雅伎著

Faculty & Staff Accomplishments

We are excited to share recent accomplishments from faculty and staff members at our campuses around the world.

Accomplishments are listed by date of achievement in reverse chronological order, with the most recent first.

Eugene Kelly

College of Arts and Sciences

Eugene Kelly, Ph.D., adjunct professor in the Department of Humanities, published a paper, , in the Edith Stein and Max Scheler in Dialogue, Bloomsbury Academic, on January 1, 2026.

Jonathan Goldman

College of Arts and Sciences

Jonathan Ezra Goldman, Ph.D., professor of English, Department of Humanities, contributed a peer-reviewed chapter, "Teaching Ulysses in Nonacademic Spaces," to , published by University Press of Florida on December 16, 2025.

Elaine Brown

College of Arts and Sciences

Elaine Brown, Ph.D., department chair and associate professor of humanities, conducted a narrative medicine workshop for faculty and students at the University of Kentucky College of Medicine on December 3, 2025.

Lynn Rogoff

College of Arts and Sciences

Lynn Rogoff, M.F.A., adjunct associate professor of English, Department of Humanities, was featured in USA Today's , on November 7, 2025, highlighting her film, Bird Woman, and AI chatbots made with the help of a 雅伎著 grant.

Amanda Golden

College of Arts and Sciences

Amanda Golden, Ph.D., associate professor of English in the Department of Humanities, presented "Robert Lowell and The New Yorker" on the roundtable, "Midcentury Boston Poetic Infrastructures: Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, and Anne Sexton" at the in Boston, Mass., October 912, 2025. She also chaired the panel, "Archive as Infrastructure: Rerouting Modernist Paradigms." Golden served as a mentor for an early-career researcher at the conference, as part of a new program. Golden was a member of the conference organizing committee and is now vice president of the Modernist Studies Association. The conference marked the end of her year as second vice president, the first in a three-year term concluding with president.

Chinmoy Bhattacharjee

College of Arts and Sciences

Chinmoy Bhattacharjee, Ph.D., assistant professor of physics in the College of Arts and Sciences, published a paper, in the Physical Review E journal, his fourth single-author paper in this journal, on October 9, 2025. The article explores the structure of magnetic and flow fields in dusty plasmas. It illuminates the impact of Einstein's theory of general relativity in dusty plasmas, which is critical for star formation in the universe.

Kate E. O'Hara

College of Arts and Sciences

Kate E. OHara, Ph.D., associate professor of interdisciplinary studies, spoke about Ethical Considerations of GenAI on September 30, 2025, with undergraduate students in the course, Digital and AI Literacy, which is part of the Foundation Core at Flame University in Pune, India. OHara discussed topics such as transparency, academic integrity, bias, and societal impacts associated with the use of generative artificial intelligence.

Lynn Rogoff

College of Arts and Sciences

Lynn Rogoff, M.F.A., adjunct associate professor of English, Department of Humanities, published an article, "," in AI Journal, on September 18, 2025. The research demonstrated how AI video can expand creative possibilities without replacing the human creative teams insights that drive truly resonant work.

Jonathan Goldman

College of Arts and Sciences

Jonathan Ezra Goldman, Ph.D., professor of English, Department of Humanities, published an article, "," in an online magazine, Mondoweiss: News and Opinion about Palestine, Israel, and the United States, on September 13, 2025. Though classified as an opinion piece, the article uses Goldman's archival work to offer an historical account of anti-Zionism in 1920s NYC, situating Zohran Mamdani within this intersectional tradition.

Sebastien Marion

Library

Edward Guiliano, Ph.D., president emeritus and professor of English in the Department of Humanities, and Sebastien Marion, M.L.I.S., M.B.A., librarian III, virtual services, have published a scholarly article in Dickens Studies Annual, titled, "." The article was published on September 1, 2025.

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