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Denbo Center Welcomes 2024–2025 Class of Fellows

August 20, 2024 by

Denbo Center Welcomes 2024–2025 Class of Fellows

Denbo Center Welcomes 2024–2025 Class of Fellows

August 20, 2024

  • The Denbo Center for Humanities & the Arts (DCHA) is delighted to welcome its new class of fellows for the 2024–2025 academic year. The DCHA’s residential research fellowships provide a full-year release from teaching and service to six UT tenure-stream faculty members and four UT graduate students from departments affiliated with the Center. This year’s incoming fellows represent the fields of Africana studies, Classics, history, world languages, philosophy, and religious studies. Their research ranges in scope from pre-colonial African spiritual traditions and gendered writing practices in modern China, to early modern Latin in translation and political operatives in nineteenth-century Washington, D.C. In addition to these ten research fellows, the Denbo Center also hosts a one-semester digital humanities research fellowship for a UT faculty member whose digital work directly engages humanities research.

    Faculty Research Fellows:

    Salvador Bartera, Assistant Professor, Department of Classics

    Project Title: Bernardino Stefonio, S.J., Flavia Tragoedia: critical edition, English translation, and commentary


    Kristen Block, Associate Professor, Department of History

    Project Title: Desire, Corruption, and Healing in Early Caribbean Transcultural Flows


    Marcus Harvey, Assistant Professor, Department of Religious Studies

    Project Title: “Life is War”: African Epistemology and Black Religious Hermeneutics


    Noriko Horiguchi, Associate Professor, Department of World Languages & Cultures

    Project Title: Milk and the Making of Modern Japan: A Cultural History


    Xuefei Ma, Assistant Professor, Department of World Languages & Cultures

    Project Title: Trans(re)lation of Women’s Scripts: Personal Stories and Nested Feminisms from Rural China to the Sinophone World


    Danielle Procope Bell, Assistant Professor, Department of Africana Studies

    Project Title: Dispersed Domesticities: Uncovering Black Feminist/ Feminine Thought (1892–1920)

    Graduate Student Research Fellows:

    Mehtap Ince, Department of World Languages & Cultures

    Project Title: A Cross-Textual Event Analysis based on German Short Stories


    Amanda Klug, Department of History

    Project Title: Memories of the Constitutional Convention, 1787–1861


    Linh Mac, Department of Philosophy

    Project Title: Krinostic Injustice


    Kyle Vratarich, Department of History

    Project Title: “Distinguished Scoundrel”: General Orville Babcock, The Whiskey Ring and the Dawn of a New Breed of Political Operative

    Digital Humanities Faculty Fellow:

    Jamal-Jared Alexander, Assistant Professor, Department of English

    Project Title: A Social Action Toolkit

    The Denbo Center’s residential fellowships are made possible by support from the UT Chancellor’s Office, the Office of Research and Engagement, our affiliated arts and humanities departments, and the College of Arts and Sciences. Fellows are selected through a competitive process and their applications are scored by an external panel of reviewers. They use their year at the Denbo Center to finish long-term research undertakings such as books, digital projects, or dissertations. Residency includes participating in the life of the Center by working at the DCHA, presenting work in progress, and engaging with other fellows and with visiting scholars in once-weekly Chandler Seminars.

    Read more about this year’s fellows and their projects on our website.

    Each year, the DCHA also welcomes the Marco Institute’s Haslam Dissertation Fellow to join the cohort of fellows. Also invited to participate in fellows’ events are those faculty who applied for our faculty fellowship but won and accepted national fellowships such as the ACLS or NEH fellowships.

    2024–2025 Affiliated Fellows:

    Stacie Beach, Department of History; Marco Haslam Dissertation Fellow

    Project Title: Arbitration and Conciliation: A Social History of Imperial Petitions and Rescripts, 200–450


    Aris Moreno Clemons, Assistant Professor, Department of World Languages & Cultures

    National Academy of Education (NAEd)/Spencer Postdoctoral Fellow


    Daniel Magilow, Professor, Department of World Languages & Cultures

    National Endowment for the Humanities Fellow


    Kelli Wood, Assistant Professor, School of Art

    Villa I Tatti – Harvard University Berenson Fellow

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