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About
How can interdisciplinary approaches enrich your work? Join us for a dynamic discussion where scholars from diverse backgrounds will come together to explore the impact of the Arts & Humanities on collaborative research. Our panelists will delve into how bridging disciplines can deepen understanding and tackle complex global challenges. Don't miss this opportunity to engage with thought leaders and discover innovative ways to bridge gaps between fields.
Presenters
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Molly Richards
Moderator
Molly Richards is an Acquisitions Editor working on Oxford Intersections at Oxford University Press. Oxford Intersections is a digital resource for interdisciplinary scholarship from across the arts, humanities, and social sciences that addresses complex and urgent global challenges. Molly is the lead Acquisitions Editor for projects that include Climate Adaptation, which explores who we become, socially and culturally, as our places, livelihoods, and communities are reshaped by a changing climate, and Racism by Context, which examines the layered and multidimensional nature of racism.
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Madelyn Detloff
Panelist
Madelyn Detloff is Professor of Global and Intercultural Studies and Professor of English at Miami University, Ohio, US, which takes its name from the Myaamia people, on whose traditional homelands the university is situated. Detloff studies and teaches how social descriptors such as race, age, gender, sexuality, nationality, and (dis)ability are formed and deformed by systems of power that categorize some groups of people as worthy of resources needed to live and flourish, while categorizing other groups as threats to the well-being of the privileged, purportedly “normal” community, nation, race, or gender. Detloff focuses mostly on intersectional feminist, queer, and crip theories as some (but not all) of the tools necessary to undo the logic of these systems of power in the name of bringing about a more just and accountable world. Detloff’s publications include The Persistence of Modernism: Loss and Mourning in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge University Press, 2009) and The Value of Virginia Woolf (Cambridge University Press, 2016). She is co-editor with Brenda Helt of Queer Bloomsbury (Edinburgh University Press, 2016), and editor of the Norton Critical Edition of Orlando. Her articles are published in venues such as Hypatia, Modernism/modernity, Journal of Lesbian Studies, and Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal.
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Jennifer Edmond
Panelist
Jennifer Edmond is Professor in Digital Humanities at Trinity College Dublin. Over the past 10 years, she has been the PI or co-PI of 11 large-scale, interdisciplinary, funded research projects, with total grant capture amounting to almost €15 million. She has also served in leadership roles in a number of European-level policy and infrastructure organisations. Her research explores interdisciplinarity, humanistic and hybrid research processes (with a special focus on the infrastructures needed to support them), and critical digital humanities as a contributor to both research and technology development. In these fields, she has a publication record that includes more than 50 internationally peer-reviewed articles, chapters, reports, datasets and books, all single-authored or co-created with her network of 60 co-authors from 16 countries. Jennifer is also very committed to the impact and public communication of her research, regularly appearing in the public media and co-creating STEAM exhibitions and events.
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Marion Thain
Panelist
Marion Thain is Director of the Edinburgh Futures Institute, and Professor of Culture and Technology at the University of Edinburgh. She began her career as a Junior Research Fellow at Cambridge, and then worked in English departments at Russell Group universities, before moving to New York University as a professor of in the school of the interdisciplinary global liberal arts, and as Director of Digital Humanities for NYU. She returned to the UK in 2018 as Professor of Culture and Technology and Executive Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at King's College London. She publishes primarily on the relationship between culture and technology, and is known particularly for establishing the new field of ‘Attention Studies.’
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