Features

Cover of Ana-Maurine Lara's "Streetwalking: LGBTQ Lives and Protest in the Dominican Republic"

Reflections: UO Graduate Students Share How Works by WOC Faculty Changed Them

CSWS events have always served as informal sites for networking, support, and mentorship among women faculty and graduate students across campus. When the pandemic shut down our regular programming last year, the Women of Color (WOC) Project filled this need with a virtual books-in-print event series celebrating recent monographs by WOC faculty affiliates.  

Author
Polet Campos-Melchor
Kiana Nadonza
Roshelle Weiser-Nieto
Teresa Hernández
Publication Year
2021
Publication type
Annual Review
Sangita Gopal / photo by Jack Liu.

An Interview with Sangita Gopal: Interim Director Seeks to Strengthen CSWS Infrastructure

Interview by Jenée Wilde, Senior Instructor, Department of English, CSWS Dissemination Specialist

With a background in comparative media studies and postcolonial theory, Associate Professor Sangita Gopal came to the University of Oregon in 2004 to teach cinema studies in the Department of English. Over time she saw the popular program grow from an English concentration into a unique tri-school major, then into its own department housed in the College of Arts and Sciences.  

Author
Jenée Wilde
Publication Year
2021
Publication type
Annual Review
Law professor and former CSWS director Michelle McKinley started the Caregiver Campaign in response to community need / photo by Jenée Wilde.

New Special Project Advocates for Institutional Change: CSWS Leads an Effort to Redress Pandemic Impacts for Faculty who are Caregivers

by Jenée Wilde, Senior Instructor, Department of English, CSWS Dissemination Specialist

Last year, in the early stages of pandemic lockdown, then-CSWS director and law professor Michelle McKinley began receiving panicked emails from faculty friends and Center affiliates who are caregivers. With 4J schools and childcare facilities shut down, as well as shortages in long-term elder care services, how were they supposed to fulfill their teaching and research commitments at the university while also meeting the labor-intensive care needs of others?  

Author
Jenée Wilde
Publication Year
2021
Publication type
Annual Review
Baran Germen

Catching up with Baran Germen

By Jenée Wilde, Senior Instructor, Department of English

Baran Germen is an assistant professor of film and media studies at Colorado College. In 2018, he graduated with a PhD in comparative literature from University of Oregon, where he also completed a certificate degree in women’s, gender, and sexuality studies and specialized in film studies. His research and teaching focus on global cinema and comparative media studies, cutting across melodrama, queer theory, and Islam and secularism. 

Author
Jenée Wilde
Publication Year
2022
Publication type
Annual Review
A watercolor image of a blonde woman working at a desk in a dimly lit office, hunched over with a pen and paper, with a cartoon thought bubble coming from her to the left.

CSWS Expands Support for Graduate Students

by Jenée Wilde, Senior Instructor, Department of English

“One of the things that became clear during the pandemic is that graduate students were the most affected by lockdowns, but the institution made the least room for addressing how they were affected,” says CSWS Director Sangita Gopal. “Faculty could take a break from research, but graduate students didn’t have that leisure.”

Author
Jenée Wilde
Publication Year
2022
Publication type
Annual Review
Raka Ray / photo by Jack Liu

Reflecting on the 2022 Acker–Morgen Memorial Lecture

This spring, CSWS resumed the Acker–Morgen Memorial Lecture series after winter weather and pandemic conditions had thwarted the event for the last three years. On May 20, we were thrilled to welcome on campus Dr. Raka Ray, a professor of sociology and South and Southeast Asia studies and dean of social sciences at UC Berkeley. She specializes in gender and feminist theory, domination and inequality, the emerging middle classes, and social movements. Below, political science graduate student Olivia Atkinson offers a personal reflection on Ray’s talk:  

Author
Olivia Atkinson
Publication Year
2022
Publication type
Annual Review
Sangita Gopal

A Year in Review

by Sangita Gopal, CSWS Director

Author
Sangita Gopal
Publication Year
2022
Publication type
Annual Review
Demonstrators Attend Women's March to Defend Reproductive Rights A demonstrator holds a pro-choice sign during a Women's March in New York on Saturday, Oct. 2, 2021. Women's March and more than 90 other groups organized a national rally to protect women's reproductive rights ahead of the Supreme Court reconvening on October 4 / photo by Stephanie Keith, Bloomberg via Getty Images.

On the Implications of Overturning Roe

On June 24, 2022, in a historic and far-reaching decision, the US Supreme Court officially reversed Roe v. Wade, declaring that the constitutional right to abortion—upheld for nearly a half-century—no longer exists. The majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization proposes that the various provisions of the Constitution contain no inherent right to privacy or personal autonomy. Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito stated unequivocally that abortion is a matter to be decided by the states.

Author
Charise Cheney
Garrett Epps
Keya Saxena
Puja Ghosh
Roxy Alexander
Kristin Yarris
Publication Year
2022
Publication type
Annual Review