Archived Working Groups

Principal Investigators: Max Woodworth, Robert E. Livingston

The Asian Futures initiative aims to develop a forward-looking framework for Asian Studies at OSU, one commensurate with the realities of the 21st century.  Hosting speakers, colloquia and workshops, Asian Futures brings together colleagues and constituencies to explore emerging topics, organizing themes and long-term developments that outrun traditional geopolitics.  Environmental imaginings, religious movements, ethnic and regional revitalizations, popular cultures, transnational inflections of sexuality and civility: all these loosen the epistemic grip of nation-state-centered analyses and call for more supple and dialogical inquiries.  Asian Futures also seeks to create opportunities for the discussion and design (or re-design) of courses from an inter-Asian perspective, especially in the context of the new General Education curriculum’s emphasis on Citizenship for a Diverse and Just World.

The Humanities Institute will serve as an incubator for Asian Futures, supporting the working group as it builds capacity on campus and explores organizational alternatives. Our project addresses the Global Arts and Humanities Discovery Theme (GAHDT) themes of Im/Mobility and Community and connects with work in Livability and Methods and Practices as well.

Principal Investigator

Max Woodworth (Geography)

Asian Futures Working Group

Mark Bender (East Asian)
Madhumita Dutta (Geography)
Pranav Jani (SASI/English)
Namiko Kunimoto (History of Art)
Scott Levi (History)
Morgan Liu (NELC/Anthropology)
Gil Latz (Office of International Affairs, ex officio)
Ila Nagar (NELC)
Yvette Shen (Design)
Mytheli Sreenivas (History/WGSS)
Hugh Urban (Comparative Studies)

Building Sustainable Worlds: Latinx Placemaking in the Midwest, Investigating How Latinx Communities in the Midwest Create Home and Engage the Issue of Sustainable Environments

How do Latinas/os in the Midwest define, create, and cultivate ecologically and socially sustainable environments and communities? How do considerations of race, gender, ethnicity, sexuality, socio-economic status, and disability intersect with those of environment, region, culture? How are Latinas/os, long recruited to the region for industrial and agricultural work, impacted by the physical and material climate and environments of the region? And how do Latinas/os reflect upon, react to, and transform these cultural, social, and physical environments to create sustainable communities? “Building Sustainable Worlds: Latinx Placemaking in the Midwest” brings together professors and graduate students from across the Midwest to explore these questions. This project examines the significance of Latinx efforts in building sustainable communities in both urban and small-town environments of the region as these appear in formal and everyday performance; literature; and community, cultural, and arts centers. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the Midwest is a twelve-state region; however, our understanding of the Latinx Midwest recognizes the long history of translocal, transregional, and transnational interconnections that bind many Latinx communities to other parts of the U.S., and to places and countries throughout the Americas. The collaborative project involving researchers from several universities -- see below --  began in February 2017 and ends in December 2019. The project has created an annotated bibliography of sources on Latinx in the Midwest, a syllabus project, an online publication in the Oxford Literature Encyclopedia, two open-access cable television programs, and will complete its work with the publication of an anthology of the research generated. 

This project is funded by a major grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation/Humanities Without Walls consortium, housed at the Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 

 

Participants

Ariana Ruiz, Assistant Professor, Spanish and Portuguese, University of Iowa. She is interested in Latina/o cultural studies, travel literature, critical race theory, cultural geography, and youth culture studies. 

Claire Fox, Co-Principal Investigator; Professor of English/Spanish and Portuguese, University of Iowa. Her research is on Latinx visual cultures, cultural centers, and heritage sites in Iowa and surrounding states. She focuses on institutional histories of cultural centers and their partnerships with other organizations.

Delia Fernandez, Assistant Professor, History, Michigan State University and an alumni of OSU. Her research is on the collaborations between Mexican American and Puerto Rican communities in Michigan on creating community centers and community initiatives.

Emiliano Aguilar, Graduate Student, History, Northwestern University. He is interested in Latinx Indiana, primarily the “politics of protest” during the 1970s by groups such as the Youth Advisory Board and Concerned Latins Organization. His work seeks to present these civil rights groups in conflict not only with discrimination but also political corruption as they fought for representative inclusion into their cities.

Geraldo Cadava, Co-Principal Investigator; Associate Professor of History, Northwestern University. His research focuses on US and Latin American history, looking at Latinos in the United States and the US-Mexico border. 

Karen Mary Davalos, Professor, Chicano and Latino Studies, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. Her research focuses on Twin Cities Latinx cultural centers, and ephemeral pop-up projects, installations, and exhibitions that artists are and have created in the Twin Cities.

Laura Fernandez, PhD Student, Spanish and Portuguese, The Ohio State University. She is specializing in Latinx Literature and Culture and is interested in Latinx literature in the Midwest. 

Lawrence La Fountain-Stokes, Associate Professor, American Culture, Latina/o Studies, Romance Languages and Literatures, and Women’s Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His research will focus on Fausto Fernós, Puerto Rican drag, the Feast of Funpodcast in Chicago, and the web series Cooking with Drag Queens, highlighting the convergence between Latinx queer performance aesthetics and new media platforms. 

Leila Vieira, PhD student, Spanish and Portuguese, The Ohio State University. She is interested in research on composition of Latinx communities in Midwest with particular focus on how or whether Brazilian and/or “other” Latinx groups, such as Peruvian-American, etc., become incorporated into Latinx ethnic/racial gatherings.

Marie Lerma, PhD student, Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, The Ohio State University. She is interested on Latinos in the Central Valley of California and Latino youth. 

Ramón Rivera-Servera, Co-Principal Investigator; Associate Professor, Performance Studies, Northwestern University. His research will focus on contemporary performance projects across the Midwest focusing site-specificity to address issues of Latino labor and the environment. He will examine artists such as Joel Valentin-Martínez (Chicago), Anita González (Michigan), and Erica Mott (Chicago). 

Sandra Ruiz, Assistant Professor of Latinx Studies and English, University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign. Her research on “Unearthing Central Time: The Midwestern Latinx Avant-Garde” will focus on the profound and evocative history with sound and performance art in Latinx Chicago, Detroit, and Iowa City, from improvisation jazz to punk and noise music, and endurance to earth-body art.

Sergio Gonzalez, Assistant Professor of History, Marquette University. His research is on religious spaces as sites of cultural production imagined through faith — including churches, missions, festivals, social justice events/actions — with a focus on transnational interaction in the specific case of the Sanctuary Movement in Wisconsin and the interethnic context of its activity.

Sophie Delacruz, Formerly of Grand Valley State University and currently a graduate student at OSU.  She was primarily involved in this project in the summer of 2017, gathering observations and helping in the beginning stages of the interviews at Latinx ethnic festivals, through the Summer Research Opportunity Program (SROP) at The Ohio State University.

Theresa Delgadillo, Co-Principal Investigator; Professor of Comparative Studies, The Ohio State University. Research addresses environmental concerns in Latinx literature and co-authored work on Latinx ethnic festivals in Ohio with research team that includes Laura Fernandez, Marie Lerma, Leila Vieira, Sophie Delacruz, and Genevieve Arce. 

 

Investigators

Geraldo Cadava (Northwestern University)

Claire Fox (University of Iowa)

Ramón Rivera-Servera (Northwestern University)

Principal Investigator: Jared Gardner

In 2021/22 the Humanities Collaboratory is working supporting the Digital Humanities Working Group as it seeks to develop a sustainable and rich network supporting work in this area in the Arts and Humanities. Organized by OSU Library's digital librarian Leigh Bonds, along with Maria Palazzi (director of ACCAD), David Staley (former director of the Humanities Consortium and a professor in the Department of History), and Jared Gardner, the working group will be hosting a series of speakers throughout the year, culminating in a symposium for OSU stakeholders geared towards drafting a proposal and a plan of action for moving the digital humanities forward at Ohio State.

Principal Investigators: Harry Kashdan, Dana Renga, Johanna Sellman

The Global Mediterranean Project website.

Principal Investigator: Rick Livingston

CHiP is now Imagined Futures, part of the Global Arts and Humanities Discovery Theme. The Global Arts and Humanities Discovery Theme website.

Principal Investigator: Cassie Patterson

A Secret History of American River People website.

Principal Investigators: Isaac Weiner, Amy DeRogatis (Michigan State University)

American Religious Sounds Project website.

Principal Investigators: Katherine Borland, Rachel Hopkin (Independent Scholar)

Principal Investigator: Robert E. Livingston

Principal Investigators: Christopher Highley, Mark Rankin (James Madison University)

Abolitionist Epistemologies worked to understand the connections between the arts, humanities, sciences and technologies in their role in the expansion of the notion of abolition. The life of abolition necessitates a collective imaginary beyond disciplinary distinctions, to allow it to dismantle the material and semiotic structures of racial capitalism.

Principal Investigators: Brett Zehner and Harshavardhan Bhat.