CSWS is pleased to announce that the 2016 CSWS Annual Review is now available for your reading pleasure. If you are on our mailing list as a CSWS faculty affiliate, supporter, contributor, or UO administrator, the 2016 CSWS Annual Review should soon be arriving in your mailbox. You can also access this 28-page publication online now.
2016 CSWS Annual Review Contents
- “CSWS Has a New Director,” by Alice Evans, Managing Editor
- “Voices of the Vanquished,” by Gina Herrmann, Associate Professor of Spanish, Romance Languages
- “The Afterlife of Princess Ka‘iulani,” by Stephanie Teves, Assistant Professor, Ethnic Studies and Women’s and Gender Studies
- “Women in Papua New Guinea,” by Aletta Biersack, Professor, Department of Anthropology
- “Daughters of the Moon: True Life Stories from the Lacandon Rain Forest,” by Analisa Taylor, Associate Professor of Spanish, Department of Romance Languages
- “The Forgotten Story of Japanese Women Who Studied in the U.S.,” by Alisa Freedman, Associate Professor, Japanese Literature and Film
- “HandiLand: Nature, Disabililty and the Magic Kingdom,” by Elizabeth A. Wheeler, Associate Professor, Department of English
- “Raising Chickens: Women and the Emergence of Poultry Production,” by Elizabeth C. Miller, ABD, Department of Sociology
- “Melodramatics of Turkish Modernity,” by Baran Germen, PhD candidate, Department of Comparative Literature
- ”Gender, Inclusion, and Military Recruiting,”by Jeremiah Favara, PhD candidate, School of Journalism and Communication
- “Deportation & Redefining Masculinities on the Northern Mexico Border,” by Tobin Hansen, PhD candidate, Department of Anthropology
- “This Body Could Be Mine,” by Danielle Seid, PhD candidate, Department of English
- Highlights from the Academic Year
- Looking at Books
- NWWS: Crossing Borders
- NWWS: “Putting a Face to Child Immigrants,” by Lidiana Soto, master’s candidate, School of Journalism and Communication
- “Remembering Joan Acker”