Chair(s)
Jesus G. Smith (He, Him, His)
Jesús Gregorio Smith is an Associate Professor and chair of the Ethnic Studies Program as well as an Associated Colleges of the Midwest (ACM) Andrew W. Mellon Fellow.
All Faculty
Ameya S. Balsekar
My interests are in the sub-field of Comparative Politics, with a focus on developing countries, the politics of identity, political rhetoric, and constitution-making. I also teach courses on democracies and dictatorships in comparative perspective, and the politics of cities.
Elizabeth Carlson
Sigma Colon
Sigma Colón holds a joint appointment in Environmental Studies and Ethnic Studies. She has a PhD in American Studies from Yale University and an MA in History and BA in English literature and Spanish from the University of Arizona.
Carla Daughtry
As an Arabic-speaking and Italian-speaking cultural anthropologist, I teach what I research academically— society and cultures in the Middle East and Africa, the impact of migration and globalization on cultures, the anthropology of food, sex/gender/sexuality systems acros
Sonja Lynn Downing (she/her/hers)
I am an ethnomusicologist with research interests in Balinese gamelan music and dance, traditional music pedagogy, the intersection of gender and performance, and ecomusicology.
Jose L. Encarnacion (He/Him/His)
Ornella J. Hills
Karen A. Hoffmann (She/her/hers)
I teach courses in the English department and the Ethnic Studies program, such as Literature of the Harlem Renaissance, Toni Morrison, Expressions of Ethnicity: Ethnicity and the Arts, and Gender and Modernist Literature.
Lena L. Khor (she/her)
I love reading literature: It teaches, delights, and moves me. I enjoy sharing my love of literature with others through my research and teaching. My research areas are human rights and humanitarianism (how to love and live with people) and environmentalism (how to love and live with nature).
Estefani Marin (she/her)
Estéfani Marín is an Assistant Professor of the Ethnic Studies program and a Mellon Mays Fellow. Her research investigates how families negotiate social inequality in two primary contexts: education and the criminal legal system.
Brigetta F. Miller (she/her)
Brigetta is an Associate Professor of Music at Lawrence University and is praised for her strong contributions in teaching both Music Education and Ethnic Studies. Professor Miller is an enrolled member of the Stockbridge-Munsee (Mohican) Nation and a descendant of the Me
Stewart C. Purkey
Melissa H. Range (she/her)
I teach courses in creative writing (poetry), nineteenth century American literature, and contemporary poetry, with particular emphasis on women writers and writers of color.
Jesus G. Smith (He, Him, His)
Jesús Gregorio Smith is an Associate Professor and chair of the Ethnic Studies Program as well as an Associated Colleges of the Midwest (ACM) Andrew W. Mellon Fellow.
Beth A. Zinsli (she/her)
I teach courses on the history and theory of photography, museum studies, global modernisms, and contemporary art. In addition to an active curatorial practice, I write about photography from Cuba and the Cuban diaspora.