GENDER AND WOMEN'S STUDIES STUDENT RESEARCH CONFERENCE AND SIGNATURE EVENTS
STUDENT RESEARCH CONFERENCE
2023: Emma Heaney, PhD, "Literature Against Cisness"
2022: Erin Murphy, PhD, "Amazons and Zombies: Margaret Cavendish鈥檚 Soldiers, Gender, and the Paradoxes of War"
2019: Uma Narayan, PhD, "Sisterhood and Doing Good"
2018: Duchess Harris, "Hidden Human Computers: The Black Women of NASA"
2017: Valerie Steele, "Chanel and Her Rivals"
2016: Lauren Berlant, 鈥淥n Being in Life Without Wanting the World: Rankine, Isherwood, and Dissociative Life鈥
2015: Katina Sawyer, "What鈥檚 Gender Got to Do with it? The Impact of Gender on your Life at 棉花糖直播"
2014: CJ Pascoe, "Bullied: Youth Gender, and Homophobia."
2013: Stephanie McCurry, "The Tale of the Solder's Wife: War, Gender, and Emancipation"
2012: Cynthia Enloe, "The Risks of Not Learning from Iraqi Women's War Experiences"
2011: Noel Sturgeon, "Avatar and Activism: Ecological Indians, Climate Justice and Disabling Militaris."
2010: Lori Ginzberg, "A Very Radical Proposition: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Meanings of the vote"
2009: Linda Greenhouse, "What Judges Know (or Don't Know) About Sex Discrimination (or Anything Else)"
2008: Susan Aberth, "Frida Kahlo: Mexican Hydra"
2007: Afsaneh Najmabadi, "Feminism, Secularism, and the Challenges of Women's Rights Activism in a Islamic Republic"
2006: Bonnie Dow, "Screening the second Wave: Images and Activism in 1970s Feminism"
2005: Elizabeth L. Hillman, "Guarding Women: Abu Ghraib and Military Sexual Culture"
2004: Yopie Prins, "Ladies' Greek"
2003: Maria DiBattista, "Fast-talking Dames"
2002: Alan Sinfield, "Using Two Noble Kinsmen to read Midsummer Night's Dream against the Grain"
2000: Marion Roydhouse, "A New Zealander Abroad: Unexpected Journeys and Women's History in Unexpected Places"
1999: Janice Madden, "Gender Discrimination in Labor Market: Constructing Evidence in the Classroom and in the Court Room"
1998: Mary Crawford, "Feminist Research: Generations of Change"
1997: Madelyn Gutwirth, "My Life in Women's Studies, and Why We Still Need Them"
1996: Adele Lindenmeyr, PhD, and Ryan McDonough
1995: Rachel Hare-Mustin, PhD, and Kelly Biessel
1994: Marie McAllister and Sherry Masters, "The Value of Women's Studies Education"
1993: Barbara E. Wall, OP, "Women and Mass Communication"
1991: Farrah Griffith, "Black Feminist Contributions to Women's Studies"
Emma Heaney
Emma Heaney is a scholar of comparative literature, feminist studies, and trans studies. She is Associate Director and Clinical Assistant Professor in the XE Program in Experimental Humanities and Social Engagement at NYU. Her first book is The New Woman: Literary Modernism, Queer Theory, and the Trans Feminine Allegory (Northwestern UP 2017). Her forthcoming edited collection, Feminism Against Cisness [Duke UP 2024], gathers essays by trans studies scholars that demonstrate the potential of feminist critique freed of the ideology that assigned sex determines sexed experience.聽
CAMPUS COMMUNITY EVENTS
Every semester, the Gender and Women's Studies program hosts about 8 鈥 10 events. These events include lectures, live performances, and films from a variety of fields and disciplines.
Several of these events are recorded and may available on the University's YouTube channel, making them available to the larger community.