English
adrianaDonna Campbell, professor, English, authored “The Victim as Vampire: Gothic Naturalism in the White Slave Narrative” in Haunting Realities: Naturalist Gothic and American Realism (University of Alabama Press).
Donna Campbell, professor, English, authored “The Victim as Vampire: Gothic Naturalism in the White Slave Narrative” in Haunting Realities: Naturalist Gothic and American Realism (University of Alabama Press).
Dene Grigar, professor and director, English/creative media and digital culture, WSU Vancouver authored “The Legacy of Uncle Roger” in #WomenTechLit, and the introduction, “‘Syn[ning]’ Bravely: Introduction to Next Horizons” in Hyperrhiz.
Marina Tolmacheva, professor, history, WSU Vancouver, presented “Geographical Coordinates in the Western Indian Ocean: Transmission of Knowledge from Antiquity to the Late Middle Ages” in the Symposium “Science in Islamic Societies, Globally and Locally” at the 25th International Congress on the History of Science and Technology in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. She delivered the inaugural lecture in Curso de Geografia at the Universidade Federal da Integração Latino-Americana, where she spoke on “Ibn Battuta e a Geografia Arabe.”
Amy Mazur, professor, politics, philosophy, and public affairs, presented “GEPP En Action: L’ Approche, Le Réseau et Les Résultat Préliminaires” as the keynote lecture at Genre, égalité de droit et inégalités de fait, discrimination indirecte et transversale, les dispositifs, at the University of Nantes, France. Mazur also presented the workshop “The GEPP Network: An Overview on Money and Political Recruitment” at the University of Bergen. Norway.
Jesse Spohnholz, associate professor, history, authored The Convent of Wesel: The Event that Never Was and the Invention of Tradition (Cambridge University Press).
Susan Peabody, professor, history, WSU Vancouver, authored Madeleine’s Children: Family, Freedom, Secrets, and Lies in France’s Indian Ocean Colonies, the first full length biography tracing slavery in the Indian Ocean world (Oxford University Press).
Justin Denney, associate professor, sociology, presented “From the Health of Children in Same‐Sex Couple Families to Neighborhood Contributions to Disparities in Adult Mortality: RDCs Make It Possible” at the Rocky Mountain Research Data Center in Boulder, Colo.
Stephen Powers, postdoctoral research associate, environment, received the Gene E. Likens Award from the Ecological Society of America for outstanding publication by a junior scientist in the biogeosciences in recognition of his paper “Long-term accumulation and transport of anthropogenic phosphorus in three river basins” in Nature Geoscience.
Ryan Booth, doctoral student, history, was selected to present “They Are Always at the Front: Native American Soldiers in the Great War” at the International Conference on Hate Studies at Gonzaga University in Spokane.
Jennifer Sherman, associate professor, sociology, co-edited Rural Poverty in the United States (Columbia University Press, New York).