Faculty
Regular Faculty
 
    Caroline Heldman, Chair
 Professor, Gender, Women, & Sexuality Studies 
     B.A., Washington State University; M.A., Ph.D., Rutgers University   
    
              Caroline Heldman specializes in the presidency, media, gender, and race in the American context.
          
    
  Advisory Committee
 
    Mary Christianakis
 Professor, Critical Theory and Social Justice 
     B.A., UCLA; M. Ed., UCLA; M.A., Loyola Marymount University; Ph.D., UC Berkeley 
    
              Mary Christianakis is a professor of language, literacy, and culture. She studies literacy development, language, and discourse from a critical sociocritical perspective.
          
    
   
    Michael Gasper
 Associate Professor, History  
     B.A., Temple University; M.A., Ph.D., New York University   
    
              Michael Gasper teaches courses on the History of the Modern Middle East and North Africa, the History of the Ottoman Empire and the History of Islam and the Muslim World.
          
    
  Affiliated Faculty
 
    Bevin Ashenmiller
 Associate Professor, Economics 
     B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., UC Santa Barbara 
    
              Bevin Ashenmiller is an Environmental Economist whose research falls into three areas: recycling, evaluation of environmental programs, and energy and climate policy.
          
    
   
    Erica Ball
 Professor of Black Studies 
     B.A., Wesleyan University; M.A., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, City University of New York 
    
              Erica L. Ball is a historian who specializes in nineteenth and twentieth-century African American history.
          
    
   
    Alexander F. Day
 Professor, History & Asian Studies 
     B.A. Colby College; M.A., Ph.D. UC Santa Cruz 
    
              Alexander Day studies the intellectual, social, and cultural history of peasants, food, and agrarian change in China. He teaches Chinese, East Asian, and world history. Read his ºù«Ӱҵ Story profile.
          
    
   
    Allison de Fren
 Professor, Media Arts & Culture 
     B.A., Grinnell College; M.P.S., New York University; Ph.D., University of Southern California 
    
              Allison de Fren is a media maker and scholar whose research-practice falls at the intersection of sexuality/gender, film/media, and science/technology, often tracing a line from contemporary representations to earlier conceptual histories and audiovisual practices.
          
    
   
    Sharla Fett
 Robert Glass Cleland Professor in American History 
     B.A., Carleton College; M.A., Stanford University; Ph.D., Rutgers University  
    
              Sharla Fett teaches courses on early U.S. and African American history, including the Atlantic World, Slavery and the Antebellum South, U.S. Women’s History, and Collective Memory and Slavery’s Legacies. Read her ºù«Ӱҵ Story profile.
          
    
  Susan Grayson
 Professor, Spanish and French Studies 
     A.B., M.A., Ph.D., UCLA; Ph.D., Wright Institute Los Angeles Attestation d’études, Université de Bordeaux   
    
              Grayson has taught the 18th- and 19th-century French novel, French feminism, women's studies, literary criticism, and French grammar and composition at all levels.
          
    
  Laura Hebert
 Professor, Diplomacy and World Affairs  
     B.A., University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee M.A., University of Oregon Ph.D., University of Denver   
    
              Hebert's research interests center on gender, human rights, international law, and international organizations, with a geographic emphasis on sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia and a thematic focus on gender-based violence.
          
    
   
    Amy Holmes-Tagchungdarpa
 Professor, Religious Studies & Asian Studies 
     B.A., Victoria University of Wellington; Ph.D., Australian National University 
    
              Areas of specialization: Buddhism in Tibet, the East and South Asian Himalayas, and beyond.
          
    
   
    Vivian Lin
 Assistant Professor, Media Arts and Culture 
     B.A., UC Berkeley; M.P.S., NYU; M.F.A., Sandberg Instituut; P.h.D., City University of Hong Kong 
    
              Vivian Wenli Lin is a media artist and educator with a background in psychology, documentary film, video art, and interactive installation.
          
    
   
    Mary J. Lopez
 Elbridge Amos Stuart Professor of Economics 
     B.A., UC Riverside; M.A., Ph.D., University of Notre Dame   
    
              Professor Lopez's research is in the areas of labor economics, applied micro, and demography.
          
    
   
    Heather Lukes
 Associate Professor, American Studies 
     B.A., UC Berkeley; M.A., Ph.D., UCLA   
    
              Heather Lukes teaches courses on queer theory, queer color critique, queer L.A., and psychoanalysis.
          
    
   
    Amy Lyford
 Arthur G. Coons Professor in the History of Ideas 
     B.A., Pomona College; M.A., Boston University; Ph.D., U.C. Berkeley 
    
              Amy Lyford’s research centers on twentieth-century American and European artistic practices, with a special interest in the histories of photography and sculpture.
          
    
   
    Viviana MacManus
 Associate Professor, Critical Theory & Social Justice 
     B.A., ºù«Ӱҵ; Ph.D., University of California, San Diego 
    
              Viviana Beatriz MacManus’s research and teaching focuses on Latin American and Latinx feminist theory, literature, film, and cultural studies.
          
    
   
    Malek Moazzam-Doulat
 Resident Associate Professor, Critical Theory and Social Justice 
     B.A., ºù«Ӱҵ;  Ph.D., State University of New York, Stony Brook   
    
              Prof. Malek Moazzam-Doulat is a professor in the Critical Theory & Social Justice Department focusing on global responses to modernity. He received his Ph.D. in philosophy from SUNY Stony Brook. 
          
    
   
    Richard Mora
 Professor, Sociology 
     B.A., Harvard College (Sociology); M.A., University of Michigan (Education); M.A., Harvard University (Sociology); Ph.D., Harvard University (Sociology & Social Policy) 
    
              Dr. Mora teaches courses on masculinities, youth cultures, education, immigration, violence, and social inequality.
          
    
   
    Clair Morrissey
 Professor, Philosophy  
     B.A., University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; M.A., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill   
    
              Clair Morrissey is a moral philosopher who specializes in practical ethics and political philosophy.
          
    
   
    Julie Prebel
 Professor, American Studies; Director of Writing Center 
     B.A., UC Berkeley; M.A., Cal State San Francisco; Ph.D., University of Washington   
    
              Julie Prebel is Professor of American Studies and Director of the Writing Center.
          
    
   
    Erica Preston-Roedder
 Resident Associate Professor, Philosophy 
     B.A. Stanford University; M.S., UNC Chapel Hill; Ph.D., New York University 
    
              Erica Preston-Roedder specializes in applied ethics. She also has interests in philosophy of race/gender, public philosophy, and philosophy of psychology.  In recent work with ºù«Ӱҵ, she…
          
    
   
    Lisa Sousa
 Norman Bridge Professor, History 
     B.A., M.A., Ph.D., UCLA   
    
              Sousa specializes in the histories of colonial Latin America, indigenous peoples and languages of Mexico, and women, gender and sexuality.
          
    
   
    Kristi Upson-Saia
 Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs; David B. and Mary H. Gamble Professor of Religious Studies 
     B.A., University of Washington;  M.Div., Princeton Theol. Sem.;  Ph.D., Duke University   
    
              Areas of specialization: late ancient Mediterranean religions; dress and performativity; history of medicine, health, and healing 
          
    
   
    Yurika Wakamatsu
 Associate Professor, Art and Art History 
     B.A., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; A.M., Harvard University; Ph.D., Harvard University 
    
              Yurika Wakamatsu teaches East Asian art history, including pictorial narratives, woodblock prints, comics and anime, and gender and visual culture. Read her ºù«Ӱҵ Story profile.
          
    
  