Stanley International Programs-Obermann Center Research Fellowships
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Spring 2008
William Davies (Linguistics) returned to Indonesia to continue his description of the grammar of the Madurese language spoken by one of Indonesia's largest ethnic groups living primarily on the island of Madura.
William LaRue Jones (School of Music) visited Shanghai, Beijing, and Shenyang to work with Chinese composers, conductors and performers, and secondly to obtain music scores and recordings of Chinese-Western Fusion music.
Spring 2007
- Catherine Ringen (Linguistics) traveled to Russia, Norway, Finland, and Hungary to record speakers for her research on the differences and similarities of consonants in Russian, Norwegian, Fenno-Swedish and Hungarian.
Fall 2006
- Denise Filios (Spanish & Portuguese) traveled to Turkey to research
idealizing images of al Andalus, an area of the Iberian Peninsula ruled
by Muslims from 711 to 1492.
- Mark Sidel (Law) traveled to Vietnam and Cambodia to perform research
for a book he is writing about a large trafficking case involving Vietnamese
and Chinese workers on American Samoa.
Spring 2006
- Eric Gidal (English) traveled to London to continue research on the final
chapter of his book, “Civic Melancholy: Sorrow and Society in the Eighteenth
Century," the primary figures of which, Mme de Staël, Lord Byron,
and Thomas Jefferson, embodied and gave expression to melancholy as a fundamentally
public and even civic disposition.
- Robin Hemley (English and Nonfiction Writing Program) did research in
Vienna and Munich for a nonfiction book Gregory Maertz, an art historian
who has focused on the contextualizing of art from the Nazi period.
Fall 2005
- Adriana Méndez Rodenas (Spanish & Portguese) studied illustrated
travelogues at libraries in London and Paris for her book, "From Paradise
to Diaspora: Natural History in the Americas," about how the depiction
of nature, particularly the tropical region, forms an integral part of
the discourse of nation and identity formation in the Americas.
- Shel Stromquist (History) scoured the municipal archives of Manchester,
Liverpool and Bradford in England; Frankfurt and Düsseldorf in Germany;
and Stockholm and Växjö in Sweden as part of his comparative study of municipal
labor politics in six countries from 1890 to 1920.
Spring 2005
- Roberta Marvin (Music) focused on Giuseppe Verdi's “Inno delle nazioni” (Hymn of the Nations), a cantata written in 1862, which was scandalously
rejected by those who commissioned it.
Fall 2004
- Michael Chibnik (Anthropology) continued work on his examination of the
economic and anthropological significance of brightly colored wood carvings,
alebrijes, from the Mexican state of Oaxaca.
Publications:
Chibnik, Michael and Silvia Purata, “Conserving Copalillo:
The Creation of Sustainable Oaxacan Wood Carvings,” Agriculture
and Human Values, December, 2006.