Jump to: Faculty | Lecturers | Emeritus Professors | Teaching Assistants and Instructors
Faculty
| Irina Aristarkhova |
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Office: 116 Willard Building
Office Hours: Wed 1:00-3:00PM |
email | website |
| Phone: 867-1230 |
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| Assistant Professor of Women's Studies and Art. Fields of specialization: cyberculture and cyberfeminism, technology and difference, feminist theory and aesthetics, new media art. |
| Ariane Cruz |
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Office: 135 Willard Building
Office Hours: |
email |
| Phone: 865-8495 |
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| Assistant Professor of Women's Studies. Her research and teaching interests include images of black female sexuality, black women and/in BDSM, black visuality, and race and representation. |
| Gabeba Baderoon |
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| Office: 102 Willard Building |
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Phone: 865-2372
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| Assistant Professor of Women’s Studies and African and African American Studies. Gabeba Baderoon received a PhD in English from the University of Cape Town, and has held fellowships at the African Gender Institute, the Oxford Center for Islamic Studies, the Nordic Africa Institute and the University of Sheffield. She has published widely on representations of Islam, slavery and the construction of 'race' and sex in South Africa. In 2007-2008, she was a Post-doctoral Fellow in the Africana Research Center at Penn State. She joined the Departments of Women's Studies and African and African American Studies as an Assistant Professor in July 2008 |
| Lorraine Dowler |
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| Office: 302 Walker Building |
email
website |
Phone: 865-3433
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| Associate Professor of Women's Studies and Geography. B.S., Business Administration, Manhattan College, Masters of Landscape Architecture, SUNY-ESF, Syracuse University, PhD Geography, Syracuse University. |
| Alyssa Garcia |
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| Office: 107 Willard |
email |
Phone: 865-5450
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| Assistant Professor of Women's Studies. Masters and PhD in Anthropology from University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and a bachelors degree in Cross Cultural Psychology from Brown University. Her research examines intersections of race, gender, and sexuality in Cuba through an ethnographic analysis of discourses of sex-work and the body. Her research and teaching interests also include Latina/o studies. |
| Lori Ginzberg |
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| Office: 410 Weaver Building |
email
website |
| Phone: 863-8947 |
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| Professor of History and Women's Studies. Fields of Specialization: American women's history; U.S. history to 1877; history of feminist thought; Lesbian and gay history. |
| Joan Landes |
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Office: 220 Weaver Building
Office Hours: Mon 1:30-3:00PM and by appointment |
email
website |
| Phone: 863-0046 |
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| Ferree Professor of Early Modern History and Women's Studies. Fields of specialization: Feminist theory, historical and contemporary; European intellectual, cultural, and gender history; women and gender relations in eighteenth-century France. Current research: gender, nationalism and popular imagery in revolutionary France. |
| Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor |
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| Office: 110 Willard Building |
email
website |
| Phone: 867-0367 |
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| Associate Professor of English and Women's Studies. |
| Benedicte Monicat |
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Office: S334 Burrowes Building
Office Hours: Thurs. 10:00AM-12:00PM and by appointment |
email
website |
| Phone: 865-1959 |
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| Professor of French and Women's Studies. Fields of specialization: 19th-century French literature; travel literature; women's studies. |
| Jacqueline Reid-Walsh |
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Office: 259 Chambers Building
Office Hours: Tues & Thurs 2:30-3:30 pm |
email
website |
| Phone: 867-2732 |
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| Associate Professor of Education, Language & Literacy Education and Women's Studies; Jacqueline Reid-Walsh's (McGill University) research interests include historical children's literature and culture, children's and youth popular culture, comparative media literacy and girlhood studies. A literary historian working with theoretical lenses drawn from cultural studies, children's studies and feminist studies, she has co-edited and co-authored several books. Her most recent book is Girl Culture: An Encyclopedia (2007). She is a founding editor of new journal called Girlhood Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal |
| Carolyn Sachs |
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| Office: 110 B Armsby Building |
email
website |
| Phone: 863-8641 |
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| Head of Women's Studies and Professor of Rural Sociology. Fields of specialization: Agriculture, Natural Resources, and Women in Agriculture and Rural Development. Research, Teaching, and Extension. Former Director of Women's Studies Program. |
| Susan Squier |
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| Office: 117 Burrowes Building |
email
website |
| Phone: 863-3604 |
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| Julia Brill Professor of Women's Studies and English. Research Interests: Cultural studies of science and medicine; feminist theory; disability studies; modernism |
| Shannon Sullivan |
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| Office: 240 Sparks Building |
email | website |
| Phone: 865-1647 |
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| Head of Philosophy Department and Professor of Philosophy , Women's Studies and African and African American Studies. Areas of specialization: feminist philosophy, critical race philosophy, American pragmatism, and continental philosophy. |
| Nancy Tuana |
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| Office: 240 Sparks Building |
email | website |
| Phone: 865-1653 |
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| Dupont/Class of 1949 Professor of Ethics; Professor of Philosophy and Women's Studies; Director, Rock Ethics Institute. |
| Melissa Wright |
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Office: 302 Walker Building Office Hours: T 11:30AM-12:30PM or by appointment |
email
website |
| Phone: 865-9133 |
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| Professor of Geography and Women's Studies, Women in the Developing World, Mexico, The Mexico/US borderlands and Latin America. |
Post Doctoral Scholar
| Papori Bora |
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Office: 130C Willard Building
Office Hours: T 11:30a-12:30p and by appointment |
email |
| Phone: 865-8719 |
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Post Doctoral Scholar in the Department of Women’s Studies. She has a PhD in Feminist Studies with a minor in Development Studies and Social Change from the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. Her research engages with the interweaving themes of postcolonial and transnational feminist studies, South Asian historiography, feminist political theory, law and citizenship and human rights to examine questions of the political from a feminist perspective. Her recent work titled “Between the Human, the Citizen and the Tribal: Reading Feminist Politics in India’s Northeast” has been published in the International Feminist Journal of Politics. Her current research is focused on two broad themes. First, she has been interested in developing a critical engagement between the concepts of performativity and postcoloniality, through which to articulate the limits of citizenship and representative democracy as ways of belonging and accounting for difference in the post-colonial nation-state. Second, she has been working on a book on the intellectual and political history of India’s “Northeast,” which traces the political history that has ensued from the British colonial strategy of separating the region, politically and administratively, from the rest of colonial India, through the Inner Line regulation that created the categories of the “governed” and the “ungovernable,” and how the specters of these categories haunt the functioning of post-colonial citizenship in the region. |
Lecturers
| Mindy Boffemmyer |
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| Office: 111 Willard Building |
email |
| Phone: 863-3578 |
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| Lecturer and Undergraduate Director of Women's Studies |
| Brenna Johnson |
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| 117 Willard Bldg. |
email |
| Phone: 865-2546 |
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| Dual MS candidate in Art Education and Women's Studies with K-12 Art Teacher Certification. |
| Christy Lusiak |
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| Office: 117 Willard Building |
email |
| Phone: 865-2546 |
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Lecturer in Women's Studies |
| Manini Samarth |
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| Office: 139 Burrowes Building |
email |
| Phone: 865-5311 |
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Senior Lecturer in English and Women's Studies. |
| Jill Wood |
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| Office: 112 Willard Building |
email |
| Phone: 865-5708 |
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Senior Lecturer, Dr. Wood earned her doctorate from Penn State University in Biobehavioral Health, with a minor in Women's Studies. Her research focuses on women's health, specifically menstruation, women's sexuality, and the menopausal transition. Dr. Wood employs qualitative methodology and also has a research interest in feminist pedagogy. She typically teaches: WMNST 001, 301, 400, 452, and 492W.
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Emeritus Professors
| Mike Johnson |
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| 1155 Oneida St. |
email | website |
| Phone: 237-8061 |
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| Associate Professor of Sociology, Women's Studies, and African and African American Studies. Fields of specialization: social psychology, feminist family sociology, domestic violence, commitment to close relationships. Current research: causes and effects of different types of partner violence, commitment and entrapment in domestic violence. |
| Phyllis Mansfield |
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| Office: 143 River Rd. Boothbay, ME 04537 |
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| Professor Emeritus of Women's Studies and Health Education. Fields of specialization: Women's reproductive health; politics and experiences of menopause. |
Teaching Assistants and Instructors
| Crystal Endsley |
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| Robeson Cultural Center |
email |
| Phone: 865-3776 |
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Dual PhD candidate in Curriculum & Instruction and Women's Studies.
Interim Assistant Director of the Robeson Cultural Center. |
| Edith Gnanadass |
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| 117 Willard Building |
email |
| Phone: 865-2546 |
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| PhD candidate in Adult Education and Women's Studies minor |
| Katie Johnson |
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| Office: 117 Willard |
email |
| Phone: 865-2546 |
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| PhD candidate in Sociology and Women's Studies minor. |
| Greg Lankenau |
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| Office: 117 Willard |
email |
| Phone: 865-2546 |
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| PhD candidate in Geography and Women's Studies |