the Sprague Gallery at Harvey Mudd College in October, where her sculptural work will be displayed along with her video work.

Denise Machin, assistant director of the Smith Campus Center and director of the ballroom dance program, successfully defended her title as the number one woman/woman Latin couple from the North American Same Sex Partner Dance Association (NASSPDA) alongside her partner Viola Ni CMC 25 on September 21. Machin also excelled in various woman/woman salsa categories with Amy Rubinstein, art studio technician at Pitzer College.

Sara Masland, associate professor of psychological science, presented a talk, Using Ecological Momentary Assessment to Test GPM Theory and Enrich Clinical Care, at the European Society for the Study of Personality Disorders (ESSPD) conference in Antwerp, Belgium.

Richard Mawhorter, professor of physics and astronomy, recently received word of acceptance by Physical Review A of a manuscript with four 91做厙 student co-authors titled Rotational and near-infrared spectra of PbF: Characterization of the coupled X1 21/2 and X2 23/2 莽喧硃喧梗莽. Sean Jackson 23 is lead author. Also, a poster with three 91做厙 student co-authors titled SrF Rotational and Hyperfine Global Fit (and YbO) was presented at the American Physical Society DAMOP meeting in Fort Worth, Texas.

Preston McBride, assistant professor of history, delivered a keynote research webinar for the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition on September 25 titled Hidden Epidemics within Indian Boarding Schools.

Richard McKirahan, Edwin Clarence Norton Professor of Classics and professor of philosophy, published the book The Sophists. The book is part of Routledges Ancient Philosophies series in which the fifth-century BCE Sophists are presented in a radically different and more positive way than the traditional view of them as subversive foreigners who took money for teaching young men how to gain political power and win lawsuits through dishonest means and misleading rhetoric.

Susan McWilliams Barndt, professor of politics, participated in three panels at the American Political Science Associations annual meeting in Philadelphia during the week of September 5: as the chair of a panel on African-American political thought; as the chair of a panel titled The Idea of Fraternity in America at 50 and Its New Generations of Readers and as a presenter on a panel on Liberalism, Republicanism, and Communal Freedom in American Political Thought.

On September 10, McWilliams delivered the Constitution Day Lecture at Skidmore College, titled A Tale of Two Liberalisms: Desegregating American Political Thought.

McWilliams published an op-ed in The Los Angeles Times on September 9, titled . On September 16, she published an article in Ms. Magazine titled .

On September 25, McWilliams appeared on LiveNOW From FOX to discuss the upcoming American presidential election as part of the networks You Decide 2024 series.

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, organized the 2024 conference at the Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena, California, on September 19-20.

Moreno was and wrote an invited guest post titled .

Lina Patel, lecturer of theatre, was one of eight playwrights from across the country invited to The New Harmony Projects inaugural new works festival to workshop her new play Sick Girl or... Don't Hate Me Cuz Im Pretty about the intersection of immigration, misdiagnosis, chronic illness and disability. The play was helmed by director Daniel Talbott, with Lexy Leuzsler providing dramaturgical support. PlayFest Indy partners invited playwrights with local theaters and provided funding, travel, housing and casting support to work on and ultimately present their work to a public audience.

Sheila Pinkel, professor emerita of art and art history, will have two large bodies of work included in the Getty PST show Digital Capture at the California Museum of Photography in Riverside, California, opening October 26. The museum enlarged one of her small works and wrapped the front of the museum with it. Also, her work will be included in the exhibition Work at the Wellcome Collection in London. This large modular piece addresses prison labor in California prisons. It is also included in the show at the University of Alabama Birmingham Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts Outside Lines group exhibition from their collection. It is also included in the exhibition Presidential Rogues: Satirical Posters from the 1950s to the Present at the Mercado La Paloma in Los Angeles.

Hans Rindisbacher, professor of German, presented a paper titled Proud or Sorry to be Neutral? Swiss Political Self-Representation in the Nebelspalter, 1930s and 1940s at the in Atlanta on September 26-29.

Colleen Ruth Rosenfeld, professor of English, (Yale University) about the art of close reading for Public Books.

Larissa Rudova, Yale B. and Lucille D. Griffith Professor in Modern Languages and professor of German and Russian, delivered a paper, The Rise of the Detective Genre in Post-Soviet Childrens Literature: Enid Blyton and Middle-Class Values, at the international conference Writing a British Childhood in a Global Context? Critical Perspectives on Enid Blyton at the University of Potsdam, Germany on September 25-27.

Patricia Smiley, professor emerita of psychological science, published a paper with colleagues at UC Irvine and the University of WisconsinMadison in Infant Mental Health Journal. Among other findings, undergraduate interveners from The Claremont Colleges showed higher fidelity in implementing a weekly savoring intervention than those with more education, and mothers, in turn, displayed more sensitive caregiving.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, published a MarketWatch opinion piece, on September 11.

Jessica Stern, assistant professor of psychological science, co-authored two papers on adolescents social development: , an fMRI study published in Social Neuroscience, and , published in Development and Psychopathology. Working with Theresa Pfister 13, she also published an education practice brief, , for the American Psychological Association, Division 15: Educational Psychology.

Luis Edward Tenorio, visiting assistant professor of sociology, published a paper, , in Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.

Friederike von Schwerin-High, professor of German, published the essay Lessings Naturbegriff laut den Schriften seines Bruders Karl Gotthelf Lessing in September in the book Natur in der Romantik, volume 15 in the series Schriften der internationalen Arnim-Gesellschaft, edited by Christof Wingertszahn.

Andrew Wilson, director of research computing, published an article titled in Levant, The Journal of the Council for British Research in the Levant.

Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages and literatures, and Jonathan Becker 24 led a workshop on AI-supported language learning for the Computer Assisted Language Instruction Consortium (CALICO) on September 27. Founded in 1983, CALICO is a leading international organization dedicated to advancing computer-assisted language learning (CALL).

Yanshuo Zhang, assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures, won the , a national grant given by the American Council of Learned Societies.

August 2024

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, was a featured soloist in Bear McCrearys score to (Amazon MGM Studios), which premiered on August 29, with eight episodes being released through October 3. Bandy can be heard playing both yayl覺 tanbur and viola da gamba throughout the season and on the .

Allan Barr, emeritus professor of Chinese, presented a paper on the topic Exploring the Boundary between Translation and Editing: Thoughts after translating Jin Renshuns Chunhyang at the International Conference on Regional and National Literatures and Cultures, held at Inner Mongolia University for the Nationalities, Tongliao, on August 22-23. He also gave a talk on literary translation at Northeastern Normal University in Changchun on August 26.

Graydon Beeks, emeritus professor of music, attended the conference Endless Pleasure: George Frideric Handel and French Musical Culture, sponsored by the International G.F. Handel Society in Halle, Germany, where he chaired a paper session and read a paper submitted by a colleague who could not attend. In addition, he participated in the meetings of the board of directors of the society, of which he is a vice president, and the editorial board of the 晨硃梭梭勳莽釵堯梗-晨瓣紳餃梗梭-插喝莽眶硃莉梗, the ongoing edition of the composers complete works.

Charlotte Chang, assistant professor of biology and environmental analysis, presented at the Ecological Society of America (ESA) on a large-scale analysis of over 2 million scientific abstracts to construct an evidence map for natural climate solutions. Changs thesis student Rohan Gowda Thanh-Quang 23 also presented at ESA on his research examining investment patterns for climate technology venture capital and carbon mitigation or climate adaptation potential.

Karla Cordova, Chau Mellon postdoctoral fellow in economics, was awarded the 2024-25 Lowe Faculty-Student Research Program grant from the Lowe Institute of Political Economy at Claremont McKenna College.

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, gave a talk titled Fast food for thought: what can chicken nuggets tell us about linear algebra? at the inauguration of the Saint Louis University Mathematics Mentoring Lab on August 23.

Dean Gerstein, director of sponsored research, convened a workshop on August 1-2 for research administrators from 15 campuses in seven states, funded by Building A National Network of Enterprise Research Support at Predominantly Undergraduate Institutions (BANNERS-PUI), an 18-month $100,000 from the National Science Foundation, on which Gerstein is a coprincipal investigator.

Gerstein presented at the National Council of University Research Administrators (NCURA) 66th annual meeting in Washington, DC, on August 6, at a session on The Write StuffWriting for NCURA, representing the editors of NCURAs Research Management Review. He also published a brief article titled SPy versus FRy: Grey Areas in Allocating Work and Credit at Predominantly Undergraduate Institutions in the August 2024 NCURA Magazine.

Gerstein was on a virtual panel hosted by Colleges of Liberal Arts Sponsored Programs, a 500-member organization, on August 28 to discuss BANNERS and complementary awards from .

Edray Herber Goins, professor of mathematics and statistics, attended the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) MathFest in Indianapolis from August 6-10. In his role as past chair of MAA Congress, Goins led a discussion and vote to update the congress bylaws August 7; gave a talk and participated in the Project NExT Special Session Nurturing Mathematical Minds: Mentoring a Math Related Student Group on August 7; and introduced the screening of the documentary Journeys of Black Mathematicians: Forging Resilience on August 9.

Goins visited Bard College from August 12-14 as part of a week-long conference titled MathScape 2024: The Mathematics of Supersymmetry. On August 13, he gave an hour-long address titled Adinkras as Origami?

Heidi Nichols Haddad, associate professor of politics, published the book chapter (with Madeline Baer) The City of Los Angeles and the UN Sustainable Development Goals in Implementing Sustainable Cities (Routledge 2024).

Emiliano Huet-Vaughn, associate professor of economics, published the paper in the August issue of the American Economic Journal: Microeconomics.

Gizem Karaali, professor of mathematics and statistics, together with Lew Ludwig of Denison University, facilitated a webinar titled hosted by the Mathematical Association of America.

Karaali published a poem, , in the online gallery The Nature of Our Times on August 26.

Talya Klein, visiting assistant professor of theatre, was the intimacy coordinator for the horror film , which wrapped principal photography on August 16 in Los Angeles. The film is written and directed by Julia Max and stars Kate Burton and Colby Minifie.

Jade Star Lackey, professor of geology, saw two papers published. One in focuses on development of two garnet samples in the 91做厙 mineral collections as standard materials for use by the international geochronology community. A second in Geosphere titled is the culmination of a 12-year collaboration between Lackey and colleagues at Denison University. Many of the new uranium-lead dating ages published in the paper were measurements in the Colleges Oxtoby Environmental Isotope Laboratory.

Jun Lang, assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures, was invited to join the editorial board of Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, a peer-reviewed journal published by Springer Nature.

Genevieve Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, coached chamber music groups at the in early August and performed with fellow faculty members at Oregon coast venues in Gold Beach, Port Orford and Langlois.

From August 17-18, Lee was a guest artist at the 2024 Summer Festival where she played two-piano works of Rachmaninoff, Saint-Saens and Brahms and eight-hand arrangements of works by J. S. Bach and Vivaldi. The and concerts were live streamed.

Jingyi Li, assistant professor of computer science, published an article titled Toward Appropriating Tools for Queer Use in the Halfway to the Future symposium.

Alexandra Lippman, visiting assistant professor of anthropology, curated and organized 38th season finale with a show highlighting transnational cumbia and featuring Chucho Ponce Los Daddy's, Yeison Landero, Turbo Sonidero, DJ Chihuahua and others. She hosted this alongside her record label partner artist and recorded a radio show on with the invited musicians. Their record label Discos Rolas was mentioned in The Wire (August 2024) in Juan San Crist籀bal Lizamas .

Preston McBride, assistant professor of history, participated at the World Congress of Environmental History conference in Oulu, Finland, on August 20 with Pey-Yi Chu, associate professor of history, and Char Miller, W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History. Their roundtable Settler colonial knowledge and practices in the United States and Siberia included McBrides presentation on Boarding School Transformations of Native American Communities.

Richard McKirahan, E.C. Norton Professor of Classics and professor of philosophy, attended the annual meeting of Aristotle scholars at a village on Mount Pelion, Greece, and for the first time for any foreigner was honored by being the first speaker. He also attended a conference on Protagoras, the fifth-century BCE Sophist, where he gave two presentations. He also attended the biennial meeting of the International Association for Presocratic Studies, of which he is president. It was held in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, and McKirahan participated in the organization of the event and presented an overview of his forthcoming book on the Sophists. Lastly, he sent in the final version of his book which will be published by Routledge Publishing in their series Ancient Philosophies.

Susan McWilliams Barndt, professor of politics, participated in the Musing with Melville program at Arrowhead, Herman Melville's house in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. The program allows writers to spend time working at the desk where Melville wrote Moby-Dick, the subject of McWilliams fall ID1 course.

On August 28, McWilliams appeared on to discuss the 2024 election. On August 30, she was interviewed by about CNNs interview with Vice President Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz.

Wallace Meyer, director of the Bernard Field Station and associate professor of biology, was an invited panelist at the Ecological Society of America Meeting. He was also an author on multiple talks at the American Malacological Conference, with his student Isabel Ramos 24 winning best student poster. He also presented a talk and was an author on two talks at the Ecological Society of American meeting. Lastly, he was an author on three talks at the Hawaii Conservation conference.

Char Miller, W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History, is the editor of the just-published book Burn Scars: A Documentary History of Fire Suppression, from Colonial Origins to the Resurgence of Cultural Burning (Oregon State University Press, 2024).

At the recently concluded World Congress for Environmental History, held in Oulu, Finland, Miller convened and moderated a roundtable on Settler Colonial Knowledge and Practice in the United States and Siberia and presented a paper titled Collecting Nature, Building Nations: Botany and Settler Science in Finland and the United States. Joining him on the panel were Pey-Yi Chu, associate professor of history, and Preston McBride, assistant professor of history, as well as historian Tamara Polyakova of the University of Eastern Finland.

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, delivered an invited talk titled Intergalactic Pachamama: a blueprint for decolonizing astronomy, as part of the All-Inclusive AGN session at the International Astronomical Union meeting in Cape Town, South Africa. Moreno also gave a public talk on galaxies with and without dark matter at Lick Observatory in Hamilton Mountain, California, as part of the series. Moreno also delivered an invited talk and participated in a panel at the Astronomers Bridging Culture, Tradition, and Research event, sponsored by NASA.

Zhiru Ng, professor of religious studies, inaugurated the new Foo Hai Buddhist Seminar Series at Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore on August 21. She delivered a talk titled Using Chinese Theory of Ritual to Study Ritual: Stove or Alms Bowl? Meal Rites and Cultural Borrowing from Myanmar in Taiwanese Female Monasticism.

Gilda L. Ochoa, professor of Chicana/o Latina/o studies, published an in Z籀colo Public Square on August 15.

Dan OLeary, Carnegie Professor of Chemistry, co-authored the review article in the Journal of Physical Organic Chemistry. A UCLA chemistry professor, Anet built some of the first high-field nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometers, now standard equipment in chemistry laboratories worldwide, and used the instruments to discover bedrock principles in organic chemistry and magnetic resonance.

Igor Santos, visiting assistant professor of music, premiered his large-scale music composition titled nossas m瓊os (our hands) at the festival in New York City. This 30-minute work, written for piano trio and video, explores the profound symbolism of handscelebrating them as instruments of human agency, affection, protest and as technologies for music-making. The composition was commissioned by the New York City-based trio and funded by Chamber Music Americas Classical Commissioning Program, with generous support from The Mellon Foundation.

Santos performed his piano and video work offering on Louisville Public Medias . In Kentucky, he also attended a residency at the where, along with workshopping new music, he mentored doctoral composition students from Columbia University and Cornell University.

John Seery, George Irving Thomson Memorial Professor of Government and professor of politics, had his full-feature screenplay Jone judged as one of 12 finalists in the 2024 Los Angeles International Screenplay Awards Diversity Initiative Competition. Seery also played baritone saxophone with the city of 91做厙 Concert Band in separate concerts on August 1, 8, 15, 22 and 29.

Anthony Shay, professor of dance, was named honored fellow by the Iranian Studies Association for his numerous writings on Iranian dance and Persian popular music on August 12 at its biennial conference in Mexico City.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, wrote six opinion pieces: (MarketWatch, August 1), (MindMatters, August 9), (MindMatters, August 16), (MindMatters, August 21), (Scientific American, August 23) and (MindMatters, August 29). The Scientific American piece was widely reported, including an in-depth article by Andrew Isbester, , (Finews.asia, August 27). Smith was also quoted extensively in an article by Edward Yardeni on the limitations of AI, On AI, Payrolls, & Global Economy, (Yardeni Research, August 22).

Jessica Stern 12, assistant professor of psychological science, was interviewed about her research on empathy across generations of parents and children for the podcast with Anita Nowak.

Luis Edward Tenorio, visiting assistant professor of sociology, presented a paper titled The Intergenerational Citizenship Effects of Public Benefits for Non-Citizen Mothers and Their Citizen Children at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association in Montreal, Canada.

Kevin Wynter, associate professor and chair of media studies, published an essay titled When the woman speaks in the peer-reviewed journal Porn Studies.

Samuel Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History and coordinator of Asian studies, moderated two alumni conversations with Soma Mei Sheng Frazier 95 about her first novel Off the Books, published by Macmillan in July. The first was held on August 3 at Village Well Books in Culver City, California, and the second on August 4 at Arvida Book Co. in Tustin, California. Both events were organized by 91做厙 alumni.

July 2024

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, organized and chaired a panel on Musica Poetica at the , held July 2326 at the University of British Columbia. Bandy presented the paper Through All Eternity: Musical-Temporal Rhetoric in Dieterich Buxtehudes Jesu dulcis memoria (BuxWV 57), which highlighted concordances between 17th-century Lutheran orthodox and Western esoteric theologies of time and memory, toward a new understanding of North German Baroque basso ostinato (repeating bassline) works as rhetorically self-conscious measurers of human temporality.

Bandy was a featured soloist in Bear McCrearys score to , the STARZ historical drama about Catherine de Medici, which premiered on July 12 with eight episodes being released through Aug. 30. Bandy can be heard playing viola da gamba throughout the season, as well as on the official .

Paul Cahill, associate professor of Spanish, presented a paper, Hacia una po矇tica de la antilog穩a po矇tica: el caso de Jorge Urrutia, virtually at the I Congreso Internacional de Teor穩a de la L穩rica y Po矇ticas Comparadas, held at the Universidad de Salamanca from July 3-5.

Gary Champi, assistant professor of dance, co-choreographed and performed at the Fini Dance Festival in Calabria, Italy, with local dancers from July 13-20.

Charlotte Chang, assistant professor of biology and environmental analysis, was invited to present on her research to the World Resources Institute and gave a talk titled Leveraging Large-Scale Data Mining for Socio-Environmental Impact.

David Divita, professor of Romance languages and literatures, published Back to Spain? Return Migration on Stage among Aging Migrants in France, a chapter in the edited volume States of Return: Rethinking Migration and Mobility (NYU Press).

Virginie A. Duzer, professor of Romance languages and literatures, presented her work in progress on an ecocritic approach to Balzac, Le Chef d'Oeuvre inconnu, at the 16th edition of the annual workshop series on 19th-century French studies titled Cultural Production in the 19th Century (Tissages et M矇tissages) at the American University of Paris.

Lorn Foster, emeritus professor of politics, spent four days in Alabama along with staff from the National Trust for Historic Preservation doing a site visit to four historical African American churches: Dexter Avenue King Memorial Baptist Church, Montgomery; Old Ship AME Zion Church, Montgomery; Brown Chapel AME Church, Selma; and Old Sardis Baptist Church, Birmingham. Each church is on the National Registry for Historic Places and has received funding from the National Trust.

Robert Gaines, Edwin F. and Martha Hahn Professor of Geology, published three articles in July. With collaborators from Australia and Colorado College, he published the article in the July 26 issue of Science Advances. With collaborators from the American Museum of Natural History, he published the article in Biology Letters on July 10. He joined an international community project on the paper , published in the July issue of Nature Geoscience.

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, was appointed as a member of the American Mathematical Society (AMS) Fellows Program Selection Committee for a term of three years, effective Feb. 1, 2025, through Jan. 31, 2028. The Fellows of the AMS program recognizes members who have made outstanding contributions to the creation, exposition, advancement, communication and utilization of mathematics.

Garcia gave a talk titled Quotient sets, Fibonacci numbers, and related curiosities at the 21st International Fibonacci Conference at Harvey Mudd College on July 11.

Garcia published a book chapter (with Albrecht Boettcher and Mishko Mitkovski) titled The Reciprocal Schur Inequality in Analysis without Borders, edited by Sergei Rogosin.

Emiliano Huet-Vaughn, associate professor of economics, published the paper Minimum Wage Employment Effects and Labour Market Concentration in the July issue of .

Tom Le, associate professor of politics, published a book article titled with Asia Policy.

Le gave an invited lecture on Japans aging and declining population at Meiji Gakuin University in Japan. He also led a benkyoukai on the assassination attempt on President Donald Trump to the U.S.-Japan Leadership Program. Le completed the U.S.-Japan Network for the Future Fellowship with a four-day conference in Washington, D.C. where he presented his research to policymakers on Capitol Hill.

Genevieve Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, returned as a faculty member at the , held at Colgate University, New York. For one week in July, she coached high-level amateur musicians in chamber music groups and performed J. S. Bachs Trio Sonata from Musical Offering with other faculty members.

As a faculty member at the in late July, Lee performed piano quartets of Mozart and Schumann at the Cultural Center in Crescent City, California, and two venues in Oregon (Port Orford and North Bend).

Susan McWilliams Barndt, professor of politics, appeared on The Tavis Smiley Show on July 23 to discuss the question Is Democracy on the Ballot?

Miriam Merrill, chair of physical education, was inducted into the Tuscarawas County Sports Hall of Fame (TCSHOF). The TCSHOF is dedicated to honoring individuals prominent in the history of athletics in Tuscarawas County, Ohio. Merrills induction class included four teams, one foundation and 19 other individual athletes.

Lynne Miyake, emerita professor of Japanese and Asian studies, published a study of Japanese comics versions of an 11th-century tale, titled The Tale of Genji Through Contemporary Manga: Challenging Gender and Sexuality in Japan on July 11.

Nikki Moore, visiting assistant professor of geology, was awarded a $198,248 grant from the National Science Foundation EMBRACE program through the Division of Earth Sciences for her research proposal titled Magmatic Evolution and Timing of the Independence Dike Swarm. With a host of undergraduate research assistants, she will conduct field, geochemical and geochronological work on the dikes to develop a comprehensive model for the generation and emplacement of the swarm. This grant will provide research and networking opportunities for about six Claremont Colleges students and expand the analytical capabilities of the 91做厙 Oxtoby Lab.

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, published an article titled Effects of multi-channel AGN feedback in FIRE cosmological simulations of massive galaxies in the .

Moreno and collaborators were awarded time to observe 450 galaxies in the local universe on the Atacama Large Millimetre/Sub-millimetre Array, under a proposal titled Star formation efficiency and quenching patterns in and between galaxies. Moreno is serving as theory deputy director of this collaboration with principal investigators Timothy Davis and Amelie Saintonge. Moreno is also co-investigator on a National Science Foundation award titled Multiphase Analysis of (U)LIRG Nuclear Activity with principal investigator Vivian U.

Moreno and postdoctoral fellow Francisco Mercado were awarded $49,990 by the National Science Foundation under a program titled Conference: 23rd Annual Symposium of the NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellows.

Moreno was selected as the first distinguished guest by the undergraduate interns enrolled in the program at the Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena, California. Moreno represented the American Astronomical Society on a site visit to oversee the publishing of American astronomy journals at the Institute of Physics headquarters in Bristol, UK. On July 11, Moreno delivered a research talk at the University of Surrey in Guildford, UK. During the week of July 23, Moreno attended and co-organized the first meeting of the in Seattle.

Thomas Muzart, assistant professor of Romance languages and literatures, presented a paper titled Futurit矇 queer dans Viendra le temps du feu de Wendy Delorme at the 65th annual conference of the Society for French Studies on July 2.

Muzart published an article, L'矇mancipation d矇coloniale en toutes lettres d'Abdellah Ta簿a, in the special issue of Contemporary French Civilization, Queer flight: Rethinking Maghrebi sexualities (July 2024).

Zhiru Ng, professor of religious studies, presented Mra as the Problem of Evil: East Asian Variants of a Global Indian Myth at the 2024 Association of Asian Studies-in-Asia Meeting at Universitas Gadjah Mada in Yojyakarta, Indonesia.

Lina Patel, lecturer of playwriting, was invited to present her play The Ragged Claws at The Road Theater Companys Summer Playwrights Festival in North Hollywood, California. Also in July, Patel participated in and co-moderated Rogue Machine Theater's inaugural Playwrights Roundtable, a culmination of a six-month workshop and new play presentations at the historic Matrix Theater in West Hollywood, California.

Larissa Rudova, professor of German and Russian, delivered a paper, The Queering of Russian Childhood in Mikita Frankos Fictional World, at the workshop Politics of Text and Image in Childrens Culture: Contemporary Eastern Europe and Beyond, organized by the International Workshop of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (LMU) and International Youth Library in Munich from July 18-19. Rudova also moderated a panel, Politics of Memory: East and West, at the same conference.

Santiago Sandi-Urena, visiting professor of chemistry, was an invited speaker at the 27th International Conference on Chemistry Education, the specialized event in the field organized by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. The conference was held in Pattaya, Thailand, from July 15-19. His talk Cross-institutional study: Propositional instruction and competence in chemical symbolic language in college students included valuable research contributions by Jason Xu 26 and Nate Rubin 26. Sandi-Urena was appointed to the Scientific Committee of the conference and organized and chaired the symposium Emerging Educational Trends in Chemistry in the 21st Century.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, wrote three opinion pieces: (MarketWatch, July 11), (MindMatters, July 22) and (MarketWatch, July 31).

Jessica Stern 12, assistant professor of psychological science, co-authored a book chapter, The Neuroscience of Social Relationships in Early Development, for the new edition of , published by the American Psychological Association.

Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages and literatures, gave an invited online workshop on how to address individual differences in learning with AI for a diverse group of instructors and researchers from elementary and high schools in Singapore to the Ministry of Education and National Institute of Education on July 9.

Xiao published an invited paper titled The 80/20 Rule in the Era of Artificial Intelligence in International Chinese Learning and Teaching Resources by Joint Publishing (Hong Kong) on July 10.

Xiao was invited to join the review team of research priorities and grants for the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL) on July 25.

June 2024

Lise Abrams, Peter W. Stanley Chair of Linguistics and Cognitive Science, co-authored the introduction to the special issue of Psychology and Aging , along with co-editor Elizabeth Stine-Morrow (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign). Abrams also published two research articles in this issue: , co-authored with collaborators Meredith Shafto and Lori James (University of Colorado Colorado Springs) and co-authored with cognitive science majors Benjamin Cote 23, Mar穩a Jos矇 Najas 24 and Aysha Gsibat 24 and collaborator Katherine White (Rhodes College).

Nicholas Ball, associate professor of chemistry, completed his Downing Fellowship at University of Cambridge. Hosted by Matthew Gaunt (chemistry), he learned about new high-throughput techniques for synthesis. He also gave research talks at University of Bristol, University of Oxford and University of Cambridge.

Lisa Beckett, professor of physical education, was honored with a scoreboard naming dedication at the Pauley Tennis Courts. Student-athletes, alumni, colleagues, family and friends gathered for a dedication ceremony at court 7. The evening included a formal program of speakers, the unveiling of the naming of the scoreboard, a reception and dinner.

Graydon Beeks, emeritus professor of music, published an article on Coroliano Transformed: The Early History of Ariosti's First Royal Academy Opera in the 2024 issue of the Handel-Jahrbuch.

Amelia Bransky, visiting assistant professor of theatre, collaborated with on their production of Lynn Nottages 唬梭聆餃梗s as the scenic designer.

Charlotte Chang, assistant professor of biology and environmental analysis, co-organized a symposium titled Text Analysis for Conservation at the 2024 North American Congress for Conservation Biology in Vancouver, Canada.

Toni Cook, visiting assistant professor of linguistics and cognitive science, published an article with Case Miranda 24 and Clara McGilly PZ 24, , in the journal Linguistics Vanguard.

Anne Dwyer, associate professor of German and Russian, was an associate at the Summer Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign in June, where she conducted research for her book manuscript Viktor Shklovsky after Russian Formalism and a related article on Soviet cultural production/propaganda around the 1939 annexation of Eastern Poland/Western Ukraine. The award was made possible by the U.S. Department of State through its Title VIII Program for Research Training on Eastern Europe and the Independent States of the Former Soviet Union.

KJ Fagan, senior director of public programming and strategic initiatives, was appointed to the Professions Committee of the Association of Change Management Professionals (ACMP), a global organization dedicated to advocating for the discipline of change management, supporting the global community of change managers through educational and professional development, and maintaining a standard for the accreditation of professionals working in the field. As a board-appointed member of the Professions Committee, Fagan will be responsible for implementing ACMPs strategic initiatives in the areas of education, partnerships and advocacy.

Robert Gaines, Edwin F. and Martha Hahn Professor of Geology, and a team of international colleagues published the article Rapid volcanic ash entombment reveals the 3D anatomy of Cambrian trilobites in the journal Science. This Trilobite Pompeii was featured on the cover of the June 28 issue of Science and was featured in news outlets including and .

Melissa Givens, assistant professor of music, was one of five Davidson College alumni selected by the alumni association to receive the Distinguished Alumni Award for providing leadership or attaining recognition on a national or regional level in their profession or business during the recently concluded 2024 Reunion Weekend. The citation read in part, Because of her deep and varied contributions to the worlds of music and art; and because of her commitment to the liberal arts and preparing the next generation of leaders who will serve in the world, the Alumni Association is pleased to present Melissa Givens, class of 1989, with the Distinguished Alumni Award, on the occasion of her 35th Reunion, June 2024. Givens also co-chaired the reunion for her class.

Elizabeth Glater, associate professor of neuroscience, presented Chemical Basis of Behavioral Preference for the Microbiome at the C. elegans Topic Meeting: Neuronal Development, Synaptic Function & Behavior in Madison, Wisconsin. The co-authors were Dylan Blackett 24, Emily Church 23, Victor Chai 23, Tiam Farajzadeh 23 and Charles Taylor, chair and professor of chemistry.

Esther Hern獺ndez-Medina, assistant professor of Latin American studies and gender and womens studies, participated June 13 in the roundtable Todav穩a pensamos, todav穩a escribimos: 聶Qu矇 tiene para decir la academia frente a la encrucijada que vivimos? (We still think, we still write: What can the academy say about the crossroads we are living in?) at the Latin American Studies Association (LASA) Annual Congress in Bogot獺, Colombia. On June 14, she was part of the LASA book presentation session about the edited volume Womens Rights in Movement: Dynamics of feminist change in Latin America and the Caribbean along with the editors and other authors and talked about her chapter The Right to a Complete Life: Struggles of the Dominican Feminist Movement. On June 15, she presented the paper The Anti-Gender and Anti-LGTBQ Conservative Backlash in the Dominican Republic in the LASA section panel Presentes de odio, futuros dist籀picos (Hateful presents, dystopic futures).

Jun Lang, assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures, delivered a talk titled New Practices in Chinese Courses at a Liberal Arts College: Richness, Diversity, and Timeliness at the 2024 Forum on the Research and Teaching of Chinese Language and Culture, organized by the China-U.S. Alliance of College Teachers of Chinese at Xiamen University in China. In the presentation, she shared her recent pedagogical innovations in teaching Mandarin Chinese, including collaborative grading and creative project-based learning approaches in foreign language classrooms.

Jonathan Lethem, Roy E. Disney 51 Professor of Creative Writing, will have a collection of his art writings Cellophane Bricks published on July 25.

Joyce Lu, associate professor of theatre and Asian American studies, participated in a roundtable discussion titled Leading with Performance: Interdisciplinary Arts-led Innovations Inside the Neoliberal University" at the Canadian Association of Theatre Research Conference: Staging Justice, moved from McGill University to Universit矇 de Montreal, Teesri Duniya Theatre and Concordia University.

Lu was a discussant in The Dramaturgy and Ethics Working Group and participated in the Critical Race Studies Working Group at The Performance Studies International Conference in London at Senate House and Hoxton Hall.

Denise Machin, assistant director of the Smith Campus Center and director of the Claremont Colleges Ballroom Dance Company, was elected as president of the , the tri-state ballroom dance circuit the Claremont Colleges belongs to. Machin was also elected as a board member of (North American Same-Sex Partner Dance Association).

Susan McWilliams Barndt, professor of politics, spoke at the Oxford Union at the University of Oxford, where she was part of a panel titled Intrigue & Insiders: American Politics in the Age of Trump vs. Biden on June 3.

McWilliams gave a talk titled The Book Banning Epidemic, first to the residents of Pilgrim Place in Claremont and later to the members of the United Nations Association of 91做厙 Valley.

On June 24, McWilliams published an essay on in Current.

Char Miller, W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History, is the author of Wild, Managed, and Reclaimed: The Complex Environmental History of the San Antonio River Watershed, in Greg Gordon, ed., Rewilding the Urban Frontier: River Conservation in the Anthropocene. Miller also chaired a session devoted to the anthology at the recent meetings of the American Society for Environmental History.

Miller was featured in , Save As: NextGen Heritage Conservation podcast.

Miller published an essay on his participation in a series of humanities Texas teacher programs in the Humanities Texas Newsletter.

Jon Moore, lab coordinator and associate professor of biology, presented a poster with co-authors Anaya Ramkumar 24 and Bernice Sule 26 titled Assessing Local Ecological Genetic Diversity as an Introductory Biology CURE at the Association for Biology Laboratory Educations annual conference in College Park, Maryland.

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, published a paper titled Size-Mass Relations for Simulated Low-Mass Galaxies: Mock Imaging versus Intrinsic Properties in the .

On June 3, Moreno delivered an invited talk titled The intriguing lives of galaxies lacking dark matter at the Cosmic Signals of Dark Matter Physics: New Synergies conference held at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics in Santa Barbara, California.

Moreno served as reviewer for the Swiss National Science Foundation and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Gilda L. Ochoa, professor of Chicana/o Latina/o studies, presented The Branches of Greenberry Drive: African Americans and Activism in the East San Gabriel Valley Suburbs, 1960s-1970s at the Inland Empire Peoples History Conference at California State University, San Bernardino on June 1.

Mary Paster, professor of linguistics and cognitive science, gave a keynote address titled What, if anything, is myopia in grammar? at the Workshop on Myopia in Grammar, University of Leipzig on June 13.

Hans Rindisbacher, professor of German, delivered a plenary address at an online conference at the Centre for Comparative Literature at Goldsmiths College of the University of London titled .

Richard S. Savich, lecturer in economics, was awarded a Wig Curriculum Development grant to update ECON 131, Economics of Entrepreneurship, for possible offering during the 2025-2026 academic year. The course was last offered in 2018.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, wrote two opinion pieces: (MindMatters, June 27) and (FastCompany, June 28).

Smith signed a contract for a second edition of .

Smiths co-authored paper , American Journal of Preventative Medicine, was selected as the AJPM paper of the year.

Ken Wolf, John Sutton Miner Professor of History and professor of classics, recently returned from his 14th alumni trip May 29 to June 9, this one focused on 12th- and 13th-century papal responses to heresy in Languedoc and Catalunya. This year marked the 25th anniversary of his first such medieval-themed trip in 1999.

May 2024

Patria Aziz, assistant womens tennis coach, led the team to winning the and the . 

Nicholas Ball, associate professor of chemistry, gave a series of talks sharing the latest research from his group at University of California San Diego, Scripps Research and the University of Manchester (UK).

Ball published a paper with Natalie Schur 24 titled in the journal Chem. The paper is a collaboration with the Sammis (U. British Columbia) and Melvin (Bryn Mawr) labs. It is a perspective highlighting the historical challenges of these compounds as chemical weapons, their safety profile and the potential for innovation toward addressing challenges in chemical and biomolecular sciences.

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, played the viola da gamba on , a rock concept album released May 3 by composer Bear McCreary and featuring artists such as Slash and Rufus Wainwright. Bandy can be heard on the track .

Bandy contracted, organized and played violone for the ensemble Harmonologia 91做厙, a group of professional instrumentalists specializing in Baroque performance practice, which collaborated with the 91做厙 Glee Club in performances of Handels Dixit Dominus, directed by Donna M. Di Grazia, David J. Baldwin Professor of Music. Performances took place in Bridges Hall of Music on April 25 and 27 and May 11, followed by a West Coast tour (May 14-22), with concerts in Berkeley, Palo Alto, Portland and Seattle.

On May 10 in Orange, California, Bandy programmed and led a workshop handling musical rhetoric in works by Lassus, Morales and Marenzio for the , and on May 26, Bandy played violone with in their in Beverly Hills, California, a complete performance of Alessandro Scarlattis oratorio Cain, overo Il primo omicidio (1707).

Tatiana Bas獺簽ez, visiting assistant professor of psychological science, had a symposium titled The World of Three Cultures Model: Honor, Achievement, and Joy/Easygoingness accepted for presentation at The XXVII International Congress of International Association of Cross-Cultural Psychology 2024 where she is scheduled to present a paper titled Psychometric Properties of Values and Behavior Measures Using the World of Three Cultures Model: Honor, Achievement, and Joy. Also, along with students from her Social Psychology and Health (SOPAH) research lab, she was awarded a grant to present two scientific posters at the Association for Psychological Science Annual Convention in San Francisco, May 23-26.

Colin J. Beck, professor of international relations, gave two invited talks. First, he spoke to masters students in the Department of Sociology at Stockholm University on revolutionary waves in modern history. On May 3, he presented a paper on the role of corruption grievances in 21st century revolutions at the Wisconsin Historical Analysis Table at the Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Graydon Beeks, emeritus professor of music, performed as harpsichordist with his Cornucopian Baroque Ensemble colleaguesviolinist Alfred Cramer, associate professor of music; theorbist Jason Yoshida, lecturer in music; and cellist Roger Lebowin a Friday Noon Concert of music by Handel and Telemann in Lyman Hall.

Gary Champi, assistant professor of dance, taught a masterclass on Cunningham Technique at the University of Washington, Seattle, on May 24.

Charlotte Chang, assistant professor of biology and environmental analysis, co-authored a publication titled Communication and Deliberation for Environmental Governance in the Annual Review of Environment and Resources. Chang also co-authored a preprint titled on the arXiv preprint server with two non-profits, Conservation Science Partners and On The Edge Conservation.

David Divita, professor of Romance languages and literatures, gave a talk titled Memoria de la migraci籀n de las mujeres espa簽olas en Francia at the Reina Sof穩a Museum in Madrid on May 10. The talk, which was based on his recently published book Untold Stories: Legacies of Authoritarianism among Spanish Labour Migrants in Later Life (Toronto, 2024), was sponsored jointly by the museum and the Universidad Aut籀noma de Madrid.

Erica Dobbs, assistant professor of politics, was an invited speaker at a co-hosted by the UC San Diego Center for Comparative Immigration Studies and UCLA Center for the Study of International Migration on May 17. She and gave a talk based on their recently published book (Oxford University Press).

Virginie A. Duzer, professor and chair of Romance languages and literatures, remotely presented the paper Calques et Copies des amiti矇s tardives during the dedicated to copy and double May 16.

Robert Gaines, Edwin F. and Martha Hahn Professor of Geology, with colleagues from Harvard University and Freie Universitat Berlin, published the article Benthic pterobranchs from the Cambrian (Drumian) Marjum Konservat-Lagerst瓣tte of Utah in Papers in Palaeontology.

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of mathematics and statistics, gave a talk titled Fast food for thought: what can chicken nuggets tell us about linear algebra? at the Cal State Long Beach Mathematics Colloquium on May 3.

Garcia published an article, , with former Visiting Assistant Professor Angel Chavez and Jackson Hurley 23 in Canadian Mathematical Bulletin.

Ernesto R. Guti矇rrez Topete 17, Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in linguistics and cognitive science, presented his research project titled Production Leads Perception: Linguistic Variation Effects on Speech Perception at the Colloquium Seminar for the Linguistics Department at UCLA.

Heidi Nichols Haddad, associate professor of politics, participated in the invited workshop Surfacing Social Justice Solutions in Voluntary Local Reviews sponsored by Carnegie Mellon University/Heinz College and the Brookings Institution Center for Sustainable Development in Washington D.C. on May 1-2.

Esther Hern獺ndez-Medina, assistant professor of Latin American studies and gender and womens studies, co-organized and moderated a on May 31 evaluating the results of female candidacies in the Dominican presidential and congressional elections. Hern獺ndez-Medina also gave an interview on the feminist radio program Libertarias the same day to publicize the event.

Gizem Karaali, professor of mathematics and statistics, together with Kira Hamman of Pennsylvania State University Mon Alto and Lew Ludwig of Denison University, led a virtual four-day workshop (May 13-16) titled Whos Afraid of Generative AI? Promises and Challenges for the Mathematics Classroom hosted by the of the Mathematical Association of America.

Karaali gave a talk titled A New Elephant Enters the (Chat)Room: Why Teach Math Now? at the 2024 FYMSiC (First-Year Mathematics and Statistics in Canada) one-day online conference Why Are We Teaching Mathematics Today? on May 9. A is available.

Karaali published an article titled in the April/May 2024 issue of FOCUS, the newsletter of the Mathematical Association of America.

Jade Star Lackey, professor of geology, co-authored the study , published in Geosphere.

Lackey presented the talk Subduction to Sequoias: How Cretaceous Magmatism Set the Vitality and Vulnerability of Sierran Forest Ecosystems at the 2024 Sierra Nevada Science Symposium convened by the National Park Service, USGS and University of California System.

Genevieve Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, and fellow members of the Mojave Trio were artists-in-residence at University of California, Davis, from May 15-17. They recorded and presented the premiere of graduate composer works in concert. Mojave Trio also performed a live-streamed of works by Nico Muhly, James Di獺z, Gao Ping and Rebecca Clarke. Each member of the group coached undergraduate individuals and chamber ensembles.

Lee was invited to give a solo recital for the May meeting of the local Foothill Philharmonic Committee, a support group for the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

Joyce Lu, associate professor of theatre and Asian American studies, led a qigong workshop at a Hike for Wellness in Lincoln Heights offered by on May 11.

Lu led an online exploration in contracting and expanding for the on May 20.

Sara Masland, associate professor of psychological science, presented an invited talk, Knowledge is Power(ful): Harnessing Education to Destigmatize Borderline Personality Disorder, at the annual Yale-National Education Alliance for BPD conference.

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, published a paper titled HI discs of Lstar galaxies as probes of the baryonic physics of galaxy evolution in the .

Moreno delivered a colloquium titled The intriguing lives of galaxies lacking dark matter at (May 8) and (May 14).

Carolyn Ratteray, associate professor of theatre, received the Integrity Award from the Los Angeles Women's Theatre Festival for her outstanding work in Los Angeles theatre.

Ratterays one-woman show Both And (A Play About Laughing While Black) was invited to be a part of the International Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, this summer along with her episodic film (Un)Claimed. (Un)Claimed also screened at the Diva Film Festival in London this past month.

Hans J. Rindisbacher, professor of German, published a by David Crystal (Oxford, Bodleian Library Publishing, 2023) in The European Legacy.

Joti Rockwell, associate professor of music, performed in a pair of concerts at Claremonts Folk Music Center as a member of Peter Harpers band, playing a variety of instruments including pedal steel, banjo and theremin. On vihuela, he joined Alfred Cramer, associate professor of music, and Ursula Kleinecke, lecturer in music, in a performance as part of Claremont Colleges Faculty Mariachi, led by C獺ndida J獺quez. On a custom-made Balinese bamboo slide guitar, he was a guest musician with gamelan Burat Wangi at the CalArts 2024 World Music and Dance Festival, performing the new composition Fantasy by I Nyoman Wenten, lecturer in music.

Rockwell published a review of Nicholas Stoias book Sweet Thing: The History and Musical Structure of a Shared American Vernacular in the Journal of Music Theory.

On May 18, Rockwell delivered the keynote lecture titled Music in Motion, Music as Motion at the joint meeting of the West Coast Conference of Music Theory and Analysis and the Pacific Southwest Chapter of the American Musicological Society, held at UC Irvine.

Cherene Sherrard-Johnson, E. Wilson Lyon Professor of the Humanities and chair of English, published her edited collection on May 16. The Companion assembles a coalition of expert scholars, both emergent and established, to ensure comprehensive and incisive coverage of literary texts featuring the Black body over a wide historical range and from a variety of theoretical perspectives. This book provides an invaluable guide for teachers, students and general readers interested in literary and artistic representations of Blackness and embodiment. The cover design features Wardell Milans The Black Male Body, one of five billboards commissioned by 91做厙s Benton Museum during the 2022-2023 academic year.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, published two peer-reviewed papers: in Journal of Financial Planning and in Journal of Investing. He also wrote two opinion pieces: (MindMatters, May 15) and (MarketWatch, May 29).

Gary was interviewed by Derek Thompson for in The Atlantic (May 8) and signed a contract for a traditional Chinese translation of which has also been translated into Simplified Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Turkish.

Andrew Wilson, director of research computing, ITS, published an article, , in The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease.

Keri Wilson, assistant professor of biology, published the article in the journal American Naturalist.

Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages and literatures, organized a panel on AI-generated content and second language teaching at the 2024 Conference of Computer Assisted Language Instruction Consortium (CALICO) held by Carnegie Mellon University on May 23. Xiao and Jonathan Becker 24 showcased an AI-based adaptive learning platform, Luduan.ai, at CALICO 2024 on May 23.

Xiao co-authored a paper titled in Journal of Psycholinguistic Research on May 24.

April 2024

Aimee Bahng, associate professor of gender and womens studies (GWS) and program coordinator of GWS and American Studies (AMST), was nominated for the Excellence in Mentorship Award from the Association for Asian American Studies and was awarded an honorable mention at the national conference awards ceremony in Seattle on April 27.

Nicholas Ball, associate professor of chemistry gave a talk titled Synthetic Strategies toward Fluorosulfurylation of Organic Molecules and Sulfur-Fluoride Exchange (SuFEx) at Portland State University.

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, served on the program committee for the 32nd Annual Conference of the , held April 47 at Princeton University and hosted by Princeton University Department of Music, with support from the Center for Human Values, Council of the Humanities, Program in Italian Studies, Department of Art and Archaeology, Department of French and Italian and Department of Comparative Literature.

On April 11, Bandy presented a lecture-performance titled Drawing the Bow: Process, Passaggi, and Gendered Sociality in Italian and English Viol Music, ca. 15801680 at the Benton Museum of Art at 91做厙, as part of the event Gender and the Italian Arts. Bandys lecture-performance featured members of Artifex Consort and drew connections between 16th-century cartoon tracing, the viola da gamba as a gendered object, and the rhetorical abundant style of divisions (variations) practice as instrumental reworkings of Italian Renaissance vocal polyphony. The event also featured a lecture by Eve Straussman-Pflanzer (to which Bandys musical portion responded), curator and head of Italian and Spanish paintings at the National Gallery of Art, in honor of the current Benton exhibition 500 Years of Italian Drawings from the Princeton University Art Museum.

Gayle Blankenburg, lecturer in music, performed in a at Symphony Space in New York City on April 20. She performed a solo piano work, a work for cello and piano, and a work for violin, piano and two dancers.

Shannon Burns, assistant professor of psychological science and neuroscience, presented a symposium talk titled Coordinated neural states during joint decision-making at the Annual Meeting of the Social and Affective Neuroscience Society in Toronto on April 11.

Paul Cahill, associate professor of Spanish, presented two papers: El que habla no es el que sufre: Witnessing Testimony in Juan Carlos Mestres Fechado en Auschwitz, at the 44th Cincinnati Conference on Romance & Arabic Languages and Literatures, held at the University of Cincinnati from April 4-6 and Economic Exile and Migratory Identity in the Writings of Azahara Palomeque, at Cal State Long Beachs 58th Annual Comparative World Literature Conference (April 17).

On April 20, Cahill hosted the Spring Meeting of the Southern California Chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese at 91做厙.

Eileen J. Cheng, professor of Asian languages and literatures and faculty director of Oldenborg, published an annotated bibliography of sources on the modern Chinese writer in in Chinese Studies, edited by Tim Wright and published by Oxford University Press.

Cecilia Conrad, emerita professor of economics, was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2024 in recognition of her nonprofit leadership.

David Divita, professor of Romance languages and literatures, was recognized by the Queer Resource Center at Lavender Graduation for his support of students and his contributions to the community.

Erica Dobbs, assistant professor of politics, had an article, , published online in the journal Ethnic and Racial Studies.

Malte Dold, assistant professor of economics, published the article in Behavioural Public Policy.

Edray Herber Goins, professor of mathematics and statistics, attended the from April 6-7 at Howard University in Washington, D.C. On April 6, Goins organized a special session called GranvilleFest 100: A Celebration of the Legacy of Evelyn Boyd Granville, celebrating the 100th birthday of the second African American to receive a doctorate in mathematics. On April 7, Goins gave a talk in the special session on Elementary Number Theory and Elliptic Curves titled {Quasi-Critical Points of Toroidal Belyi Maps.

Goins has been traveling around the country serving as a section visitor for the Mathematical Association of America (MAA). On April 5, he attended the at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Arkansas. He gave a keynote address titled Clocks, Parking Garages, and the Solvability of the Quintic: A Friendly Introduction to Monodromy. On April 12-13, Goins attended the at the University of Wisconsin in Whitewater, Wisconsin. He gave a keynote address titled Indiana Pols Forced to Eat Humble Pi: The Curious History of an Irrational Number.

Nicole Desjardins Gowdy, senior director of international and domestic programs, presented a session on case studies and table top scenarios with colleagues Stacey Bolton Tsantir (DIS Study Abroad in Scandinavia) and Susan Lochner Atkinson (University of WisconsinMadison) at the U.S. Department of States Academia Sector Committee (ASC) Spring 2024 Seminar on Health, Safety, and Security held at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities on April 26 in St. Paul.

Ernesto R. Guti矇rrez Topete 17, Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in linguistics and cognitive science, presented his research project titled Occlusive salience among Spanish-English bilinguals: Evidence from code-switching in a Blue Room Talk for the series Return to 91做厙 for 91做厙 faculty, staff, students and alumni.

Guti矇rrez Topete participated in an alumni panel hosted virtually on April 7 by the Office of Graduate Diversity at UC Berkeley.

Nina Karnovsky, Willard George Halstead Zoology Professor of Biology, and biology majors Philip Duchild 24 and Teodelina Martelli 24 presented their bird-related research at the April 91做厙 Valley Audubon Society meeting. Karnovsky presented her work assessing the diets of Antarctic penguins and south polar skuas from the ear bones of fish found in the puke and poop of those seabirds. Duchild presented results from his senior thesis in which he quantified and characterized the plastic consumed by Laysan albatross breeding at two colonies on Oahu, Hawaii. Martelli presented a RAISE (Remote Alternative Independent Summer Experience) project she did in which she translated the bird field notes of her late grandfather from Argentina and put his sightings into ebird, a citizen science app for recording birds.

Karnovsky performed in two dances choreographed by Anthony Loa in Village Dance Arts recital Steppin Out at the Haugh Performing Arts Center in Glendora, California, on April 21.

Jun Lang, assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures, co-authored the article New Developments in 91做厙s Chinese Program: Implementation of Gender-Inclusive Curriculum Practices with Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages and literatures, published in .

Lang gave a talk titled Chinese Language and Gender: Exploring Gender-Inclusive Pedagogy at the 2nd Annual Gender-Inclusive Language Conference hosted by the Center for Languages and Cultures, University of Southern California.

Lang joined a panel at the 2024 Chinese Language Teachers Association (CLTA) Annual Conference in St. Louis, Missouri, where she presented her recent pedagogical practices titled Teaching Chinese to Gen Z: Project-based Learning.

Tom Le, associate professor of politics, published an on the death and impact of Dragon Ball creator Akira Toriyama.

Le served as a discussant on a panel concerning social movements in Japan at the Associate of Asian Studies annual conference.

Le gave a talk at Soka University of America on Japan-South Korea reconciliation.

Le served on a panel, The Future of East Asia, at the West Coast International Relations of Asia Conference at USC.

Jonathan Lethem, Roy E. Disney 51 Professor of Creative Writing, won The New York City Book Award for his 2023 book Brooklyn Crime Novel.

Alexandra Lippman, visiting assistant professor of anthropology, presented Queen of the Favela: Ludmilla's Queer Funk at the Brazilian Studies Association in San Diego on April 3 in a panel on queer and trans performance, necropolitics and the Brazilian state.

Joyce Lu, associate professor of theatre and Asian American studies, led a Playback Theatre workshop at the conference April 4. She also performed playback with as part of Armand Volkas plenary speech titled Healing the Wounds of History Through Psychodrama on April 6.

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, delivered an invited talk titled from excursion sets to today: a random walk through the history of cosmological simulations at the on April 4. This presentation was also featured in .

From April 15-19, Moreno co-organized an international conference called at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.

Moreno published three peer-reviewed research articles in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: , and The third article was led by Francisco Mercado, postdoctoral fellow working under the supervision of Moreno and lecturer in physics and astronomy.

Zhiru Ng, professor and chair of religious studies and program coordinator of Asian studies, presented To beg or to cook? Food ethics, cross-cultural borrowing, and the meal rituals of South Forest (Nanlin) Buddhist nuns in Central Taiwan at the conference on Buddhism and Food Ethics, University of Oxford China Center, March 19-20. The conference was hosted by the faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Oxford.

Kun Nie, visiting instructor of Asian languages and literatures, gave a presentation titled Strengthening Cultural Roots through Community-Centric Projects for the Heritage Chinese Classes at the 31st International Conference on Chinese Language Instruction, held at Princeton University on April 27.

Gilda L. Ochoa, professor of Chicana/o-Latina/o Studies, was an invited panelist on Claiming Belonging and Witnessing Joy: New Directions in Latinx Studies at the Latinx Studies Association, Arizona State University on April 19.

Ochoa co-facilitated a daylong workshop for Santa Ana Unified School Districts Ethnic Studies Steering Committee on April 24 in Santa Ana, California.

Dan OLeary, Carnegie Professor of Chemistry, had his six-year effort with the University of Washington to reconcile its role in a decades-old case of child sexual abuse at a Seattle elementary school on NPR affiliate KUOW.org.

Adam Pearson, associate professor and chair of psychological science, published the article , co-authored with Stella Favaro 23 and Brooke Sparks 22. The article is part of a 25th anniversary special issue of the journal Group Processes and Intergroup Relations focused on the role of psychology in addressing global challenges.

Pearson co-authored the article in Science Advances with a global team of 250 behavioral scientists.

William Peterson, professor emeritus of music and College organist, performed music from the WWI era in a concert on the Hill Memorial Organ in Bridges Hall of Music. The program included a number of works that were originally published in an anthology, Les Voix de la douleur chr矇tienne (The Voices of Christian Sorrow). The concert program included music composed between 1914 and 1924 by Louis Vierne, Camille Saint-Sa禱ns, Joseph Jongen, Jacques Ibert and others.

Sheila Pinkel, professor emerita of art and art history, has a large cyanotype work currently on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Alexis Reyes, director of sustainability and energy management, was featured in a with Patch, a carbon credit marketplace, for her work on sourcing and vetting high-quality carbon credits. Reyes worked with a subcommittee of the 91做厙 Board of Trustees to establish criteria for purchasing high-quality carbon credits. The Sustainability Office launched a pilot program under which departments can purchase carbon credits to offset emissions from College-funded air travel.

Hans Rindisbacher, professor of German and Russian, published a of Kellers Erz瓣hlen. Strukturen Funktionen Reflexionen. Herausgegeben von Philipp Theisohn (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2022); and Kellers Medien. Formen Genres Institutionen. Herausgegeben von Frauke Berndt (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2022) in Monatshefte.

Monique Saigal Escudero, professor emerita of French, gave a presentation, My Hidden Childhood in WWII in Occupied France, during Alumni Weekend on April 27.

Bri S矇rr獺no, assistant dean and director of the Queer Resource Center, defended and passed his dissertation defense for a doctor of philosophy in education and human resource studies degree with a specialization in higher education leadership from Colorado State University on April 29. His dissertation is titled I Love the Work, But the Work Doesnt Love Me: A Constructivist Study on the Lived Experiences of Transgender Staff of Color Who Report Discrimination in Higher Education.

Anthony Shay, professor of dance, wrote his first novel Death Along the Silk Road. The novel follows Omar Khayyam through the period 1090-1092, when the Seljuq Empire of Persia fell apart. Most of the events, though fictionalized, occurred. Shay translated Khayyams poems anew for the novel.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, wrote five opinion pieces: (MindMatters, April 11), (MindMatters, April 16), (MindMatters, April 23); (MindMatters, April 29) and (Washington Post, April 23).

Smith signed a contract for a Japanese translation of the book The Power of Modern Value Investing: Beyond Indexing, Algos, and Alpha, co-authored with his wife Margaret Smith.

Kevin Wynter, assistant professor of media studies, signed a contract with Edinburgh University Press for his second book, Feeling Absence: Horror, Memory, and Language in Cinema.

Wynter organized and hosted the Media Studies Departments 2024 Eckstein Symposium. The theme of this years symposium was Expressing the Inexpressible. The symposiums invited speakers were film scholars Aaron Kerner (San Francsico State) and Hilary Neroni (University of Vermont).

Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages and literatures, was appointed chair of the media and publicity committee at Chinese Language Teachers Association, USA (CLTA) on April 5. He participated in a panel discussion on the challenges and opportunities of generative AI for Chinese teaching and co-presented a paper titled Assessing pragmatic routines in L2 Chinese: A focus on rating scale functioning and rater behavior at the 2024 CLTA Conference on April 6.

Xiao was invited to join the international roundtable discussion on Chinese curriculum design and pedagogical practice held by Princeton University on April 26.

Samuel Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History, discussed Professor Chen Shouyi, who headed 91做厙s Asian Studies program for nearly three decades, in a short talk titled Chen Shouyi and the Development of Asian Studies at 91做厙 that was part of a special program, Remembering Professor Chen Shouyis Legacy: A Discussion, held at The Claremont Colleges Library on April 3.

March 2024

Ellie Anderson, assistant professor of philosophy, was featured in for her research on hermeneutic labor in intimate relationships.

Anderson delivered the annual Edwards Lecture at Emory University on March 21, with a presentation titled Feeling Myself: Self-Awareness and Objectification. She also presented Love and Limerence at an invited symposium at the meeting of the American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, in Portland, Oregon, on March 23 and delivered an invited talk on The Critical Phenomenological Turn to the Kant and Post-Kantian Research Group at the University of Toronto on March 28.

Tricia Avant, academic coordinator and gallery manager of art, had one of her videos included in a screening event titled The Formless is What Keeps Bleeding at Heavy Manners Library in Los Angeles on March 8.

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, alongside Donna M. Di Grazia, David J. Baldwin Professor of Music, and Adrien Redford 14, programmed, prepared editions for, co-directed and played tenor viola da gamba in Musick Divine, a concert of 16th- and 17th-century English music for voices and viols, as a joint venture between Artifex Consort and PRISM Choral Ensemble (March 3, Bridges Auditorium).

On March 8, Bandy presented a paper titled Through All Eternity: Clockwork, Memory, and Temporality in Dieterich Buxtehudes Jesu dulcis memoria at the , held at Wheaton College (Wheaton, IL). Bandy then presented another paper, Instruments of Torture: Viols, Dismemberment, and Transfiguration in German Baroque Passion Meditations, based on his research as a 2023-24 91做厙 Humanities Studio fellow, at the , held March 1517 at UC Berkeley.

On March 2224 at venues in Palo Alto, Berkeley and San Francisco, Bandy performed with the early music ensemble Ciaramella on viola da gamba, alto shawm and Renaissance h羹mmelchen bagpipes, in presented by the .

Alexa Block, associate director of news and strategic content in the Office of Communications, served as a plenary speaker and for The Council for Advancement and Support of Educations Social Media and Community conference in Boston from March 18-20. The plenary sessions were titled Social Issues, Social Climate and Social Media and Crisis Messaging and Protocols Workshop.

Bana Marine Dahi, visiting assistant professor of French, presented a talk titled Lintelligence artificielle (IA) au carrefour de la didactique du FLE : LIA en Support lApprenant et lEnseignant in the conference organized by the American Association of Teachers of French (AATF-SoCal) at USC on March 2.

Susanne Mahoney Filback, associate director, preprofessional programs & prelaw advisor in the Career Development Office, attended a graduate school advisor workshop hosted by The University of St. Andrews in Scotland from March 18-22. 91做厙 was one of only 12 U.S. colleges and universities invited to attend.

Robert Gaines, Edwin F. and Martha Hahn Professor of Geology, published two papers in the March 29 issue of Science Advances. With colleagues from the U.S., Australia and Korea, he published the article . With colleagues from the U.S. and China, he published the article .

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, delivered the 2024 Mosaic Lecture at Grand Valley State University on March 12. His talk was titled Prime Time Math: Little Green Men, Locust Hordes, and Cybersecurity.

Gizem Karaali, professor of mathematics and statistics, together with Kira Hamman of Pennsylvania State University and Mon Alto and Lew Ludwig of Denison University, facilitated a virtual discussion session titled Revisiting Generative AI and Numeracy. The session was hosted by the National Numeracy Network on March 21.

Karaali facilitated a virtual workshop, together with Ileana Vasu of Holyoke Community College, Geillan Aly of Compassionate Math and Jonas DAndrea of Westminster University, titled Equity in the Moment on March 24. The event was hosted by (New England Community for Mathematics Inquiry in Teaching).

Jun Lang, assistant professor of Chinese, co-chaired with Feng Xiao, associate professor of Chinese, in organizing and hosting the 36th North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics (NACCL-36), an international scholarly event at 91做厙 from March 22-24. This event was sponsored by the College, Academic Deans Office, Asian Languages and Literatures Department, Asian Studies, Asian Library, Oldenborg Language Center, Pacific Basin Institute, and Linguistics and Cognitive Science Department. NACCL-36 at 91做厙 marks the first time this international conference was held at a liberal arts college.

At NACCL-36, Lang collaborated with her students Sydney Tai 26, Emma Tom 26, Jenny Wey 24 and Jessie Zhang 26 to deliver a panel presentation titled Incorporating Gender into Chinese Language and Linguistics Courses, showcasing learning and teaching reflections from the two new courses Lang first offered: Introduction to Pop Culture in China in spring 2023 and Chinese Language and Gender in fall 2023.

Lang was invited to review the newly published book titled Pragmatics of Chinese as a Second Language, edited by Shuai Li. Lang's was published in the journal Contrastive Pragmatics on March 12.

Genevieve Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, gave a solo on the series at Colburn School of Music in downtown Los Angeles. Her program featured keyboard works with speaking and singing.

With the support of a 91做厙 research grant, Lee commissioned and premiered two new works by Chris Castro and Livia Malossi Bottignole. San Francisco Classical Voice gave her a glowing review.

Lee was a judge for the Oakland University (Michigan) 2024 Piano Day Competition for young pianists in two age groups between 11 and 18 years old.

Char Miller, W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History, presented Crisis Management: Conflict and Controversy in Forest Service History to sessions of the USDA Forest Service Middle Leadership Program in Davis, California, Ogden, Utah, Anchorage, Alaska, and Missoula, Montana.

紼勳梭梭梗娶s was published by the Forest History Society.

Miller was quoted in Washington Post articles on on March 2 and on March 5.

Monique Saigal Escudero, professor emerita of French, spoke at the American Cinemath癡que in Los Angeles on the anniversary of the execution of Missak Manouchian, an Armenian man who was active in the French Resistance. Saigal Escudero read a letter Manouchian wrote to his wife before being killed and additionally talked about her own situation during WWII and the women in the French Resistance whom she has interviewed.

Patricia Smiley, professor emerita of psychological science, with co-authors from UCI, published . The paper reports on the teams efforts to culturally adapt their relational savoring intervention for implementation with minoritized groups.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, wrote three opinion pieces: (MarketWatch, March 4); When it comes to critical thinking, AI flunks the test (Chronicle of Higher Education, March 12) and (MindMatters, March 20).

Smith signed a contract with Business Expert Press for a novel, co-authored with Margaret Smith, Reboot: A Business Novel of Money, Finance, and Life.

David M. Tanenbaum, Osler-Loucks Professor in Science and professor of physics, and his collaborators presented a talk, Slot-die Coated and Distributed Bragg Reflector (DBR) Integrated Improved Semi-transparent Organic Solar Cells at the Materials for Sustainable Development Conference (MATSUS) 2024 in Barcelona, Spain.

Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages & literatures, gave an invited talk titled AI and Adaptive Language Learning for the course AI and Global Humanities at Carnegie Mellon University on March 18. He also gave an invited talk titled Using ChatGPT API in Language Teaching at the third lecture series on Chinese curriculum design. The event was organized by Beijing Language and Culture University Press and Phoenix Tree Publishing on March 22. Xiao gave a presentation titled Facilitative and Inhibitive Factors in Processing L2 Chinese Compounds at the 36th North American Conference on Chinese Linguistics on March 23.

Samuel Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History, delivered Did the War Have to End in the Way It Did? and Understanding Daily Life in Wartime Japan, 1937-1945 at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater on March 5 and the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology on March 7. The Northeast Asia Council of the Association for Asian Studies funded these lectures, the fourth and fifth Yamashita has given as a member of NEACs Distinguished Speakers Bureau.

On March 16, Yamashita delivered a paper titled Kaiseki Cuisine and the New Hyperlocal Cuisines as part of a panel on New Directions in Japanese Food Studies that he organized for the annual meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, which was held in Seattle. On the following afternoon, Yamashita gave his Chinese Food Along the Pacific Rim talk to 91做厙 alumni in Seattle.

Yanshuo Zhang, assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures, was an organizer, chair and presenter at a panel titled Transcultural Encounters in the Sin-Tibetan Borderlands at the Association for Asian Studies (AAS) annual conference. Her scholarly panel examined cross-lingual, cross-ethnic encounters among Western missionaries, indigenous groups and Han Chinese intellectuals in the 20th and 21st centuries.

Zhangs pedagogical essay Visualizing Ethnic Minorities was published in (Modern Language Association). Her essay is probably the first systematic discussion of how to engage with and teach about Chinas ethnic minorities in the classroom ever published in the English language.

Zhang was invited to give a special talk as part of the distinguished Tanner Talk Series at Utah State University. Her talk was titled Understanding China from the Borders: The Qiang and Multiethnic Chinese Literature, Cinema, and Visual Culture and tackled ethnic minority creative expressions and diversity issues in the realm of literary and artistic productions in globalizing China and represents cutting-edge interdisciplinary research in Asian humanities.

February 2024

Lise Abrams, Peter W. Stanley Chair of Linguistics and Cognitive Science, published the research article in the journal Language and Speech, co-authored with Pengbo Hu 21 and Genevieve Gray 22 and collaborators Meredith Shafto and Lori James.

Ellie Anderson, assistant professor of philosophy, delivered the keynote address for the 2024 Society for the Philosophy of Sex and Love seminar series with a presentation titled Hermeneutic Labor in Sexual Contexts on Feb. 8. She also presented On the Possibility of Unrequited Love: Limerence, Infatuation, and Crushes at the 2024 Fagothey Conference Problems with Love at Santa Clara University.

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, presented the paper Didactics Beyond Depiction: Jesuit Dialectic in Heinrich Bibers Mystery Sonatas (c.1680) at a , Mullen Professor Emerita of Musicology at Rice Universitys (Houston). The conference took place Feb. 1718 at the and featured invited papers by 15 Shepherd School alumni from across the U.S. and Europe.

On Feb. 21, Bandy presented a lecture on the life and esoteric compositional practices of Dieterich Buxtehude (ca.16371707) at USCs Doheny Memorial Library, at the event , organized by the USC working group and co-sponsored by the for Austrian-German-Swiss Studies and the .

Bandy programmed and led a day-long workshop (Feb. 3, South Pasadena, California) for , the local Viola da Gamba Society of America chapter, on the topic of fauxbourdon and its many symbolic meanings across sacred and secular music from the 15th through 17th centuries in Italy, Flanders and England.

Graydon Beeks, emeritus professor of music, performed as harpsichordist with his Cornucopian Baroque Ensemble colleaguesviolinist Alfred Cramer, associate professor of music; theorbist Jason Yoshida, lecturer in music; and cellist Roger Lebowin a Friday Noon concert of music by Handel and Telemann on Feb. 16 in Lyman Hall.

Gary Champi, assistant professor of dance, taught an open-level community dance masterclass at Elite Movement Dance Studio in Cape Town, South Africa. During his time there, he worked with four local dancers on a short video project and interviewed studio owner and choreographer Densley Deezy Carolissen on the conversations surrounding hip hop dance today.

Champi premiered a new six-minute contemporary modern dance titled Reset with the Malashock Dance Company in San Diego, California. The work included new music by percussionist and composer Jonathan Rodriguez.

Eileen J. Cheng, professor of Asian languages and literatures and faculty director of Oldenborg Center, had a podcast interview on her translation of Lu Xuns published on Feb. 13 in .

David Divita, professor of Romance languages & literatures, published a book titled with University of Toronto Press.

Dean Gerstein, director of sponsored research, received a research grant from the to design, conduct and analyze a national sample survey on research development and research administration at U.S. colleges and universities. 91做厙 is the lead institution, and Gerstein is the principal investigator, with colleagues from the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, Seattle University and Research Triangle Institute. This three-year project is titled , with an overall project budget of $1,884,361.

Gerstein was appointed to the at the Social Science Research Council. Industries of Ideas is a three-year funded by the Directorate for Technology, Innovation, and Partnerships of the National Science Foundation.

Meg Gotowski, visiting assistant professor of linguistics and cognitive science, Ernesto R. Guti矇rrez Topete, Chau Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in linguistics and cognitive science, and Galia Bar-Sever, visiting assistant professor of linguistics and cognitive science, organized and hosted the 91做厙 Acquisition Workshop (PAW) 2024 on Feb. 23. The one-day event brought together invited speakers from UCSD, UCLA and UCI as well as graduate students from UCLA to present their most recent work on language acquisition research. 91做厙 faculty and students attended the event and interacted with other scholars in Southern California working on this topic.

Gizem Karaali, professor of mathematics and statistics, was elected to serve as a member-at-large of the of the Association for Women in Mathematics and began her term in Feb. 2024.

Karaali gave a talk titled Can Zombies Do Math? OR Humanism as a Philosophy of Mathematics on Feb. 22 at the Mathematics Department Colloquium at Ferris State University in Big Rapids, Michigan.

Karaali gave a talk titled ChatGPT and New Ethical Considerations for the Mathematics Classroom on Feb. 24 at the WiMSoCal-14 Conference held at 91做厙.

Nina Karnovsky, Willard George Halstead Zoology Professor of Biology, and biology major Philip Duchild 24, attended the 50th annual meeting of the Pacific Seabird Group in Seattle from Feb. 20-23. Karnovsky chaired the session Community Outreach and presented the paper Sowing Seeds of Futures in Seabird Conservation through Participation in Habitat Restoration Work on Anacapa Island. In this study, Karnovsky found that participating in a field trip in her Advanced Animal Ecology classes had a lasting and large impact on the lives of 91做厙 students long after graduation. Duchild presented a part of his senior thesis in a poster, Analysis of Laysan Albatross Diets from Two Colonies on Oahu, Hawaii. Co-authors were Karnovsky and Lindsay Young of Pacific Rim Conservation. As part of the meeting there was an exhibit called Faces of Conservation. Kristina McOmber 12, Jacob Ligorria 23 and Clare Flynn 19 were profiled in this exhibit. At the meeting, Kay Garlick-Ott 18 won the award for best Ph.D. student talk, and Kristina McOmber 12 won the award for best masters student poster.

Tom Le, associate professor of politics, was selected for the Institute for Global Affairs 2024 nonresident fellowship.

Genevieve Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, performed at ChamberFest 2024 held at California State University, Northridge on Feb. 2. With CSUN faculty members, she played Khachaturians Trio for clarinet, violin and piano.

Lee was an invited guest on Global Village Thursdays with John Schneider on KPFK 90.7FM. She was asked to speak about her upcoming at the Colburn School in downtown Los Angeles on March 5.

Joyce Lu, associate professor of theatre and Asian American studies, performed with Pangea Playback Theatre under the direction of Hannah K. Fox for a presentation by Dailey Innovations, Inc. titled Speaking Through Colors: Self-Expression Through Art (SETA) and using Playback Theater to Transform the World on Feb. 22. This virtual event was sponsored by the School of Social Work and the Office of Professional Development and Continuing Education at Howard University.

April Mayes, professor of history and associate dean of the College, was one of three scholars featured in the podcast Lost Women of Science in an Fraser was the daughter of Reverend Jeremiah Loguen, ex-slave, abolitionist and clergy member, and became one of the first African American women to earn a medical degree (Syracuse University). She immigrated to the Dominican Republic where she became the first woman certified to practice medicine, allowed to treat women and children.

Susan McWilliams Barndt, professor of politics, spoke to the Metuchen (New Jersey) Democratic Committee on Feb. 7 about the possibilities and probabilities for the 2024 election.

On Feb. 15, McWilliams published an article titled He Took Children Seriously as part of a retrospective forum on the historian Christopher Lasch in the journal Current.

McWilliams published an essay titled in Political Science Quarterly on Feb. 28.

Wallace M. Meyer III, associate professor of biology and director of the Bernard Field Station, published an article titled Acmispon glaber shrub canopies facilitate Bromus madritensis establishment after fire in California sage scrub in the Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences.

Meyer received, as a co-PI, a National Science Foundation BIORETS: REACHES grant for a project titled Research experiences for advancing curriculum of Hawaiian ecosystem sciences.

Meyer gave an invited talk at Cal State University San Bernardino titled Using ecological information to develop a holistic approach to sustainable landscaping in southern California.

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, published an article titled in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Moreno and collaborators obtained approval for a research proposal titled BonFIRE: Modeling Galaxy Formation in the Early Universe under the Theory Program.

Michael OMalley, professor of art, has new work in the show This is not a chair currently on view at the Claremont Museum of Art until April 20, 2024.

Zvezdana Ostojic, visiting assistant professor of French, chaired the panel Crime is their Business and presented the paper tout crime son ch璽timent : une r矇矇criture impossible dans Maudit soit Dosto簿evski dAtiq Rahimi at the 2024 20th- & 21st-century French & Francophone Studies International Colloquium in Philadelphia.

Adam Pearson, associate professor and chair of psychological science, was elected Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science, the largest international scientific organization of psychologists. Fellow status is awarded to APS members who have made sustained outstanding contributions to the science of psychology in the areas of research, teaching, service and/or application.

Pearson gave an invited address, Social Psychological Pathways to Climate Justice, at the Groups Preconference of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology in San Diego, California.

Hans J. Rindisbacher, professor of German, was awarded a in support of his edited book on the 20th-century Swiss author Friedrich D羹rrenmatt (under contract with Camden House). The volume brings together 12 scholars who (re)read and interpret D羹rrenmatts multi-perspective work in the context of contemporary social, political and cultural developments.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, published a paper (co-authored with Margaret Smith), in the Journal of Financial Planning and wrote three opinion pieces: (Retraction Watch, Feb. 21); (MindMatters, Feb. 21) and (MindMatters, Feb. 23). He was also quoted extensively in Ed Yardenis discussion of AI Isnt Intelligent in Morning Briefing (Feb. 22).

Smith gave a presentation, Generative AI Is Still Fake Intelligence, to 381 people working with AI in OReilly Medias GenAI Superstream: Possibilities and Pitfalls on Feb. 28.

Valorie D. Thomas, emerita Phebe Estelle Spalding professor of English and Africana Studies, published the chapter Who Do You Worship?: #Memesis #whodoyouworship #Beyonc矇theFeminist #AprilBey, about Los Angeles artist April Beys Afrofuturist work on Black femme iconography, in the collection edited by Anne Bray (MIT Press). She also published Incidents in the Life of a Black Prof.: A Speculative CV in the book edited by Shard矇 M. Davis (UNC Press).

Margaret Waller, professor emerita of French, won the New Yorker cartoon caption contest Feb. 5.

Kevin Wynter, assistant professor of media studies, served as moderator for the Evening with Joy-Ann Reid event celebrating the publication of her new book Medgar and Myrlie: Medgar Evers and the Love Story that Awakened America. The event was held in Bridges Auditorium on Feb. 15.

Yanshuo Zhang, assistant professor of Asian languages and literatures, presented her research project titled Indigenous Articulations: Understanding the Mother Tongue Movement of the Qiang People of China at the Global Asias conference held at UC Irvine. The conference gathered scholars from Asian Studies, Asian American Studies, English and other fields to explore cross-disciplinary issues and find connections beyond area studies.

January 2024

Lise Abrams, Peter W. Stanley Chair of Linguistics and Cognitive Science, co-authored the introduction to the special issue of American Psychologist along with co-editors Leah Light (Pitzer College), Sangeeta Panicker (Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research) and Jina Huh-Yoo (Drexel University).

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, recorded viola da gamba and tanbur solos for the soundtrack to the television series Masters of the Universe: Revolution. The show, whose score features musical themes by Bear McCreary and music by Sparks & Shadows, premiered on Netflix on January 25.

Mietek Boduszyski, associate professor of politics and international relations, was awarded a $40,000 to design and implement a simulation on the geopolitical and economic consequences of a supply chain disruption originating with the Peoples Republic of China. His co-principal investigator for the project is Ben Radd, visiting assistant professor of politics in 2022-23.

Charlotte Chang, assistant professor of biology and environmental analysis, published an article led by Hanna Kim 23 in the journal Conservation Science & Practice. This article compared environmental NGOs in terms of their social media strategy across multiple platforms, ranging from TikTok to Facebook, and found several organizations that were influencers, or positive deviates for public reach online. This research was the product of a RAISE award earned by Kim in the summer of 2021.

Chang co-authored two manuscripts related to conservation planning and public outreach. Chang was the lead author in an article published in Trends in Ecology & Evolution showing that after Elon Musks takeover of Twitter, environmental and climate voices declined markedly. This manuscript received press attention from venues including , , , and . Chang worked with an interdisciplinary team convened as a NIMBioS working group to mathematically model how incorporating information on conservation threats improves landscape planning outcomes; this article was published in .

Chang gave invited seminars to Nanyang Technological University, Asian School of the Environment; Centre for Wildlife Studies, Banglore, India; National University of Singapore, Department of Biological Sciences; and University of Nottingham, Malaysia, Sustainable Environments Research Group.

Stephan Ramon Garcia, W.M. Keck Distinguished Service Professor and chair of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, delivered the International Linear Algebra Society (ILAS) invited address Fast food for thought: what can chicken nuggets tell us about linear algebra? at the 2024 Joint Mathematics Meeting (JMM) in San Francisco on January 4. This honor was recognized at the Prizes and Awards ceremony on January 3. He also gave an hour-long lecture, A second course in linear algebra: a call for the early introduction of complex numbers, at the AMS Special Session on Issues, Challenges, and Innovations in Instruction of Linear Algebra on January 5, also at the JMM (a meeting attended by over 5,500). Garcia also co-organized, with Konrad Aguilar, assistant professor of mathematics and statistics, the ILAS Special Session on Linear Algebra, Matrix Theory, and its Applications on January 4-5.

On January 11, Garcia gave a talk titled The quaternionic structure of 2x2 matrix inner functions at the 2024 Workshop on Schur Analysis and applications to Hypercomplex Analysis, Neural Networks, and Linear Systems held at Chapman University.

Melissa Givens, assistant professor of music, was one of nine musicians who collaborated with Southwestern University Professor of Music John Michael Cooper on a video project in conjunction with the release of three volumes of previously unpublished volumes of music by Florence B. Price on January 1. Givens and Genevieve Feiwen Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, gave the world-premiere performance of Prices , a setting of a Langston Hughes text. The three volumes, published by ClarNan Editions and distributed by , are Twelve Pieces for Piano Solo, Seven Songs on Texts of African American Poets (Paul Laurence Dunbar, Langston Hughes, Florence Price, and Melvin B. Tolson) (original keys / medium voice) and Seven Songs on Texts of African American Poets (transposed for high voice).

Elizabeth Glater, associate professor of neuroscience, and Charles Taylor, chair and professor of chemistry, with Victor Chai 23, Tiam Farajzadeh 23, Yufei Meng 25, Sokhna Lo 25 and Tymmaa Asaed 25, published the paper in Scientific Reports in January.

Edray Herber Goins, professor of mathematics and statistics, attended the in San Francisco. The annual conference is the largest meeting of mathematicians in the world. On January 3, Goins organized and moderated a panel titled What Makes Successful Research Careers. Goins brought several Claremont Colleges students with him as part of his summer program experience: Tesfa Asmara 24, Louis Burns 24, Matilda LaFortune SCR 23, Eli Pregerson HMC 24 and Melinda Yang 23.

Goins was featured in a new documentary on African American mathematical scientists. , directed by George Csicsery, had its world premiere at the Joint Mathematics Meetings on January 6. The hour-long film traces the evolution of a culture of Black scholars, scientists and educators in the United States. The film follows the stories of prominent pioneers, showing how the challenges they faced and their triumphs are reflected in the experiences of todays mid-career Black mathematicians. Goins is credited in the film as a consulting scholar.

On January 23, Goins gave a virtual colloquium talk at Alabama A&M University on Clocks, Parking Garages, and the Solvability of the Quintic: A Friendly Introduction to Monodromy.

Esther Hern獺ndez-Medina, assistant professor of Latin American studies and gender and womens studies, presented the paper The Legacy of the Institutional Route of the 1990s on the Dominican Feminist Movement Today: NGOization, Beijing, and Collaborating with the State on January 27 at the 2024 Winter Meeting of Sociologists for Women in Society (SWS) in the Santa Ana Pueblo in New Mexico. Hern獺ndez-Medina was also part of the panel Queering Spaces of Social Action: Integrating Teaching, Research, and Activism for Radical Inclusion on January 27 at the same SWS conference. She shared her remarks on her trajectory as a scholar-activist who teaches and does research about how marginalized groups are able to influence public policy in Latin America while also being a member of the Dominican feminist movement for 30 years.

Gizem Karaali, professor of mathematics and statistics, gave a talk on January 3 titled ChatGPT and New Ethical Considerations for the Mathematics Classroom at the American Mathematical Society Special Session on Ethics in the Mathematics Classroom that was a part of the Joint Mathematics Meetings 2024 held in San Francisco. At the same meeting, she gave a second talk on January 6 titled Oblique Strategies for Classroom Poetry at the Association for Women in Mathematics Special Session on Mathematics in the Literary Arts and Pedagogy in Creative Settings. Karaali was also one of two panelists invited to present at the Project NExT Session on Fostering a Growth Mindset in the Classroom (organized by Adam Yassine, visiting assistant professor of mathematics and statistics, and held on January 5) and gave a talk titled From Growth Mindset to (Re)humanizing Mathematics.

Karaali participated in the Claremont Center for Teaching and Learning Teaching Tune-Up for Spring 2024 and gave a presentation January 11 titled Using ChatGPT for Fun and for Profit as part of the Introduction to Generative AI session organized by Keri Wilson, assistant professor of biology.

Jun Lang, assistant professor of Chinese, published the article with Zhuo Jing-Schmidt in PLOS One.

Lang participated in the online conference organized by the University of Southern California and shared her pedagogical exploration of collaborative grading, focusing on Peer Evaluation of Student Presentations on January 26.

Genevieve Lee, Everett S. Olive Professor of Music, performed as a member of the at three Oregon venues (Port Orford, North Bend and Bandon) and at the Cultural Center of Crescent City, California, in early January. They presented works of Joseph Haydn, Joaquin Turina, Jennifer Higdon and Ludwig van Beethoven. These concerts are part of the of the .

Miriam Merrill, professor of physical education, guest lectured at Hartwick College on January 5. Merrill's session discussed the impact of emotional intelligence on leadership.

Thomas Muzart, assistant professor of Romance languages and literatures, presented the paper titled Matrice nature: Repenser la crise dun point de vue 矇cof矇ministe et subsaharien avec L矇onora Miano in the panel Repr矇sentations francophones de la crise 矇cologique organized by the International Council of Francophone Studies at the MLA 2024 Convention in Philadelphia.

Sheila Pinkel, professor emerita of art and art history, has a large mural about the history of the Tongva People exhibited at the Autry Museum beginning in January.

Carolyn Ratteray, associate professor of theatre, performed her one woman show, Both And (A Play About Laughing While Black), at the Wallis Center for Performing Arts from January 13-28.

Monique Saigal Escudero, emerita professor of French, was awarded a proclamation presentation by 91做厙 Unified School District on January 17.

Prageeta Sharma, Henry G. Lee 37 Professor of English, had her Claremont-based photograph and poem appear in this most recent Places Journal, a journal focused on public scholarship on architecture, landscape and urbanism.

Sharmas Ode to Badminton appeared on podcast on January 16.

Patricia Smiley, professor emerita of psychological science, published a research paper, in Journal of Family Psychology in January. The work is a collaboration with colleagues and students in Claremont and at UC Irvine.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, wrote five opinion pieces: (MindMatters, January 2), (MindMatters, January 8), (MindMatters, January 9), (MindMatters, January 15) and (MarketWatch, January 22).

Smiths latest book , co-authored with Margaret Smith, was published by Palgrave Macmillan on January 13. Gary and Margaret have hit the ball out of the park. Both amateur and professional investors would be well-rewarded by reading and re-reading The Power of Modern Value Investing (Brian Nelson, President, Valuentum Securities); A book about investing that every investor should read (Ed Yardeni, President & Chief Investment Strategist, Yardeni Research, Inc.).

Sharon Stranford, professor of biology and faculty co-director for the Institute for Inclusive Excellence (IIE), and Malcolm Oliver II, assistant director for academic affairs and interim assistant director for the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program, presented at the (AAC&U) Annual Conference in Washington, DC (January 17-19). In their presentation they spoke about IIE programming, which emphasizes inclusive teaching, building community and sustained engagement. In particular, they highlighted the New Faculty Cohort (NFC) Program, DEI Faculty Cohorts and the new DEI Faculty Project Pairs Program.

Stef Torralba, visiting assistant professor of English, accepted a tenure-track position as assistant professor of English and gender, womens, and sexuality studies at Grinnell College to begin fall 2024.

Feng Xiao, associate professor of Asian languages and literatures, was elected to the board of directors of Chinese Language Teachers Association (CLTA) USA on January 4. His three-year term will commence this May, during which he will serve as the sole CLTA board member representing a liberal arts college.

Samuel Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History, gave a talk January 7 titled Chinese Food Along the Pacific Rim to a group of alumni in San Francisco. It was the 21st alumni talk he has given since he arrived at the College in 1983.

December 2023

Malachai Komanoff Bandy, assistant professor of music, was featured in performances played on the radio show , produced by Classical California in partnership with KDFC San Francisco and aired on on December 3. The program excerpted viola da gamba suites by Marin Marais that Bandy self-recorded, edited and produced, as well as live performances of the USC Collegium Musicum in which Bandy played the vielle (medieval fiddle).

The television series , with musical themes by Bear McCreary and musical score by Sparks & Shadows, premiered on Disney+ on December 19 and features Bandy as a yayli tanbur soloist as the theme for the Lord of the Dead in episodes 2, 3 and 7. On December 22, 20th Century Studios released the , also featuring Bandys solos, on all major streaming platforms.

On December 21, Bandy played baroque double bass in a period-instrument performance of Handels Messiah, a joint venture between the and , performed at the Beverly ONeill Theater in Long Beach and directed by James K. Bass.

Tatiana Bas獺簽ez, visiting assistant professor of psychological science, had six research posters accepted for presentation.

Mietek Boduszyski, associate professor of politics and international relations, served as moderator at a December 5 closed-door event on the future of U.S. policy toward China sponsored by the and the Consulate General of the Republic of Korea in Los Angeles.

Boduszyski published an article titled Can There Ever be Transitional Justice in Iraq in the winter 2023-2024 edition of the

Boduszyski participated as a lecturer on an on Diplomacy and Human Rights in Morocco and Spain. He will partner with ACM/IAU to lead the first 91做厙-sponsored Mayterm on Diplomacy and Human Rights in May and June 2024.

Paul Cahill, associate professor of Spanish, published two articles: in Romance Quarterly and Los 獺rboles aquellos: Luis Cernuda en Mount Holyoke College in Muy Verbum.

Pey-Yi Chu, associate professor of history, gave a talk titled Toward Critical Climate Histories of Eurasia at the conference held at the Harriman Institute for Russian, Eurasian, and East European Studies at Columbia University from December 8-9.

Malte Dold, assistant professor of economics, published the article in The Palgrave Handbook of Methodological Individualism on December 27.

Guillermo Douglass-Jaimes, assistant professor of environmental analysis, as part of the Latinx Geographies Collective, co-authored a publication with Madelaine Cristina Cahuas, Cristina Faiver-Serna, Yolanda Gonz獺lez Mendoza, Diego Martinez-Lugo and Margaret Marietta Ram穩rez. The paper in ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies is titled .

Jun Lang, assistant professor of Chinese, was invited to give a workshop titled Conducting Quantitative Analysis of Chinese Construction Grammar Using R to graduate students at Tianjin Normal University in December.

Tom Le, associate professor of politics, gave a talk titled Political Science to Japanese students from Wakayama, Japan, through the Stanford/e-Wakayama program.

Joyce Lu, associate professor of theatre and Asian American studies, performed with Pangea Playback Theatre under the direction of Hannah K. Fox at The International Playback Theatre Network Conference: Roots and Routes of Playback Theatre in Muldersdrift, South Africa. Pangea was sponsored by Dailey Innovations, Inc. and Howard University through their program.

Richard McKirahan, professor of classics and philosophy, was chosen to be a member of the European Society for Ancient Philosophy and to attend its annual meeting.

McKirahan attended the opening ceremony of the Stage of Ideas project in the National Conservatory building of Athens. He was a member of the academic committee that discussed and approved the concepts that were implemented for the first installation and will continue to serve when plans are made for future installations. He also taught a three-hour long meeting of a course on Plato at the University of Athens.

McKirahan presented two papers at the University of Venice, one on the Sophists and one on Aristotle. The Sophists paper will be a chapter in a forthcoming book of his in the Ancient Philosophies series published by Routledge, and the Aristotle paper will be published in a collection of works on concepts in ancient philosophy which will be published by Cambridge University Press.

McKirahan participated in a Ph.D. examination at the University of Geneva.

Susan McWilliams Barndt, professor of politics, had an article on published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Religion, Culture, and Democracy, as part of a special issue on the work of C.S. Lewis.

McWilliams wrote a book chapter titled Up in the Air: Flying the Faithless Skies that appeared in , edited by Micah Watson and Carson Holloway and published by Lexington Books.

McWilliams book chapter on James Ellroy's California appeared in , edited by Joseph Romance and Darrell A. Hamlin and published by Lexington Books.

Nivia Montenegro, professor of Spanish and Latin American studies, published a detailed article about the exploitation of gay dissident Cuban writer Reinaldo Arenas, EXPEDIENTE | Reinaldo Arenas, Emmanuel Carballo y El mundo alucinante (documentos y correspondencia) (1968-1981) in Rialta, the premier digital journal of literary and cultural criticism in Spanish. This article, with accompanying archive of 29 documents, is the result of one year's worth of onsite research at both the Firestone Library of Princeton University and the Nettie Lee Benson Library of University of Texas, Austin. It documents the travails of Arenas with both Cuban government publishing bureaucrats and Mexican editor Carballo of publishing the first edition of El mundo alucinante, one of the most important novels of the so-called Latin American post-boom.

Thomas A. Moore, professor of physics, had a textbook, , published by University Science Books in December. This 591-page textbook introduces upper-level undergraduates to the Standard Model of particle physics, the accepted theoretical description of fundamental physics at the microscopic level (a subject many physicists see first only in graduate school).

Jorge Moreno, associate professor of physics and astronomy, published an article titled in the Astrophysical Journal.

On December 11, Moreno delivered an invited talk titled Cosmological simulations: JWST controversies and future ELT opportunities at the conference at UCLA. Moreno was one of two theorists invited to make the case to the National Science Foundation and private donors on behalf of the U.S. Extremely Large Telescope Program.

On December 5, Moreno delivered an invited talk titled The intriguing lives of galaxies lacking dark matter at the in C籀rdoba, Argentina. Moreno also participated in a panel discussion aimed at seeking funding for astronomers in the Global South.

Thomas Muzart, assistant professor of Romance languages and literatures, published the article in the special issue Queering the City of the academic journal Transatlantica.

Colleen Ruth Rosenfeld, associate professor of English, published in Publications of the Modern Language Association.

Larissa Rudova, Yale B. and Lucille D. Griffith Professor in Modern Languages and professor of German and Russian, participated in the roundtable Decolonizing Melodrama in Russia: Gender and Ethnicity at the ASEEES (Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies) Annual Convention in Philadelphia from November 30-December 2. Rudova also served as a formal discussant on the panel Russian YouTube is on Fire: Dissent, Dialogue, and Division at the same convention.

Erin Runions, Nancy J. Lyon Professor of Biblical History and Literature, published Losing Ground: From Anti-Gang Apocalypticism to Social Dis/Repair in Lee Edelman and the Study of Religion, edited by Kent L. Brintnall, Rhiannon Graybill and Linn Tonstad and published by Routledge.

Gary Smith, Fletcher Jones Professor of Economics, wrote three opinion pieces: (MarketWatch, December 12), (Fast Company, December 15) and (MindMatters, December 15).

Smith was invited to return to the invitation-only Sci Foo Camp, which will be held for the first time in Cambridge, UK, instead of Palo Alto.

Kyle Wilson, assistant professor of economics, published the article in the Review of Network Economics on December 7.

Kevin Wynter, assistant professor of media studies, was invited by the Film and Media Department at UC Berkeley to participate in a colloquium honoring the work of Linda Williams and her pathbreaking book in the field of porn studies, Hard Core: Power, Pleasure, and the "Frenzy of the Visible." Wynter delivered a talk titled When the Man Looks, which examined the emergence of virtual pornography and interactive sex simulators in the 1990s.

Samuel Yamashita, Henry E. Sheffield Professor of History, was interviewed about the Japanese turn in fine dining in the U.S. and related developments in the contemporary restaurant world for Minxin Peis Asian Experts Forum.