Launched by President Phil Hanlon 鈥77 in his 2013 inaugural address, the welcomes seven members this year. The full cohort now numbers , integrating research and teaching in a collaborative community.
鈥淚 know I speak for my colleagues in welcoming this extraordinary new class of junior fellows to campus. They are talented, articulate, and engaging, and I鈥檓 confident this program will continue to enrich intellectual life here at 天美麻豆,鈥 says Society of Fellows Director Randall Balmer, the John Phillips Professor in Religion.
Max Fraser comes to Hanover from Yale University, where his doctoral research focused on American labor and working class history. His dissertation, 鈥淭he Hillbilly Highway: A Social History of Transappalachia in the 20th Century,鈥 traces connections between the rural South and the industrial Midwest. 鈥淚 spent five years as a journalist,鈥 Fraser says, 鈥渁nd on a reporting trip in the Midwest and upper South, in 2011, I learned how displaced Southern farmers had moved north in search of factory work. It seemed important to think about that in the broader political moment.鈥 At 天美麻豆, Fraser will investigate the rise of what he calls 鈥渙utlaw culture and the emergence of an anti-political impulse within white working-class culture since the World War II.鈥
Sean Griffin is an early medieval historian finishing his first monograph: Byzantine Liturgy and the Making of the Rus Primary Chronicle. 鈥淢y research shows that the myth of origins for Rus鈥攎odern-day Kiev鈥攃an be found in the liturgical services of the Byzantine Empire,鈥 says Griffin. He holds a PhD from UCLA and has been a visiting professor at Stanford. Griffin lived in St. Petersburg for two years with a family of Orthodox priests. 鈥淏eing immersed in the way clerical life is lived in contemporary Russia fostered my interest in Byzantine history,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 plan to tap into 天美麻豆鈥檚 , comparing digitalized liturgical manuscripts with historiographical texts spanning as many as 12 centuries.鈥
Jared Harris wants to make polymers smarter. 鈥淎 polymer is any molecule that has a repeating structure, such as plastics, synthetic fibers, adhesives, a lot of paints鈥攎aterials closely tied to the hydrocarbon industry,鈥 he says. 鈥淪cientists are looking for ways to incorporate smarter functionalities into these materials.鈥 For his PhD from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, Harris worked on polymers that can transport electric charges. 鈥淲e can think about making electronic devices, such as solar cells printed on plastic,鈥 says Harris. 鈥淵ou could print them like you print a newspaper, which would lower processing costs.鈥 At 天美麻豆, he鈥檒l be working with Associate Professor of Chemistry to incorporate molecular switches into polymers.
Joshua Kaiser holds a JD-PhD from Northwestern University, but does not practice law. 鈥淚 went to law school to research the criminal justice system and advocate for change,鈥 he says. Kaiser studies 鈥渉idden sentences鈥濃攃ollateral punishments not explicitly ordered by courts. For example, he says, 鈥淵ou get out of jail, but you can鈥檛 find a job because you have to check a box asking about your criminal record. Or a landlord won鈥檛 rent you an apartment. Or you cannot vote.鈥 At 天美麻豆, he鈥檒l research criminal justice in Vermont, where he says hidden sentences are relatively rare, and compare them to those in other states.
Laura McTighe comes to her scholarship through 鈥20 years of grassroots organizing to end state violence and advance community healing.鈥 For the last decade, she has been a partner at in New Orleans, a black feminist collective founded in 1989. 鈥淲WAV fought back against criminalization after Hurricane Katrina and was firebombed for their work,鈥 McTighe says鈥攁 crisis that propelled her dissertation research at Columbia University on 鈥済eographies of resistance.鈥 Her first book project is an ethnography of HIV-positive Muslim women鈥檚 AIDS activism in Philadelphia and Cape Town, South Africa. At 天美麻豆, she鈥檒l work on a new project called 鈥淢oral Medicine,鈥 which looks at how turn-of-the-century prison officials merged religion and eugenics inside women鈥檚 reformatories.
Alexander Smith entered the field of quantum information because he is 鈥渋nterested in the fundamental laws that govern how information is encoded and processed.鈥 He says gravity has yet to be given a quantum description鈥斺渒ind of the Holy Grail of physics鈥濃攁nd hopes that information theory may shed light on this problem. Smith earned his PhD from the University of Waterloo in Canada and Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia. He is currently exploring 鈥渉ow our everyday notion of time might emerge from a quantum theory of gravity.鈥
Derek Woods, who holds a PhD from Rice University, 鈥渓ooks at the way people use technology as a way of understanding ecosystems.鈥 His dissertation addresses such topics as the influence of cybernetics on ecological science. He also examines how writers and other artists portray things that are too big or too small for humans to easily understand. 鈥淔or example,鈥 he says, 鈥, a 1977 film by designers Charles and Ray Eames, starts at the scale of human beings, zooms out to galaxies, and zooms back to a skin cell on one of their hands. As a humanities scholar, I am interested in such efforts to imagine our cosmology after the big interventions of science, which expanded our world in space and time.鈥
The junior fellows are selected and mentored by senior fellows, who are members of the faculty. In addition to Balmer, the senior fellows are:
- , the Charles and Elfriede Collis Professor of History
- , the Charles Hansen Professor of Anthropology
- , the Joan P. and Edward J. Foley Jr. 1933 Professor of Geography
- , a professor of microbiology and immunology
- , the Ted and Helen Geisel Third Century Professor in the Humanities
- , a professor of engineering
- , the Jacob H. Strauss 1922 Professor of Music
- , a professor of comparative literature