After an acting career in theatre and television, Lola Young became an arts administrator, later moving on to become
professor of Cultural Studies at Middlesex University, a writer, cultural critic, public speaker and broadcaster.
Eva Rueschmann is Associate
Professor of Cultural Studies at Hampshire College.
The failings of New Labour: From a Blue Labour perspective, Jonathan Rutherford,
Professor of Cultural Studies at Middlesex University and editor of Soundings, writes very well on the failings of New Labour (see page 88 of this Soundings e-book, which is based on a series of seminars on Blue Labour, from 2010 - 11): «The early years of New Labour — the pluralism, the ethical socialism, the stakeholding economy, the idea of a covenant of trust and reciprocity with the people, the emotional language that reignited popular hope — created a powerful and successful story.
It goes on for a while — he is
a professor of cultural studies — but its message is well worth considering, all the more so because of the remarkable circumstances under which it was written.
Not exact matches
While at the University
of Uyo, she served variously as Director, Centre for
Cultural studies; Head, Department of History and International Studies; Vice Dean, Faculty of Arts; Dean faculty of Arts; adjunct professor, Akwa Ibom State Univ
studies; Head, Department
of History and International
Studies; Vice Dean, Faculty of Arts; Dean faculty of Arts; adjunct professor, Akwa Ibom State Univ
Studies; Vice Dean, Faculty
of Arts; Dean faculty
of Arts; adjunct
professor, Akwa Ibom State University.
But NYU
professor and performance artist Karen Finley, who famously pissed off Jesse Helms by smearing chocolate on her nude body, is sure to effectively blow everyone away at tonight's sixth annual meeting
of the
Cultural Studies Association at NYU.
Michele Gelfand, a
cultural psychology
professor at the University
of Maryland, College Park,
studies the motivations underlying conflict — losing and regaining honor, taking revenge, and so on — and how those motivations vary across cultures.
«The scientists should just tell us what they know and not worry too much about whether there's too much gloom and doom in it,» says Dan Kahan, a Yale law and psychology
professor who leads the
Cultural Cognition Project,
studying public perceptions
of risk.
Teaming up with Shamsh Pervez, Ph.D., a
professor of Chemistry at the Pandit Ravishankar Shukla University, India and a 2011 Fulbright fellow to DRI, Chakrabarty designed and executed a comprehensive
study to investigate the nature and impact
of pollutant particles emitted from the widely - prevalent
cultural practice
of open - air funeral pyre burning in India and Nepal.
Rachel Watkins (pictured above), an assistant
professor in the Department
of Anthropology at American University in Washington, D.C., is a biocultural anthropologist, which means she
studies how people's physiological conditions — their health and disease states — reflect the social,
cultural, economic, and political environment in which they lived.
The senior author
of the
study, Deanna Kepka, PhD, MPH, a Huntsman Cancer Institute investigator and assistant
professor in the College
of Nursing at the University
of Utah, added that, «We are interested in looking at
cultural values that may make certain demographic groups in the United States, such as Latinos, more supportive
of adolescent vaccination than other demographic groups.
Commenting on the research, leading primatologist
Professor Frans de Waal,
of the Yerkes Primate Center
of Emory University, said that the
study «is one
of the few successful field experiments on
cultural transmission to date, and a remarkably elegant one at that.»
Lisa DeCamp, M.D., M.S.P.H., assistant
professor of pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins University School
of Medicine and the
study's senior author, noted that although parental surveys
of this kind have weaknesses in terms
of parent responses reflecting the breadth
of traumas children may be exposed to, the findings, published in the Oct. issue
of the journal Pediatrics, offer new insight into potentially higher childhood resiliency among immigrant families supported by strong community networks and a strong sense
of cultural identity.
«
Cultural differences in gender norms provide North African French boys less freedom to deviate from traditional gender roles and norms than that experienced by European French boys,» explains Isabelle Regner,
professor of psychology at Aix - Marseille Universite and the National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), who coauthored the
study.
«Minority teachers may be perceived more favorably by minority students because they can serve as role models and are particularly sensitive to the
cultural needs
of their students,» said
study author Hua - Yu Sebastian Cherng, assistant
professor of international education at NYU Steinhardt.
«Anatomically modern humans colonized Europe around 45,000 - 43,000 years ago, replacing Neanderthals approximately 3,000 years later, with potential
cultural and biological interactions between these two human groups,» said
Professor Hervé Bocherens, a biogeologist at the Senckenberg Center for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment at the University
of Tübingen, Germany, and lead author
of a
study published in the journal Scientific Reports.
«Like so many aspects
of sexuality, the patterns are likely a combination
of both biological and
cultural factors,» says lead
study author Justin R. Garcia, PhD, assistant
professor of gender
studies at The Kinsey Institute at the University
of Indiana.
This enlightening collection
of essays by leading luminaries in fields ranging from psychology to political science was edited by Dinesh Sharma, Associate Research
Professor at the Institute for Global
Cultural Studies, SUNY Binghamton.
-- Excerpted from the introduction (pages 1 - 3) Way back in 1941,
Professor Melville J. Herskovits published The Myth
of the Negro Past, an exhaustive, anthropological research
study which debunked the prevailing notion that Africans brought to America in chains were savages with no
cultural traditions worth preserving.
He also serves as Director
of Programming for the Provincetown International Film Festival, a position he's held since 2006, and is a Visiting Assistant
Professor for Media &
Cultural Studies at Macalester College.
Head
of School, School
of Fine Art, History
of Art and
Cultural Studies /
Professor of Art History and Museum
Studies, University
of Leeds
-LSB-...] his blog The Grade, on the website
of the Phi Delta Kappan, Alexander Russo printed a very thoughtful review
of School Inc. by Amy Shuffleton, Associate
Professor of Cultural and Educational Policy
Studies at Loyola University Chicago.
Amy Shuffelton is Associate
Professor of Cultural and Educational Policy
Studies at Loyola University Chicago.
Zeus Leonardo is an Associate
Professor of Social and
Cultural Studies in Education at University
of California, Berkeley.
Gerson, a
cultural historian and
professor of French
studies at New York University, writes unflinchingly
of the accident, its immediate aftermath and its effect on him and his family.
Head researcher and
cultural economist,
Professor David Throsby AO said, «This is the first time this type
of study has been undertaken in Australia.
Media and
cultural studies professor Clarissa Smith, an editor of the publication Porn Studies, says: «There are a number of pleasures potentially on offer here — the fact that this is really f
studies professor Clarissa Smith, an editor
of the publication Porn
Studies, says: «There are a number of pleasures potentially on offer here — the fact that this is really f
Studies, says: «There are a number
of pleasures potentially on offer here — the fact that this is really fantasy.
After serving as Assistant Chair
of the Department
of Social Science and
Cultural Studies at Pratt Institute, Godoy recently accepted a position at Illinois State University, where as Assistant Professor he is currently contributing to an effort to expand the university's environmental studies major and
Studies at Pratt Institute, Godoy recently accepted a position at Illinois State University, where as Assistant
Professor he is currently contributing to an effort to expand the university's environmental
studies major and
studies major and minor.
Uri McMillan is a
cultural historian and Associate
Professor of Performance
Studies in the Departments
of English and African American
Studies at the University
of California, Los Angeles.
Brielmaier is currently Assistant
Professor of Critical
Studies in the Department
of Photography, Imaging, and Emerging Media at Tisch School
of the Arts at New York University, and oversees the arts and
cultural programming at Westfield World Trade Center.
About the speakers: Ope Lori is one
of Embodied Spaces participating artists, Emma Dabiri is a visual sociology PhD researcher at Goldsmiths, and teaching fellow at the Centre
of African
Studies at SOAS, University
of London, Nana Adusei - Poku is Research
Professor in
Cultural Diversity at Hogeschool Rotterdam and Lecturer in Media Arts at the University
of the Arts, Zurich.
From 1998 to 2007, he was a
professor of Aesthetic Theory /
Cultural Studies at the Merz Akademie, Stuttgart.
In his role as an adjunct
professor in the curatorial
studies program at California College
of the Arts, Leiber inspired a new generation
of curators, many
of whom are still locally active and influencing the course
of our
cultural climate.
Brielmaier is an assistant
professor of critical
studies in the Department
of Photography, Imaging, and Emerging Media at Tisch School
of the Arts at New York University, and also serves as curator and director
of arts and
cultural programming at Westfield World Trade Center.
Contributors include Dale Jamieson,
Professor of Environmental
Studies and Philosophy, New York University; Chis Wiley, artist, writer, and independent curator; Joel Sternfeld, artist and Noble Foundation Chair in Art and
Cultural History, Sarah Lawrence College; and Lynn Gumpert, Director
of the Grey Art Gallery, New York University.
A catalogue will be published for the exhibition, featuring an introductory text by Lise Pennington, senior curator at ARoS, and a peer - reviewed text by Anne Ring Petersen, associate
professor at the Department
of Arts and
Cultural Studies at the University
of Copenhagen.
«' Women
of Abstract Expressionism», for the first time, positions this expanded group
of painters within the context
of abstract expressionism and its
cultural milieu,» said Ms. Chanzit, who is also a
professor of Museum
Studies at the University
of Denver, in a release.
Notable participants include: choreographer and dancer Kyle Abraham; poet Elizabeth Alexander; performer Eric Berryman; performance and installation artist Tania Bruguera; urban revitalization strategist Majora Carter; innovator James Burling Chase; actress and playwright Eisa Davis; architect Elizabeth Diller; The Met's Kimberly Drew; photographer John Edmonds; juvenile justice reformer Adam Foss; writer and performance artist Malik Gaines; social practice artist Theaster Gates; filmmaker Tony Gerber; FLEXN dance pioneer Reggie (Regg Roc) Gray; trombonist, painter, and composer Dick Griffin; dancer and choreographer Francesca Harper; trombonist Craig Harris; vocalist Nona Hendryx; playwright Branden Jacobs - Jenkins; cinematographer Arthur Jafa; artist and
cultural worker Shani Jamila; trumpeter JAWWAAD; gaming pioneers Navid and Vassiliki Khonsari; NYU
Professor and musician Jason King; philosopher Gregg Lambert; composer and Bang on the Can co-founder David Lang; novelist, filmmaker, and curator Ernie Larsen; Wooster Group founding member and director Liz LeCompte; Harvard Professor Sarah Lewis; journalist Seamus McGraw; poet Aja Monet; jazz pianist and composer Jason Moran; performance studies professor Fred Moten; visual artist Shirin Neshat; playwright Lynn Nottage; professor of contemporary rhetorical theory Kendall Phillips; doctor Jeremy Richman; poet Carl Hancock Rux; performance artist Alexandro Segade; writer and activist Tanya Selvaratnam; guitarist and composer Marvin Sewell; playwright and actress Anna Deavere Smith; conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas; performance artist Carmelita Tropicana; puppeteer Basil Twist; theater director Roberta Uno; vocalist and composer Imani Uzuri; and Wooster Group founding member and actress Kate Valk, amon
Professor and musician Jason King; philosopher Gregg Lambert; composer and Bang on the Can co-founder David Lang; novelist, filmmaker, and curator Ernie Larsen; Wooster Group founding member and director Liz LeCompte; Harvard
Professor Sarah Lewis; journalist Seamus McGraw; poet Aja Monet; jazz pianist and composer Jason Moran; performance studies professor Fred Moten; visual artist Shirin Neshat; playwright Lynn Nottage; professor of contemporary rhetorical theory Kendall Phillips; doctor Jeremy Richman; poet Carl Hancock Rux; performance artist Alexandro Segade; writer and activist Tanya Selvaratnam; guitarist and composer Marvin Sewell; playwright and actress Anna Deavere Smith; conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas; performance artist Carmelita Tropicana; puppeteer Basil Twist; theater director Roberta Uno; vocalist and composer Imani Uzuri; and Wooster Group founding member and actress Kate Valk, amon
Professor Sarah Lewis; journalist Seamus McGraw; poet Aja Monet; jazz pianist and composer Jason Moran; performance
studies professor Fred Moten; visual artist Shirin Neshat; playwright Lynn Nottage; professor of contemporary rhetorical theory Kendall Phillips; doctor Jeremy Richman; poet Carl Hancock Rux; performance artist Alexandro Segade; writer and activist Tanya Selvaratnam; guitarist and composer Marvin Sewell; playwright and actress Anna Deavere Smith; conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas; performance artist Carmelita Tropicana; puppeteer Basil Twist; theater director Roberta Uno; vocalist and composer Imani Uzuri; and Wooster Group founding member and actress Kate Valk, amon
professor Fred Moten; visual artist Shirin Neshat; playwright Lynn Nottage;
professor of contemporary rhetorical theory Kendall Phillips; doctor Jeremy Richman; poet Carl Hancock Rux; performance artist Alexandro Segade; writer and activist Tanya Selvaratnam; guitarist and composer Marvin Sewell; playwright and actress Anna Deavere Smith; conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas; performance artist Carmelita Tropicana; puppeteer Basil Twist; theater director Roberta Uno; vocalist and composer Imani Uzuri; and Wooster Group founding member and actress Kate Valk, amon
professor of contemporary rhetorical theory Kendall Phillips; doctor Jeremy Richman; poet Carl Hancock Rux; performance artist Alexandro Segade; writer and activist Tanya Selvaratnam; guitarist and composer Marvin Sewell; playwright and actress Anna Deavere Smith; conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas; performance artist Carmelita Tropicana; puppeteer Basil Twist; theater director Roberta Uno; vocalist and composer Imani Uzuri; and Wooster Group founding member and actress Kate Valk, among others.
She is an assistant
professor of critical
studies in the Department
of Photography, Imaging, and Emerging Media at Tisch School
of the Arts at New York University, and also serves as curator and director
of arts and
cultural programming at Westfield World Trade Center.
Until recently
Professor of Art History, Visual Culture and
Cultural Studies at the Advanced Institute
of the Arts
of Toulouse, France, Morad Montazami has a Masters degree In English literature and civilisation (LLCE) from the University
of Nanterre, Paris and is about to complete his PhD in History and Theory
of Art at the École des hautes études en science sociales (EHESS).
She held artist residencies at the Lower Manhattan
Cultural Council (2009 — 2010) and the Whitney Museum
of American Art Independent
Study Program (2010 — 2011) and was the Guna S. Mundheim Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin (2013 — 2014) before assuming her current position as assistant
professor in the Department
of Photography at the School
of the Art Institute
of Chicago.
Forgotten in much
of this is a point made in an e-mail message sent to me and some other science communicators this morning by Dan Kahan, the Yale law
professor who
studies the
cultural filters that influence how people perceive and react to information.
Dr. Tom Swetnam,
professor at the University
of Arizona,
studies natural and
cultural disturbances
of forest ecosystems across a broad range
of temporal and spatial scales.
At the beginning
of winter quarter, Kendall joined Sarah Anderson and environmental historian and Environmental
Studies professor Peter Alagona to lead one research project on the biological, social, and
cultural dimensions
of wildlife reintroductions, using the proposed reintroduction
of grizzly bears in California as a case
study.
Proctor, a
professor of the history
of science at Stanford, is one
of the world's leading experts in agnotology, a neologism signifying the
study of the
cultural production
of ignorance.
Completed earlier this year by Brian Tayan, research associate with the case writing office
of the Stanford Graduate School
of Business and James N. Baron, Ph.D., formerly with Stanford, who since the publication
of the
study has taken a
professor of management position at the Yale School
of Management, the case
study describes the economic and
cultural models that have led to the success
of Keller Williams Realty.