2019 WW Women’s Studies Dissertation Fellows Named

Woodrow Wilson Foundation Names 2019 Women’s Studies Fellows

May 1, 2019

NEWS RELEASE
FOR RELEASE:  Wednesday, May 1, 2019
CONTACT:  Susan Billmaier | Program Officer, WW Dissertation Fellowship in Women’s Studies
billmaier@woodrow.org |  (609) 945-7872
                       Frances Hannan | hannan@woodrow.org | (609) 945-7886

Note:          Prospective applicants should call 609-452-7007 x310 or email ws@woodrow.org

Woodrow Wilson Foundation Names 2019 Women’s Studies Fellows

PRINCETON, NJ (Wednesday, May 1, 2019)—The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation has selected 10 Ph.D. candidates as Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellows in Women’s Studies for 2019.

The competitive WW Women’s Studies Fellowship is the only national program of its kind. The award supports the final year of dissertation writing for doctoral students in the humanities and social sciences whose work addresses women’s and gendered issues in interdisciplinary and original ways.

Each Fellow will receive a $5,000 stipend to use towards research related expenses—travel, data work/collection, supplies, and others. This year’s Fellows are writing on such topics as the politics of reproduction in Israel/Palestine, the creative strategies for survival that foster care alumni develop, and the use of classified ads by sex workers around the turn of the 20th century.

The Fellows are completing their dissertations in such departments as English, communications, history, sociology, and American studies. They represent Arizona State University, University of Arizona, Brown University, University of California, San Diego, University of Miami, Rutgers University, Stanford University, the College of William & Mary, and the University of Wisconsin, Madison (See the full list of Fellows and their dissertation titles below).

In its 45-year history, the WW Women’s Studies Dissertation Fellowship has named nearly 600 Fellows, each scholar continuing the program’s legacy of original and significant research about women that crosses disciplinary, regional, or cultural boundaries. Fellows are now distinguished faculty members, artists and novelists, and (in some cases) leaders in business, government, and the nonprofit sector. They include a Pulitzer Prize winner, two MacArthur Fellows, numerous Guggenheim and Fulbright Fellows, and many others who have achieved significant distinctions.

For more information on the Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship in Women’s Studies, please visit https://woodrow.org/fellowships/womens-studies/.

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About the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation
Founded in 1945, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation (www.woodrow.org) identifies and develops the nation’s best minds to meet its most critical challenges. The Foundation supports its Fellows as the next generation of leaders shaping American society.

 

WW DISSERTATION FELLOWS IN WOMEN’S STUDIES, 2019

Bayan Abusneineh • University of California, San Diego, ethnic studies
Chosen and Imagined: Racial and Gendered Politics of Reproduction in Israel/Palestine

Samina Ali • University of Miami, English
Bad Women and the Politics of Recognition in Post-9/11 American Literature

Hillary Ash • University of Pittsburgh, communication
Defining a Crisis: the Rhetorical Exclusion of Women in the United States’ AIDS Epidemic, 1982-1993

Lizbett Benge • Arizona State University, gender studies
Sensing the State and Strategizing Survival: Art, Ethnography, and the Lived Experiences of Foster Care Alumni

Hannah Frydman • Rutgers University-New Brunswick, history
Between the Lines: Sex, Work, and Business in the Parisian Classifieds, 1881-1940

Elizabeth Kinnamon • University of Arizona, gender and women’s studies
Attention as Method: Marxism, Feminism, and The Politics of Presence

Michaela Kleber • College of William & Mary, history
Gendered Societies, Sexual Empires: Early French Colonization among the Illinois

Isabel Pike • University of Wisconsin-Madison, sociology
Looking for Future: Gender, Work, and Social Change in Kenya

Virginia Thomas • Brown University, American studies
Dark Albums: Regions of Racial Violence, Family Feeling, and Temporal Intimacies in the U.S. South

Grace Zhou • Stanford University, anthropology
In the Market for Intimacy: Work and Welfare in Post-Soviet Central Asia

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