May 2024 End Of Year Newsletter
Dear American Studies Faculty, Staff, Students, Alumni, and Supporters:
Many thanks for your support as we close out the 2023-2024 Academic Year.
It has been an exciting and productive year for the department!
Please read on for some Department highlights from this past year.
Thank you all for your support of the department and a big congratulations to all of our American Studies, majors and minors, Public Humanities minors, and Asian American Studies minors who are graduating this year.
If you need us, during the summer, just drop me an email at tbhalla@umbc.edu or email our amazing program management specialist, Morgan Dowty at morgando@umbc.edu.
I wish you all a restful and peaceful summer,
Dr. Tamara Bhalla
Student Highlights
We are very proud of the students presenting their hard work at Undergraduate Research and Achievement Day 2024!
Spencer Hanks| United Or Divided: Examining Desegregation In Anne Arundel County Schools
Larissa Kuonen | Autistic People In The Workplace, Housing, And Transportation
Juelle Lee | Checked Out: Public Libraries As Sites Of Assimilation
Luke O’Neill | Fueling Diversity: Understanding Student-athletes’ Dietary Habits
Taylor Phelps | Politics Of Education: How A Political Movement Fueled Controversy At Queen Anne’s County Public Schools
Karla Press-Porter | Maryland Perspectives On The Use Of The Phrase “Defund The Police”
(Pictured above: Larissa Kuonen)
(Pictured above: Karla Press-Porter)
(Pictured above: Prof. Fouts and Spencer Hanks)
Faculty Highlights
Prof. Mike Casiano is the recipient of the annually-awarded CAHSS Early-Career Faculty Excellence Award. His book, Let us Alone: The Origins of Baltimore’s Police State, is under contract with the University of Illinois Press.
Prof Andy DeVos successfully piloted a new course titled “The American Horror Film” which became an instant hit with students. He also helped reestablish the department’s partnership with the Shady Grove campus by teaching a hybrid course for SG, and he recently agreed to serve as Faculty Advisor to the student club Comics and other Media.
Prof. Conor Donnan is finishing his first monograph, Kindred Spirits: Native Americans, Irish immigrants, and Imperialism in the American West, which is under contract with Johns Hopkins University Press. He published an article on No Irish Need Apply in Baltimore City. He also worked on a committee to reimagine the flag display in the Commons, and he is currently submitting plans to paint murals in different buildings at UMBC.
Prof. Sarah Fouts, director of the public humanities program, will be working on copy edits over the summer for her forthcoming manuscript, Right to Remain: Street Food Vendors and Day Laborers in Post-Katrina New Orleans. The ethnographic manuscript is slated for publication by UNC Press in July 2025. Fouts’s short film,El Camino del Pan al Baltimore, which was co-produced with Andy Dahl and Fernando Lopez, screened at the Maryland Film Festival on May 4, 2024. The film series, which is part of the Library Congress and American Folklife Center’s Homegrown Foodways Series, will also screen at Current Space in Baltimore on June 13, 2024. On May 9, 2024, Fouts’s AMST403/682 students launched the Sabor de Highlandtown mapping, archival, and storytelling project. Sabor de Highlandtown asks the question, “What can the stories behind immigrant foodways tell us about how neighborhoods change?” This project is supported by Maryland Traditions and was done in collaboration with Southeast CDC in Highlandtown. On May 28, 2024, Fouts will attend the Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes (CHCI) annual conference at Berkeley to receive an Honorable Mention Award for the collaborative Baltimore Field School Public Humanities project.
Prof Nicole King has been working on her second monograph, The Ungentrifiable City: Resisting the Slow Violence of Urban Renewal in Baltimore and co-organized an event for the Humanities Forum When Your City Becomes a Campus: What Good is Higher Education for Our Cities, a talk by Davarian Baldwin, author of In the Shadow of the Ivory Tower: How Universities Are Plundering Our Cities, which took place on Wednesday, May 1 at 5:30pm at the University of Baltimore in coordination with the Dresher Center and the University of Baltimore. She was a keynote speaker at the Provost’s DELTA Teaching Forum at Johns Hopkins University May 2, 2024. She co-authored “Rethinking the Field in Crisis: The Baltimore Field School and Building Ethical Community and University Partnerships” with Sarah Fouts and Tahira Mahdi, which was published in the April 2024 issue of the Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement. King published a chapter, “Baltimore Traces: Public Humanities, Zines, and the Connecting the Classroom,” in The Routledge Companion to Publicly Engaged Humanities Scholarship forthcoming on May 31, 2024.
Prof. Tamara Bhalla has been working in her role as co-PI on the Global Asias Initiative Mellon grant that resulted in two new exciting hires this year. We welcome Priya Bhayana as project manager on the grant and Mika Thornburg as post-doctoral fellow in Global Asias. Prof. Bhalla is also working on her second monograph, Decentering Whiteness: Race and Readership in Contemporary US Literature and is excited to be presenting research at an invited talk this summer at “Free People Read Freely: Literacy, Inclusion, and Democracy” on the campus of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and at a conference for the Society for History of Authorship, Reading and Publishing in Reading, England.
Morgan Dowty, AMST’s Program Management Specialist, is finishing up her second academic year at UMBC (Go Big Dogs!) and her first year in graduate school in History and Library Science Master of Arts (HiLS) dual-degree program at UMD College Park. This year Morgan was nominated and served as one of five UMBC representatives in the 2023-24 intercollegiate cohort Building Bridges Across Maryland. She also completed the professional development course “Documenting the Impact of the Humanities in Higher Education” offered by the National Humanities Alliance.
Posted: May 20, 2024, 10:49 AM