College of Fellows

Fellows

Hier finden Sie eine Übersicht und Profile der aktuell am College of Fellows | CIIS aktiven Fellows. Alumnae und Alumni der vergangenen Semester und Assoziierte finden Sie auf den Unterseiten:
 Alumnae & Alumni
 Assoziierte

Smith B. Babiaka
Humboldt
Chemie

Fellowship: Alexander von Humboldt Postdoc Research Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Department of Microbial Bioactive Compounds, Interfaculty Institute for Microbiology and Infection Medicine, Univeristy of Tübingen; Prof. Dr. Heike Brötz-Oesterhelt and Dr. Chambers C. Hughes
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): September 2022 – September 2025
Research Project: Discovery of novel marine natural products from sponges
Research Areas: Natural Product Drug Discovery and Medicinal Chemistry
Publications: Eine Liste der Publikationen gibt es hier.

Contact: 

babiakasmith2009spam prevention@gmail.com

babiaka.smithspam prevention@ubuea.cm

Activities at the College of Fellows: Humboldt Lecture: "Natural Product-Based Discovery of Novel Lead Compounds From Terrestrial and Marine Ecosystems" (10 January 2024)
About: Smith B. Babiaka is a Lecturer at the Department of Chemistry at the University of Buea where he was awarded a PhD in Chemistry in March 2019. Since June 2022, he is a Georg Forster Alexander von Humboldt and Georg Forster-Bayer Research Fellow. He is working in the research group of Prof. Dr. Heike Brötz-Oesterhelt and Dr. Chambers C. Hughes at the University of Tübingen. He has been awarded the ARISE Intra-ACP mobility grant, AGNES junior research grant, MINESUP research grant, ACS best poster ward among others. His previous research has been focused on natural product drug discovery of novel lead compounds from nature. He is a member of ACS, RSC, EFMS-YSN & INPST and others. He is a reviewer of manuscripts from Phytochemistry, Frontiers in Natural Products, ChemBioChem, and Natural Product Research and others. He has about thirty-two peer-reviewed journal publications. 

Personal Website: 

https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=5heMRJoAAAAJ&hl=en

https://loop.frontiersin.org/people/912704/overview

 

Doaa M. Baumi
Teach@Tübingen
Islamische Theologie

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen 
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Center for Islamic Theology
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025– September 2025
Research Project: The Development of the Concept of 'Isma (Infallibility) in Islamic Theology 
Research Areas: Islamic theology (kalām), Qurʾānic exegesis, reception of biblical narratives in Islamic literature, Islamic intellectual history, interreligious thought, classical Arabic texts

Publications: 

  1. "Navigating Biblical Narratives in Islamic Thought: From Early Engagement to Ibn Taymiyya's Theorization" (Forthcoming, De Gruyter, January 2026)
  2. "Online Scriptural Reasoning as a Pedagogical Tool for Fostering Intercultural Understanding and Empowering Women: A Case Study from Egypt" (Forthcoming, IJMES – International Journal of Middle East Studies), co-authored with Joel Pierce
  3. "On Teaching Islam Across Cultures," co-authored with Courtney Dorroll and Kimberly Hall (University of Indiana Press, 2019)
  4. Baumi, Doaa M., Dini, Elena, and Feldmann Kaye, Miriam. "Scriptural Reasoning in a Time of Social Distancing." The Journal of Scriptural Reasoning, vol. 20, no. 1, February 2023
  5. Baumi, Doaa M. "Muammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb al-Ghassānī" in Christian-Muslim Relations: A Bibliographical History (Asia, Africa and the Americas), ed. David Thomas and John Chessworth (Brill: Oct. 2018), vol. 12, pp. 56–59
  6. Book Review: "Biblical Figures in the Qur'an and Muslim Literature" by J. Kaltner & Y. Y. Mirza, in The Bible and the Qur'an: Biblical Figures in the Islamic Tradition
Contact: doaa.baumispam prevention@zith.uni-tuebingen.de
Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in interdisciplinary seminars and interfaith colloquia; offering a Master’s-level course on “Biblical Figures in the Qur’an and Islamic Literature
About: Doaa M. Baumi is a postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for Islamic Theology, University of Tübingen, where she explores the reception of biblical narratives and the development of theological constructs in classical Islamic thought. She holds a PhD in Islamic Studies from the University of Birmingham, an MA from the University of Chicago, and a BA from al-Azhar University. Her teaching and research focus on kalām, Qurʾān, Islamic intellectual history, and interfaith engagement.

Personal Website: 

LinkedIn Profile

 

Jon Beltz
Teach@Tübingen
Kulturen des Alten Orients

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen 
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Institute for Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Prof. Dr. Wiebke Meinhold
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025– March 2026
Research Project: Sumerian “Oath Incantations”: A Critical Edition and Study
Research Areas: Mesopotamian Religion, Literature, and Magic, Cuneiform Epigraphy 

Publications: 

Monograph

Namtar: Deity, Demon, Agent of Fate, under review

Articles

  1. “The Neo-Babylonian Tablets of the Lawrence Henry Ott Collection in the Yale Babylonian Collection.” Orientalia, in press.
  2. “Everyday Magic?: Four Sumerian zi…pa3 Incantations on Amulets.” Journal of Cuneiform Studies, in press.
  3. “The Son of King Kurigalzu on a Kassite Prayer Seal.” Nouvelles Assyriologiques Brèves et Utilitaires 2022/2, #65.
  4. “A Tale of Two Plague Gods.” Biblical Archaeology Review 47/4 (Winter 2021), 58-59. 
Contact: jonathan-david.beltzspam prevention@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de
Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Workshop
About: Jon Beltz holds a PhD in Assyriology from Yale University, specializing in the languages, literature, and religions of ancient Mesopotamia. His dissertation was on the Mesopotamian underworld deity/demon Namtar, who functioned as a "grim reaper" figure for the Sumerians, Babylonians, and Assyrians. He has also worked on the usage of inscribed amulets in ancient Mesopotamia and the phenomenon of "magic." His current work focuses on a group of Sumerian incantations he calls "oath incantations," which utilize the language of oath-binding to exorcize demons and prevent them from attacking a patient. He is currently producing a critical edition of the late bilingual Sumerian-Akkadian compositions Diĝir Hul and Lugal Namtar, two lengthy standardized incantations used in ancient Mesopotamia for exorcism and healing from demonic attack. He has studied and published cuneiform texts from the Yale Babylonian Collection and the British Museum.
 

Deep Chand
Global Encounters
Soziologie

Fellowship: Global Encounters Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Institute of Sociology, host: Prof. Bani Gill
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: Neighbourhood and Social Cohesion: Police, Protest, and the Citizenship (Amendment) Act [CAA] in India
Research Areas: State, Police, Sociology of Policing, Citizenship and Democracy, Belonging and Neighborhood, Caste and Education, Ethnography

Publications

  1. Chand, D. (2024). (Re)-production of Caste in the Classroom: A Dalit Perspective, Higher Education (Accepted).
  2. Chand, D. (2023). (Re)-production of Caste Prejudices: Viva-Voce Examination in Higher Education in Eastern Uttar Pradesh. In Dhaneshwar Bhoi & Hugo Gorringe (Eds.), Caste in Everyday Life: Experience and Affect in India. Palgrave Macmillan, London.
  3. Chand, D. (2019). “Equal opportunities in Education: A perspective from below.” Contemporary Voice of Dalit (Sage) 11(1): 55-61. [with Sailu Karre]
  4. Chand, D. (2017). “Parents’ Perception and Experiences of Scheduled Caste Students in Access to Higher Education.” Indian Journal of Dalit and Tribal Social Work 4 (1): 49-86.  
  5. Chand, D. (2017). “Critique of Brahmanical Hegemony: Understanding Indian Caste System through Gramsci.” Journal of Social and Economic Studies XXVII (1): 76-88.
Contact: deep01492spam prevention@gmail.com
Activities at the College of Fellows: Research and Teaching, Research workshop, Participating in GTURN lecture series and South Asia reading group
About: I have an MA and M.Phil. in Social Science from the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai, India. I recently completed my PhD in Sociology from Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany, with a grade of magna cum laude distinction. I am trained in ethnography, discourse analysis and ethnomethodology. My areas of research include State, Police, Sociology of Policing, Citizenship and Democracy, Belonging and Neighborhood, Caste and Education, Ethnography. I have published my research work in national and international academic journals. I have presented my research at the University of Porto, Portugal, the International Studies Association, Nashville, USA and the World Congress of Sociology organised by the International Sociological Association (ISA) in Melbourne, Australia. I also participate in "Varieties of Ethnographic Research", initiated by the Goethe Research Academy for Early Career Researchers (GRADE). 
 

Veronica Cibotaru
Intercultural Studies
Philosophie

Fellowship: Intercultural Studies Fellowship
Affiliation: College of Fellows (Center for Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Studies), hosted by Dr. Niels Weidtmann
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): October 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: A Phenomenology of Interreligious Dialogue
Research Areas: phenomenology of religion, philosophy of language and AI

Publications

1. Veronica Cibotaru (2025). Phenomenological understandings of the relationship between ethics and the idea of God, Continental Philosophy Review.
2. Veronica Cibotaru (2024). For a contextualist and content-related understanding of the difference between human and artificial intelligence, Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences.
3. Veronica Cibotaru (2023). Le problème de la signification dans les philosophies de Kant et Husserl. Paris: Hermann.
4. Veronica Cibotaru (2023). Banal evil - Radical goodness. Reflection on the 60th Anniversary of "Eichmann in Jerusalem", Open Philosophy, vol. 6, no. 1.

Eine vollständige Liste der Publikationen gibt es hier

Contact: cibotaruveronicaspam prevention@gmail.com 
Activities at the College of Fellows: I organize the online series of workshops “Rethinking peace”. 
About: I obtained a PhD in Philosophy in 2021 at the Sorbonne University and at the University of Wuppertal, in the framework of a French-German binational program. Before arriving at the College of Fellows I worked as a postdoctoral research fellow at the School of Philosophy and Cultural Studies of the Higher School of Economics (Moscow), and as a visiting lecturer at the Institute of Philosophy of KU Leuven. In my current project, funded by a College of Fellows Fellowship, I aim at developing a phenomenology of interreligious dialogue and a critical reflection on the treatment of the question of interreligiosity throughout the history of Western philosophy.
 

Alexandra Ciorita
Teach@Tübingen
Nanoscience

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Cellular Nanoscience, Schäffer Lab (ZMBP)
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): October 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: The effects of Vinca alkaloid vincamine on microtubule dynamics
Research Areas: Electron microscopy, cellular biology 

Publications:

1. “Single depolymerizing and transport kinesins stabilize microtubule ends” https://doi.org/10.1002/cm.21681

2. “Green Synthesis of Ag-MnO2 Nanoparticles using Chelidonium majus and Vinca minor Extracts and Their In Vitro Cytotoxicity”, https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25040819

3. “Interaction of Low-Density Polyethylene Nanofragments with Autotrophic and Chemotrophic Bacteria”, https://doi.org/10.1021/acssuschemeng.4c02440

Complete list of publications at Google scholar

Contact: alexandra.cioritaspam prevention@mnf.uni-tuebingen.de
About: Alexandra's research in understanding anticancer mechanisms has led her to explore plant-derived compounds with natural cytotoxic effects on malignant cells. The research conducted by the Cellular Nanoscience group under the leadership of Professor Erik Schäffer focuses on studying molecular machines that orchestrate cellular self-assemblies, particularly emphasizing the cytoskeleton as an essential target for anticancer treatment. 
 

Cansu Civelek
Global Encounters
Soziologie

Fellowship: Global Encounters Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Sociology Department, hosts: Prof. Boris Nieswand & Dr. Gani Bill
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: Entangled processes of urban ruination, dispossession, and depoliticization : A spatio-temporal analysis of the Karapınar neighborhood in Eskişehir, Turkey
Research Areas: Urban studies, migration, politicization

Publications:

  1. 2023 Beyond Lawfare: An Analysis of Law’s Temporality through Russian-doll Urbanization from Turkey. PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review. https://doi.org/10.1111/plar.12543
  2. 2020 Tackling participation beyond the theses of neoliberal urban governance or citizen empowerment. Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development, Special Issue [The Contemporary Turkish State: The Changing Landscape of Political Economy in Turkey] 49(1-2): 39-83. ISSN 0894-6019
  3. 2019 Urban renewal with dancing and music”?: The renewal-machine’s struggle to organize hegemony. Focaal Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology. 84: 47-61. https://doi.org/10.3167/fcl.2019.840104
Contact: civelekcansuspam prevention@gmail.com
About: Cansu Civelek graduated from the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara. She received her master’s degree from the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Vienna with a thesis entitled “‘Regeneration on Site’ or Rent-Driven Urban Renewal? An Ethnographic Inquiry into the Karapınar Valley Urban Regeneration Project in Eskişehir, Turkey”. In 2015, she independently financed her first documentary film, “Warning Karapınar! Voices from an Urban Regeneration,” which was derived from her master’s thesis. In 2020, she received her doctoral degree from the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Vienna, with a dissertation entitled “Non-spectacular Policy-making: Urban Governance, Silence, and Dissent in an Abortive Renewal Project in Eskişehir, Turkey.” As a post-doctoral researcher at the Democracy Institute of the Central European University, she focused on her book project titled “Igniting the Spark of the Political,” examining urban policy-making and governance practices of Eskişehir’s municipal government while addressing questions of collective silence and (de)politicization.
With a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Tübingen's Global Encounters Program, she is developing a research project on neighborhoods of Eskişehir where Afghan refugees reside. The aim is to comprehend the interactions between refugee newcomers and long-standing residents, as well as the mechanisms of claim-making employed by both groups.
 

Manuel Cojocaru
Intercultural Studies
Theologie

Fellowship: College of Fellows (Center for Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Studies)
Affiliation: Intercultural Studies
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): May 2024 – July 2025
Research Project: Anxiety and Nothingness as ways to disclose Being
Research Areas: ancient Greek philosophy, phenomenology, religious studies, philosophy of religion, metaphysics

Publications

  1. Manuel Cojocaru (2024). The Will to Being. Plato, Cronus, and the Cult of Sisyphus, Springer.
  2. Manuel Cojocaru (2022). “The Creative Solution. Privileged Things as Heroic Objects”, in Philosophia 50, 473–486, Springer.
Contact: manuel.cojocaru@rocketmail.com
Activities at the College of Fellows: I will organize a workshop at the end of my stay here. 
About: I obtained by PhD in philosophy at the University of Bucharest, Faculty of Philosophy, with a thesis concerning death and immortanilty in Plato's philosophy and ancient Greek myths. I have published my thesis recently with the title "The Will to Being. Plato, Cronus, and the Cult of Sisyphus" (Springer 2024). As a continuation of my interest in death and immortality, my current Fellowship addreses the phenomenology of religious experience.
 

Samuel J. Cox
Teach@Tübingen
Anglistik

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Department of English, Prof. Dr. Dr, Russel West-Pavlov 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: Dust Horizons: Stories from a Fragmented Earth 
Research Areas: Environmental Humanities, Anthropocene Studies, Ecocriticism, New Materialism, Southern Literatures, Global South Studies 

Publications

 

  1. Cox, Samuel J. [forthcoming] ‘Review: Cambridge Companion to the Australian Novel.Text: Journal of Writing and Writing Courses, April 2025.
  2. ——. ‘Writing from the South: An Interview with Kim Scott.’ Overland no. 255, 2024.
  3. ——. ‘Review: The Cambridge History of the Australian Novel.’ JASAL, vol. 24, no. 2, 2024.
  4. ——.  ‘On the Track to Tourmaline: Randolph Stow’s “dry-souled country.”’ Westerly, vol. 69, no. 1, June 2024.
  5. ——. ‘Textual Encounters of the Bird Kind: Dal Stivens and the Night Parrot.’ Australian Literary Studies, vol. 38, no. 3, 2023, dx.doi.org/10.20314/als.486a89265d.
  6. ——. ‘The Dust of Carpentaria.Motifs [En ligne], vol. 6, 2022, DOI : 10.56078/motifs.806.
  7. ——. ‘I’ll Show You Love In a Handful of Dust: The Material Poetics of Voss.’ JASAL, vol. 22, no. 2, 2022, pp. 1-11.
  8. ——. ‘“The Kingdom of Dust”: Voss as Planetary Epic.’ Australian Literary Studies, vol. 37, no. 3, 2022, pp. 1-27, http://dx.doi.org/10.20314/als.40f6a48016.
  9. ——. ‘On the Track to Tourmaline: Photo Essay.’ Westerly, vol. 67, no. 2, 2022, pp. 109-118.
  10. ——. (2022). ‘Land, Grief, and Returning to Dust: An Interview with Dani Powell.’ The Saltbush Review, vol. 2, 2022, pp. 1-13, https://saltbushreview.files.wordpress.com/2022/07/saltbush-issue-2-land-grief-and-returning-to-dust-cox.docx.pdf

     

Contact: samuel.coxspam prevention@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de 
Activities at the College of Fellows: Science Compass Workshop and Teach@Tübingen Fellow Workshop, 7-8 April 2025
About: About: Samuel J. Cox received his PhD from the University of Adelaide where he rethought notions of land, place and space in Australian literature through the granular and ephemeral nature of dust. He has lectured and taught numerous courses in contemporary literature at the University of Adelaide. Samuel has won the Association for the Study of Australian Literature’s A.D. Hope Prize for his essay on the material poetics of Patrick White’s Voss. He has also won Australian Literary Studies PhD Essay Prize for an essay on the Night Parrot as a paradoxical trickster figure in the work of Dal Stivens and has been highly commended for InASA’s inaugural Kay Schaffer Award for ECRs. Samuel is currently finalising the development of his thesis into a more expansive book, as he focuses on expanding his current research into dust, decay and material poetics to be global in scope. 
 

Cassidy Croci
Teach@Tübingen
Skandinavistik

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation: Scandinavian Studies department, University of Tübingen, host: Jun.Prof. Dr Rebecca Merkelbach
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): September 2024 – October 2025
Research Project: Visualizing the Narrative Networks of the Hauksbók Redaction of Landnámabók
Research Areas: Old Norse language and literature, Social Network Analysis, Landnámabók Studies, and interdisciplinary Viking Studies

Publications: 

Monograph
Networks of Settlement in Old Norse Texts: A Social Network Analysis of Landnámabók (The Book of Settlements). Kalamazoo/Berlin: Medieval Institute Publications/De Gruyter [In preparation]

 

Book Chapter
‘Frá Birni er nær allt stórmenni komit á Íslandi: Bjǫrn buna’s Influence on the Narrative Network of Landnámabók’, in Social Network Analysis and Medieval History, ed. Matthew Hammond, York: Arc Humanities Press [Forthcoming]. 


Public Engagement
‘Interdisciplinary Perspective: Social Networks and Landnámabók’, in Medieval Materialities 1: Lichfield Cathedral (2023), 27-9, Available online at: https://more.bham.ac.uk/medievalmaterialities/wp-content/uploads/sites/63/2023/05/Medieval-Materialities-1-2023.pdf#page=35 

Contact: 

cassidy.crocispam prevention@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de

cassidycrocispam prevention@gmail.com  

Activities at the College of Fellows: Teach@Tübingen Fellow Workshop, 9 October 2024, ‘Visualizing History: Social Network Analysis and Landnámabók (The Book of Settlements)'.
About: Cassidy Croci completed a PhD in English at the University of Nottingham (United Kingdom) with the Centre for the Study of the Viking Age in 2024. From 2022-2023, she was an American-Scandinavian Foundation fellow at the Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies in Reykjavík, Iceland, during which time she conducted geographical and historiographical research for her PhD thesis ‘New Methods for the (Land)-taking: Visualising the Sturlubók Redaction of Landnámabók’. As a Teach@Tübingen Fellow, she is currently in the process of adapting her thesis into a monograph as well as expanding her methodology to include the Hauksbók redaction of Landnámbók. 
Her research combines traditional historical and literary methods with Social Network Analysis and Visual Analytics to construct, quantify, and visualize the narrative networks (i.e. people and their relationships) of Old Norse-Icelandic works, particularly Landnámabók ‘The Book of Settlements’ to detect emergent social and geographical pattern. This ultimately provides new insights into how the landnámsöld ‘the settlement period’ (c.870-930 CE) was remembered in the latter half of thirteenth-century Iceland (c.1275-1280 CE).

Nora Donoghue
Teach@Tübingen
Altertumswissenschaften

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Institute of Classical Archaeology hosted by Prof. Dr. Richard Posamentir
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): October 2024 – October 2025
Research Project: “At Home in Middle Republican Colonies: Colonial Households and Water Management”
Research Areas: Roman archaeology, art, and history from Iron Age to late Imperial period; Roman colonies of the Republican and early Imperial periods; Household Archaeology; Craft production and ancient weaving technology; Etruscan archaeology

Publications:

  1. Donoghue, N. "Following the Thread: Elite Iconography on Weaving Objects at Poggio Civitate (Murlo)". Arts, vol. 11, no. 1, 2022.
  2. Donoghue, N., and R. Wallace. “A Republican Latin Abecedarium and Writing Exercise from Cosa.” Zeitschrift Für Papyrologie Und Epigraphik, vol. 224, 2023, pp. 297–303.
  3. Tuck, A., Belinskaya, A., N. Donoghue, A. Glennie, K. Kreindler, E. O’Donoghue, and C. Reilly, C. “Excavations at Poggio Civitate (Murlo): The 2023 Field Season”. Etruscan and Italic Studies, vol. 26, no. 1-2, 2022, pp. 102-131.
  4. Tuck, A., N. Donoghue, A. Glennie, K. Kreindler, F. Schmidt. "Excavations at Poggio Civitate (Murlo): The 2022 Field Season". Etruscan and Italic Studies, vol. 26, no. 1-2, 2023, pp. 102-131.
Contact: nora.donoghuespam prevention@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de 
Activities at the College of Fellows: Teach@Tübingen Fellow Workshop 9 October 2024- “Adapting to Place: The Variability of Domestic Water Management Systems in Middle Republican Colonies”
About: Nora is a postdoctoral Teach@Tübingen fellow at the Institute for Classical Archaeology at the University of Tübingen. Nora holds a BA in Classical Archaeology from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and an MA in Classical Studies from Columbia University. Recently, she completed her Ph.D. in Classics at Florida State University. Her dissertation, “At Home in Middle Republican Colonies: Colonial Households and Water Management”, examines the development of domestic water management systems of Italian colonies founded between the third and second century B.C. and the impact these systems had for community planning. Nora’s excavation experience in Italy includes Hadrian’s Villa (Tivoli), Cosa Excavations (Ansedonia), and Poggio Civitate Archaeological Project (Murlo). Nora's research encompasses a wide range of fields, including Roman and Etruscan archaeology, postcolonial theory, domestic craft production, and anthropological approaches to household archaeology. In her spare time, Nora is an avid bread baker, supported by her faithful sourdough starter “Doughmitian”, and she also enjoys training her rambunctious dogs, Zoey and Macaroni.
 

Mohammad Mahdi Fallah
Intercultural Studies
Philosophie

Fellowship: Intercultural Studies 
Affiliation: College of Fellows, host: Niels Weidtmann
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): May 2024 – August 2025
Research Project: Belonging to the In-Betweenness: Phenomenology of Barzaḵi Situation
Research Areas: Intercultural philosophy of religion, phenomenology of belonging

Publications

  1. Fallah, Mohammad Mahdi (2024). “Revisiting Divine Impassibility through Tabatabaʾi Notion of ‘Perfect Human,” Islam and the Contemporary World, vol. 1, Issue 3, Winter 2024, pp. 61-68.
  2. Oppy, Graham; Trakakis, Nick (forthcoming). *The Western History of Philosophy of Religion* (vol. 5), Chief Editor of translation, Mohammad Mahdi Fallah, Tehran: Sales. [Farsi]
  3. Hasker, William; Rogers, Katherin (forthcoming). “Anselm and the Classical Idea of God: A Debate,” trans. Mohammad Mahdi Fallah, in *Philosophy of Religion: The Key Thinkers*, ed. Mahdi Akhavan, Tehran: Lega. [Farsi]
  4. Johnson, David (forthcoming). “Hume and Reports of Miracles,” trans. Mohammad Mahdi Fallah, in *Philosophy of Religion: The Key Thinkers*, ed. Mahdi Akhavan, Tehran: Lega. [Farsi]
  5. Phillips, D. Z. (2023). *Death and Immortality*, trans. Mohammad Mahdi Fallah, Tehran: Parsik. [Farsi]
  6. Smart, Ninian (2023). *The Concept of Worship*, trans. Mohammad Mahdi Fallah, Tehran: Parsik. [Farsi]
  7. Wrathall, Mark (2021). “Between Earth and Sky: Heidegger on Life after the Death of God,” trans. Mohammad Mahdi Fallah, in *Religion after Metaphysics*, Tehran: Qoqnos. [Farsi]
  8. Rehbein, Boike (2021). *Critical Theory after the Rise of the Global South: Kaleidoscopic Dialectic*, trans. Mohammad Mahdi Fallah, Tehran: Teesa. [Farsi]
Contact:  m.mahdi.fallahspam prevention@gmail.com
About: My name is Mohammad Mahdi Fallah. I completed my Ph.D. in philosophy of religion at Allameh Tabataba'i University in Tehran, Iran. My dissertation explored the conceptualization of nihilism in Iran and Japan, focusing on Shayegan and Nishitani. My research interests include intercultural philosophy of religion, Islamic theology and mysticism, and the Kyoto School.

Amin Ghafarpour
Teach@Tübingen
Terrestrische Sedimentologie

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Terrestrial Sedimentology research group, Prof. Dr. Kathryn E. Fitzsimmons
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): August 2024 – July 2025
Research Project: Reconstructing long-term dynamics of high latitude winds from dust deposits in Central Asia
Research Areas: Loess, sedimentology, northern hemisphere climate system
Publications: Eine vollständige Liste der Publikationen gibt es hier
Contact: amin.ghafarpourspam prevention@sedgeo.uni-tuebingen.de 
Activities at the College of Fellows: Research and Teaching
About: I am an Iranian early-career scientist specializing in loess deposits and semi-arid terrestrial environmental change in the Caspian Sea region. My PhD these was on the paleopedology of loess-paleosol sequences in northern Iran near the Caspian Sea using a range of sedimentological and geophysical methods to reconstruct environmental change in wind-blown dust deposits. Through my PhD career I obtained diverse knowledge from the fields of soil science, (paleo) pedology, clay mineralogy, soil micromorphology, sedimentology, rock magnetic, and geochemistry. Our findings; resulted in six international peer reviewed publications, eight international conference presentations and posters, and two prizes.
 

Patrick Haggard
New Horizons Fellow
Neurowissenschaften

Fellowship: New Horizons Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Lehrstuhl für Philosophie mit dem Schwerpunkt Kognitionswissenschaft, Prof. Dr. Hong Yu Wong
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): Mehrere Kurzaufenthalte 2024 – 2025
Research Project: Action and Body: an interdisciplinary mind sciences approach 
Research Areas: Human experimental psychology; consciousness science; neurophysiology

Publications

Selected recent publication:

  1. Haggard, P. (2024). An intellectual history of the “Libet experiment”: embedding the neuroscience of free will. In Proceedings of the Paris Institute for Advanced Study (Vol. 21). https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13341982

eine vollständige Liste der Publikationen finden Sie hier: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=NqmgC9gAAAAJ&hl=en 

Contact: p.haggardspam prevention@ucl.ac.uk
About: Patrick Haggard obtained his PhD in Experimental Psychology from Cambridge University in 1991.  He was a postdoctoral researcher at Oxford University from 1991 to 1994, before moving to University College London in 1995.  He was promoted to Full Professor in 2004, and became a Fellow of the British Academy in 2014.
 

Joshua Kumbani
Teach@Tübingen
Ältere Urgeschichte & Quartärökologie

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen

Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Institute for 

Prehistory & Early Prehistory, Prof. Dr. Nicholas Conard

Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: Music archaeology of Southern Africa 
Research Areas: Music archaeology, rock art, experimental archaeology 

Publications

  1. Dordevic, Z., Kumbani, J. and Alvarez-Morales, L. (Submitted book chapter). Sacred soundscapes of Medieval World: The role of percussion instruments in landscape sacralistaion.
  2. Kumbani, J and Díaz-Andreu, M. (Submitted). Animated motifs: a systematic analysis of dance scenes in the rock art of the Zimbabwean Plateau. Southern African Field Archaeology.  
  3. Kumbani, J and Díaz-Andreu. (Submitted). Dance scenes from Free State, KwaZulu Natal, Eastern Cape and Western Cape Provinces in South Africa. TELESTES: An International Journal of Archaeomusicology and Archaeology of Sound.
  4. Kumbani, J and Díaz-Andreu. (Submitted book chapter). Dance scenes of the rock art of the Central Limpopo basin (South Africa and Zimbabwe): a systematic study.
  5. Kumbani, J and Díaz-Andreu, M. 2024. The art of music. The representation of musical instruments in the rock art of Zimbabwe. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa.
  6. Kumbani, J and Díaz-Andreu, M (Submitted). Animated motifs: a systematic analysis of dance scenes in the rock art of the Zambezi and Save river basins (Zimbabwe). African Archaeological Review.
  7. Scherzinger, M.R and Kumbani, J. (Submitted) Mbira Key from the Later Iron Age excavated at the Medieval City of Great Zimbabwe. Global Anthology of Sources in the History of Music Theory.
  8. Kumbani, J. 2023. Drumming things up: a possible depiction of a drum at Grootvlei 158 (Oakdene), South Africa. The South African Archaeological Bulletin 78(218): 3-10.
  9. Kumbani, J. 2023. Idiophones or palettes? An analysis of flat bone and shale implements from Matjes River site, southern Cape of South Africa. Critical Arts 37(1): 72-86, DOI: 10.1080/02560046.2023.2220368
  10. Kumbani, J. and Vogels, O. 2022. Musicals bows in the Rock Art of Southern Africa. Oxford Research Encyclopaedia of Anthropology. Musical Bows in the Rock Art of Southern Africa | Oxford Research Encyclopaedia of Anthropology.
  11. Rust, R., Kumbani, J., Rusch, N. and Wurz, S. 2022. Flute-playing in the rock art of the Klein Karoo and Cederberg, South Africa; a link to ancient sound. Rock Art Research: The Rock Art Research: Journal of the Australian Rock Art Research Association (AURA). 39(1): 104-113.
  12. Kumbani, J. 2020. Music and sound-related archaeological artefacts from southern Africa from the last 10,000 years. Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa 55: 217-241.
  13. Kumbani, J., Bradfield, J., Rusch, N. and Wurz, S., 2019. A functional investigation of southern Cape Later Stone Age artefacts resembling aerophones. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 24: 693-711.
  14. Mercader, J., Patalano, R., Favreau, J., Itambu, M., Kumbani, J. and Marufu, H., 2016. Acheulean prepared core technologies from the eastern Zimbabwe escarpment, Maunganidze. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 8: 47-62.
Contact: joshkumbanispam prevention@gmail.com 
Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Workshop, Teaching Music Archaeology, Experimental Archeology and Rock art of Southern Africa at the Department of Early Prehistory and Quaternary Ecology  
About: Joshua Kumbani is a Zimbabwean archaechologist who specialises in the music archaeology of Southern Africa. His research interest lies in surveying for archaeological artefacts in existing archaeological collections that could have been used for music and sound production in the past and conductin archaeological experiments. His research encompasses rock art research focusing on evidence of musical expressions depicted in the art. 
 

Kina Kunz
Teach@Tübingen
Politikwissenschaft

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Institute of Political Science, Prof. Dr. Andreas Hasenclever
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: “Navigating the Rise of China: The Foreign Policy Decision-Making of Japan and South Korea”
Research Areas: East Asian international relations, US Foreign policy, conflict management, and decision-making processes 

Publications

Selection of Opinion and Analysis Pieces

  1. Kunz, K. (21 June 2024). Asia Studies in Aotearoa. The Context. https://www.thecontextasiapacific.org.nz/asiastudies/   Kunz, K. (15 May 2024). South Korea & Japan's Response to China. Asia Media Centre. https://www.asiamediacentre.org.nz/opinion-and-analysis/south-korea-and-japans-response-to-china/
  2. Kunz, K. (24 May 2023). Why South Korea and Japan’s Radar Link Plan Might Be Bad News for China. NK News: Korea Prohttps://koreapro.org/2023/05/why-south-korea-and-japans-radar-link-might-be-bad-news-for-china/
  3. Kunz, K. (3 May 2023). New Zealand-China Relations Under Prime Minister Hipkins: Changes on the Horizon? 9DASHLINEhttps://www.9dashline.com/article/new-zealand-china-relations-under-prime-minister-hipkins-changes-on-the-horizon 

Books Under Contract 

  1. Kunz, K. (expected 2026). The Foreign Policy Decision Making of Japan and South Korea: Navigating the Rise of China. Routledge.
  2. Shibata, R., & Kunz, K. (expected 2025).  Competing Victimhood and Intergenerational Responsibility: Resolving the Rift between Japan and Korea. Routledge. 

Journal Article in Preparation 

  1. Kunz, K. Flashpoints, Threat, and Leverage: How Geography Shaped Japan’s and South Korea's Diverging Responses to China's Rise (1992-2022). 
Contact: kunzkinaspam prevention@gmail.com
Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Fellow Workshop

About: Since obtaining my PhD at the University of Otago, I have worked as a researcher for the Toda Peace Institute and am now a Teaching Fellow at the University of Tübingen.My research interests include international relations in the Asia-Pacific region, state decision-making processes, and conflict management.

My current research project examines the decision-making processes of Japan and South Korea in response to the rise of China. For this research, I conducted extensive field work in South Korea and Japan, including a stint as a Waseda Visiting Research Fellow.

I have taught courses on international relations theory and New Zealand foreign policy, and worked as a teaching assistant for various courses, including introduction to international relations, Chinese foreign policy, and US foreign policy. 

As a freelance writer and researcher, I have contributed articles to NK News, the Asia New Zealand Foundation, 9Dashline, and The Context. 

Fellow Profile

Charlotte Lafont
Teach@Tübingen
Geomikrobiologie

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Group of Geomicrobiology, Prof. Dr. Andreas Kappler 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): October 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: The Role of Iron and Manganese Redox Cycles in Carbon Tranformation During Permafrost Thaw 
Research Areas: Biochemistry 
Publications: /

Contact: 

charlotte.lafontspam prevention@ifg.uni.tuebingen.de

Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Workshop 

About:

I am a biogeochemist specializing in the role of microorganisms in redox processes within environmental systems. Currently, as a T@T Fellow at the University of Tübingen, I focus on investigating the interaction between carbon cycling and iron and manganese redox cacyles in permafrost soils. 

Previously, I worked at the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, where my research centered on improving passive mine water treatment systems by studying the removal processes and microbial dynamiccs in these environments. 

 

Maristella Lunardon
Teach@Tübingen
Psychologie

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Department of Psychology, Prof. Hans-Christoph Nürk 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: Implicit measures of mathematical anxiety 
Research Areas: Numerical cognition, individual differences in mathematical learning, psychophysiology

Publications

  1. Lunardon, M., Cerni, T., & Rumiati, R. I. (2022). Numeracy Gender Gap in STEM Higher Education: The Role of Neuroticism and Math Anxiety. Frontiers in Psychology, 13, 856405. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.856405
  2. Lunardon, M., T., & Rumiati, R.I. (2024). Field of study and gender modulation of the effect of personality and math anxiety on numeracy. The Journal of Psychology: Interdisciplinary and Applied. 1-29. https://doi.org/10.1080/0223980.2024.2352706
  3. Lunardon, M., Lucangeli, D. Zorzi, M., Sella, F. (2023). Math computerized games in the classroom: an Number Line Training in Primary School Children. Progress in Brain Research, 276, 1-33. https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.pbr.2022.11.001
  4. Lunardon, M., Decarli, G., Sella, F., Lanfranchi, S. Gerola, S., Cossu, G., & Zorzi, M. (2023). Low discriminative power of WISC cognitive profile in developmental dyscalculia. Research in Developmental Disablities, 136, 104478. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2023.104478
  5. Lunardon, M., Cerni, T., Zanon, M., & Rumiati, R.I. (2024). Psychological correlates of numeracy in higher education. PsyArXiv. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/adnw9

Eine vollständige Liste der Publikationen finden Sie hier: 

 https://scholar.google.it/citations?user=VpWV0rUAAAAJ&hl=it

Contact: maristella.lunardonspam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de
Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Workshop 

About: Maristella Lunardon earned her PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience in 2024 from the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) in Trieste, Italy. Her research focuses on individual differences in numeracy performance, using a combination of cognitive tests, self-report questionnaires, and physiological measures such as skin conductance, heart rate variability, and salivary cortisol concentration.

In addition, her academic interests include numerical development and interventions for children with both typical and atypical development.

Maristella Lunardon is also a licensed psychologist in Italy.

 

Francesco Marchionni
Teach@Tübingen
Anglistik

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Department of English, Prof. Dr. Christoph Reinfandt 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: Forgetting the Present, Remembering the Past: History, Philosophy and Poetry in European Romanticism 
Research Areas: Romanticism, Comparative Romantic Studies, Philosophy and Poetry in European Romanticism 

Publications

  1. Marchionni, Francesco, Promethean Grief in Byron and Shelley: Subjectivity, Knowledge and Art. (Under contract with Liverpool UP)
  2. Hamilton, Paul, Marchionni Francesco (Eds.), Giacomo Leopardo: Reading, Reception and Legacy in Europe. (Legenda, 2026)
  3. Marchionni, Francesco, ‘Giacomo Leopardi’s Promethean Weltanschauung', in Contaminazioni leopardiane, ed. by Olmo Calzolari, Alessandra Aloisi and Emanuela Tandello (Milano: Mimesis, 2024), pp. 136-144
  4. (Forthcoming) Marchionni, Francesco, “' Il rimembrar delle passate cose”: Giacomo Leopardi between ricordanza and dimenticanza', in Giacomo Leopardi. Reading, Reception and Legacy in Europe, edited by Paul Hamilton and Francesco Marchionni
  5. Marchionni, Francesco, “And making death a Victory”: Sceptisim and Personal Conflict in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage I-II and ‘Prometheus’, The Byron Journal, 48:1 (2020), 45-56
  6. Marchionni, Francesco, ‘Performing the Promethean Self in Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage III-IV and Cain', Essays in Romanticism, 31:2 (2024), 133-150
  7. (Forthcoming) Marchionni, Francesco, ‘Promethean Nihilism in Giacomo Leopardi’s Canti and Operette Morali', Forum for Modern Language Studies 
Contact: francesco.marchionnispam prevention@uni-tuebingen.de 
Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Fellow Workshop 
About: Originally from Italy, Francesco lived in the UK for 12 years where he eventually completed a PhD at Durham University in 2023. While his training as a Romanticist was mostly focused on British Romanticism, his research interests have recently moved to a more comparative approach to the discipline. In fact, Francesco's interests are the ramifications of Romanticism in Europe in literature and philosophy. His first monograph Promethean Grief in Byron and Shelley: Subjectivity, Knowledge and Art (under contract with LUP) is a first attempt at placing Byron and Shelley within a continental tradition of intellectual history. He is also one of the co-editors of the volume Giacomo Leopardi: Reading, Reception, Legacy in Europe. His current project examines the genealogy of (Neo)Platonism in the literary and intellectual history of European Romanticism. 
 

Somak Mukherjee
Teach@Tübingen
Environmental Humanities

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Faculty of Philosophy, Department of English, hosted by Dr Dan Poston
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): October 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: "Elemental Cities: Material Ecology and Narratives of
Precarity in Urban Cultures"
Research Areas: Environmental humanities, urban studies, contemporary
global Anglophone literature, materialist aesthetics, film and media
studies

Publications:  

  1. “Pyropolis: Locus of Fire in Nabarun Bhattacharya’s Harbart.” in Eric Prieto, Liam Lannigan, and Anni Lappella (ed.), Cities Under Stress: Urban Discourses on Crisis, Resistance, Resilience, and Renewal. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024. (In Press).
  2. (Under Review) “Industrial Breeze: Figurations of Urban Air in Satyajit Ray’s Calcutta Trilogy.” In Manishita Dass and Usha Iyer (ed.). Locating the Indian New Wave in Global Art and Political Cinema Circuits, Oxford University Press, 2025.
  3. “Kinship, Knowledge, and Nationhood in Shyam Benegal’s Kalyug.” In Sneha Kar Chaudhuri and Ramit Samaddar (ed.), ReFocus: The Films of Shyam Benegal, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2022. 100-117.
  4. “King Lear on the Marathi Stage: on V.V. Shirwadkar’s Natasamrat,*” Jadavpur University Essays and **Studies* Volume 31 (2017): 187-215.
  5. "Infernal Encounters: Streets and Interpretation in Mrinal Sen’s Calcutta Trilogy.” *Humanities Underground*, September 24, 2015. Web.

Contact: 

somak.mukherjeespam prevention@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de 

somakmukherjeespam prevention@umail.ucsb.edu 

Activities at the College of Fellows: The Global Encounters Lecture Series, ‘The French Jesuit Relations as Theology and Travel Literature in Charles II’s Library’, 29 May 2024.

About:

Somak Mukherjee is a Postdoctoral fellow at the Department of  Modern German Literature at the Faculty of Philosophy in the University of Tubingen in Germany. His interests lie at the intersection of environmental criticism, materialist aesthetics, urban history, cinema and media studies, and visual culture. He recently completed his PhD at the Department of English, University of California, Santa Barbara. His current book manuscript in progress, tentatively titled *Elemental City: Ecology, Media, and Narratives of Crisis in Postcolonial Calcutta*, explores how the literary and mediatic representation of classical elements, such as earth, air, fire, and water, imagine conditions of urban crisis, with Calcutta as the model site.  Somak’s teaching and research has been supported by the Mellon Foundation, Interdisciplinary Humanities Center (IHC) of UC Santa Barbara, Dean’s Prize for Teaching Fellowship at UCSB, and UCSB Graduate Division Dissertation Fellowship, among others. His academic articles have been published, or under review by journals *Amerasia, Critical Humanities, or *edited volumes of Edinburgh University Press, Palgrave Macmillan, and Oxford University Press. His public writings have appeared in various print and digital publications in South Asia, including *Huffington Post*, *Frontier,* *Scroll,* *The Citizen*, *Daily Star*, *Anandabazar Patrika*, and Humanities Underground.

Fellow Profile

Olisa Godson Muojama
Global Encounters
Geschichtswissenschaften

Fellowship: Global Encounters Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Institute of Didactics of History and Public History, host: Prof. Bernd-Stefan Grewe
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): 1 April 2024 – 31 September 2025
Research Project: Neighbourhood Encounters in Anglo-German Colonial Frontiers in West Africa, 1884-1914
Research Areas: Global History, Colonial History, International Political Economy, Intellectual History

Publications

  1. Olisa Muojama.‘Victims of Nationality: German Civilian Internment in British West Africa during the Second World War.’ Journal of World History Vol. 37. No. 3 (Sept. 2024)
  2. Mattin Biglari and Olisa Muojama, ‘Global Histories of Environment and Labour in Asia and Africa.’ In Emily O’Gorman, William San Martin, Mark Carey, Sandra Swart. The Routledge Handbook of Environmental History (Oxon and New York: Routledge 2024), 247-260
  3. Gertschen, A. and Olisa Muojama, ‘Multinational Enterprises.’ In Unger, C. R.; Borowy, I. and Pernet, C. A. The Routledge Handbook on the History of Development (Oxon and New York: Routledge, 2022). 278-296.
  4. Olisa Muojama, ‘Cocoa Marketing Board and Sustainable Cocoa Economy in Colonial Nigeria. African Economic History Vol.47. No.1 (2019): 1-31
Contact: olisamuospam prevention@gmail.com
Activities at the College of Fellows: At the College of Fellows, I will form a focus group with the other Global Encounters Fellows. I will also collaborate with the members of Global Encounters platform and become part of the College’s academic life. 
I will work for 12 months analyzing the data generated from the field work and from the archives to posit my research questions, with the help of my host, Prof. Dr. Bernd-Stefen Grewe. I will consult the University library, as well as company and national archives in Berlin/Koblenz. I will also write out manuscripts on the proposed research project for consideration for publication in high impact journal, and continue to work on my larger project.  I will make presentation of my project to the university community for a feedback an input of other fellows and scholars. 
About: Dr. Olisa Godson Muojama is an Associate Professor in the Department of History, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria. His research cuts across African History, global history, economic history, and colonial history. He is a fellow of Global Encounters, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen, Germany (2024-2025). He was a Fellow in Global History at the Munich Centre for Global History, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany (2022). He was a Laurette of the Council for the Development of Economic and Social Research in Africa (CODESRIA), Dakar, Senegal (2016). He was also a Fellow of the African Humanities Program (AHP) of the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) from 2011 to 2012. He is the Principal Investigator/Principal Faculty in Nigeria of the Global History Lab (GHL), University of Cambridge, formerly of Princeton University, New Jersey, USA. He is the author of The Nigerian Cocoa Industry and the International Economy in the 1930s: A World-Systems Approach. He has also published in specialist journals such as African Economic History 47, no.1 (2019): 1-31 (Wisconsin) and Journal of World History 35, no. 3 (2024, upcoming). His current post-doctoral research is on Deutsch-Westafricanisches Begenungen, 1840-1990.
Fellow Profile

Gomathy Kamala Naganathan
Teach@Tübingen
Ethnologie

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Prof. Dr. Karin Polit 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: “Relocating health: A ethnographic study of South Asian Migrant women's experiences in Germany” 
Research Areas: Urbanization, Human- Environmental Relations, Migration, Health, Gender 

Publications:  

 

Articles

  1. Gomathy, K.N. (2024). Technology a Co-actor in Kinning and ‘Desirable’ Aging? Anthropology and Aging https://doi.org/10.5195/aa.2024.552
  2. Gomathy, K.N. (2024). A Case Study of CSR Pratices by Select Agri Companies in Andhra Pradesh, International Journal for Multidisciplinary Research, 6(2), 1-9, https://doi.org/gtnkbb
  3. Gomathy, K.N. (2022). Symmetrical, Non-soverign Cartography as a means for Conservation: Insights from a Participatory Forest Mapping Exercise, Journal of Polititical Ecology 29(1), 94-100. https://doi.org/10.2458/jpe.2371

Book Chapters

  1. Gomathy, K.N. Growing Food and Making Kin in Later life: Towards a More-than-human Approaching to Aging in South Asia, in The Routledge Handbook of Anthropological and Development Studies Approaches to Aging (under review)
  2. Gomathy, K.N. Doing organic rooftop gardening in the city: Multiple knowledge and agents guiding the transition in South Asia, in ‘Urban human-nature partnerships – From The Anthropocene to the Ecocene’ (under review) 

Contact: 

kngomathy92spam prevention@gmail.com

Activities at the College of Fellows: Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Workshop 

About:

I am an early career scholar. I obtained my doctorate in Social Anthropology from the University of Hyderabad, India in 2024. My doctoral work focused on urban rooftop gardening as a collective health and kin-making practice beyond growing ‘safe’ food. Currently, as a Teache@Tübingen fellow, I teach a course on human-environmental relations. Besides, I am pursuing post-doctoral research on the links between gender, migration, and health. What fascinates me is the process of re-locating one's health in the context of migration. This research is relevant in furthering the understanding of how migrants interact with the host health care system and vice versa; and what are the alternate practices through which they manage their health. Additionally, my membership in the College of Fellows gives me a platform to share my research and meet other international scholars, collaborate with them. 

Personal Website (if applicable): https://www.linkedin.com/in/gomathy-kn-a271bb78
 

Hye Min OH
Global Encounters
Asien-Orientwissenschaften

Fellowship: Global Encounters Fellowship
Affiliation: Faculty of Humanities, Insitute of Asian and Oriental Studies, Jun.-Prof. Dr. Yewon Lee 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): March 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: Alternative Facts Built on Memes in the Politics of Division – Formation of Post-Truth Knowledge and Finding the Way Out
Research Areas: Anti-Feminist Backlash, Epistemic Justice, Feminist Pedagogy, Young Generation, New Media, Intersectionality and Cultural Diversity, Korean Society 

Publications

  1. 2025. 02 You are the 20,000th person to ask me this question - the indefatigable Femi answers. Taehak Publishing/Nal Pub. Paju. ISBN: 979-11-681033-0-6 http://aladin.kr/p/PzmPM
  2. 2024. 02 Epistemic Vulnerability of Korean Budding Feminists in the Era of Post Feminism Reboot Doctoral Dissertation, Ewha Women's University https://dspace.ewha.ac.kr/handle/2015.oak/267226
  3. 2024. 01 The ‘Tal-jo’ Diary of a Matriarch – Ain’t I a Woman? In: Reading bell hooks together. Dongnyokpub. Paju. ISBN: 978-89-729711-4-6http://aladin.kr/p/dQFXD
  4. 2022. 12 The Strangers in the Feminist Classroom. In: Equality in the Classroom, now. Dongnyokpub. Paju. ISBN: 978-89-729707-1-2 http://aladin.kr/p/FQiFe
  5. 2022. 06 Feminist Pedagogy through the Silence in a Time of Backlash. In: Women’s Studies Review, 39(1). Korean Women’s Institute at Ewha Women’s University. Seoul. ISSN: 15987698 https://www.kci.go.kr/kciportal/landing/article.kci?arti_id=ART002853596
  6. 2021. 06 The Political Responsibility of “No. 1 Orphan Exporter” and the Appearance of Compassionate Korean. In: Memory&Vision, 44. Korea Democracy Foundation. Seoul. ISSN: 1599712x https://kiss.kstudy.com/Detail/Ar?key=3889946
  7. 2019. 12 Well-Grounded Anxiety Becoming Hate: A Focus on the Discourses of Recognizing Refugees’ and Women’s Fear. In: Gender and Culture, 12(2). Keimyung University Institute of Women’s Studies. Daegu. ISSN: 20056354 https://www.kci.go.kr/kciportal/ci/sereArticleSearch/ciSereArtiView.kci?sereArticleSearchBean.artiId=ART002550145
  8. 2019. 06 Encounters with ‘Ugly Koreans’ and the Construction of the ‘Other’. In: Memory&Vision, 40. Korea Democracy Foundation.Seoul. ISSN: 1599712x https://kiss.kstudy.com/Detail/Ar?key=3683340

Contact: 

eoberangspam prevention@gmail.com

hye-min.ohspam prevention@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de

Activities at the College of Fellows: Global Encounters Fellowship – Politics of Division

About: Dr Hye-min OH is a feminist scholar, writer, filmmaker, and educator. She holds a PhD in Women’s Studies from Ewha Women’s University in Seoul and an MA in Gender and Diversity from the Freie Universität Berlin. Her dissertation, entitled ‘Epistemic Vulnerability of Korean Budding Feminists in the Era of Post-Feminism Reboot.' focused on the contemporary and generational context, examining the impact of feminism and anti-feminism backlash on the young generation. 

Following the emergence of the #MeToo movement in the arts sector, she has taught mandatory feminist courses at the Korea National University of Arts in Seoul for six years. In an educational environment characterized by acceptance and resistance, she cultivated her interest in feminist pedagogy. She participated in numerous projects to develop educational content and published academic papers and books. In addition to her previous activities, she has expressed a desire to research the current situation in which alternative knowledge, defined as information that deviates from established facts and is often used to manipulate public opinion, is replacing and influencing reality. To this end, she was awarded a Global Encounters Fellowship at the Eberhard Karls University Tübingen, Germany, where she is currently engaged in research to identify responses to this phenomenon from a transnational perspective, with a particular focus on resilience and institutionalization.

Sergio Pérez-Gatica
Intercultural Studies
Philosophie

Fellowship: Intercultural Studies Fellowship 
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): College of Fellows, Dr. Niels Weidtmann
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): Apri 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: "Cultural Renewal and Anticolonial Emancipation. From Husserl's Phenomenology to the Latin American Liberation Philosophy”
Research Areas: Phenomenology, Violence Research, Latin American Liberation Philosophy 

Publications:

 

Recent publications (selection)

 

  1. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2024). Is Violence a Limit Phenomenon? A Critical Approach from the Perspective of Transcendental Phenomenology and Public Health Studies. Human Studies (published online 31 July 2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10746-024-09750-5
  2. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2024). Phenomenological Method and Violence Research. The Leuven Philosophy Newsletter, 31, 30-33. https://hiw.kuleuven.be/en/study/alumni/newsletter/newsletter-31-2024.pdf/view
  3. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2023). The Distinction between ‘First’ and ‘Universal’ Philosophy in Husserl’s Cartesian Meditations: On a Basic Precondition for the Transformation of Philosophy into a Rigorous Science. In Daniele De Santis (ed.), Edmund Husserl’s Cartesian Meditations. Commentary, Interpretations, Discussions. Baden-Baden: Karl Alber, pp. 481-495.
  4. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2023). La recepción temprana del concepto ‘mundo de la vida’ en la filosofía de habla hispana. Valoración crítica de un episodio decisivo en la historia de la fenomenología entre Alemania, España y México. In Matei Chihaia et al. (eds.), Caminos cruzados: filosofía y literatura del exilio español en América Latina. Madrid: Iberoamericana, pp. 413-433. https://doi.org/10.31819/9783968694030
  5. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2022). ¿Funcionarios de la humanidad? La fenomenología, la UNESCO y el exilio español en México. Investigaciones Fenomenológicas, 19, 159-171. https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.19.2022.34319  
  6. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2022). Philosophy between Wisdom and Science – Luis Villoro’s Critique of Husserl’s Phenomenology. The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy, 20, 115-121. https://doi.org/10.4324/b23070
  7. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2021). Die Diskussion zwischen José Gaos und Luis Villoro über den Begriff der Lebenswelt – Kritische Auswertung einer entscheidenden Episode der Rezeptionsgeschichte von Husserls Phänomenologie in Spanien und Mexiko. Husserl Studies, 37(3), 271-286. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10743-021-09293-y  
  8. Pérez-Gatica, S. (2020). Anfang und Methode. Zur Verwandlung der Ersten Philosophie in eine Grundlagenwissenschaft bei HusserlDissertation published by KUPS, Universität zu Köln, 279 pp. https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/62926/
Contact: sergioperezgaticaspam prevention@yahoo.com
About: Sergio Pérez-Gatica holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Cologne (2020), where he studied the methodological renewal of First Philosophy in Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology. From 2021 to 2024, he was a postdoctoral fellow and lecturer at the Center for Phenomenology and Continental Philosophy – Husserl Archives, KU Leuven, contributing to the collective project “Functionaries of Humanity”: Phenomenology, the UNESCO, and the Problem of Universalism in Science and Culture. His current research explores the application of phenomenological methods to intercultural philosophy and the study of violence, with recent publications engaging themes in phenomenology, violence research, and Latin American philosophy. 
 

Blair Proctor
Global Encounters
Soziologie

Fellowship: Gloabl Encounters Fellowship
Affiliation: Department of Sociology; Prof. Dr. Boris Nieswand and Jun. -Prof. Dr. Bani Gill 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): 1 April 2025 – 31 March 2026
Research Project: Necropower: Perpetual Exploitation of Black Geographies in New Orleans & Johannesburg - The Quest for Human Liberation

Research Areas: 

  • Geography (Black Geogrpahies/Urban Planning/Exclusionary Zoning/ Public Policy)
  • Africana Studies (African Diaspora Studies/ African American Diaspora Studies/ African Studies)
  • Sociology (Historical/ Whiteness Studies/ Race, Class, and Gender/ Urban Sociology/ Environmental Justice/ Social Justice/ Social Problems/ Sociology of Culture/ Sociology of the Body/ Race and Health)

Publications

  1. “Coloured South African Politics and the New Orleans Afro-Creole Protest Tradition,” in the edited volume The African World in Dialogue: An Appeal to Action! Teresa N. Washington, ed. Oya’s Tornado’s Books, 2016.
  2. “Coloured South African Consciousness: Blurring the Lines of Identity Formation and Space,” in the edited volume New Frontiers in the Study of the Global African Diaspora: Between Uncharted Themes and Alternative Representations. Glenn A. Chambers, Rita Kiki Edozie, and Tama Hamilton-Wray, co-ed. Michigan State University Press, 2018.
  3. “Race, Space and Urban Renewal in New Orleans: From Plessy through Katrina,” in Architecture_Media_Politics_Society (AMPS) Journal Proceedings Series 24.2: ISSN 2398-9467, Jason Montgomery, ed. UCL Press. February, 2022.
Contact: proctorbspam prevention@newpaltz.edu
Activities at the College of Fellows: As a potential fellow, I propose to collaborate with my Tübingen hosts Dr. Boris Nieswand and Dr. Bani Gill in the Global-Tübingen Urbanities Network (G-Turn). I plan to incorporate my former Urban Planning and Geographer skills from the City of Phoenix Development Services and Public Transit departments and my current interdisciplinary field as a Black-Studies scholar and Urban Sociologist. Enganing with G-Turn would be an opportunity to contribute to projects centered on diversity, community development, sustainbility, and civic engagement. 
About: Blair M. Proctor, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of African History in the Department of Black Studies, State University of New York (SUNY) and New Paltz. Dr. Proctor is also a Research Associate with the Centre for Diversity Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand. Dr. Proctor is a former Fulbright U.S. Scholar in South Africa, for a project titeled: Westbury Rising: Promoting Yourself - CEO of your lives for the makings of a better community. Dr. Proctor's latest article "Necropower" in New Orleans: Plantation Politics and the Perpetuation of Black Geographies within the COVID-19 Era," published in the December issue of GeoJournal Springer Nature. Dr. Proctor's articel “Jazz, Vice, Geography, and Revolution: The Triumph and Fall of the Harlem & Sophiatown Rennaissances (1920-1948)” in the Safundi journal, Routledge - Taylor & Francis., April 2025. Anticipated. Additionally, Dr. Proctor's contribution “Host or Home in the Motherland?: Questions of Forgetting Mother, Diaspora, Circularity, & ‘Aliyah’ to Ghana, " to the edited volume Sacred Cutlures in Politics, Roberta Sabbath and Daniel Nii Aboagye Aryeh, co-ed. DeGruyter Academic Press, September 2025. Anticipated.

Michael Raposa
New Horizons Fellow
Systematische Theologie I

Fellowship: New Horizons Fellowship
Affiliation: Systematic Theology I; Prof. Dr. Gesche Linde
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): January 2025 – June 2025
Research Project: American Pragmatism, Theory of Religion, and Theology" (an exploration of philosoophical pragmatism as a resource for contemporary scholars of religion and theologians)
Research Areas: philosophy of religion; philosophigal theology; pragmatism; semiotics, Charles S. Peirce; contemporary Roman Catholicism

Publications

  1. Theosemiotic: Religion, Reading, and the Gift of Meaning (Fordham University Press, 2020)
  2. Meditation and the Martial Arts (University of Virginia Press, 2003);
  3. Boredom and the Religious Imagination (University of Virginia Press, 1999),
  4. Peirce's Philosophy of Religion (Indiana University Pressm 1989).

Ein Fakultätsprofil und den vollständigen Lebenslauf finden Sie hier 

Contact: mlrspam prevention@lehigh.edu
Activities at the College of Fellows: Focus Group on philosophical pragmatism and the study of religion (5 sessions, with 5 preparatory discussions of readings); Lecture: “Philosophical Pragmatism and the Ethics of Attention” (February 5); presentation/participation in workshop/conference on “Mundanity, Everydayness and God(s): Philosophical and Intercultural Perspectives” (March 3-4); co-host with Prof. Gesche Linde of conference on “Peirce's Neglected Argument” (June 9-11)
About: Michael L. Raposa is a Professor of Religion Studies and the E.W. Fairchild Professor of American Studies at the Lehigh University. Raposa has served as president of the Charles S. Peirce Society, the Semiotic Society of America, and the Institute for American Religious and Philosophical Thought. 

Corey Ratch
Teach@Tübingen
Kunsthistorisches Institut

Fellow Profile 

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen Fellowship
Affiliation: Institute of Art History, hosted by Prof. Dr. Megan Luke
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): October 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: Rendering Bodies: The Slaughterhouse in Modern Art and Photography (book)
Research Areas: Modernism with a focus on Surrealism and photography; nonhuman animals; death, violence, and trauma; history of colonialism, racism, and dehumanization 

Publications

  1. “Pineal/Perineal: The Anthropological Divide at Monkey Hill,” react/review: a responsive journal for art & architecture 4: “Subversion Zones: Bodies and Spaces at the Threshold” (2024)
  2. “Pastoral Abstraction in Theo van Doesburg’s Study for Composition VIII (The Cow), 1917,” MRC Dossier 8, The Museum of Modern Art (2022)
  3. “The Movement of the Fashioned Self: Richard Hamilton’s Fashion-Plate,” UBC Undergraduate Journal of Art History 3 (2012)
Contact: corey.ratchspam prevention@columbia.edu 
About: Corey Ratch holds a Ph.D. in art history from Columbia University and specializes in interwar French and German art and photography. His work is motivated largely by critical animal studies, posthumanism, and biosemiotics, focusing on depictions of nonhuman animals in art, how discourses of animality intersect with race, gender, and class, and how we are affected by images of violence and dismemberment.

Andrew Russo
Global Encounters
Islamische Theologie

Fellowship: Global Encounters Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Center for Islamic Theology, Prof. Dr. Erdal Toprakyaran
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): 1 April 2025– 31 March 2026
Research Project: Valorous Defeat: North African Narratives of the Morisco Expulsion
Research Areas: Mediterranean History, Europe and MENA, Migration and Diaspora Studies, Religious conflict and coexistence, Orientalism, Slavery and Captivity

Publications:

 

  1. “Memories of the Morisco Expulsion in the Writings of Muammad Ibn ʿAbd al-Rafīʿ.” The Journal of the Middle East and Africa 13.4 (2022): 435-450.
  2. “The North Atlantic in the Islamic Cartographic Imaginary,” Viator 51.1 (2021): 35-45.
  3. (Book Review) Autobiography and Letters of a Spanish Nun. ed. Susan Diane Laningham. trans. Jane Tar. Toronto and Tempe: Iter Press and Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2016. The Sixteenth Century Journal. L.2 (Summer 2019): 525-6.
Contact: a.elmer.russospam prevention@gmail.com

Activities at the College of Fellows:

At the College of Fellows, I will form a focus group with the other members of the current Global Encounters cohort. I plan to participate fully in College of Fellows academic life and work collaboratively with the other Global Encounters Fellows. I will spend my time in Tübingen preparing a book manuscript for publication, as well as other article length projects. I will also take part in several symposia and workshops.

About: 

I am a historian of the late medieval and early modern period, with a focus on religious, cultural, and migration histories. I earned my PhD in History from the University of Rochester in 2024. My research has been supported by Fulbright-Hays, the Renaissance Society of America, and the American Institute of Maghrib Studies, among others. My current book project “Valorous Defeat: North African Narratives of the Morisco Expulsion” examines how memory, conflict, and religious identity interact during migratory processes and diasporic communities and is based on archival research in Morocco, Tunisia, and Spain.

 

John Sanni
Intercultural Studies
Philosophie

Fellow Profile 

Fellowship: Intercultural Studies 
Affiliation: College of Fellows, host: Niels Weidtmann
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): June 2024 – May 2025
Research Project: Violence and Decolonisation: A Phemenological Approach
Research Areas: Philosophy
Publications: Eine vollständige Liste der Publikationen gibt es hier
Contact: john-sodiq.sannispam prevention@cof.uni-tuebingen.de
Activities at the College of Fellows: Symposium and Workshop

Ruth Sonderegger
New Horizons Fellow
Philosophie

Fellowship: New Horizons Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Prof. Dr. Markus Rieger-Ladich 
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): June 22- July 5, 2025
Research Project: “Towards an Aesthetics of Sociality” 
Research Areas: Aesthetics; Cultural Studies; Critcal Theory; Philosophy of Critical Race; Politica Philosophy; Post- and Decolonial Studies 

Publications

  1. Philosophie und Rassismus (co-edited with Franziska Dübgen und Marina Martinez Mateo), Velbrück, 2025; open access: https://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/9783748962816.pdf
  2. “Felipe Guaman Poma de Ayalas Erste neue Chronik und gute Regierung. Eine einführende Annäherung”, in: Lucile Dreidemy, Johannes Knierzinger, David Mayer, Clemens Pfeffer (eds.), Stimmen des Antikolonialismus. Eine globalhistorische Spurensammlung 1615-1915, mandelbaum 2025, pp. 70-84 (co-author: Imayna Caceres) 

Eine vollständige Liste der Publikationen finden Sie hier: Homepage at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna 

Contact: r.sondereggerspam prevention@akbild.ac.at 
About: Since 2009 Ruth Sonderegger has been Professor of Philosphy and Aesthetics Theory at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. She completed her PhD in Philosophy (1998) at the Free University Berlin. From 2001 to 2009 she worked as Associated and Full Professor at the Philosophy Department of the University of Amsterdam. Currently she is part of the research project (together with Katja Diefenbach and Pablo Valdivia) Perception, Rights and Valorization in Colonial Modernity: On the Nexus of Primitive Accumulation, Race, and Western Aesthetics (https://accumulation-race-aesthetics.org/) which is funded by Volkswagen Stiftung. She is also part of the transversal.at publishing collective: https://transversal.at/books/ 
 

Ashwin Tripathi
Teach@Tübingen
Anthropologie

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): Methods Centre, Faculty of Economicy and Social Sciences; Prof. Dr. Ursula Offenberger
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): April 2025 – March 2026
Research Project: Exploring Research Approaces in Social Gerontology 
Research Areas: Demographic transitions, Cultures of Ageing, Anthropology of Life-course, Critical Gerontology 

Publications

 

  1. Tripathi, A, Samanta, T. (2023). Third Agers in India: Empirical Evidence from Longitudinal Aging Studies in India (LASI), 2017-2018 (Journal of Applied Gerontology)
  2. Tripathi, A; Samanta, T (2023). Social Engagement as leisure: Does it moderate the association between subjective wellbeing and depression in later life? (Frontiers in Sociology)
  3. Tripathi, A; Samanta, T (2023). “I don’t want to have the time when I do nothing”: Aging and reconfigured leisure practices during the pandemic Ageing International
  4. Tripathi, A; Samanta, T (2022) Leisure as self-care in the times of the pandemic: Insights from a time-use diary study in India, Leisure Studies
  5. Isaacson, M; Tripathi, A; Samanta, T; D'ambrosio, L; Coughlin J. 2020. ‘Giving voice to the environment as the silent partner in aging: Examining the moderating roles of gender and family structure in older adult wellbeing,’ International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.

Book Chapters 

 

  1. Tripathi A. 2021. ‘Social Care and Habitus Transformation in the Elderly Indian Immigrants in Belfast (United Kingdom)’ in Joshi, P. C., & Mahajan, C. Introduction: Emerging Challenges in Indian Medical Anthropology.
  2. Lubit, A., Marshall, T., & Tripathi, A. (2021). Editorial Note Celebrating Twenty-Five Years of the Irish Journal of Anthropology: Editors' Introduction to Special Issue Irish Journal of Anthropology, 24(1), 4-7. 8.
  3. Tripathi, A. 2021. ‘Rethinking Transnational Care: The Nature of Nurture among Indian Families in Belfast, Northern Ireland,’ in Rajan, et al (2021). Handbook on Aging, Health and Social Policy, Springer Nature. 

Contact:

ashwin.tripathispam prevention@wiso.uni-tuebingen.de

tripathi.ashwin05spam prevention@gmail.com

 

Activities at the College of Fellows: 

  1. Workshop Participation in the Teach@Tübingen Induction Workshop
  2. Workshop Leader at the Spring School of the Methods Center – Writing in Qualitative Research (Academic Writing and Publishing Practices)
  3. Teaching “Social Gerontology” at the Methods Center
About: Ashwin Tripathi has joined the Methods Centre in the Faculty of Economics and Social Science where she will explore research approaches in Transitions Research (with special focus on Ageing Studies). She has completed her PhD from the Indian Institute of Technology, Gandhinagar (India), Master’s from Queen’s University of Belfast (UK) and Bachelor’s from the University of Delhi (India). Her work lies at the intersection of Aging, Leisure and Time-Use Studies, where she has previously explored how older Indians understand and experience leisure (free) time in their post-retirement lives. She holds expertise in both qualitative and quantitative methods and conducts inter-disciplinary research in Social Sciences.
 

Amanda Vernon
Teach@Tübingen
Anglistik

Fellowship: Teach@Tübingen Fellowship
Affiliation (host insitution, host scholar): English department, hosted by Prof. Dr. Matthias Bauer
Stay in Tübingen (from - until): October 2024 – September 2025
Research Project: The Spiritual Roots of Victorian Therapeutic Reading
Research Areas: Victorian literature; theology and literature; literary form; George MacDonald; Victorian reading practice.

Publications

  1. ‘Speaking with the Dead: Resurrective Reading and Pneumatological Imagination in George MacDonald,’ Victorians: A Journal of Culture and Literature, no. 146, Winter 2024. In press.
  2. ‘Prayer (Literature),’ in Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception (EBR), Vol. 24, eds. Constance M. Fure, et. al., De Gruyter. In press.
  3. ‘You Are How You Read? Ethical Reading and Christian Poetics,’ (c. 3,000 words) Among Winter Cranes: The Quarterly of the Christian Poetics Initiative, Vol. 7.1, Winter 2024, 1-9.
  4. ‘Introduction,’ with Daniel Gabelman, Unsaying the Commonplace: George MacDonald and the Critique of Victorian Convention, ed. by Daniel Gabelman and Amanda B. Vernon. Winged Lion Press, 2024.
  5. ‘Uncommon Interpretation: Reading Dante in Charles Kingsley and George MacDonald’s Fairytales,’ in Unsaying the Commonplace: George MacDonald and the Critique of Victorian Convention, ed. by Daniel Gabelman and Amanda B. Vernon. Winged Lion Press, 2024.
  6. ‘A Form of (Spiritual) Knowing: Word-Music and the Verticality of Prayer in George MacDonald,’ (c. 8,000 words) Victorian Review, Vol. 47.2, Fall 2021, 281-297. 
Contact:  amanda.vernonspam prevention@philosophie.uni-tuebingen.de 
About: Amanda B. Vernon received her PhD from Lancaster University where she researched the relationship between theology and literary form in the work of the Victorian writer George MacDonald. She has taught at Lancaster and Anglia Ruskin Universities, and in 2019 she held a short-term fellowship at Yale’s Institute of Sacred Music, where she undertook work on the George MacDonald Collection at the Beinecke Library. Amanda is co-editor (with Daniel Gabelman) of Unsaying the Commonplace: George MacDonald and the Critique of Victorian Convention (2024), and a contributor to the forthcoming Cambridge Companion to George MacDonald. Her monograph, Reading with the Trinity: Theology and Literary Form in George MacDonald is under contract with Manchester University Press. Amanda’s current project evaluates the work of Victorian writers as a significant untapped resource for therapeutic reading practice, due to their interest in literature as materially and spiritually curative. 
Personal Website: amandabvernon.com
Fellow Profile