The Neubauer Family Initiative for Excellence in Graduate Education is intended to recruit the most talented doctoral students from around the world by providing competitive fellowships to the University of Chicago’s Humanities, Social Sciences, and Physical Sciences Divisions.
Neubauer Fellows are selected based on their outstanding academic accomplishments thus far that demonstrate their promise as scholars and teachers capable of making important contributions to their fields.
Fellows
Name: Jake Butts PhD Program: PhD program in Psychology Hometown: Springfield, PA Education: Williams College; B.A., Psychology Research: My research explores conceptual development with a focus on mathematical symbols and notations. Specifically, I am interested in how linguistic input and spatial representations impact children’s understanding of mathematical concepts. Through this research, I hope to better understand the basic cognitive processes that drive learning and identify mechanisms to close achievement gaps in mathematics.
Name: David Cerny PhD Program: PhD program in Geophysical Sciences Hometown: Prague, Czech Republic Education: University of California, Los Angeles; B.S., Ecology, Behavior and Evolution Research: Since high school, I have been interested in the evolution of animals with backbones and in evolutionary processes taking place above the level of species. I took part in paleontological fieldwork in Krasiejów, Poland; conducted ecological and behavioral field research in French Polynesia; and worked as a computational biology research intern at the Centre de Regulació Genòmica in Barcelona, Spain. At UCLA, I had the opportunity to work in the Alfaro Lab on several projects involving molecular dating (a technique that combines paleontological information with DNA sequence data to infer the ages of origin of various groups of organisms), resulting in two published papers and several others still in preparation. In the Slater Lab at the University of Chicago, I hope to contribute to the development of methods that integrate fossil and molecular data in order to help us develop a deeper understanding of the evolution of Earth’s biosphere.
Name: Binglu Chen PhD Program: PhD program in Mathematics Hometown: Ningbo, Zhejiang, China Education: University of Chinese Academy of Sciences; B.S. Research: My undergraduate thesis is a very basic survey related to K-stability of Fano varieties, which itself is an active math branch. Now I’m trying to get into the research area of Algebraic Geometry and Representation Theory.
Name: Basil Dababneh PhD Program: PhD in Cinema and Media Studies Hometown: Buffalo Grove, IL Education: Vanderbilt University, BA, Cinema and Media Arts Research: Basil Dababneh is a PhD student in Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Chicago. He holds a BA in Cinema and Media Arts from Vanderbilt University, where he also minored in Women’s and Gender Studies. His research coalesces around theories of cinematic temporality, the politics and aesthetics of queer theories of time, and the anachronisms of horror cinema in the digital age. He is also interested in postcolonial theory and Arab cinema.
Name: Daniel Epstein PhD Program: PhD Program in Political Science Hometown: Cape Elizabeth, ME Education: Harvard College, Cambridge, MA; A.B. Social Studies Research: My interests include restorative justice and prison abolition; relationships between politics, ethics, and law; 20th century social and political thought; phenomenology; and the politics of time. During the 2020-2021 academic year, I will be completing a Master of Legal Studies degree at the University of Chicago Law School.
Name: Zehua Lai PhD program: PhD program in computational and applied mathematics Hometown: Quanzhou, Fujian, China Education: Tsinghua University, BA in mathematics and economics Research: I am a first-year Ph.D. student at Committee on Computational and Applied Mathematics. Prior to coming to Chicago, he received his bachelors degrees in Economics and Mathematics at Tsinghua University. I have broad interests in machine learning, partial differential equations and image processing.
Name: María D. Hernández Limón PhD Program: PhD in Geophysical Sciences Hometown: Waukegan, IL Education: Brown University, Providence, RI; B.S., Geology-Biology;
Columbia University, New York, NY; Post-Bacc. Earth Science Research: Maria became the first in her family to graduate from college when she earned a B.S. in geology-biology in 2014 from Brown University. As a junior, Maria helped to assess hypoxia in Narragansett Bay, which led to her interest in aquatic ecosystems. After graduating, Maria worked with the Schuler Scholar Program which prepares underserved students to excel in college. In August 2016, Maria joined the Dyhrman laboratory at Columbia University, which focuses on understanding the interaction between phytoplankton and their environment. In 2017, María’s research focused on comparing data from phytoplankton grown at ambient and increased CO2 to elucidate how increases in CO2 influence phytoplankton physiology. The results were published in Frontiers in Microbiology. María’s current research aims to describe patterns of important process in Emiliania huxleyi from samples collected in the Pacific Ocean. At University of Chicago Maria hopes to explore the microbial diversity of the Great Lakes.
Name: Carol Medina PhD Program: PhD in Psychology Hometown: Charleston, SC Education: Brown University, Providence, RI; B.S. Psychology Research: Having been a summer camp counselor, babysitter, and pediatric health researcher, working with children has been a lifelong passion, but my interest in children’s cognition is a more recent discovery. In college, I discovered my fascination with the human mind and all that makes humans such extraordinary learners. This incredible capacity is most evident in toddlers as in only a few years, they go from knowing little about the world to being able to walk, talk, and recite the ABC’s! As a developmental psychologist at UChicago, I plan to study how children learn to navigate their world, when they learn from others, and how they generate hypotheses as such processes may be the foundation for children’s later science abilities. In addition to psychology, I am also passionate about music. I sing (mostly to myself) and played the sousaphone throughout college as a member of the Brown University Marching Band.
Name: Solomon Quinn PhD Program: PhD program in Computational and Applied Mathematics Hometown: New York, NY Education: University of Richmond, Richmond, VA; B.S., Mathematics and Physics Research: Solomon’s current research interests include physically motivated problems, particularly in quantum mechanics and applications of partial differential equations. At the University of Richmond, Solomon conducted research in cosmology with Prof. Ted Bunn, examining the possibility of extracting multi-wavelength maps from single-filter observations of the cosmic microwave background. Solomon and Prof. Bunn presented their results at the 231st American Astronomical Society Meeting in January, 2018. Solomon’s undergraduate work also included a project in game theory, under the supervision of Prof. Michael Kerckhove. Aside from mathematics and physics, Solomon enjoys playing the piano, sports, chess and hiking.
Name: Nicolás Torres-Echeverry PhD Program: PhD program in Sociology Hometown: Bogota, Colombia Education: Stanford Law School, Stanford, J.S.M. (Master of the Science of Law); Universidad de los Andes, Colombia, LL.B. (Law) and B.A. (Economics) Research: I am interested in political and economic sociology, specifically in how social interaction on the Internet is shaping people’s political and economic ideas. During my time at UChicago, I would like to reflect on the way the Internet and data are changing political and economic processes and the organizations behind such changes. My research adopts an interdisciplinary approach and combines quantitative and qualitative methods. Before coming to Chicago, I was at Stanford conducting socio-legal research as a JSD fellow and a research assistant at FSI’s Global Digital Policy Incubator. My previous research was on political sociology, in particular on state-building challenges in post-conflict settings, with a focus on Colombia. Before that, I worked as a researcher at the Center for the Study of Law, Justice, and Society (Dejusticia), and as a consultant for the Ministry of Justice in Colombia. I love cooking and swimming!
Name: Hai Tran Bach PhD Program: Statistics Ph.D. Hometown: Bucharest, Romania Education: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI; B.S. , Mathematics & Data Science Research: My research interests are in Machine Learning, Network Analysis, and High Dimensional Inference. At the Big Data Summer Institute, I have worked in identifying the relationships between financial and private entities in the Panama Papers to unveil the world’s hidden wealth. Later at Chenope, I had the opportunity to build a statistical model which reveals the interaction of political clusters on Twitter over time. During my PhD program, I plan to further my understanding of the underlying structure of real big data sets. I am also interested in the socio-politico-economic history of the 20th century and trying new culinary recipes.
Name: Emily Willson PhD Program: PhD in Computer Science Hometown: Appleton, WI Education: Wheaton College (IL); B.S. Mathematics and Physics Research: I graduated from Wheaton in 2016 and was employed for several years as an applied research mathematician for the Department of Defense. My work there touched a variety of areas ranging from quantum computing to machine learning to blockchain technology. In my PhD studies at UChicago, I will pursue my research interests in applied machine learning and blockchain technologies through my work with Dr. Ben Zhao. Once I graduate, I hope to serve as a leader in a government, corporate, or academic research institution. In my spare time, I enjoy running, reading, and searching for the best pancake restaurant in the Chicagoland area.
Name: Chih-Hsuan Wu PhD Program: Statistics Hometown: Taiwan Education: National Taiwan University, Taiwan, MA, Mathematical Statistics; B.A., Mathematics Research: During my graduate school study, I accumulated research experiences by probing into a robust regression method, Self-Updating Process (SUP), with Dr. Ting-Li Chen. In the future, I hope to do more research on high-dimensional data and robust methods with faculties in UChicago.
Name: Angela Zorro Medina PhD Program: PhD program in Sociology Hometown: Bogota, Colombia Education: B.A. Economics Universidad de los Andes, LL.B Universidad de los Andes. LL.M. Yale Law School, JSD Candidate Yale Law School Research: My research focuses on the criminal justice system and the way it produces and reproduces inequality in Latin America and the United States. For the Latin American case, I study the impact of carceral outcomes in inequality, and the factors that influence the prison population. For the U.S. case, I study the impact of non-carceral outcomes in inequality at the sub-felony justice level.
Fellows
Name: Chris Batterman Cháirez PhD Program: Ethnomusicology Hometown: Detroit, MI Education: Emory University, Atlanta GA; B.A. in Music and Latin American Studies Research: Generally speaking, I am interested in music and sound’s intersection with the political, broadly defined. More specifically, my work examines questions of race/ethnicity, nationalisms and cosmopolitanisms, post-coloniality, and modernity in Latin American sonic contexts (especially in Brazil and Mexico). I am a proponent of collapsing disciplinary boundaries and blurring lines of inquiry. My research, then, draws upon music studies, sound studies, critical theory, ethnic studies, history, and anthropology to consider music/sound’s aesthetic, affective, and material functions in society. To that end, much of my past work has interrogated questions of subjectivity, racialization, indigeneity, and constructions of identity and community in Brazil and greater Mexico. Past contexts for this research have included: Brazilian opera and ideologies of race and nation; hip-hop, language, and racialized communicative aesthetics; community, nationalism, and political militancy in Chicana/o music; and opera, early ethnography, indigenous language, and racialized listening in 19th c. Mexico.
Name: Avigail Ben-Gad PhD Program: Egyptology Hometown: Haifa, Israel Education: Research: I am a first-year PhD student in the Egyptology program with research interests focusing mainly on Egyptian interactions with the Near East during the New Kingdom, particularly under the Ramesside kings of the 19th and 20th dynasties. I completed my bachelor’s degree in Egyptology and Assyriology at Cambridge University, where my dissertation investigated parallels between Ancient Egyptian and Semitic literary texts in order to reconstruct possible models for the cross-cultural spread of ideas. My non-academic interests include reading science fiction and fantasy, attempting to garden, and playing the violin.
Name: Sthira Bhattacharya PhD Program: South Asian Languages and Civilizations (SALC) Hometown: Dhanbad, India. Education: BA English, Delhi University (2014); MA English, Jawaharlal Nehru University (2016); MPhil English, Jawaharlal Nehru University (2018) Research: I hope to explore how different actors imagined what it meant to lead ‘public’ lives in late 19th-early 20thcentury eastern India; how and why certain print and oral genres as well as forms of associational life gained popularity in this context; and processes of subject-formation and self-fashioning specific to actors’ location within social-linguistic hierarchies.
Name: John Burden PhD Program: Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Harrisonburg, Virginia Education: University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va: B.A. in Foreign Affairs; University of Oxford, Oxford, UK: MPhil in Islamic Studies and History Research: I am a PhD student focusing on Islamic Thought. My research interests include Islamic Law, particularly medieval and early modern legal reasoning, as well as Sufism and its role in the construction of religious orthodoxy in the medieval period. My graduate thesis, entitled “The ‘Real’ Uṣūl al-Fiqh? The Role of Qawāʿid Fiqhiyya in Late Medieval and Early Modern Islamic Legal Reasoning,” explores the function of Islamic legal maxims in the interpretation and extension of legal precedents identified in canonical handbooks of positive law. I have worked, studied and travelled throughout the MENA region. I spent a year working at the Casablanca American School in Morocco, followed by two summers studying Classical Arabic at Qasid Arabic Institute in Amman, Jordan. I have also worked for a peace-building NGO in Israel/Palestine. In my free time, I enjoy reading (especially 19thcentury Russian and 20thcentury American literature), cooking, and playing ultimate frisbee.
Name: Irina Cristali PhD Program: Statistics Hometown: Bucharest, Romania Education: Duke University, Durham, N.C.; B.S., Mathematics and B.S., Statistical Science Research: Finding rigorous proofs and explanations has always challenged me and it motivated me to expand my mathematical foundation. At Duke University, I deepened my background in computational analysis and probability theory and used it to pursue exciting research in both pure and applied mathematics. My two projects in probability were focused on investigating the limit behavior of random structures. I also used dynamical systems to study the renal blood flow autoregulation and model time-series processes, and I understood the important role real data plays in model design. As a Statistics PhD student, I plan to combine theoretical probability techniques with data-driven modeling and inference, and discover new estimation and uncertainty quantification methods. I am currently interested in theoretical high-dimensional and statistical learning problems, motivated by real world applications.
Name: Yue Deng PhD Program: Geophysical Sciences Hometown: Shenzhen, China Education: Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, MA; B.A., Biological Sciences / Classics (minor) Research: I became interested in evolutionary biology after a class my first year of college. Then I stumbled upon a most bizarre group of bivalves– the watering pot shells, which I wrote an undergrad thesis on, and which dragged me into the world of bivalves. I’m now interested in further understanding the evolution of bivalves combining paleontological data with the biology of living species.
Name: Daniel Ehrlich PhD Program: Economics Hometown: Boston, MA Education: University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; B.A., Economics Research: My research explores the determinants of economic growth in developing countries, particularly through the lens of regional variation and spatial distributions of economic activity. Joint work with Professor Robert Townsend (MIT) examines the spatial effects of scaling up financial interventions in rural Thailand and how individuals migrate in response to changes in access to financial services. My other projects including examining the effects of geographic location on entrepreneurship in Ghana and the joint responses of regional trade-financial linkages in the US to economic shocks. I am excited to be back at UChicago to start my PhD. In my free time, I enjoy cooking, backpacking, and window shopping at farmer’s markets.
Name: Cristina Esteves-Wolff PhD Program:Hispanic and Luso-Brazilian Studies Hometown: San Juan, Puerto Rico Education: B.A. Literature, Yale University; J.D., Fordham University School of Law; M.A. Comparative Literature, University of Puerto Rico – Río Piedras Research: My research focuses on identity politics of peripheral subjects, those on the margins of discourses of power. I work primarily with 20thand 21stcentury Caribbean and Latin American literature with a focus on postcolonial and decolonial theory. As a scholar of law and literature, I am also interested in exploring how the judicial and political fictions of modernity intersect with identity formation and cultural production. My Master’s thesis focused on the Puerto Rican case study, and I will now broaden the scope of my work towards a comparative analysis of the colonial experiences of peripheral subjects throughout the Caribbean and Latin America. My research looks for points of correspondence and dissonance across empires, as well as how imperial formations endure and reproduce themselves in modern territories and nation-states.
Name: Jane Gordon PhD Program: Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations (Cuneiform Studies) Hometown: Ardmore, PA Education: University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; BA, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations;University College London, London, UK; MA, Ancient History Research: I study the textual record of ancient Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq and Syria), with a particular focus on literary development and cultural exchange during the second millennium B.C.E. While I was an undergraduate at Chicago, I wrote a thesis on the narratological use of physical spaces in the Standard Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh. I then pursued an MA in Ancient History from University College London, where my master’s thesis analyzed emotional expression and discussion of emotion in Assyrian merchants’ letters. My research interests include Mesopotamian narrative literature and literary history, the rhetoric of letter-writing, and ancient Near Eastern conceptions of social space and landscape, particularly during the Middle and Late Bronze Age. In my free time, I like to read novels, bake almond-based desserts, and go to art museums.
Name: Jenny Harris
PhD Program:Art History Hometown: Chicago, IL Education: Wellesley College, B.A. Art History Research: I focus on 20th century art with particular interests in performance, intersections of dance and visual arts, and the status of decoration and craft in postwar American art. Prior to arriving at the University, I worked in The Museum of Modern Art’s Department of Painting and Sculpture where I participated in the reinstallation of the collection galleries and contributed to exhibitions including The Shape of Shape, Artist’s Choice: Amy Sillman(2019), The Long Run (2017-18) and Robert Rauschenberg: Among Friends(2017).
Name: Bret Klein Hart PhD Program: Cinema and Media Studies Hometown: Santa Monica, CA Education: B.A., UC Berkeley, Statistics, Media Studies Research: My research concerns the experiential qualities of data collection and algorithmic prediction – how it looks and feels to be within surveillance computational apparatuses such as social media, video games, and digitally monitored everyday life. Interested in industrial, technical, and aesthetic analyses of machine learning processes, I work to make legible how behavioral data processing and prediction define contemporary experience. In my free time, I sing in the Rockefeller Chapel Choir and enjoy discussing esports and digital culture.
Name: Peng Hui How PhD Program: Mathematics Hometown: Selangor, Malaysia Education: Stanford University, Stanford, CA; B.S., Mathematics; M.S. Computer Science Research: Among pure math, I have scratched the surface of Lie theory, algebraic number theory, topology, and geometry throughout my years at Stanford and Bonn. I am also highly intrigued by physics, both observables and unobservable ones, as mathematical inspiration and as a subject on its own. At UChicago, I am looking into topology/geometry for now, but am always open-minded to other things, since I strongly believe that mathematical study originates from motivating problems, and separation of mathematical field is artificial.
Name: Tejas Kannan PhD Program:Computer Science Hometown: Palo Alto, California Education: University of California at Berkeley, B.A. Computer Science; University of Cambridge, MPhil Computer Science Research: Tejas is a computer science student who works at the intersection of computer systems and machine learning. His master’s thesis involved designing a machine learning technique to solve traffic routing problems in cities. Currently, his research focuses on adaptive and energy-efficient computing. In particular, he is interested in techniques to execute machine learning models on low-power devices. Outside of computer science, Tejas is an avid sports fan (football, basketball, and soccer), and he enjoys distance running and traveling.
Name: Olivier Kooi PhD Program: Economics Hometown: Rotterdam, Netherlands Education: University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; M.A., Social Sciences Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands; Bsc., Economics Research: My research interests are in public finance, macroeconomics and political economy. For my undergraduate and master theses I studied how government can redistribute income most effectively through social insurance and tax instruments. During my time at Chicago I would like to expand my interest in optimal government policy to the study of growth enhancing policies and policies to mitigate the adverse effects of economic fluctuations. In addition to studying features of optimal policy I hope to improve our understanding of how our political institutions result in the policies we see. When I am done studying I enjoy doing Judo and reading books on history and political philosophy.
Name: Lex Ladge PhD Program: Art History Hometown: Los Angeles, CA Education: Reed College, Portland, Oregon; B.A., Classics Research: I study Greek and Roman art with a particular focus on the cultural and political environment of the Hellenistic period. I am especially interested in how material culture and space interact with concepts of power, memory, and perception. While at Reed, I wrote a thesis entitled “Memory Objects: a Study of Attalid Memory and Object Creation under Philetairos and Attalos I.” In my free time, I enjoy cooking and baking and practicing calligraphy.
Name: Carol Lewis PhD Program: Committee on Social Thought Hometown: Greenville, SC Education: Furman University, Greenville, SC; B.S., Mathematics Research: I’m interested in unhappiness, human nature, education, and love of one’s own. I particularly enjoy discussing Plato, Aristotle, Pascal, Austen, Tocqueville, and Nietzsche in seminars, around dinner tables, and on long walks or runs. I most attentively studied and wrote on Plato’s Symposiumas an undergraduate. My less-academic loves include camping, singing, playing board games, tackling home improvement projects, and spending time with my family.
Name: Xinyi (Camilla) Liu PhD Program: Geophysical Sciences Hometown: Shenzhen, China Education: Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA; B.S., Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Research: My undergraduate research projects involved 1) evaluating tectonic and climatic effects on long-term chemical weathering rates and 2) earth’s oxygen and phosphorus cycle and the evolution of animal life. During my PhD program at UChicago, I look forward to exploring the interaction between these processes on early Earth using primarily isotope geochemistry techniques. I enjoy all sorts of outdoor recreation, especially backpacking. I’m also a German speaker and a badminton player.
Name: Nadia Lucas PhD Program: Economics Hometown: Bellevue, WA Education: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA; B.S., Mathematical Economics and Computer Science Research: Coming from a computationally heavy undergraduate background, I began my post-graduate career working at the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago. It was here that I learned to synthesize a mathematically and computationally rigorous set of tools to analyze human behavior and social issues. My goal in working towards a PhD in economics is to develop the skillset for sound policy analysis. My interests broadly encompass the economics of energy and environmental policy. Specifically, I am interested in looking at energy and environmental policy through the lens of sustainable growth of industries and firms on a microeconomic level. In my free time I enjoy being a part of the running community in the Chicago area and taking every opportunity I can to travel.
Name: John Muller PhD Program: Social Thought and Philosophy Hometown: Santa Monica, CA Education: Dartmouth College, B.A., History and Economics; Yale Law School, J.D.; University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, M.A., Philosophy Research: My academic interests center on self-deception, ambivalence, and privation. I work on these issues in philosophy, drawing as well on law, literature, and psychoanalysis. My initial training, as an undergraduate at Dartmouth, was in history and economics. I then studied law at Yale. After law school, I clerked for a pair of federal court of appeals judges in the northeast, spent a couple of years as a fellow and lecturer at Harvard Law School, and then practiced law in Los Angeles. I come to UChicago from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where I completed a master’s in philosophy. In addition to my academic work, I write occasional essays and book reviews for a non-academic audience.
Name: Quynh-Anh Nguyen PhD Program: History Hometown: Thanh Hoa, Vietnam Education: Earlham College, Richmond, IN; B.A., History Research: Informed by Critical Theory’s critique of modernism, colonialism, and nationalism, my current research concentration lies at the intersection of print culture, urban politics, gender, and emotion in modern Asia. I have found my research engaging with two sets of questions. The former concerns the condition of freedom: the encounter with the Other, forms of agency in tragedies, and the possibility of politics (as a verb) in everyday life. The latter confronts the condition of historical writing: concept work, the possibility of writing world history and history in the plural, and positionality. I’m recently interested in questions about spatial history and capitalism, which may have to do with my summer weekend exercise: getting on the CTA and getting off at a random unexplored stop.
Name: Clara Nizard PhD Program: English and Theatre and Performance Studies Hometown: Aix-En-Provence, France Education: Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, MFA; McGill University, BA Research: In my research, I rehearse questions of social bonds, affiliations, and fractures via frameworks of affect or ‘feeling-labour’ present in performance at large. I focus particularly on paradoxes of the body raised by contemporary dance practices and feminist and queer performance practices. My work finds a foothold in the tensions between theory and practice both in performance studies, aesthetic theories, and psychoanalytic approaches to text(s). As a practitioner, I explore queer poetics and embodiment in writing and performance, working with and against – among other things – notions of camp, ‘the personal as political’, esoteric and pastoral modes of writing, as well as interrogations on the choreographic potential of desire.
Name: John Peterson PhD Program: Chemistry Hometown: Menomonie, WI Education: Hope College, Holland, MI; B.S. Chemistry Research: I have been broadly interested in the natural sciences for most of my life and decided on formally studying chemistry as a way to interact, or at least understand as much about the other sciences as possible. My research interests have evolved over time along with my ever-increasing desire for quantitative results. At Hope, I did bioinformatics research studying how bacterial communities interact for a couple of years before I had had enough of staring at a computer screen and worked at some inorganic synthesis of cobalt complexes. At the graduate level, I intend to study physical chemistry. Because my interests are broad, the exact research project I work on during my PhD is not my major concern. Having the chance to rigorously explore the physics of chemical systems and getting a tangible result in the end is what matters to me
Name: Jacob Reed PhD Program: Music Theory and History Hometown: Chapel Hill, NC Education: Yale University, New Haven, CT; B.A. Music, Mathematics; M.A. Music; M.M. Organ Performance Research: I’m an organist and music theorist, focusing on interactions between music and words: historical discourses on music, musical responses to lyrics, and musical effects of sung and spoken language. Recently, I’ve been studying how lyrics are used to produce and disturb rhythms in pop music traditions, with an eye to similar interactions between rhythm and harmony/melody. Otherwise, I’m fascinated by writing on music (literary and theoretical) in pre-modern China, and continue to perform on a variety of early and modern keyboard instruments.
Name: Dominiquo Santistevan PhD Program: Sociology Hometown: Pueblo, Colorado Education: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA; B.S., Computer Science Research: I would really like to understand how we communicate and use language to make sense of the world, especially in places where mobile technology has, almost overnight, increased the access to information by orders of magnitude. During undergrad, I worked with Human Dynamics Lab at the MIT Media Lab to study call detail records to better understand the relationship between social networks and physical spaces. I then spent a couple years working in Uganda, Chile, and most recently, Myanmar, as a Luce Scholar. In each of these countries, I worked in some variant of the technology/society intersection whether it was via an academic lab, government consultant, or NGO. In my free time, I like to run, watch movies, and see live music.
Name: Lily Scherlis PhD Program: English Hometown: Pittsburgh, PA Education: Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; A.B., Comparative Literature and Visual and Environmental Studies Research: Broadly, I’m interested in how everyday encounters with contemporary literature and media let us feel emotionally plugged into a community, cause, or place. My research involves working in video and sculpture as well as writing.
Name: Arthur Schott Lopes PhD Program: History Hometown: Curitiba, Brazil Education: Harvard College, Cambridge, MA; A.B. History Research: My research explores the intersection of race, nationalism, and democracy in early twentieth century Brazil. My undergraduate senior thesis interpreted Brazilian sociologist Gilberto Freyre’s Casa-Grande & Senzala (1933), perhaps Brazil’s most emblematic work of social science, as a work of literature that employed the rhetoric of science and myth to postulate Brazil as a Western nation on the world stage. My current research focuses on early-twentieth-century Brazilian understandings of democracy and democratic culture, particularly in relation to the United States. I spend most of my free time following Brazilian and American politics obsessively or watching the Great British Baking Show (even though I am a terrible cook).
Name: Audrey Jane Slote PhD Program: Music History & Theory Hometown: Meadville, PA Education: St. Olaf College (Northfield, MN) B.M. Cello Performance, University of Minnesota (Minneapolis, MN) M.M. Cello Performance, M.A. Music Theory Research: As a music theorist, I am interested in using techniques of musical analysis in service of broad philosophical questions. My work centers around music as a site of resilience and an object of political resistance particularly for people in marginalized groups. Recent projects have focused on Mahler’s unfinished Tenth Symphony and the music of Janelle Monáe. My article, “Deconstruction as Political Discourse in Janelle Monáe’s ‘Q.U.E.E.N.,’” was published in the Music and Politics special issue of the Society for Ethnomusicology (SEM) Student News. In my free time, I enjoy practicing cello, perusing the galleries at The Art Institute of Chicago, and watching TheGreat British Bake Off.
Name: Sofia Smith PhD Program: Political Science Hometown: Seattle, WA Education: Denison University, Granville, OH; BA Philosophy, Politics, and Economics; Johns Hopkins SAIS, Bologna, Italy and Washington, DC; MA in International Economics and Middle East Studies Research: My research comes from the four years I lived and worked in Jordan in the humanitarian aid and development sector. I hope to explore how Islamic religious education, everything from Quranic schools to da’wa on Instagram, affects women’s conceptions of themselves as political subjects and the kinds of political action they participate in within the Middle East. I am broadly interested in gendered politics of the every day, socialization, political media, and cross-cultural relationships. In my free time, I like to backpack, ski, cook, and watch reality TV.
Name: Hayoung Song PhD Program: Psychology, Integrative Neuroscience Hometown: Seoul, Korea Education: Sungkyunkwan University, MS in Biomedical Engineering and BA in Psychology Research: I am interested in the neural dynamics of high-level cognition, as we constantly interact with the external world and formulate our internal representation. Specifically, my research aims to understand the naturalistic process of story comprehension and storytelling, as our attentional states fluctuate on a moment-to-moment basis. I seek to understand how memory of the real-world events change accordingly, and how they interact with the creation of novel stories. I eventually hopes to bring the perspective of an artist in the scientific inquiry of human mind.
Name: Maya Van Nuys PhD Program: Political Science Hometown: Rapid City, SD Education: University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS; B.A. Global and International Studies/Humanities Research: I graduated from the University of Kansas (KU) in 2019. While at KU, I worked with Dr. Brittnee Carter to study religiously-motivated terrorist groups. My recent research continues this focus on ideologically-motivated political violence. I hope to continue in this topic area at the University of Chicago with a broad focus on ideological violence as it relates to religious, ethnic, and racial tensions in an international context. In addition to political science, I also greatly enjoy cooking, exploring Chicago, and playing violin.
Name: Veronica Vazquez-Olivieri PhD Program: Psychology Hometown: San Juan, Puerto Rico Education: Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia; B.A., Psychology Research: I am a doctoral student in the Cognition program working with Dr. Boaz Keysar. I received my BA in Psychology with a minor in Sociology from Emory University in 2019. My research interests lie at the intersection of higher-level social cognition and decision making and how this affects the way we perceive the world, evaluate events, decide what actions to take, and how we interact with others.
Name: John Veillette PhD Program: Psychology (Integrative Neuroscience) Hometown: Alexandria, VA Education: University of Chicago; B.S., Statistics, B.A., Psychology, B.A., Economics Research: I am interested in bidirectional interactions between the neural mechanisms of sensorimotor control and higher level mental function. In particular, I am currently investigating how the timing relationships between neural structures involved in the control of our muscles and the perception of our sensory feedback enable the effective, coordinated control of our articulatory muscles during speech. Moreover, I am testing whether perturbations of these timing relationships impact certain elements of subjective experience, such as the experience of agency over one’s movements, and, in turn, the neural and cognitive processes supporting the acquisition of new motor skills.
Name: Christopher Williams PhD Program: Sociology Hometown: Chicago, IL Education: University of Missouri, BA; University of California-Irvine, JD Research: I am a proud Southside native. Before starting my PhD here, I completed my law degree where I worked on numerous race and law projects. More recently l have done in-depth work on legal education, race, and the law. Currently, I envision my research to turn towards policing, crime, race, and the law. I thoroughly enjoy basketball, music, podcasts, and being an avid foodie.
Name: Aaron Zhang PhD Program:Computer Science Hometown: New York, NY Education: Brown University, Providence, RI; B.S. Computer Science and Mathematics Research: I’m interested in theoretical computer science, including computational complexity, algorithms, and cryptography. At Brown University, I collaborated with self-driving car researchers to design algorithms and wrote a senior thesis in cryptography on proofs of sequential work. Outside of research, I love stargazing and playing chess.
Name: Yunning Zhang PhD Program: Comparative Literature Hometown: Beijing, China Education: University of Oxford, UK, MPhil in Modern Languages; Peking University, China, B.A. in Hispanic Philology Research: My research focuses primarily on Spanish Golden Age literature and Latin American writers from late nineteenth to mid-twentieth century, and especially, the theorization of Baroque and Neobaroque. I am also interested in critical theory, photography, performance studies and the dialectics of science and literature. An immanent concern for the discourse of “Other” (otherness) underlines all my works.
Name: Jinjin Zhao PhD Program:Computer Science Hometown: Ottawa, ON, Canada Education: Princeton University, BS Research: My area of research is in data systems and databases. As machine learning and complex statistical analyses become more popular, we are rapidly seeking out more volumes of data across disciplines, and shifting the way we interact with information as a whole. I want to explore what these trends mean for the underlying systems which store that information, and if there are ways such that those systems can guide researchers and developers to make their analyses easier to develop and more accurate.
Name: Richard (Licheng) Zhu PhD Program: Computational and Applied Mathematics Hometown: Vernon Hills, IL Education: Caltech, Pasadena, CA; B.S., Physics Research: Before coming to UChicago, I studied physics at Caltech. While there, I conducted research in fields ranging over planetary dynamics, condensed matter, and machine learning. I have also worked in Silicon Valley as a machine learning engineer. I am broadly interested in problems at the intersection of computation and biology. Outside of the lab, I can usually be found breaking a sweat at the gym, reading, or debating with friends.
Fellows
Name: Melissa Adrian PhD Program: Statistics Hometown: Chicago, IL Education: University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA; B.S. Mathematics, B.S. Statistics Research: I was initially drawn to the field of statistics because I could see its applicability to a variety of fields. My undergraduate research spanned many different topics where I was able to utilize mathematics and statistics, such as breast cancer, the human gut microbiota, student enrollment data analytics, differential privacy, and 3D printing metal objects. Though these topics are seemingly unrelated, these areas of research all have benefitted from the application and development of statistical methodology. In graduate school, I plan to further explore statistics through applications in the environmental sciences. Particularly, I plan to focus my research on environmental and spatial statistics for climate modeling. In my free time, I enjoy watercolor painting, embroidering, and playing volleyball.
Name: Arshy Azizi PhD program: PhD in Classics Hometown: Los Angeles Education: Vassar College, BA Philosophy Research: I am interested in Homer and Homeric receptions (from Milton to McCarthy), the quarrel between poetry and philosophy, and the epic as a literary genre. I also enjoy reading Virgil and the impassioned tragedies of Racine.
Name: Trevor Brandt Ph.D. program: Art History Hometown: Lansdale, Pennsylvania Education: Pennsylvania State University, BA; Winterthur Program in American Material Culture, MA Research: I study the material culture of immigration and multi-sensory objects within the early American home, especially interactive prints and objects that engage users in unexpected ways. My chapter within an edited volume (De Gruyter, March 2021) examines a genre of labyrinthine broadsides among German-Americans. Before joining UChicago, I was the curator of a Scandinavian museum in Philadelphia, where I organized shows on the intersections between Nordic folk textiles and women’s rights groups, art deco and midcentury glass, and works by Gustaf Tenggren for Disney, among others. Outside of school, I’m passionate about local history. I serve on the board of my hometown’s historic district and chair its collections committee. In my free time, I enjoy biking (both pedal and motor variety), reading, and attempting to cook.
Name: Naomi Harris PhD program: Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations. Hometown: Los Angeles, CA Education: University of Chicago: B.A. English Literature; M.A. Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Research: My research explores literary tropes in Hittite texts from Late Bronze Age Anatolia (modern day Turkey), with a focus on metaphors and rhetorical organization. I am particularly intrigued by the intersection of metaphor and ritual objects and actions, which led to my MA thesis on apiary symbolism in Hittite myths and rituals. Other research interests include beekeeping in the ancient world, Hittite art and visual culture, and canon formation. Outside of literary adventures in Ancient Near Eastern texts, I teach academic writing at the UChicago Writing Program, and in my free time, I tremendously enjoy reading novels and attending operas.
Name: Nathan Katkin Program: PhD in Classics Hometown: Cincinnati, OH Education: BA Columbia University, 2018; MPhil University of Oxford, 2020 Research: Nathan studies the stories that ancient people told about their past, especially in Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit. He is also interested in prose style.
Name: Yan Jin PhD Program: PhD in Art History Hometown: Guangzhou, China Education: University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (M.A., Art History) & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC (B.A., Art History) Research: Yan JIN studies East Asian art history, focusing on visual and material culture of late imperial China. Her research interests include cross-regional exchanges, negotiation between global and local artistic traditions, objects and agency. Her MA thesis examines the production and display of glass mirror table screens at Emperor Qianlong’s court.
Name: Kun Liu PhD program: PhD program in Mathematics Hometown: Shandong, China Education: Peking University, B.S., Mathematics and Applied Mathematics Research: My undergraduate research is about arithmetic duality theorem in which I mainly studied the basic case of Galois cohomology. I studied certain structures related to constructing moduli space in my undergraduate thesis. I hope to study number theory further at the University of Chicago.
Name: Megan MacGregor PhD Program: Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science; Anthropology Hometown: Denver, CO Education: University of Chicago, M.A. Social Sciences; University of Colorado, Boulder, B.A. Anthropology and Humanities Research: Broadly, I am interested in the relationships between science, technology, health, and sociopolitical spheres. My undergraduate thesis arose from an ethnographic study of politeness in Buenos Aires, while my more recent MA research examined scientific process and communication related to the microbiome. Currently, I am interested in exploring the relationships between genomics, microbes, medicine, and bodies in transnational contexts. Between my undergraduate and graduate careers, I worked in hospitality and as an educator, performer, and coordinator at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. In my free time, I enjoy hiking, cooking, watching musical theater, and working with ink and paper.
Name: Kaelan Doyle Myerscough PhD program: PhD program in Cinema and Media Studies Hometown: Toronto, Canada Education: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, MA, M.S. in Comparative Media Studies; McGill University, Montreal, QC, B.A. in East Asian Studies Research: I am a trans/non-binary scholar and critical creator interested in game design and worldbuilding. As an undergraduate at McGill University, I studied the context of media creation and wrote a thesis on competitive communities of the Pokemon video game series. Then, I studied Comparative Media Studies at MIT, where I worked as a research assistant for the MIT Game Lab and wrote a thesis on the close analysis of video games for intimate affects. I hope to bring together contextual understanding and close analysis in my research at UChicago, where I will consider the history and political stakes of the process of building fictional worlds. My work is heavily influenced by my game design practice, which takes up much of my free time; when I want to get away from a computer, I sew and knit gender-expansive clothing for my friends.
Name: Jeson Ng PhD Program: Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Singapore Education: University of Cambridge, BA Asian and Middle Eastern Studies Research: I am interested in understanding how the ambiguity of cross-cultural encounters was articulated and negotiated across the medieval Mediterranean through constructions and contestations of identity. Comparing twelfth-century Crusader-era texts in Old French and Arabic, my article in Al-Masāq (2019) explores how race and gender were intertwined in motifs of female whiteness and sensuality to sustain a religio-ideological conflict that was neither necessary nor inevitable in everyday life. Arabic literary production at this time was rich, eclectic and prolific; I seek to read these texts, particularly the poetry, as generative of their own critical apparatus and bring pre-modern Arabic literature into conversation with comparative fields of inquiry. I have had the opportunity to study in Beirut, Palestine and Amman but am still told I sound more Egyptian. I also have emerging interests in metaphor, analogy and allegory as epistemic sources in the Arabophone world.
Name: Phillip Sergio PhD Program: South Asian Languages and Civilizations (SALC) Hometown: North Carolina Education: Harvard Divinity School, MTS, South Asian Religions Research: My research focuses on the reception history of Sanskrit texts through premodern commentaries, adaptations, and translations into regional languages. Broadly speaking, I am interested in the journey of Sanskrit texts across space and time, the audiences that received these texts, and the intellectual and literary engagements that transformed them.
Name: Melani Shahin PhD program: PhD Program in Music History & Theory Hometown: San Jose, CA Education: Fordham University, Bronx, NY; B.A., Philosophy and Music Research: My research focuses on the history and historiography of music theory (especially Renaissance and early modern theory). I am particularly interested in thinking about the epistemological frameworks that structure theoretical discourses. I also have secondary research interests in the histories of philosophy and science, continental philosophy, and hermeneutics. At Fordham, I studied the rhetorical function of mathematical theories in the writings of eighteenth-century German theorists Andreas Werckmeister, Lorenz Mizler, and Johann Mattheson. My special interest in German theory and culture led me to teach English in Germany for two years on Fulbright and Pädagogischer Austauschdienst grants after college. As a graduate student, I hope to expand the scope of my research by exploring the history of music theory in broader global contexts. In my free time, I enjoy browsing used bookstores, exploring new cities, playing bass, and learning languages.
Name: Joseph Spellberg PhD program: PhD program in Chemistry Hometown: Highland Park, IL Education: Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO; B.A., Chemistry Research: My research interests are at the intersection of physics and chemistry and I am fascinated by how underlying physical properties give rise to the chemical phenomena that we observe. At Washington University, my research focused on computational modeling of electron dynamics in gas phase molecules. During my PhD at the University of Chicago, I am looking forward to continuing research in Physical Chemistry and to spending more time in the lab developing experimental techniques. Currently, I am most interested in using spectroscopy to probe the electronic properties of condensed matter systems. In my free time, I enjoy cooking, playing board games, and hanging out with friends.
Name: Chaoqi Wang PhD program: PhD program in Computer Science Hometown: Hangzhou, China Education: Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, B.Eng. Computer Science; University of Toronto, Toronto, M.Sc. Computer Science. Research: In the past, my research has been focused on Bayesian deep learning, understanding the training dynamics of neural networks, and neural network pruning. In the future, I will pursue these directions in more depth. In specific, I hope to design more principled algorithms with rigorous mathematical guarantees, and more importantly, fewer hyperparameters to tune, to address the problems remaining in the field. Apart from research, I enjoy playing soccer and skiing.
Name: Yiwen Wu PhD program: Joint Program in East Asian Languages & Civilizations and Theater & Performance Studies Hometown: Shanghai, China Education: University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA; B.A., Drama, Media Studies; University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; M.A. Research: My interests in Chinese opera and the history of performance have emerged from one fundamental question: How do stories evolve across time and space? I want to explore the modality of Chinese opera across mediums, across decades, and across evolving national cultures. The dynamic interplay between performance and its medium fascinates me the most: How does media awareness affect our conceptions of performance? How does the experience of reading, listening, and watching enrich each other? I seek to explore performance as a living heritage–an amorphous assemblage of cultural conventions that continues to furnish the page, the stage, the screen, and our everyday life.
Name: Yuwei Zhou PhD program: East Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Guangdong, China Education: University of California San Diego, CA; B.A., History and B.S., Mathematics. Research: My current research interest lies on the craft production system in Bronze Age China. More specifically, I am interested in investigating how craft production activities reveals the social and power relations. Another focus of mine is the development of early Chinese writing, as reflected in the oracle bone inscriptions and bronze inscriptions. Coming from an undergraduate background of math and computer science, I am very enthusiastic about using computational methods to quantify and visualize the late Shang elite social network as represented in the distribution of clan emblems, which are preserved primarily on bronze vessels.
Fellows
Name: Rhya Moffitt Brooke PhD program: English Language and Literature Hometown: Piscataway, NJ Education: University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX (M.A., English); Northeastern University, Boston, MA (M.A., English); Southern Adventist University, Collegedale, TN (B.A., English) Research: My research focuses on the intersections of Blackness, gender, and (dis)ability/(un)wellness in anglophone literatures of the Black Diaspora. While the bulk of my work focuses on fiction of the 20th- and 21st centuries, my work is cross-historical in its considerations of Black interiority and the affective afterlives of slavery. I am also an educator with experience teaching at the secondary through undergraduate levels. My curriculum design centers historically marginalized voices and prioritizes accessible pedagogies.
Name: Ihsan Ul Ihthisam Chappangan PhD program: South Asian Languages and Civilization Hometown: Kerala, India Education: Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India (M.A., 2020); Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi, India (B.A., 2018) Research: I am interested in the early modern history of Malabar (modern Kerala) and Ma‘bar (Coromandel) in the ‘Indian Ocean World’ (IOW). My project aims to undertake a historical and anthropological study of the circulation of Sufi texts and sounds, and its reception across the IOW. I would read texts in Arabic, Persian, Malayalam, Arabi-Malayāḷam, Tamil and Arabu-Tamil; as primary sources for my research. I am also interested in the historical, political and sociological aspects of various performance traditions among the Māppiḷa Muslims of Malabar.
Name: Panyu Chen PhD program: Physics Hometown: Nanjing, Jiangsu, China Education: University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA (B.S., Physics; B.S., Mathematics) Research: My research interest lies in the field of active matter, which are non-equilibrium systems driven internally by its microscopic components. As it is dissipative such system breaks time reversal symmetry and therefore possesses some novel properties. At UCSB I researched on microtubule based active nematics in Professor Zvonimir Dogic’s lab. Particularly, we placed inclusions within active nematics and studied their interaction. Currently I am working in Professor William Irvine’s lab on a system of spinning magnetic particles. We have observed several interesting phenomena. Most notably, the particles can self-organize into layers. I hope my research can reveal the fundamental laws behind the non equilibrium physics.
Name: Anna Conner PhD program: History Hometown: Portland, OR Education: Portland State University, Portland, OR (B.A. Honors, History and English Literature); Newcastle University, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK (M.A., History of Medicine) Research: I am interested in the history of medicine in early modern Europe, and specifically in experiences and representations of diverse or non-normative bodies, focusing on intersectional ideas of gender, disability, and race. I am also interested in the reception of classical medical ideas in the early modern period, particularly as they relate to understandings of the body. My B.A. Honors thesis focused on the possible dissection and vivisection of criminal bodies in Ptolemaic Alexandria, and my M.A. thesis studied representations of female bodies in early modern Europe, mainly within medical literature. In my free time I enjoy reading novels, baking, watching baking competition shows, and spending time with my family.
Name: Melina Gioconda Davis PhD program: Comparative Human Development Hometown: Miami, FL Education: Barnard College of Columbia University, New York, NY (B.A., Political Science) Research: My research spans topics in contemporary sexuality including pleasure, gender, anatomical variation, and the role of social movements and transnational medical communities in the production and dissemination of knowledge about sex. In addition to my studies at the University of Chicago, I work with grassroots collectives in the U.S. and Mexico and am co-founder of Vulgar, a Spanish-language sex education organization with a focus on pleasure and social justice. I facilitate trainings for educators and health professionals and have collaborated on projects that critically rewrite approaches to sexual health including Our Bodies Ourselves Today, It Gets Better’s Queer Sex Ed, and Pussypedia. I also create original cabaret and have performed at queer and transfeminist spaces internationally. In my free time, you can find me salsa dancing or cooking for friends.
Name: Isabella Di Giovanni PhD program: Comparative Human Development Hometown: New York Education: Cornell University (B.A. Linguistics; B.A., Psychology) Research: Broadly, I am interested in language acquisition and development. In particular, I am interested in exploring how children’s social interactions and environment influence how they learn language, and how these processes might be similar or different in different cultural and linguistic contexts. I also have an interest in language endangerment and revitalization. In my free time I enjoy reading, cooking, baking and visiting museums.
Name: Zi Yun Huang PhD program: Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science Hometown: Toronto, Canada / Urumqi, China Education: University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada (Master of Museum Studies and B.Sc., Ecology and Evolutionary Biology); University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada (M.A., Philosophy) Research: My research connects the history of museums, natural history, and digital humanities. I’m especially interested in how the colonial legacy of museums creeps into contemporary practices of digitizing natural history collections, and conversely, how critical digitization practices can help to decolonize and indigenize museums. Before starting my PhD, I worked on various projects at the Ontario Science Centre, Toronto Allan Gardens Conservatory, Art Gallery of Ontario, and Toronto’s First Post Office. In my free time I like to garden, ferment vegetables, and hang out with other people’s cats and dogs.
Name: Henry Jones PhD program: Psychology, Integrative Neuroscience Hometown: Charlotte, NC Education: Brown University, Providence, RI (B.S., Cognitive Neuroscience) Research: I am interested in the cognitive and neural mechanisms that underlie adaptive behavior. In my undergrad work with David Badre, I explored how people create context-specific value representations. In my post-baccalaureate work with Russ Poldrack, I surveyed high-level functions of self-regulation. My current research focuses on how people can maintain goals in concert with other information to support flexible action. I’m interested in the format and dynamics of these representations – how quickly they are formed, how much information is stored, how robust to interference they are. Outside of research, I enjoy exploring the city, consuming a lot of media, and bringing people together.
Name: Stefanos Jones PhD program: The Committee on Social Thought Hometown: Seattle, WA Education: Yale University, New Haven, CT (B.A., Philosophy) Research: I completed my B.A. with a thesis on Plato’s Theaetetus and the philosophical problems surrounding the possibility of falsehood and error. I continue to think about these topics in the context of: Plato and Plato’s relation to the Sophists and the pre-Socratics; 19th Century German Idealism; the current intersection of Idealism and analytic philosophy.
Name: Daniel Lapinski PhD program: South Asia Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Oak Brook, IL Education: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA (M.A., South Asia Studies); University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (B.A., Linguistics and SALC) Research: My research focuses on the role of language in the conceptualization of Northeastern India in the history of modern South Asia. Focusing in particular on the situation of Meiteilon (“Manipuri”), I intend to examine the interactions between developments in linguistic scholarship, state language policies and literary institutions, and popular linguistic rights movements in shaping the political and sociocultural space of Northeast India over the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Name: Jamie Lee PhD program: English Language and Literature and Theatre and Performance Studies Hometown: San Francisco, CA Education: University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA (B.A., Ethnic Studies with Honors); New York University, New York, NY (M.A., Performance Studies) Research: I am a joint PhD student here at The University of Chicago in the departments of English Language and Literature and Theater and Performance Studies. The impetus of my work finds itself caught up in the thinking/doing/feeling of 20th and 21st century eco-literary and eco-artistic works written and created by Black women and Femmes. I am interested in engaging what it might mean to negotiate the category of human/non-human, as well the ways this finds itself positioned within moments and scenes of doom, devastation, and catastrophe within the current geological era, otherwise known as the “Anthropocene”. Furthermore, I am deeply intrigued by the ways Black Women and Femmes theorize “earth” in their writing and art practice. Moreover, I also am curious in thinking about the ways we can mobilize trans* as an emergent analytic, guiding principle, and commonplace for meditating on the entwined relation of race, gender, and ecology. By discussing new theories of relationality and embodiment in Black Feminist ecocriticism and its praxis, my research seeks to illuminate modes of gathering, assembly, and congregating in the lives of Black women and Femmes, and how these strategies in Black Feminist literature and art move us towards an insistence on Black livability that gesture towards new transcorporealities at the end of the world.
Subject Areas: African American Literature, Black Feminist Thought, Performance Studies, 20th/21st Visual Cultures, Trans* Studies, Ecocriticism/Environment Humanities, and Affect Studies.
Name: Rayne Liu PhD program: Astronomy and Astrophysics Hometown: Xiaogan, China Education: Cornell University, Ithaca, NY (B.A., Astronomy; B.A., Mathematics) Research: I study theoretical cosmology. I am intrigued by topics such as dark matter and dark energy, tests of general relativity and beyond, baryogenesis and inflation. Some of my past works include using the large scale structure of the universe to constrain modified gravity models, and testing the black hole no-hair theorem with the ringdown of gravitational waves. This is primarily why I find UChicago Astro where my heart and soul belong. I am excited to continue working and growing with the vibrant cosmology community here, and learn to build theories and/or examine them with the wealth of upcoming observational data. When not working, I enjoy doing handicrafts including crochet, sewing, origami, polymer clay, etc. while driving myself crazy with philosophical problems and poems. I am also a regular French learner, and am taking voice lessons with an interest in coloratura.
Name: Yuhan Liu PhD program: Computer Science Hometown: Chongqing, China Education: University of Wisconsin, Madison, Madison, WI (B.S., Computer Sciences) Research: I am generally interested in the intersection between systems/software and Machine Learning. More and more researchers and developers are starting to use ML models, and it’s important to optimize not only the ML models to achieve better accuracy but also the software that uses ML models. My undergraduate research focused on improving the ML models by accelerating the training or inference procedures of Deep Neural Networks (e.g. large-scale language models). Currently, I am interested in developing robust and efficient software systems that better utilizes ML techniques to meet different objectives across various users and applications.
Name: Kunal Marwaha PhD program: Computer Science Hometown: Sacramento, CA Education: UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA (B.S., Engineering Physics; B.S., Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences) Research: I study the possibilities and limits of algorithms for quantum computers.
Name: Misha S McDaniel PhD program: English, Black Studies Hometown: Atlanta, GA Education: University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA (B.A., English; B.A., Africana Studies) Research: By adopting a Black feminist approach that emerges from my readings of a host of thinkers such as Michelle M. Wright, Zenzel Isoke, Saidiya Hartman, and M. NourbeSe Philip, I situate the story as a container for imagining new Black possibilities, a space where history, truth, and fact are stretched beyond the limits of what constitutes the “real.” Inspired by the question of who owns the future, I endeavor to think about violence within the temporal plane, considering ownership to be a relational construct while rethinking the unique role African Americans play in that state of (re-)ownership. My research seeks to answer several questions: how do African-American speculative narratives reflect the American master narrative and society in ways that are the most “unbelievable”? How does positioning memory as archive allow for the re-renderings, “re-tellings,” or “un-tellings” of Black histories and presents? How does the Black Imaginary help us to imagine Black presents and futures that do not end in extinction, that are able to exist outside of Eurocentric forms of knowledge production and outside of anti-Black capitalist conceptions of time, reality, and possibility? Outside of the classroom, I write speculative and realistic fiction, I act, and I do digital illustration and design.
Name: Siqi Ni PhD program: Physics Hometown: Wuhan, China Education: The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (B.A., Physics; B.A. Mathematics) Research: Broadly, I’m interested in a variety of topics in theoretical physics. I am particularly intrigued by the intersections of physics at different energy scales. My time outside of physics drips away in rewatching movies, indulging in classical music, and learning new languages.
Name: Mark Olson PhD program: Computation and Applied Mathematics Hometown: Los Osos, CA Education: University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA (B.A., Mathematics, computer science minor) Research: While studying at Berkeley Mark worked at the Center for Integrative Planetary Science, developing and testing crystal structure search algorithms. He is interested in probability and computational optimization problems. On a more personal note, Mark enjoys tennis, baking, playing the piano, and studying Swedish.
Name: Sebastián Ortega PhD program: Sociology Hometown: Escondido, CA Education: California State University Long Beach, Long Beach, CA (B.A., Sociology); Columbia University, New York, NY (M.A., Sociology) Research:
Spending most of my teen years in the juvenile system and engaged in street violence, I have spent the last nine years using educational, political, cultural empowerment to support gang members in California. My research focuses on the perpetuation of settler colonialism in the (in)justice system and how it targets resistance groups (street/prison gangs).
Prior to coming to UChicago, I worked at the Columbia Justice Lab as an Officer of Research on the Rikers Island Longitudinal Study (RILS) led by Dr. Bruce Western. From 2016 to 2019 I also worked with youth in the juvenile system as a case manager. While working as a case manager I had the opportunity to train various youth-serving agencies throughout Southern California on how to work with “gang involved” youth and share my knowledge on settler colonialism as it relates to Chicano/Indigenous street and prison gangs and the movement to abolish the current carceral apparatus.
Name: Yifan Peng PhD program: Computational and Applied Mathematics Hometown: Zhejiang, China Education: Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China (B.S., Mathematics; B.S., Applied Mathematics) Research: My research interest lies in machine learning and its application for scientific computing. During my undergraduate study, I had research on deep learning to develop long range convolution for point clouds, especially for dealing with long range interaction with quasi linear computational cost. Besides, I also developed a new method in neural network framework to solve high dimensional partial differential equations based on certain initialization strategy of neural parameters, which is easy to analyze its training dynamic. For future research, I have broad interests in optimization and data analysis.
Name: Rebecca Posner-Hess PhD program: Classics Hometown: Chapel Hill, NC Education: Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA (B.A., Ancient Greek) Research: I received my BA from Swarthmore College in 2021 in Ancient Greek and Latin, with a second minor in Religion. My undergraduate work focused on the Odyssey, Herodotus, Aeschylus, Vergil, and Ovid. Some of my current interests include Greek tragedy and theatrics, metaphorical and material textiles, ancient conceptions of the body and its borders, and literary expressions of memory and mourning. I have also studied biblical Hebrew and ancient Judaism and have recently been interested in biblical and Homeric orality and multitextuality. Outside of academia, I enjoy choral music and fiber arts.
Name: Benjamin Salman PhD program: Committee on Social Thought Hometown: Seattle, WA Education: Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA (B.A., Joint Major in Philosophy and Religions Studies); Peabody Institute of the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD (M.M., Music Composition) Research: I am broadly interested in philosophy, both historical and systematic; specific areas of focus are Greek and German Philosophy (especially Plato and Hegel), aesthetics (especially the philosophy of music), and the history and philosophy of logic. In addition to my philosophical work, I am a classically trained pianist and composer, and continue to perform and compose semi-professionally. When not reading or writing philosophy or playing music, I endeavor to spend as much time as I can hiking in the mountains and rainforests of my native Pacific Northwest.
Name: Misha Wei Sohan PhD program: Statistics
Name: Lourdes Honor Lacombe Taylor PhD program: English
Name: Gasira Timir PhD program: English Hometown: Toronto, Canada Education: Haverford College, Haverford, PA (B.A., English, Concentration in African and Africana Studies) Research: I am interested in analytic frameworks which take up and respond to institutionality and precarity. My thinking often constellates around educational institutions in the 20th and 21st century, and the cultural and intellectual formations of inextricably entangled phenomena such as “merit” and “meritocracy.” Currently, my research attends closely to the machinery of racial-class mobility and bourgeois racial uplift, and in doing so, I excavate contradictions concerning bourgeois black mobility and the ultimate “non-event of emancipation” transhistorically.
Additionally, I feel frequently interpellated to research and discuss a wide range of seemingly unrelated objects and materials—from cowboys in the afterlife of the frontier; to Las Vegas weddings; to the Oprahfication of reality and the remediation of 19th and 20th century New Thought philosophy into the mainstream; to Rachel Dolezal. A recurring topos across these subjects is a generalized preoccupation with disaffiliation and the conditions of present-day, everyday citizenship. Consequently, my work is very character-driven: I am motivated by and naturally gravitate towards individuals and individual circumstances that many would consider spectacularly kitschy, or otherwise “off-beat.” Accordingly, my thinking frequently gets caught up with/between the aesthetics of refusal—of disaffiliating and of “turning away,” especially from that which would be generally considered “normal”—and current discourse around pre-personal social forces and formations, “the affective turn.”
Name: Kelly Wagman PhD program: Computer Science Hometown: Annapolis, MD Education: MIT, Cambridge, MA (M.S., Comparative Media Studies);
Brown University, Providence, RI (B.A., Computer Science; B.A., Economics) Research: I’m interested in understanding how to build more equitable and inclusive technology. I work in the area of human-computer interaction, which fuses computer science with social perspectives. Before coming to UChicago, I completed a master’s in Comparative Media Studies at MIT where my thesis focused on understanding gender and power in engineering communities as well as in human-machine relations. Prior to MIT, I spent several years working in the tech industry. I look forward to continuing to bring a critical, feminist lens to technology development in my work at UChicago. In my free time, I like to escape the tech world through rock climbing, yoga, and art.
Name: Jennifer Williams PhD program: English Language and Literature; Theater and Performance Studies Hometown: Seattle, WA Education: University of Washington, Seattle, Seattle, WA (B.A., Law) Research: My work is situated at the intersection of Black studies, queer theory, and performance studies. At this junction, I primarily think about the material techniques of Black performers working across dance and new media genres. More specifically, I am interested in exploring the role of affect and embodiment in Black queer performance art as a window into Black political life. Taking the premise that the body is a principal site of knowledge-production as a point of departure, I am interested in how Black and Black queer performers illustrate this fact, as well as how they reveal the nature of black political ontology. In this way, I am guided by the idea that the realm of the aesthetic can help us understand the theory and praxis of Black political subjects. My work has been featured in the Black Embodiments Studio’s annual publication, A Year in Black Art.
Name: Rachel Willis PhD program: English
Name: Yaoxuan Zeng PhD program: Geophysical Sciences Hometown: Zigong, China Education: Peking University, Beijing, China (B.S., Atmospheric Sciences) Research: I’ve been working on ocean dynamics in worlds outside the Earth. My undergraduate research focuses on oceanic superrotation on tidally locked planets orbiting M-dwarfs. In UChicago, my research will focus on ocean dynamics on icy moons (like satellites orbiting Jupiter and Saturn) in the solar systems.
Name: Ronghu Zhu PhD program: East Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: China Education: Beijing Language and Culture University, Beijing, China (A.B., 2010); University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA (A.M., 2016); Universiteit Leiden, Leiden, Netherlands (M.A., 2019); University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (M.A., 2021) Research: I am interested in the transmission of early Chinese magico-religious practices into Medieval China. By focusing on practices, I seek to investigate the lived religion by actual religious individuals.
Víctor Hugo Almendra Hernández
PhD Program: Mathematics Hometown: Mexico City, Mexico Education: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, B.S. Mathematics Research: I am interested in the interaction of combinatorics with other areas of mathematics, particularly with algebra and topology. During my undergrad at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México I did research on discrete geometry studying Helly type theorems and wrote a dissertation on homological and representation stability of braid groups. I am looking forward to learning more about math in general at UChicago with the main purpose of doing research on interesting topics that bring combinatorial ideas into play. In my free time I enjoy watching and playing sports in general, especially soccer, and watching movies.
Eitan Borgnia
PhD Program: Computer Science Hometown: Baltimore, MD Education: Caltech, Pasadena, CA, B.Sc., Mathematics Research: At UChicago, I plan to work at the intersection of security and machine learning with Ben Zhao. I graduated from Caltech in 2019, where I studied math with a focus on geometry and topology. Prior to joining UChicago, I worked on a variety of machine learning projects as a research scientist at UMD including differentially private dataset release, model explainability with parameter saliency, algorithm-solving neural networks with weight sharing, and cold diffusion models. When I’m not working on research I like swimming, playing chess, and cooking.
Jiaheng Chen
PhD Program: Computational and Applied Mathematics Hometown: Zhengzhou, China Education: Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, B.S. Mathematics & Applied Mathematics Research: My research interests lie in the general area of applied math and statistics: scientific computing, machine learning, applied analysis and probability. Also, I’m extremely interested in building bridges between statistical physics, information theory and deep learning, designing efficient and provable algorithms and deepening the theoretical understanding. Outside of mathematics, I enjoy watching movies and reading books.
Abby Clements
PhD Program: Comparative Human Development Hometown: Buffalo, NY Education: Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA; B.A., Neuroscience & Linguistics Research: Abby is broadly interested in research on neurolinguistics, sign languages, and concepts, and their developmental progression. In the past, she has done work into event boundaries, semantic memory biases, and whether concepts have cores or essences. She hopes to study Protactile sign language, which is used by DeafBlind people, using both psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic perspectives. Outside of the university she fosters dogs and cats and owns far too many house plants.
Alejandro Cueto
PhD Program: Music History and Theory Hometown: Tucson, AZ Education: Arizona State University (Tempe, AZ) B.M. Horn Performance, Music Theory; University of Texas (Austin, TX), M.M. Music Theory
I am a music theorist and historian focusing on topics of decoloniality, agency, and accessibility in contemporary jazz and popular music. Recent research of mine has considered the way Esperanza Spalding weaves racial capitalist and Black feminist themes into her musical textures and narratives in her album, Emily’s D+Evolution (2016). Outside of academic studies, I am an avid ceramicist, continue to play the horn, and am learning recorder.
Katelyn Feuling
PhD Program: Chemistry Hometown: Muskego, WI Education: University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, Minneapolis, MN; B.S., Chemistry; Minors: Physics, Leadership Research: I am interested in studying and harnessing the fundamental physics of light-matter interactions by using ultrafast spectroscopy. Quantum mechanical properties dictate essential chemical reactivity and biological functions, such as energy transfer in photosynthesis. By understanding and tuning these processes through our “window” into the quantum world – light – we can not only appreciate the complex functions necessary for life, but also use the principles to inform chemical, material, and biological engineering. In addition to conducting research in quantum biology, I am passionate about and committed to increasing accessibility in science education and research. Through building intentional and inclusive pedagogical and workplace structures, science as a whole will be accessible to current scientists and an increasingly diverse next generation.
Yu-Shan (Grace) Huang
PhD Program: Developmental Psychology Hometown: Taiwan (ROC) and Shanghai, China Education: Boston University, Boston, MA; Ed.M. Higher Education Administration | Northeastern University, Boston, MA; B.S. Psychology Research: I am a first-year PhD student working with Dr. Lin Bian (EAST Lab) and Dr. Susan Levine (Cognitive Development Lab) at the University of Chicago. During my studies at Northeastern University, I worked in Dr. John Coley’s lab where I studied “cognitive consturals”, such as essentialism, and how they affect people’s understanding and reasoning about the world. I completed an undergraduate honors thesis that explored the relations between empathy and anthropic thinking in vegetarians and non-vegetarians. After graduating from NU, I obtained a Master’s degree in Education from Boston University, during which I formulated my doctoral research inquiries. I am interested in questions related to gender stereotypes and social biases in educational settings. In my free time, I enjoy pour-over coffee, yoga, and traveling.
Daniela Juarez
PhD Program: Sociology Hometown: Dallas, Texas Education: The University of Texas at Dallas B.A., Sociology, A. Tyler Junior College, Political Science Research: My research aims to understand the educational, political, and social inequalities that undocumented immigrants encounter in higher education institutions. Particularly, I am interested in examining the experiences of undocumented students that were not able to qualify for DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals). In addition, I want to explore and document how undocumented immigrants utilize social media to build meaningful connections and communities. Outside of school, I really enjoy spending time with my cat Buki.
Ye Ram (Esther) Kim
PhD Program: Comparative Literature Hometown: Tunis, Tunisia Education: B.A. in Comparative Literature, French & Francophone Studies, and Political Science, Bryn Mawr College, 2022 Research: My research explores questions of multilingualism and identity in North Africa/Maghreb, along with my interests in vernacularism, postcolonialism, and indigeneity (Amazighté). While multilingualism is the daily reality of many people and accompanies the process of globalization, it is only rarely manifested in literature which remains by and large defined by monolinguistic markets. Multilingualism has shaped my identity: I grew up in Tunisia, where I spoke Korean at home, French and Modern Standard Arabic in school, Tunisian dialect in the streets, and have continued higher education at English-speaking universities in the US. Despite its specificities, my situation echoes that of the Maghrebi community that does not speak in the languages they write, and do not write in the languages they speak. Hence, I ask: Can there be such a thing as a multilingual literature? How can multilingualism be expressed in languages of the “Other?” I plan to continue exploring how literary spaces can accommodate the expression and exploration of multilingual and multicultural identities. While I seek to focus on North Africa/Maghreb, I’m interested in researching linguistic politics and parallels between the Maghreb and East Asia, through a study of literature and cinema in French, Arabic, and Korean. Other than research and reading, I enjoy writing music and recording songs!
Julia Kulon
PhD Program: Slavic Languages & Literatures Hometown: Warsaw, Poland; Chicago, IL Education: School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL (M.A., Modern and Contemporary Art History); St. John’s College, Annapolis, MD (B.A., Liberal Arts) Research: Broadly speaking, I am concerned with the affective complexity of tumultuous social and political tensions in post-war Poland, c. 1945-1960, and how these factors found their expression in artistic, literary, and cultural production. At UChicago, I intend to appraise Socialist Realism (c. 1950-1955) as one such symptom of this entanglement, which had been informed by the discomposure provoked by the country’s enormous ruin and overwhelming project of reconstruction after the war. My current research grapples with the question of whether 1945 marked an intellectual caesura for Polish culture, or if the immediate post-war period was a disorienting continuation of the aspirations and ambitions of interwar leftist and avantgarde circles. In my free time, I enjoy visiting museums, listening to jazz, and bike rides by the lake.
Suyash Kumar
PhD Program: Astronomy and Astrophysics Hometown: Patna, Bihar, India Education: UCLA, BS Physics Research: I currently work with Professor Hsiao-Wen Chen to examine the diffuse gas surrounding galaxies outside the Milky Way. Cosmological theories predict that roughly 5% of the Universe should be made up of visible matter, or baryons. While stars are a major source of baryons, they do not yield the expected baryon fraction of the universe. This led astronomers to look for baryons locked up in other sources. After extensive searches, they discovered a number of baryons comparable to the stellar mass in the Circumgalactic Media of galaxies, which refers to the diffuse gas around the star-forming region of galaxies. We use spectroscopic data from a variety of telescopes (like the Hubble Space Telescope and the Magellan Telescopes in Chile) to constrain the mass, kinematics, and chemical composition/ origin of the Circumgalactic Medium. Apart from research, I love cooking, watching TV shows, playing the guitar, working out, and making jokes!
Ziyi Lin
PhD Program: East Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Zhejiang, China Education: Harvard University, MA, Regional Studies-East Asia; University of California, Berkeley, B.A., Japan Studies & Computer Science Research: I am interested in Japanese media and popular culture from the late 20th century to contemporary time, hoping to expand my research range to include China and Korea in the near future. I am particularly intrigued by the theme of space and modes of spatiality in different media, from printed to digital. During my years researching Japanese media, I have been guided by inquiries such as how space is configured and how people experience space with different media, especially digital media including the Internet and video games. A product out of such curiosity is my master’s thesis on Japanese video game maps. At the present, I actively seek to apply my background of programming knowledge to both better understand digital media and participate in digital humanities projects. I have worked in several digitizing and GIS projects and I am also an amateur game developer.
Tyler Lutz
PhD program: English Language and Literature Hometowns: Ripon and Modesto, CA Education: University of Chicago: A.B. English; Yale University: Ph.D. Physics and Certificate in Environmental Humanities Research: I work at the intersection of science and literature, but not to “bridge the gap,” think with “both sides of the brain,” or reconcile our “two cultures.” I’m committed, rather, to thinking the gap itself: to charting the space between literature and science by respecting both the difference and interpenetration of its limiting terms. By meeting literature and science in their ecological middle—examining both how literature has shaped scientific practice and how science has informed literary reading and writing in turn—I pursue a two-way tack uniquely apposite to focalizing the intricate push and pull between human and non-human domains that characterizes contemporary ecological thinking.
Lucia Neirotti
PhD Program: Art History Hometown: Birmingham, UK Education: Cambridge University (B.A., Art History) Research: My research focuses on artist’s altered modes of production in the context of dictatorship in Latin America. With particular focus on Argentina in the late 1960s and early 1970s, I study the parallel and overlapping discourses of dematerialisation of the art object and commitment to political militancy. This encompasses the development of Media Art, performance, and so-called exploitation art, as well as all new forms of address in self-curated, extra-institutional installations. In my work, I seek to problematise essentialising Western narratives of Latin American art and expand scholarship in English on this subject.
Anwār Omeish
PhD Program: Political Science Hometown: Fairfax, VA Education: Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (BA, Social Studies) Research: My research focuses on the intersections between the intellectual and ethical traditions we describe as religions and the varied forms of theoretical inquiry about collective life we describe as political thought. In particular, I am interested in how to conceptualize hope, political action, and temporality in the aftermath of the Arab Spring, as well as how such conceptualizations connect to a broader loss of futurity in the face of late capitalism and climate crisis. I conduct my theoretical inquiry with a clear commitment to praxis, a commitment I try to embody throughout my life.
Before UChicago, I pursued an MPhil in Islamic Studies and History at the University of Oxford, focusing on juristic articulations of political thought in premodern Muslim societies, and completed a BA in Social Studies at Harvard University, where I explored how assumptions of secularity in Frantz Fanon’s work limited what he saw as politically possible in revolutionary Algeria.
Madeline Ouimet
PhD Program: Near Eastern Art & Archaeology and Cuneiform Studies Hometown: Spring Green, WI Education: University of Chicago, B.A., Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Research: My broad goal as a researcher is to further our understanding of daily life and its emic experience(s) in ancient Mesopotamia by integrating archaeological and textual evidence. As an archaeologist, I have participated in fieldwork in the U.S., Israel, Turkey, and Iraqi Kurdistan. As a philologist, I am a researcher for the Oriental Institute’s Tablet Collection in projects such as artifact digitization, museum exhibition, and educational outreach. As for independent research, my interests lie primarily in ‘the anthropology of the senses’: my past work ranges from ontologies of observability in first-millennium-BCE divination texts to the socially-constitutive and material implications of legal witnessing, as sensory practice, in the Late Bronze Age. My plans for future research continue to draw upon such body-centric, experiential perspectives (e.g., habitus, ‘body technique,’ and phenomenology) to investigate how encultured sensory experiences, activities, and the ways people in the ancient world thought about their own sensoria play a fundamental role in shaping historically-specific social structures as well as the urban built world itself, particularly in contexts of non-elite daily life and small-scale domestic contexts.
Ravi Prakash
PhD Program: South Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Bhopal, India Education: Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi (MA, Arts and Aesthetics); Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi (BTech and MTech, Chemical Engineering) Research: I am interested in the co-constitutive relations between forms of literature and sociality. I would like to think about how ‘Hindi’ poetic texts circulated and how their literariness was variously conceived by different interpretive communities (courtly, mercantile, monastic etc.) in the 16th to 18th centuries. My project will also look into the discourse created around these same texts under the rubric of history (itihās) and criticism (ālocanā) from the early 20th century onwards. Hopefully, thinking through these two moments will allow me to discern how the affinities between poetics and ethics changed from pre-modern to modern times.
Kate Reed
PhD Program: History Hometown: Annapolis, MD Education: Princeton University, New Jersey: AB in History (2019); Oxford University, United Kingdom: MPhil in Economic and Social History (2022) Research: I study the economic and social history of modern Mexico, with a particular emphasis on social histories of development, labor, gender, and their intersections. My research takes up questions about the articulation of traditionally unwaged domestic work with formal labor markets; the role of debt and indebtedness in nineteenth and twentieth century labor regimes; and the unequal distribution of risk, both financial and otherwise, at scales from the intra-familial to the international. Before beginning graduate study, I worked as a teaching fellow at Princeton’s Global History Lab, and I continue to participate in a number of collaborate teaching, oral history, and writing projects with refugee and migrant historians.
Asya Sagnak
PhD Program: Theatre and Performance Studies and Comparative Literature Hometown: Istanbul, Turkey Education: Barnard College, New York, NY, BA in Political Science; University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, MA in the Humanities Research: Asya Sagnak’s research focuses on the cultural and affective economies of self-sacrificing protest performance, particularly in the Middle East. In this, she wishes to articulate a performance philosophy of decay—of that which degrades over time. She is attentive, first, to the body: to the materiality of bodily decay, and to the body’s decay under the carceral state. She wonders what collective subjecthood or futurity might be found under these circumstances. Her inquiries draw from the fields of performance studies, political theory, affect studies, poetics, and queer theory, as well as from ethnography and translation. Asya loves photography and stone fruit. Prior to her arrival in Chicago, she was a writing consultant at Columbia University.
Nishan D. Varatharajan
PhD Program: Social Thought Hometown: Sydney, Australia Education: University of Cambridge (MPhil, Political Thought and Intellectual History); University of Sydney (M.A., Political Theory and Design) Research: I look to explore the possibility of leading an integrated life during the Anthropocene. My research interests include nineteenth and twentieth-century German thought, philosophical accounts of human nature, moral epistemology, the sacred, moral imagination, and the philosophy of narrative. Two songs by the name of ‘Work’ – performed by Rihanna and Charlotte Day Wilson, respectively – have been on my Spotify Wrapped every year since 2016.
Xinyu Wang
PhD Program: PhD program in Political Science Hometown: Shanghai, China Education: New York University Shanghai, Shanghai, China (B.A., Humanities; B.A., Social Science with Honors); The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL (M.A., Social Sciences) Research: I am interested in the intersection of domestic politics and grand strategy. I am fascinated by the puzzle of why states invent grand-strategic visions. Exploring normative ideals of world order, I wrote my BA honors thesis on the usefulness of Confucianism for contemporary China and beyond. I asked why and how thinkers construct a Confucian alternative to the “liberal international order.” Shifting to empirical inquiries into grand strategy, I wrote my MA thesis on China’s Belt and Road Initiatives (BRI). I asked why some BRI members have engaged more with BRI than others. To further research the puzzle of grand-strategic visions, I would like to address it as part of a broader question of how revisionist states close capability gaps via the interaction between economic and military might. And I am eager to analyze the impacts of states’ failure to meet economic objectives on grand-strategic changes and military buildup.
Alex Akhundov
PhD Program: Chemistry
Hometown: Baku, Azerbaijan
Education: Honors Bachelor of Science (H.B.Sc.) in Chemistry (2023) – York University, Toronto, ON, Canada
Research: During his undergraduate studies, Alex spent two years working with Prof. Ryan Hili on a medicinal chemistry project in epitranscriptomics, developing small molecule inhibitors of a protein that binds modified RNA. He then joined the lab of Prof. Christine Le to work on synthetic organic methodology, developing a stereoselective reaction to synthesize monofluorinated lactams using difluorocarbene reagents. His future research interests lie with exploring novel paradigms of reactivity, exploiting unique reactive intermediates and studying their mechanisms to develop new chemical reactions and strategies for constructing organic molecules. Outside of science, Alex is a former dual-sport competitive athlete, having run the 400m sprint at the European Youth Olympics and played at the FIBA Junior European Basketball Championship. He is also a passionate music fan and musician, mainly playing the drums and guitar, and also enjoys working in visual arts, primarily through photography. At UChicago, Alex will pursue a Ph.D. in organic chemistry, a discipline that provides the perfect blend of artistic creativity and analytical problem solving.
Annabella Archacki
PhD Program: Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science Hometown: Austin, TX Education: University of Cambridge (MPhil in History and Philosophy of Science), University of Chicago (BA in History, Philosophy, and Social Studies of Science and Medicine) Research: I study the history of science, with particular interest in the role of ethics and law. I am especially drawn to questions about doubt, denial, probability, and prediction in imperial and colonial contexts. I want to know how historical actors move from what they say they know to what they actually do. Before the PhD, I worked at an environmentalist nonprofit, where I developed curricula on local ecology for schools across Chicago. I was also a student researcher for UChicago’s College Summer Institute, pursuing interdisciplinary research on animal and artificial intelligence. My non-academic writing has covered topics including the environmental history of what have been termed “diseases of the will” (such as mental illness and tuberculosis), the role of AI in sustainability, and the debates over legal personhood for animals and AI.
Taimur Aziz
PhD Program: Committee on Social Thought Hometown: Islamabad, Pakistan Education: Harvard University (B.A, Philosophy); University of Chicago (M.A, Divinity) Research: My interest in the history of philosophy is focused mainly on two areas: Ancient Greek and modern German thought. Thematically, I am most interested in questions of metaphysics and epistemology, perception, and the problem of error as they relate to idealist thought. More recently, I have also become interested in questions of political philosophy especially as they pertain to the development of public institutions, especially legal and educational institutions, in post-colonial states.
I competed a BA in Philosophy at Harvard with a focus on modern German thought and medieval Arabic philosophy. In my MA at the University of Chicago, I focused mainly on studying Ancient Greek and Aristotle.
Camille Biron-Boileau
PhD Program: Sociology Hometown: Montreal, Quebec, Canada Education: Université de Montréal, Montreal, B.Sc. in Sociology Research: My research interests lie at the intersection of stratification studies, economic sociology, and gender studies. During my Ph.D., I aim to challenge the way stratification research studies the role of women in the intergenerational reproduction of social advantage by considering their involvement in financial transfers to children, such as inheritance, gifts, and other parental investments. Up until now, intergenerational wealth transmission has been perceived and studied as occurring mainly through the paternal line. However, because this type of transmission involves a great share of emotional and care work, which is disproportionately taken on by women, their involvement in these processes deserves further exploration. Before coming to UChicago, I worked on projects studying testamentary practices and inheritance trends in the context of Quebec and Canada.
Tania Dhaliwal
PhD Program: Developmental Psychology Hometown: Tarn Taran, Punjab, India Education: Stanford University, CA; B.S. in Symbolic Systems; Minor in Data Science Research: Currently, at UChicago, I work with Dr. Susan Levine and Dr. Katherine Kinzler. Broadly, I am interested in the development of mathematical reasoning and concepts: (a) how it unfolds in diverse environments—affected by different cognitive, linguistic and sociocultural factors, and (b) how it affects our social behavior and skills such as negotiation. Prior to joining UChicago, I completed my undergraduate studies at Stanford University, then worked as a research associate at Carnegie Mellon University and as a lab manager at University of Michigan. In my research at these places, I have investigated healthy-eating growth mindsets, cross-cultural development of causal relational reasoning, associative and taxonomic priming effects on the development of word learning, perception and use of generic language, and children’s causal understanding of viral transmission. Apart from research, I enjoy pour-overs, hiking, travelling, late-night news satire shows, and Formula One!
Joe (Zihui) Ding
PhD Program: Philosophy Hometown: Shanghai, China Education: Haverford College, BA, Mathematics and Philosophy Research: Her philosophical interests have been inspired by reflections on human capacity for knowledge, mainly through reading Kant and John McDowell. At the center of her current thinking is the aim to understand the place of rationality in nature. From there, she starts to see the connections with logic, Aristotle’s metaphysics as well as Chinese philosophy, as scattered as they might seem. When not doing philosophy, she likes distilling, though not always successfully, her potentially self-indulgent sentiments into poetry, and taking photos of random subtleties on the road that catch her attention.
Nam Anh Dinh
PhD Program: Computer Science Hometown: Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Education: University of Chicago, B.S., Computer Science; Minor, Linguistics Research: I’m working with Dr. Rana Hanocka and members of the 3DL (Threedle) lab, where we explore the intersection between 3D graphics and deep learning. I’m currently working on deep learning methods for geometry processing and 3D shape representation, with an aim to build fruitful and exploratory creative tooling for artists.
Sana Elgamal
PhD Program: Astronomy & Astrophysics Hometown: Giza, Egypt Education: New York University Abu Dhabi, B.S., Physics Research: My interest lies in the field of theoretical cosmology. I am particularly interested in exploring the Physics of the early Universe and models beyond the standard cosmological paradigm. In the past, I have conducted research in astrophysics and cosmology spanning observations, simulations, and theory. Specifically, I have investigated the formation and evolution of galaxies, explored the nature of dark matter using cosmological simulations, analyzed weak gravitational lensing data, and studied the large-scale structure of the Universe using Lagrangian Perturbation Theory. During my PhD at UChicago, I am very excited to utilize analytical and numerical approaches to further learn about the origin and evolution of structure in the Universe and possibly of new fundamental physics. Currently, I am doing research in the area of inhomogeneous cosmologies using numerical relativity, where I am assessing the impact of backreaction (i.e., the effect of inhomogeneities) on observables. Beside research, I love playing the violin and doing nature photography.
Alex Evert
PhD Program: Political Economics Hometown: Cincinnati, OH Education: University of Rochester, B.S., Political Science, B.A., Physics Research: After initially planning on studying physics, I discovered my passion for applying a more quantitative approach to topics in politics and economics. My current research is on how candidates strategically shape their own perceptions in the electorate and under what conditions that can lead to partisan polarization. At UChicago, I’m hoping to use applied game theory to study how the availability of information impacts the strategic interactions between politicians and voters in elections and in government. On the side, I also enjoy cooking, baking, and playing piano to destress.
Amber Fehrs
PhD Program: Cinema and Media Studies Hometown: Norfolk, NE Education: Brown University, B.A. English, Medieval Cultures Research: I’m interested in topics that deal with the intersection of narrative creation and technological development, including (but not limited to!) podcasting, social media-based fiction such as alternate reality games and collaborative fiction, and fandom. I graduated from Brown University in 2022, where I completed an undergraduate thesis that explored the dynamics of artistic control between podcasters, advertisers, and audiences in our ever-shifting social media landscape. Outside of work, I enjoy running, playing the guitar, and listening to comedy.
Gregory Gorobets
PhD Program: Chemistry Hometown: Los Angeles, CA Education: University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA; B.S., Chemistry Research: At UCLA, I discovered my passion for chemistry under the guidance of Dr. Alexander Spokoyny. Driven by the potential for advances in chemistry to address pressing environmental challenges, I pursued further research at Oak Ridge National Laboratory where I worked with Dr. Ramesh Bhave to develop membrane-solvent extraction techniques capable of recycling critical and scarce elements from lithium-ion batteries. As a graduate student at the University of Chicago, I am excited to research interfacial self-assembly on electrode materials to advance techniques that allow us to shift away from fossil fuels and achieve carbon negativity in a scalable way. Outside of the lab, you can find me watching Formula 1, bouldering at a local climbing gym, and exploring all of Chicago’s fantastic coffee and food!
Devin Green
PhD Program: Political Science Hometown: Baltimore, MD Education: Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD; B.A., Political Science Research: My research interests relate to the tension between wealthy interests and people’s movements in the political arena. My B. A thesis, supervised by Dr. Hahrie Han, illuminated the strained political conditions that drive activists to form coalitions with their “natural enemy” in politics, corporations. At the University of Chicago, I am researching the role of corporations and wealthy individuals in bankrolling police departments, prosecutors, etc., and the dire consequences of these relationships for race-class subjugated communities. These projects reflect my current research agenda of demonstrating the role of political and economic elites in subverting the interests of racial minorities and the poor. Before transferring to Johns Hopkins, I earned my A. A at the Community College of Baltimore County and I am passionate about mentoring students from backgrounds like mine. Outside of academia, I am an avid gamer and coffee shop enthusiast.
Nicole Hart
PhD Program: Sociology Hometown: Houston, TX Education: University of Houston, Houston, TX; B.S., Sociology; M.A., Sociology Research: My focus lies in anti-Black racism and how that affects Black well-being in several contexts with a particular focus on urban sociology. I have previously completed studies on Black-White education disparities, racial differences in mental health coping strategies, and racial disparities in flooding in Houston, Texas. My goal at the University of Chicago is to incorporate geospatial data methodology, as well as qualitative methods, to investigate how anti-Black racism affects Black Americans in urban contexts.
Wenke (Coco) Huang
PhD Program: Joint PhD program in East Asian Languages and Civilizations and Theatre and Performance Studies Hometown: Beijing, China Education: Northwestern University, Evanston, B.A. Performance Studies Research: Coco has worked in Chicago and Beijing as a freelance dramaturg and director. As a scholar-artist, she is interested in the adaptations of classical myths and legends, physical theatre, and dance dramaturgy, in particular the folk dances of ethnic minorities in rural China. Focusing on Han China’s geographical and ethnic periphery, she hopes to investigate the interconnections of four cultural elements all pronounced “wu” in Chinese: martial arts, dance, witchcraft, and (performance) objects. Subsequently, how these expressive devices have consolidated and preserved the cultural identities of ethnic subgroups, manifested in the nation’s classical dance history and performance repertoire, and fused into contemporary choreography by Chinese and international artists.
Emir Faruk Kayahan
PhD Program: PhD in Germanic Studies Hometown: Bremen, Germany Education: BA in German Studies, Islamic Religious Education and BA in Islamic Theology, University of Osnabrück (21), MSt in Islamic Studies and History, Oxford University (22), MSt in Comparative Literature and Critical Translation, Oxford University (23) Research: Emir primarily focuses on the bidirectional cross-cultural exchange in philosophy and literature between the “Orient” and the “Occident.” His research centers on 18th-century German Enlightenment discussions of religion by thinkers like Kant, Lessing, Mendelssohn, and Goethe, including both their reception of Islamic thought and literature, and their reception by thinkers in the Islamic world. His ongoing projects include examining the reception of Immanuel Kant’s theoretical philosophy in the Muslim world, especially through the work of Ottoman Shaykh al-Islam Mustafa Sabri Efendi (1869-1954), and investigating the literary and philosophical reception of Andalusian philosopher Ibn Ṭufayl (d. 581/1185) in the German Enlightenment.
Juliet Kelso
PhD Program: Comparative Human Development Hometown: Santa Cruz, CA Education: Williams College, Williamstown, MA (B.A., Anthropology and German Studies); Georgetown University, School of Foreign Service, Washington, D.C. (M.A., German and European Studies) Research: I study the representation, participation, and exclusion of asylum seekers and refugees in social and political contexts, particularly in Germany and Europe. In my previous research, I have examined art workshops for refugees, housing for asylum seekers, and the political participation of noncitizens in Germany. In my free time, I like to cook, embroider, play darts, learn languages, and send postcards.
Edmund Kennedy
PhD Program: History Hometown: Cleveland, OH Education: Amherst College, B.A. in History Research: My research interests focus on understanding the interworkings of the U.S. empire throughout the Pacific. For my undergraduate thesis, I focused on the U.S. Civil Administration on Okinawa following the end of the Second World War. At UChicago, I want to expand my focus to include more countries and territories throughout the Pacific, such as Korea and the Philippines, to fully encapsulate what “empire” looks like for the U.S. When I am not researching, I enjoy finding new cafes, record shops, and antique stores.
Matt King
PhD Program: Physics Hometown: Syracuse, NY Education: Yale University, New Haven, CT; M.S. Physics, B.S. Physics and Mathematics Research: I think neutrinos are wild. There is so much that we are on the precipice of learning about them, and I am excited to be a part of that present and future. I am currently a collaborator on the LArIAT, SBND, and DUNE liquid argon neutrino experiments at Fermilab, which are instrumental in figuring out neutrinos’ role in the standard model and beyond. Specifically, I will be (most likely) measuring an interaction cross section of neutrinos in argon or a neutrino oscillation parameter on SBND for my thesis. While studying neutrinos piques my wonder, teaching students brings me profound joy. I have been a TA for physics and math courses for the past four years, and I intend on participating in CTL programs at UChicago to improve my craft. When not doing physics, I enjoy playing piano, writing short stories and poems, running half marathons, and playing with my dog.
Cathy Yuanchen Li
PhD Program: Computer Science Hometown: Beijing, China Education: UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA; B.A., Cognitive Science, Computer Science, Data Science, Linguistics, Statistics, and Applied Mathematics Research: My research interests are broadly at the intersection of machine learning, security, and privacy. I also seek to understand more about computing, logic, and cognition in general. At UChicago, I will be studying adversarial machine learning. Previously, I was at FAIR doing research on post-quantum cryptanalysis, focusing on attacking lattice-based encryption.
Hailey Main
PhD program: Organic Chemistry Hometowns: Columbus, OH Education: Ohio State University, Columbus, OH; B.A., Chemistry Research: My undergraduate research was focused on the synthesis of novel small-molecule therapeutics for the treatment of organophosphorus intoxication under the advisement of Dr. Christopher Hadad and Dr. Christopher Callam. I am very excited to continue developing my knowledge and skills in organic synthesis here at UChicago. In my free time, I love to explore new restaurants and coffee shops, watch reality competition shows, and spend time with friends!
Sofia Ortega-Guerrero
PhD Program: Art History Hometown: Oakland, CA Education: Yale University, New Haven, CT; B.A., Art History, Economics Research: Grounded in the Indigenous arts of Latin America, my research explores thematic interests in material ontology, faith aesthetics, corporeal ornamentation, and syncretism. My previous research for my undergraduate thesis, for instance, addressed the selective appropriation of diverse Indigenous dress practices toward the postrevolutionary construction of an ‘authentic’ Mexican image. Titled “Between Specificity and Myth: An Analysis of Carlos Mérida’s ‘Mexican Costume,’” the thesis earned the A. Conger Goodyear Fine Arts Award and the Diane Kaplan Memorial Senior Essay Prize, which prompted its publishing in Yale University Library’s EliScholar. With aspirations of a curatorial career, I have also held internships at the Yale University Art Gallery, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, among others. In my free time, I enjoy baking, looking at art, and keeping up with my family.
Henry Stratakis-Allen
PhD Program: Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Westport, CT Education: William & Mary, BA (Medieval & Renaissance Studies and Mathematics) Research: My research focuses on the political and intellectual landscape of Islamic civilization during the era of the Crusades. I am particularly interested in the social and political context of al-Ghazali’s philosophy and its influence on the development of Islamic thought; this topic lies at the intersection of the history of ideas and so-called ‘social history’. The ultimate aim of this project is to properly situate al-Ghazali’s philosophy within the sweep of Islamic history. At William & Mary, my senior thesis studied the social and political environment of Baghdad in the decades before al-Ghazali began teaching in the city.
Alec Sun
PhD Program: Computer Science Hometown: Bolton, Massachusetts Education: Harvard University, AB/SM Research: My primary research area is algorithmic game theory. I am currently working on information design, where the goal is to first measure the extent to which the provision of information alone can influence behavior in limited-information settings and then design optimal mechanisms to release such information. In the future l also want to work on practical operations research problems involving social and economic systems. Outside of research I like contract bridge, frisbee, and piano.
Pramantha Tagore
PhD Program: Music Hometown: Kolkata, India Education: Jadavpur University, Kolkata, M. Phil; MA., English Literature Research: My research explores the interplay between music, race, and cultural politics in the long nineteenth century. A prominent emphasis of my work has been on historical practices of music-making in modern South Asia, particularly in colonial Bengal, and how these practices, in turn, shape cultural identities. On the musical side, I am a professional Sarod player trained in the Maihar-Senia tradition of Hindustani Music. As a performer, I have collaborated with institutions and ensembles spread across a wide variety of genres and performance traditions, including those of South Asia, Indonesia, the United States, the Middle East, and Australia.
“Willers” Muye Yang
PhD Program: Computer Science Hometown: Henan, China Education: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA; B.S., Mathematics with Computer Science, Physics Research: I am broadly interested in quantum computing and quantum information. Fascinated by the intricacy and complexity of the problems in this field, I hope to apply theoretical tools and concepts to tackle the practical challenges of designing an efficient, fault-tolerant quantum system that has the potential to compute classically unfeasible tasks. Here at UChicago, I plan to work with Prof. Fred Chong to improve the constructions and implementations of quantum low-density parity check codes to better harness their power for low-overhead executions of impactful quantum algorithms.
Yingxin Zhang
PhD Program: South Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Guangdong, China Education: Jawaharlal Nehru University, MA Sanskrit; Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, BA Hindi Research: Broadly speaking, I am interested in Sanskrit texts related to alaṁkāra, arthaśāstra, kāvya, and vedānta. My project will revolve around the works of Mallinātha, a Sanskrit scholar who flourished in fourteenth-century South India. This endeavor aims to explore the ways in which the interaction between his creative ingenuity and commentarial talent contributes to his philological practices that both connect him to some pre-existing fields and make sense in terms of his social and cultural milieu. Outside of academic studies, I spend a lot of time playing ping-pong.
Jieming Zhu
PhD Program: East Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Beijing, China Education: BA in Comparative Literature, and Chinese Language and Literature, The University of Hong Kong, 2021; MA in East Asian Languages and Cultures, Columbia University, 2023 Research: I’m interested in the politics and poetics of family revolutions in modern Chinese and Sinophone cultures, spanning late-Qing anarchism, Maoist utopianism, and contemporary queer-feminist radicalism. My master’s thesis investigated the transnational articulations of Marxist-feminist theoretical and literary writings in early-twentieth-century China, examining the insights and limitations of revolutionary intellectuals including He-Yin Zhen, Friedrich Engels, Alexandra Kollontai, Ding Ling, and Luo Qiong. During PhD studies I hope to further integrate theoretical perspectives with a grounded analysis of social history.
Name: Ivan Aleksandrov
PhD Program: Sociology Hometown: Moscow, Russia Education:: Lomonosov Moscow State University (B.A., African Studies); Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences / University of Manchester (M.A., Sociology) Research: My primary research focus is on the production of social knowledge; this topic has intrigued me since my undergraduate studies. My perspective on this matter, however, has shifted significantly since then. Currently, I am interested in studying knowledge production by using insights from field theory, social aesthetics and recent developments in sociology of moral judgment. I am especially enthusiastic about examining the political and intellectual shifts/conversions occurring in academic and intellectual fields. Accordingly, I am also intrigued by the dynamics of ‘politicization-depoliticization’ and corresponding changes in popularity of certain research objects and theoretical frameworks in Soviet and post-Soviet social sciences and humanities. In addition to that, I am especially interested in studying the intellectual life of Soviet scholars who were involved in knowledge production about Africa as area experts. My more broad research interests include such topics as pragmatism and sociology, historical comparative research and STS. Aside from my job, I am a huge basketball fan and old comedy movies enjoyer.
Name: Lara Safinaz Balikci
PhD program: Music Hometown: Greenwich, CT Education: McGill University, Montreal, QC; M.A., Music Theory; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; B.A., Music Research: I am an interdisciplinary music theorist specializing in the late 19th- and 20th-century European avant-garde. I was previously the Research Assistant in Modern and Contemporary Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, where I assisted in curatorial work for Remedios Varo: Science Fictions (2023). My research on music and the esoteric teachings of George Gurdjieff and Pytor Ouspensky in Varo’s painting Harmony (1956) and on her sculpture Homo Rodans was published as two essays in the exhibition catalogue. I am currently reading Tibetan Buddhist philosophy and a board member of the University of Chicago Buddhist Association. I also enjoy learning about Turkish music theory and am a classically trained flutist.
Name: Serena Debesai
PhD Program: Biophysical Sciences Hometown: Silver Spring, MD Education: Stanford University, Stanford, CA; B.S., Physics Research: I am broadly interested in using ideas from physics, statistics, and computational biology to study how collective behaviors arise in complex biological systems. My goal during my graduate studies is to work closely with experimentalists to guide my theoretical studies and test predictions. In my undergraduate thesis, I studied how biodiversity emerges and is maintained in a specific class of ecological models where the community has a metapopulation structure. Outside of research, I am passionate about developing effective physics pedagogy in addition to eliminating racial, gender, and socioeconomic disparities in STEM disciplines. I believe realizing the latter goal requires building institutions that guarantee communities access to adequate healthcare, food, shelter, and educational resources; during my undergraduate studies, I worked at Stanford’s free student run health clinic in addition to participating in physics outreach initiatives. In my free time, I enjoy attending concerts, running, hiking, and spending time with friends and family.
Name: Marley Downes
PhD Program: Materials Chemistry Education: Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA; B.S./M.S. in Material Science & Engineering, Minor in Mathematics Research: At Drexel, I began my research journey as part of the freshman STAR Scholar program where I investigated the interaction of MXenes (2-dimensional nanomaterials) in Lithium-Sulfur batteries. Realizing my passion for synthesis, I focused my subsequent research on the synthesis of MXenes and their ceramic precursors, MAX phase to better understand their structure-property relationships. At UChicago, I am very excited to delve into material synthesis with more of a chemistry focus! Outside of the lab, you can usually find me rock-climbing, painting, or snuggling with my cats, Evangeline and Lasagna.
Name: Eli Frankel
PhD Program: Political Science Hometown: Brooklyn, NY Education: Harvard University, A.B., Social Studies Research: I study political theory, with a focus on the intellectual and labor history of the 19th and 20th centuries. I first developed those interests during my undergraduate years at Harvard, where I examined the relationships between Jürgen Habermas, Herbert Marcuse, and 1960s student protesters. Since then, I’ve become more interested in the history of analytic ethics. I am especially intrigued by competing conceptions of normative philosophy’s practical commitments. I like to swim in Lake Michigan.
Name: Isabel Gephart
PhD Program: Psychology Hometown: Ithaca, NY Education: Colgate University, Hamilton, NY; B.A., Applied Mathematics and Neuroscience Research: I work with Dr. Monica Rosenberg and use fMRI to investigate differences between and within individuals across time. Specifically, I am interested in how fluctuations in biological and lifestyle factors (hormone levels, sleep/activity cycles, etc.) alter brain function on the scale of days-months, and how those changes are reflected in behavior. Before UChicago, I did my undergrad at Colgate University where I used EEG to model the sparcification of images in the visual system. I then did a postbac at the NIH in the Section on Functional Imaging Methods where I used fMRI to investigate how slow, spatiotemporal waves in brain activity are related to ongoing thought. Outside of research I love traveling, running, spending time with friends, and being outside as much as possible!
Name: Rose Gotlieb
PhD program: Committee on Social Thought Hometown: Williamstown, MA Education: Swarthmore College, BA Research: I completed my B.A. in philosophy with a particular focus on Aristotelian ethics and politics. I am now interested in the possibility of virtue ethics in modernity – a question that I think is best read through Aristotle, Heidegger, and a handful of 20th century authors including Ford Madox Ford. Other research interests include our experiences of history in general, in ancient philosophy, and in Charles Dickens. In my free time, I like running and playing cello.
Name: Max Hancock
PhD Program: History Hometown: Milwaukie, Oregon Education: Hendrix College, Conway, AR; B.A., International Relations; University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; M.A., International Relations Research: I study 20th century intellectual history and the history of capitalism in the United States, with a special focus on political control over the economy, impersonal power over people, and (nominally) free markets. As a doctoral student at the University of Chicago, I look forward to researching the history of neoliberal economic thought and the types of compulsion and social control that underwrite Cold War theories of rational choice, justice, and equilibrium.
Name: Edmund Kennedy
PhD Program: History Hometown: Cleaveland, OH Education: Amherst College, B.A. in History Research: My research interests focus on understanding the interworkings of the U.S. empire throughout the Pacific. For my undergraduate thesis, I focused on the U.S. Civil Administration on Okinawa following the end of the Second World War. At UChicago, I want to expand my focus to include more countries and territories throughout the Pacific, such as Korea and the Philippines, to fully encapsulate what “empire” looks like for the U.S. When I am not researching, I enjoy finding new cafes, record shops, and antique stores.
Name: Katharina Krause
PhD Program: Middle Eastern Studies Hometown: Hagen, Germany Education: Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany, BA in History and Philosophy; University of Oxford, UK, MPhil in Modern Middle Eastern Studies Research: I am a historian in training focusing on Late Ottoman History and the Ottoman legacy in the Balkans and SWANA. In my MPhil research, I have sought to situate publications about Ottoman governance in Yemen within a wider discourse revolving around morality and productivity, which arose in the context of the empire’s nineteenth century reforms, in order to shed light on the representation of the imperial periphery to Istanbul’s reading public. During my doctoral studies, I am interested in further exploring matters related to space in the context of Late Ottoman History. For example, I hope to investigate the intersection of an emerging discourse on productivity with the extractive exploitation of the imperial periphery’s natural resources as well as to understand the meaning of territory (as well as its actual and potential loss) as a conceptual category central to the sense of anxiety widely understood as a guiding motivation for the empire’s defensive reform project. I am also keen to continue leaning languages at UChicago — a passion which has brought me to the study of the Ottoman Empire in the first place.
Name: Mark Larson
Program: Physics Hometown: Minnetonka, MN Education: Northeastern University, Boston, MA; B.S., Physics, Mathematics Research: My passion in research has always been in understanding elementary particles and their interactions. This, along with the marvel of particle colliders and their detectors, led me to working on upgrades of the CMS detector for the High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider and conducting studies into the feasibility of building future particle colliders. Additionally, I worked in a connectomic lab that studied neuronal circuits in animal brains; this helped introduce me to the incredible opportunities that using novel Machine Learning techniques brings to all scientific fields. At The University of Chicago, I hope to continue to pursue my passions by conducting a search for new physics with the ATLAS detector, developing new data filtering techniques for future detectors using firmware implementations of Machine Learning, and studying the feasibility of a muon collider, an exciting future collider concept. Outside of physics, I enjoy history, learning new languages, hiking, and playing basketball!
Name: Jiahao Li
PhD Program: Chemistry Hometown: Shanghai, China Education: Peking University; B.S., Chemistry & Economics (Double degree) Research: Activated by surprising phenomena and inspiring prospect, my undergraduate research is mainly based on ionizing radiation-induced reactions. It is an unexplored intersection of radiation chemistry and organic synthesis. I have successfully advanced toolboxes to address practical challenges and merged it with transition metal-catalyzed coupling and late-stage functionalization. In graduate school, I look forward to applying my insight into organic chemistry to chemical biology, especially in the field of labeling modified bases in DNA and RNA, aiming at novel sequencing methods. In spare time, I enjoy playing soccer as a goalkeeper. The sense of achievement after critical saves and the sense of honor after winning games constitute my passion.
Name: elena rose light
PhD Program: English and Theater and Performance Studies Hometown: Camarillo, CA (Micqanaqa’n) Education: Institute for Applied Theater Studies, Justus-Liebig University Giessen, MA Choreography and Performance; Yale University, BA History of Art and French Research: As a scholar-artist, I bring my experience as an experimental choreographer, performer, facilitator, and creative producer to bear on critical theories of particular bodies. Bridging arts practice and scholarly research, I seek to explore my (white, trans, not-currently-disabled, imaginary) body as a site of mediation and experimentation; to understand how it and other bodies are affect-ed by social scripts and political formations; and to identify where agency (if any) might be located within body-based practices. I cemented my understanding of choreography as an epistemological pursuit during my MA in Choreography and Performance, researching relational attunement between self and other while creating community performance projects with other transgender people across Europe. At the University of Chicago, I am excited to embark on a project of reparative study, researching the relationship between somatic practices and scores, US cultural history, and Western philosophies of the body in the wake of colonial corporeal hierarchies.
Name: Michaela Milgrom
PhD Program: Art History Hometown: Toronto, Canada Education: Princeton University (B.A. in Art History); The Courtauld Institute of Art (M.A. in Art History) Research: My research addresses questions of abstraction, gender, cliché, and failure in twentieth-century American art. I’m particularly interested in those women whose earnest commitment to modern forms—like gestural painting—and ideas—like subjective expression—left their work out of step with the advances of American art history after 1960. Before grad school, I was Research Assistant for Mark Rothko Projects at the National Gallery of Art. There, I contributed to the exhibition Mark Rothko: Paintings on Paper (2023-24) and authored entries for the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of Rothko’s works on paper. In my free time, I enjoy attempting DIY projects, attending concerts, singing in the shower, and doting on my beloved Scottish Fold, Dottie.
Name: Catherine Nelli
PhD Program: South Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Richmond, VA Education: Brown University, B.A., Sanskrit Classics, Comparative Literature, International and Public Affairs Research: I study the emic and etic literary reception of classical Sanskrit texts. My current work focuses on the Sanskritic and Bengali commentarial and adaptational reception of Jayadeva’s Gītagovinda, a 12th-century love poem, alongside the text’s 19th-century French and English colonial reception. I began this line of research during my undergrad, where I also studied decolonization and nationalism in French India, and I continued to expand the project during a Fulbright-Nehru Student Research Grant in Kolkata, India. In my free time, I enjoy knitting and crocheting, reading, baking, and taking walks.
Name: Jon Ort
PhD Program: PhD program in History Hometown: Highlands Ranch, CO Education: Yale Divinity School, New Haven, CT; Master of Divinity (M.Div.); Princeton University, Princeton, NJ; A.B. in History Research: I study how Christian discourse has shaped the modern making of race, particularly as regards Liberia. My interests include Back-to-Africa thought, Black theological movements, decolonization, the relation between Christian missionaries and empire, and slavery and abolition. As a volunteer with the Princeton and Slavery Project, I researched how the Firestone Company’s exploitation of Liberia propelled Princeton University’s modern rise. In 2023, I traveled to Liberia through a Graduate Research Fellowship with Yale University’s Gilder Lehrman Center. My undergraduate thesis traced, contrary to predominant narratives, how Jamaican laborers devised insurgent tactics against British rule in 1938. As a 2023 alum of Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics, I have considered the moral responsibilities — and risks — that result from professional authority. On my own time, I enjoy live music, late-night conversations, and exploring my home state of Colorado, especially with a camera in hand. I’m an identical twin.
Name: Lauren Selden
PhD Program: PhD program in History Hometown: Portland, OR Education: Stanford University, Stanford, CA; B.A., History Research: I study the religious history of early modern England and its empire. In my undergraduate thesis, I examined how both the Reformation and colonization changed the concepts of pilgrimage in English Christianity from a physical journey to a shrine into a spiritual journey through life on earth. At UChicago, I hope to explore how global colonization shaped English Christian ideology, especially through English encounters with people of religions with which they were not familiar. In my free time, I like to bake, spend time with family and friends, and hike. In fact, I have backpacked over 3000 miles along medieval pilgrimage paths through England, France, Spain, Switzerland, and Italy. Most recently, I walked from Canterbury to Rome along the route taken by Archbishop Sigeric in the year 990.
Name: Jeongwon Shin
PhD Program: East Asian Languages and Civilizations Hometown: Seoul, South Korea| Education: Seoul National University, MA, Communication; Seoul National University, BA, Sociology Research: My research interests include K-pop, P-pop, the Korean Wave (Hallyu), globalization, and Asian popular culture. I am particularly interested in the tensions between nationalism and globalization within transnational fandoms and cultural industries. After receiving her B.A. in Sociology and her M.A. in Communication from Seoul National University, I worked as a research assistant at the Center for Hallyu Studies at the Asia Center of Seoul National University. My areas of study span from global media and postcolonialism to fan studies and media industries. I hope to explore the transnational dynamics of East Asian popular culture during my doctoral studies.
Name: Samuel Shoemaker
PhD Program: Joint Social Thought and Classics Hometown: Charlotte, NC Education: B.A. Indiana University (2024) Classics, Philosophy, and Economics Research: My research focuses on the interaction between different genres, especially the reception of philosophy, history, and economics in literature. My B.A. thesis focused on how Ovid’s poeticisms in his epic poem the Metamorphoses reveal his position that the Roman pietas is morally empty, and to what degree humor can be used to combat the resulting absurdism. More recently, I have been developing interests in intertextuality and creativity, especially as a method of reacting to being “a bubble on the tide of empire” to quote Robert Penn Warren. When not reading, I hike, watch movies (especially horror films), and enjoy southern food.
Name: Wafa Asher Syeda
PhD program: Comparative Literature Hometown: Hyderabad, Pakistan Education: New York University, MA History; Lahore University of Management Sciences; B.A., History. Research: I’m a first year PhD student working on Urdu and Arabic decolonial and anticolonial literatures, third world internationalism, affect theory and queer theory. My proposed project looks at the role of the progressive writer in the process of decolonization and the alternative, transnational and utopic forms of belonging they envisioned outside of the nation-state model. My previous work as a Fulbright scholar at NYU focused on the work of two Progressive writers in India/Pakistan, Ismat Chughtai and Rashid Jahan. I have been involved in community organising for the last seven years, and see my academic work as a part of a greater praxis towards liberation. Apart from thinking about worlds otherwise, I enjoy hosting dinners for friends, dancing to old Bollywood and qawwalis, making jewellery and painting.
Name: Maya Sibul
PhD Program: English Language and Literature Hometown: Chicago, IL Education: Barnard College, New York, NY, USA (BA); University of Oxford, Oxford, UK (MSt) Research: At its core, my work explores the history and politics of perception through the lens of literature. I’m interested in what happens to art under late capitalism — and the impact of financialization on sensory perception. Examining the economic assumptions that undergird descriptive practices, I study the ways in which aesthetic experience is structured by a shift from the commodity to the asset form in late 20th and early 21st century novels. Prior to UChicago, I worked as a journalist for a small financial publication in London. I’ve also been a reading volunteer, working with kids from the ages of two through twelve, and the Editor of The Oxonian Review, a UK-based literary/criticism publication.
Name: Uduma Umeh
PhD Program: Linguistics Hometown: Ohafia, Nigeria Education: B.A. (English language/ literature) Abia State University, Uturu, Nigeria; M.A. (English language with concentration in experimental syntax) the University of Ibadan, Nigeria Research: Uduma is a first year PhD student in linguistics. He is interested in experimental syntax and its interfaces with morphology and semantics. He has already researched on the cross-linguistic variations of various kinds of ellipsis in English and Igbo (his native language) through the Minimalist lens of Jason Merchant’s E-Feature/E-Givenness theory of ellipsis licensing. His future inquiry, amongst others, will include a preliminary investigation into the availability of different ellipsis kinds across the Niger-Congo group of languages.
Name: Weizhou Wang
PhD Program: Chemistry Hometown: Chengdu, China Education: Peking University, B.S., Chemistry; Minor, Economics Research: My research interests lie in theoretical chemistry and statistical mechanics, with a current focus on integrating machine learning with physical laws. During my undergraduate studies at Peking University, I worked under the guidance of Prof. Jian Liu to develop an efficient integrator for molecular dynamics simulations in an isothermal-isobaric system. In my free time, I enjoy working out at the gym, taking walks by the lake, and skiing in the winter.
Name: Kangmin Wen
PhD Program: PhD program in Chemistry Hometown: Anqing, China Education: University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China; B.S., Chemistry Research: I am deeply fascinated by the art of organic chemistry. In my undergraduate years, I devoted myself to electrosynthesis, incorporating green chemistry and robust transformations into current organic methodology. At UChicago, I will focus on boron chemistry and C-C bond activation, unlocking new possibilities for molecular editing. My ambition is to integrate knowledge of electrochemistry, organometallics and biology, forge new pathways to valuable molecules, and contribute to the entire human society. In my free time, I enjoy jogging, skiing, and playing mahjong.
Name: Ruby Wen
PhD program: PhD program in Chemistry Hometown: Suzhou, China Education: University of California – San Diego, B.Sc. in Chemistry. Research: As an undergraduate at UC San Diego, I worked with Professor Yitzhak Tor, using fluorescence-based chiroptical methods to study local conformations in nucleic acids, which introduced me to the world of chirality in biology. Now, as a graduate student, I am fascinated by fundamental questions about the nature of life, ranging from chirality to non-equilibrium thermodynamics of living systems. Outside the lab, you’ll often find me walking by the lake or jotting down thoughts in my notebook at various spots around Hyde Park. Recently, I discovered a passion for teaching, and I now spend much of my time reflecting on how to approach it effectively.
Name: Abby Williams
PhD Program: Physics Hometown: Oklahoma City, OK Education: New York University; B.A., Physics Research: My interests center on cosmology, in particular what the growth and evolution of large-scale structure can reveal about the nature of dark matter. I’m also excited about the use of gravitational waves as a new cosmological probe. Before coming to UChicago, I worked on the development of calibration algorithms for SPHEREx, an upcoming NASA space telescope, as well as forecasts for novel cross-correlation techniques using simulated galaxy catalogs, and measurements of quasar anisotropy on large angular scales. More broadly, I’m passionate about the connection between physics and philosophy, and learning how to make science accessible to everyone. Beyond physics, I enjoy cycling, coffee, playing guitar, and exploring new places in the city.
Jierui (Jerry) Zhu
PhD Program: Statistics Hometown: Chongqing, China/Toronto, Canada Education: University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; B.Sc., Statistics Research: I draw motivation from my belief that statistics is a foundational tool to make sense of everything in today’s rapidly changing and data-driven world. At UChicago, I aim to develop methods for large-scale data applications with theoretical guarantees. During undergrad, I was fortunate to work with esteemed researchers on optimization, economics, and optimal transport at University of Toronto and EPFL. Outside of research, I enjoy tennis and reading.
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