Members
Alex Hack | Cinema and Media Studies, GSS, VISS, & DGMC
Emma Ben Ayoun | Cinema and Media Studies
Adrienne Adams | American Studies and Ethnicity
Yiyan Pan | Cinema and Media Studies
About: This working group takes an interdisciplinary and collaborative approach to clarify the high stakes of health care for the femme/feminized body, particularly in clinical spaces. To this end, the working group focuses on discourses about the social and political dimensions of health and the intersections of race, class, and gender with illness, disability, and vulnerability. The group is attuned to the various ways reproductive rights and access to health for trans youth are under siege across the United States. In this context, the working group aims to make clear what constitutes a feminist approach to health and what feminist healthcare practices look like in an increasingly precarious everyday. Some of the core questions for this working group including the following: What might historically feminized labor practices, such as midwifery, teach us about the relationship between power, gender, and motherhood? What are the gendered dimensions of discourses of immunity, virality, infection? What can feminist care ethics look like in a post-2020 reality, and how can they skirt the unimaginative bourgeois tedium of American healthcare?
Members
Nicole V. Bush | Communication & GSS
Hayun Cho | East Asian Languages and Cultures & GSS
Claire Crawford | Political Science and International Relations & GSS
Caitlin Joy Dobson | Communication & GSS
Sarah Ernst | History
Nancy Hernandez | Political Science and International Relations & GSS
Sayantani Jani | History
Dr. Perry B. Johnson | Communication & GSS
Chaerim Kim | Political Science and International Relations & GSS
Paulina Lanz | Communication & Cinema Studies
Azeb Madebo | Communication
Muira McCammon | Communication
Alexia Orengo Green | History
Fernanda Soria Cruz | Communication & GSS
Kayla Wolf | Political Science and International Relations & GSS
About: This working group reflects a multidisciplinary group of scholars who approach the study of violence and trauma through an intersectional framework. This grassroots collective is built by Ph.D. students and candidates across departments and disciplines, whose work remains rooted in the following four pillars of research: (1) Violence and Trauma studies (2) Intersectionality studies (3) Feminist theory / Gender & Sexuality studies (4) Transnational studies. Led by Ph.D. students and candidates currently spanning 4-5 Ph.D. departments at USC and 2-3 academic institutions, and under the advisement of Dr. Ange-Marie Hancock Alfaro and Dr. Jane Junn, our group aims to meet graduate scholars at whatever point they may be in their PhD program, whether joining as a first-year student, navigating their qualifying examination experience, working to create and grow community-based projects, planning their dissertation, or heading toward the job market. The group emphasizes trauma-informed approaches to research, pedagogy, anti-violence activism, and the ways in which the gaps can be bridged between them. Their activities include workshops, events, and group research projects, among other collaborative opportunities such as anti-sexual violence programming on campus and in conference settings.