RPW Fellows
Musings on the Spaces of Violence
Apr. 4, 2022—Taryn Marashi is the 2021-2022 Stella Vaughn Fellow from the Department of History. Specializing in medieval Islamic history, her research interests include social power and group identity, violence and space, crime and punishment, and urbanization under Abbasid rule. The first time I read Henri Lefebvre’s book The Production of Space, I was a first year...
The Rare Maps of Guajarat
Mar. 28, 2022—Meet Samira Sheikh, a 2021-2022 RPW Center Faculty Fellow. This year’s group is exploring the theme of “Environments.” I was a graduate student at Oxford, writing a dissertation on politics in fifteenth-century Gujarat, in western India, when I received an intriguing stack of photocopies through the Pigeon Post, the university’s internal mail. A prominent historian...
The Immortality of Blackness
Feb. 21, 2022—Courtney Brown is the 2021-2022 Mona C. Frederick Fellow from the Department of English. Her research focuses on the use of immortality as aesthetic practice in contemporary Black American art and literature. I specialize in 20th- and 21st-century Black American literature and visual culture. Currently, my research focuses on the use of immortality as aesthetic...
On the Nature of Things
Feb. 14, 2022—Meet Jessie Hock, a 2021-2022 RPW Center Faculty Fellow. This year’s group is exploring the theme of “Environments.” What does the phrase “Environments” mean to you? When I think of “environments,” I think about the set of interlocking circumstances that makes a surrounding. This is intentionally abstract: the project I’ll be working on as an...
Surviving in the Environment
Feb. 7, 2022—Meet Karen Ng, a 2021-2022 RPW Center Faculty Fellow. This year’s group is exploring the theme of “Environments.” What does the phrase “Environments” mean to you? In my research, I explore how concepts of life and organic nature played a central role in nineteenth-century German philosophy, especially in their theories of mind, agency, and community....