IAS faculty members granted IDISCO awards in the fall 2019 funding round

Raissa DeSmett received a community-based partnership seed grant to support her project Decolonizing Collections: Experiments in Care. DeSmett will work with students preparing the Southeast Asia collections to be accessed by community members as part of a new multi-campus Research Family. One of the questions she is pursuing with her students is: How can we help unlock the social, cultural, political, and aesthetic potential of ...

December 19, 2019

Katherine Voyles: “On (Not) Reading the Mueller Report”

IAS faculty member Katherine Voyles published “On (Not) Reading the Mueller Report” in the Los Angeles Review of Books. The piece explores the wide gap between the high public interest in the Special Counsel’s report evidenced by its bestseller status and the vanishingly small number of Americans who have actually read in full the redacted report.

December 16, 2019

Neil Simpkins wins 2020 CCCC Disability in College Composition Travel Award

AS faculty member Neil Simpkins has been selected for a 2020 CCCC Disability in College Composition Travel Award. The Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) is a constituent organization within the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE). Simpkins is one of 6 recipients of this award.

December 12, 2019

Jennifer Atkinson interviewed on The 4 Stages of Climate Grief

IAS faculty member Jennifer Atkinson was interviewed in an Outside Magazine story on The 4 Stages of Climate Grief. Written by Heather Hansman, author of Downriver: Into the Future of Water in the West, the essay profiled personal struggles with climate grief and eco-anxiety. Atkinson's contribution highlighted practical strategies for coping with distress that arises from assaults on places we are personally connected to. Hansman contacted Atkinson after learning of her work helping students build emotional strategies to cope with climate grief and ...

December 9, 2019

IAS students engage in multi-media production

Students in Kristin Gustafson’s Multi-media Storytelling in Student Media class produced three live UWave radio shows focused on climate change, international student experience, and tuition. These two-way radio productions involved the BISMCS472 students talking with one another on air about their journalism reporting for the Husky Herald. In addition to the radio shows, the news story about climate change appeared in the December/January Husky Herald issue distributed this week. The other two news stories will appear in February’s edition. ...

December 6, 2019

Ted Hiebert and Jin-Kyu Jung publish “Psychogeographic Visualizations: or, what is it like to be a bat?”

IAS faculty members Ted Hiebert and Jin-Kyu Jung published “Psychogeographic Visualizations: or, what is it like to be a bat?” in Cultural Geographies. The article takes a creative re-interpretation of psychogeography: psyschogeography less about the psychological dimensions of real space but more about the mind’s spatiality with the consideration of different forms of imagining as ‘places’ ...

December 5, 2019

Minda Martin facilitates artist panel at the Henry

IAS faculty member Minda Martin facilitated an artist panel on 23 November 2019 during the opening weekend of Shamim M. Momin’s In Plain Sight exhibition at the Henry Art Gallery. The artists on the panel Beatriz Cortez, Nicole Miller, Tom Burr, and Andrea Bowers. The panel focused on ...

December 5, 2019

Amoshaun Toft at the OurMedia Conference: “From StudioX to legal FM”

IAS faculty member Amoshaun Toft co-organized the “Echoes of Indymedia: Infrastructures of resistance” panel at the OurMedia conference in Brussels. His presentation, “From StudioX to legal FM: Organizing communications infrastructure in Seattle 1999-2019” accompanied participants in-person and remotely from a range of academics and practitioners involved in ...

December 2, 2019