English
mikayla.makleWilliam Hamlin, professor, English, authored Montaigne: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford Press).
William Hamlin, professor, English, authored Montaigne: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford Press).
Jesse Spohnholz, professor, and Clif Stratton, assistant professor, history, coauthored three books in 2020: Ruptured Lives: Refugee Crises in Historical Perspective; Power Politics: Carbon Energy in Historical Perspective; and Chronic Disparities: Public Health in Historical Perspective (Oxford University Press).
Linda Heidenreich, associate professor, history, authored Nepantla Squared: transgender Mestiz@ Histories in Times of Global Shift (University of Nebraska Press).
Debbie Lee, professor, English, authored Remote: Finding Home in the Bitterroots (OSU Press).
Mary Stohr, professor, criminal justice and criminology, coauthored Corrections: The Essentials (SAGE Publications).
W. Puck Brecher, associate professor, history, authored Japan’s Private Spheres: Autonomy in Japanese History, 1600-1930 (Brill).
Robert Bauman, assistant professor, and Robert Franklin, assistant director, history, co-edited Echoes of Exclusion and Resistance: Voices from the Hanford Region (WSU Press).
Ken Faunce, associate professor, history, authored Heavy Traffic: The Global Drug Trade in Historical Perspective (Oxford University Press).
Andrew Gillreath-Brown, doctoral candidate, anthropology, authored Robert J. Hard and John R. Roney: Early Farming and Warfare in Northwest Mexico (University of Utah Press).
Vilma Navarro-Daniels, professor, languages, cultures, and race, presented “’We will survive as two Robinsons’: The loss of sociopolitical referents as the dissolution of one’s own subjectivity in Ignacio Martínez de Pisón’s ‘La muerte mientras tanto’ (‘Death meanwhile’)” at the 27th International Conference on Literature and Hispanic Studies organized by Lock Haven University, Lock Haven, Pennsylvania.
Navarro-Daniels also coauthored En la Elocuencia del Silencio (In the Eloquence of Silence); Critical Edition of the Poetry of Marta Ortiz Lorca (Valparaíso University Press) through a grant from the Ministry of Cultures, Arts and Heritage, Government of Chile.