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Focus on Faculty

Buying a Prius Won't Solve the Climate Crisis

Buying a Prius Won't Solve the Climate Crisis

Small, individual acts of environmental consciousness ─ while worthwhile for the planet ─ are nothing compared to the massive policy change needed to solve the climate crisis, Northwestern University religion and culture professor Sarah McFarland Taylor told a UCSB audience earlier this month. The Walter H. Capps Center for the Study of Ethics, Religion, and Public Life hosted Taylor, who discussed her book Ecopiety: Green Media and the Dilemma of Environmental Virtue.

UCSB adds Law to its History of Public Policy program

UCSB adds Law to its History of Public Policy program

UC Santa Barbara students have seen the History of Public Policy as a a good major to prepare for law school. Now, starting later in 2020, students will be able to major in the History of Public Policy and Law. Program director Randy Bergstrom explains in an interview.

Supporting UCSB’s International Students

Supporting UCSB’s International Students

As the number of international students at UCSB have doubled over the past 5 years, Kristen Dunkinson works specifically with international students at Campus Learning Assistance Services (CLAS) in order to help them with their writing.

Wendy Eley Jackson: A New Mentor for Film Students

Wendy Eley Jackson: A New Mentor for Film Students

New UCSB professor Wendy Eley Jackson is the instructor for Basic Screenwriting and Crew Production. She sat down for an interview to discuss her passion for writing and film, her journey through Hollywood, and what knowledge she hopes to impart to her students.

Ancient Arts Meet Futuristic Technology

Ancient Arts Meet Futuristic Technology

UC Santa Barbara Art professor Sarah Rosalena Brady recently presented her work with the National Museum of the American Indian and Jet Propulsion Laboratory in an event sponsored by the Media Arts & Technology Department. Brady is a multi-media artist who combines computer craft like coding & 3D modeling with traditional art-forms like clay sculpting.

Focus on Faculty: Kate McDonald Maps Modern East Asian History

Focus on Faculty: Kate McDonald Maps Modern East Asian History

Kate McDonald, A UC Santa Barbara Modern East Asian History professor, has received a $100,000 federal grant to improve and expand her new website “Bodies and Structures: Deep-Mapping Modern East Asian History.” McDonald discussed in an interview this new digital platform for researching and teaching histories of Japan and other cultures in the region.

Defining Personhood: Slavery Through a Legal Lens

Defining Personhood: Slavery Through a Legal Lens

In a recent workshop, UC Santa Barbara English professor Jeannine DeLombard said American legal doctrine granted the status of ‘persons’ to slaves in order to prosecute them, a dynamic that lingered long after emancipation in the criminalization of African Americans.

“Slaves were recognized as criminally responsible, but not having civil rights,” DeLombard said. “And this is mapped onto African Americans today.”

A Digi-Humanist: Alan Liu Links Big Data to the Humanities

A Digi-Humanist: Alan Liu Links Big Data to the Humanities

Alan Liu, a professor of English at UC Santa Barabara is a self-described digi-humanist. Liu is currently directing a $1.1 million humanities grant from the Mellon Foundation. The project, “WhatEvery1Says,” collects big data relating to the word ‘humanities.’ He also published a book last year with the University of Chicago Press titled “Friending the Past.”

Liu recently sat down for an interview to discuss the intersection between humanities and our increasingly digital  environment.

Bazerman Fellow Kathy Patterson Researches Blogging in College Writing

Bazerman Fellow Kathy Patterson Researches Blogging in College Writing

UCSB writing professor Kathy Patterson shared her recent research on incorporating blogging in first-year college writing courses during the 3rd annual celebration for the Charles Bazerman Endowed Faculty Fellowship for Professional Development in Writing. As the 2018-2019 recipient of the research fellowship, Patterson discussed the benefits blogging has on a college student’s motivation, writing process, digital literacy, and connection with their community.

From Page to Stage: Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig Supports Student Playwrights

From Page to Stage: Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig Supports Student Playwrights

Created in 2017 by theater professor Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, New Works Lab is a workshop production program that gives students the unique opportunity to see their works come to life. It brings together student directors, playwrights, designers, stage managers, publicists and actors to put on original plays written by UCSB students. In the fall, students submit their scripts, after which a committee of students and faculty choose their top five or six scripts to which to give developmental productions. Directors, stage managers, designers and actors are then chosen in the winter and the shows are put into production in the spring. Every two weeks, each show performs their play in front the New Works Lab class and receives feedback from other students and faculty mentors.

In a recent interview, Cowhig spoke more about the class and its growth since its conception.

Ellen O’Connell Whittet: Writing for the Future of Ballet

Ellen O’Connell Whittet: Writing for the Future of Ballet

UCSB Writing Program lecturer Ellen O’Connell Whittet examines the art and tradition of ballet, with the critical eye of a writer and the perspective of a former ballerina. In this interview, she discusses her experience as a dancer and her memoir, which explores the intersection of feminism and ballet.

Kuo-Chi'ng Tu: Bringing Taiwan Studies to UCSB

Kuo-Chi'ng Tu: Bringing Taiwan Studies to UCSB

As the director of UCSB’s Center for Taiwan Studies, Kuo-Chi’ng Tu aims to promote Taiwan Studies in America through events such as the recently held conference, “World Literatures in Chinese: Transnational Perspectives of East Asian Cultures.” In this interview, Tu speaks about the conference, as well as how the Center for Taiwan Studies came to be.

 Ilene Miele: Inspiring Peer Publication

Ilene Miele: Inspiring Peer Publication

In an interview, UCSB writing professor Ilene Miele discusses Starting Lines, a yearly compilation of student work used to teach future writing students. Miele describes the motivation behind the launch of the publication and its impact on the lives of hundreds of students and alumni alike.

Jennifer Holt: Protecting Freedom in a Digital Age

Jennifer Holt: Protecting Freedom in a Digital Age

Jennifer Holt, a Film and Media Studies professor at UC Santa Barbara, researches media policy and the digital infrastructure that underlies modern communication.  In this interview, she provides crucial insight on how to be a properly informed citizen without losing sight of our basic rights when it comes to digital usage.

FOCUS ON FACULTY: From Wool to Apps, Lisa Jevratt on Art and Technology

FOCUS ON FACULTY: From Wool to Apps, Lisa Jevratt on Art and Technology

“Understanding programming can really help shape science, help shape production, help shape art and culture,” says Lisa Jevratt, an art professor who teaches in UC Santa Barbara’s Media Arts and Technology Program and is part of the university’s Center for Information Technology.

Jevbratt’s work, which has included the Zoomorph app, research projects, and collaborations with MAT students, offer us a picture of the future of technology. In this interview with Writing student Vinny Leonelli, ,she answers questions about the future and her achievements in her field.

FOCUS ON FACULTY: Becoming Nearly Carbon Neutral

FOCUS ON FACULTY: Becoming Nearly Carbon Neutral

When UC Santa Barbara put out a climate report in 2014, professor Ken Hiltner was in complete awe at the enormity of the carbon footprint that academic conferences left behind, amounting to about 55 million pounds of carbon dioxide.  With a joint appointment in Environmental Studies and English Literature, Hiltner was ideally suited take action. He spoke in a recent interview about his Nearly Carbon Neutral Guide to academic conferences and the intersection of humanities and the environment.