May 2016
Transcription
May 2016
CLA Alumna Earns Peabody International Studies Alumna, Caitlin Dickerson (2011), has won the 2015 Peabody Award for NPR’s Investigation of Secret Mustard Gas Testing during World War II. In addition, she has been named a finalist for the Livingston Award for Excellence in National Reporting for her article WWII Secret Mustard Gas Testing. To listen to her work, please follow this link to the Livingston Award page: http://wallacehouse.umich.edu/ library/wwii-secret-mustard-gas-testing/ THE 14TH ANNUAL SOLANKI LECTURE The Yadunandan Center for India Studies welcomed Dr. Anand Yang at its 14th annual Solanki Lecture. Dr. Yang's presentation was titled "Subaltern Speak: An Indian Soldier’s Travelogue of China, 1900-1901" Dr. Yang, professor of International Studies and History at the University of Washington, Seattle, was born to Chinese parents in Shantineketan and grew up in New Delhi. Yang is fluent in Mandarin, Hindi and Spanish. Yang's research takes a global approach to understanding Indian and Chinese relations during the diaspora of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He discovered a text written by Thakur Gadadhar Singh called, “Thirteen Months in China," which he translated from Sanksritized Hindi and used as the basis for his own book. Thakur Gadadhar Singh was an Indian Subaltern, or military officer, who was part of the 7th Rajput regiment of the British Army. Gadadhar Singh’s motivation for writing his book was to share information on China, the Boxer Uprising and the victory of these soldiers. As an Indian soldier, he felt a certain kinship with the Chinese. The book looks at the atrocities of war as committed by the supposed civilized world (westerners) upon the barbarians (easterners). The book closes with a comparison of strengths and weaknesses of India and China. The lecture concluded with a question and answer session along with a presentation of a book on Mahatma Gandhi by Uka Solanki. To read the India Journal article on the lecture, please follow this link: http://www.indiajournal.com/usmetros/indian-view-of-1900s-china-discussed-at-solanki-lecture Faculty Award Winners Clorinda Donato Outstanding Professor Award Clorinda Donato, the George L. Graziadio Chair for Italian Studies, joined the Department of Romance, German, Russian Languages and Literatures in 1988 as a professor of French and Italian, and she has continued to divide her teaching, research, and service between the two fields of study. Donato has taught some 20 different courses — many of which she created or co-created — and was a driving force behind the creation of several new degree programs. An expert in eighteenth-century cultural studies, particularly in the areas of knowledge transfer, encyclopedic compilations, and gender, Donato has authored and edited numerous books and articles in her multiple fields of research. She is proudest of having worked with community members to establish the George L. Graziadio Center for Italian Studies, a point of intersection for the university and the local Italian-American community, and of the innovative NEH-funded project, “French and Italian for Spanish Speakers,” which has become a national model for multilingual communication and language acquisition. Donato is a recipient of CSULB’s Research, Scholarly and Creative Activity Award, and her work has also been honored by the French government and the Sons of Italy, among others. Jennifer Flemming Distinguished Faculty Advising Award Jennifer Fleming, an associate professor in the Department of Journalism & Mass Communication, received the Distinguished Faculty Advising Award. The award recognizes excellence in academic and career advising. Jennifer has conducted thousands of advising sessions over the years, and she played an integral role in ensuring advising and other student services for the department as it underwent accreditation. She'd like to share the award with the heart and soul of advising in the College of Liberal Arts, Bron Pellissier, and her ATLAS team. Leakhena Nou 2016 Community Service Award Since joining the CSULB faculty, Dr. Leakhena Nou has conducted extensive applied research in public/ medical sociology, especially at the intersections of medical sociology and international/transitional justice and human rights/ international law, peace and conflict, and gender research. She has actively engaged the Cambodian Americans as witnesses in the ongoing international war crimes trials of senior members of the Khmer Rouge regime (Case 002/01 and Case 002/02) since 2009, and her work on victims’ participation in the tribunals could be used as a model for future war crimes tribunals globally. Her work is often cited in the national/international media such as the BBC/New York Times/Voice of America, among others. Today, the single most important global influence in Cambodia is the prosecution of the former leaders of the Khmer Rouge. These trials and their outcomes will have a significant impact on Cambodian social health/mental health and wellbeing. Research indicates that genocide has a negative impact on the health of multiple generations. These findings led Dr. Nou to connect her research to the legal proceedings underway in the Cambodian Court System. Hugh Wilford Distinguished Faculty Scholarly and Creative Achievement Award Dr. Wilford is the author of four monographs (two of them published since he joined CSULB in 2006), a coedited collection of essays, and numerous articles and book chapters. His work on the CIA and Cold War culture has reached a wide public audience as well as an academic one. Wilford's last book, America’s Great Game: The CIA’s Secret Arabists and the Shaping of the Modern Middle East (Basic Books, 2013), received extensive newspaper review coverage, including an Editor’s Choice in the New York Times Book Review; and has led to many speaking invitations, for instance at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, DC, and the State Department, as well as TV and radio interviews; and earned the 2014 Washington Institute Book Prize Gold Medal. Wilford has also gained an international reputation as an expert on the CIA and the Cold War. He has been involved in leadership and service roles outside of CSULB, including a book series editorship for Edinburgh University Press, visiting or associate positions at various institutions, and a steady stream of inquiries regarding his research from members of the public, filmmakers, and other researchers. Dr. Wilford stated, “I am extremely grateful for this award and wish to thank those who have supported me in my scholarly endeavors, including my deans and department chairs, both present and past, and departmental colleagues, especially my U.S. academic mentor, Patricia Cleary." Jake Wilson Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award Professor Wilson’s classes challenge his students to analyze power and social inequality through the lens of social justice by applying course concepts and theories to their own lives and communities in what he calls: “Sociology for the People!” He has tremendous success in both large sections of Intro to Sociology courses and his theory-driven upper-division Sociology courses. Whether the class is large or small, Dr. Wilson strives to create community in his classrooms in order to “bring students in” by integrating two interrelated core principles into his classrooms: empathy and respect. According to Professor Wilson, empathy begins when students (and teachers) treat others’ experiences and social locations with dignity and respect. Empathy, he believes, can help build kinship-like bonds between students in the classroom allows for more self-reflection and comparative analysis among students. Professor Wilson diligently works to ensure that each of his students feels acknowledged, valued, and important at CSULB. It starts with seemingly simple things like learning his student’s names, the neighborhoods they grew up in, the types of jobs a student or their parent’s have, along with other aspects of students’ biographies. He views his classes as micro-communities in need of the proper resources, support, and intellectual space to grow and ultimately flourish. Respecting the differences between one another, whether they fall along racial, gender, cultural, sexual, or class-based lines, provides the key foundation for learning that allows students, especially those who have been historically marginalized in higher education, to feel like they, too, belong at the university and are active shapers of knowledge. Continued on the next page Jake Wilson—continued Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award Professor Wilson’s Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award builds upon his already strong teaching dossier at CSULB which includes awards and honors relating to teaching, pedagogical innovation, and mentoring, including two CCPE online course conversions, a “Flipping the Classroom” award, multiple EOP Mentorship Awards, and the “Most Inspiring Professor” from the CSULB Alumni Association among other distinctions. “I am extremely thankful and honored to have received this teaching award. This award has allowed me to reflect upon my own academic journey and the critical role that my professors had in changing my own life as a young person. As a former community college student, there was a time that I, too, was lacking mentorship and academically “lost”. I found my inspiration from a few of my professors who challenged me to think deeper, more critically, and more creatively. I knew that if I ever became a professor, I would always strive to bring a human element in all of my interactions with my students.” CLA Award Winners Please join me in congratulating these outstanding winners. Student Research Award Winners Ashly Romero Anthropology (Major) Biology and Forensic Studies (Minor) (Ceremony 2) Alberto Daniel Diaz Religious Studies (Major) Linguistics (Minor) (Ceremony 3)