This fall, 10 new tenure-track faculty members and two Riley Scholars-in-Residence, including CC alumnus Juan Miguel Arias '12, joined Colorado College. In welcoming them, Acting Provost and Dean of Faculty Claire Garcia noted that "their scholarly talents and commitment to teaching further enriches a strong and vibrant community of teacher-scholars and creative practitioners. The value of a liberal arts education has never been higher: we are preparing our students to ask tough questions of the world in which they live, and each of the new faculty members brings a unique perspective to the Colorado College community."
Acknowledging the unprecedented circumstances under which they are joining the campus community, Garcia says, "They are starting their careers here at a time of two entwined and profound crises: a public health crisis and a crisis of our democracy as it confronts unprecedented and sometimes violent challenges to basic rights of citizenship. They are teaching students who are developing intellectually and socially in highly stressful times. But I am fully confident that each of our new colleagues - with their strong records of innovative pedagogies and relevant scholarship - are ready to thrive professionally and continue CC's tradition of providing the best liberal arts education in the nation in an institution committed to antiracism in everything we do."
The new faculty members and Riley Scholars are:
Aline
Lo,
English
Lo
did
most
of
her
growing
up
along
the
Colorado
Front
Range
and
earned
her
M.A.
and
Ph.
D.
at
the
University
of
Wisconsin-Madison
before
going
on
to
teach
at
Allegheny
College
for
six
years.
Her
work,
broadly,
is
on
immigration
and
contemporary
North
American
literature
and
is
driven
by
questions
about
citizenship,
belonging,
displacement,
and
colonialism.
She
teaches
and
has
published
on
such
authors
as
Edwidge
Danticat,
Louise
Erdrich,
Gwendolyn
Brooks,
Thi
Bui,
Mai
Der
Vang,
and
Luis
Valdez.
Lo
is
especially
interested
in
Southeast
Asian
American
literature
and
Critical
Refugee
Studies.
She
teaches
courses
on
Asian
American
literature
with
an
eye
toward
careful
examinations
of
race,
gender,
class,
and
war
and
trauma.
This
Fall,
she
took
part
in
the
new
First-Year
Program,
teaching
a
course
called
"Writing
out
of
the
Wild."
She
currently
is
working
on
a
book
that
finds
beauty
and
strength
in
what
has
often
been
deemed
as
"problematic"
about
Southeast
Asian
Americans.
Her
next
project
is
a
study
of
Hmong
American
literature.
She
is
excited
to
join
the
CC
community
and
is
looking
forward
to
working
with
first-generation
college
students.
Arom
Choi,
Film
and
Media
Studies
Choi
graduated
from
the
California
Institute
of
the
Arts
in
2018
with
an
MFA
in
film
directing.
She
has
extensive
experience
in
writing,
directing,
and
editing
films.
One
of
her
works,
"Knock
Knock
Knock,"
was
an
official
selection
of
the
2018
San
Diego
Asian
Film
Festival.
Her
work
has
been
presented
in
venues
in
several
countries,
including
the
Gallery
Luminaire
in
Seoul,
Korea.
Before
arriving
at
Colorado
College,
she
assisted
directors
Deborah
LaVine
and
Josephine
Decker
who
were
teaching
acting
classes.
Choi's
2020-21
courses
include
Advanced
Filmmaking,
Storytelling
Through
Sound,
and
a
senior
thesis
course.
Cayce
Hughes,
Sociology
Hughes
joins
CC
after
holding
a
post-doctoral
appointment
at
Rice
University.
He
defended
his
dissertation
at
the
University
of
Chicago
in
2017.
His
most
recent
article,
"A
House
But
Not
a
Home,"
was
published
in
the
magazine
Social
Forces,
and
delves
into
how
surveillance
in
subsidized
housing
exacerbates
poverty
and
reinforces
marginalization.
Hughes
also
is
a
recipient
of
a
Robert
Wood
Johnson
Foundation
grant,
which
supports
his
project
that
studies
how
low-income
households
work
to
maintain
food
security
before
and
during
the
pandemic.
He
will
be
teaching
courses
in
Urban
Sociology,
Deviance
and
Social
Control,
as
well
as
Poverty
and
Social
Welfare.
Chantal
Figueroa,
Sociology
Figueroa,
a
graduate
of
the
University
of
Minnesota,
holds
a
tenure-track
appointment
in
the
Sociology
Department
after
teaching
popular
courses
in
public
health
and
global
health
issues
in
many
CC
departments
and
programs
as
a
visitor.
Multilingual,
she
has
been
doing
research
on
cross-cultural
mental
health
issues.
A
strong
proponent
of
student-faculty
research,
Figueroa
has
presented
with
her
students
at
several
public
forums
on
mental
and
public
health
concerns.
She
will
be
teaching
Gender
Inequality,
Global
Health:
Biosocial
Perspectives,
and
Global
Mental
Health
Policy.
Donald
Clayton,
Chemistry
and
Biochemistry
Clayton
earned
his
Ph.D.
in
chemistry
in
2017
at
the
University
of
Oregon.
He
comes
to
CC
from
the
University
of
Washington.
Clayton's
research
interests
include
a
focus
on
the
electrical
and
chemical
properties
of
solid-state
materials,
which
is
interdisciplinary
in
approach
and
involves
students
in
chemistry,
physics,
and
environmental
studies.
He
will
be
teaching
General
Chemistry,
Chemistry
Research,
the
Foundations
of
Inorganic
Chemistry,
and
Advanced
Inorganic
Chemistry.
John
Marquez,
History
Marquez
received
his
Ph.D.
in
Latin
American
History
from
the
University
of
Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign
in
2019.
Before
coming
to
CC,
he
was
a
Chancellor's
Advance
Postdoctoral
Fellow
at
the
University
of
California,
Irvine
(2019-20).
His
research
focuses
on
the
history
of
slavery,
race,
law,
and
empire,
with
a
particular
focus
on
Brazil
in
the
18th
century.
Currently,
he
is
working
on
a
book
manuscript
that
explores
the
entangled
histories
of
freedom,
law,
and
the
colonial
archive
in
the
South
Atlantic
world.
He
recently
was
awarded
an
Omohundro
Institute-National
Endowment
for
the
Humanities
Postdoctoral
Fellowship
to
support
the
completion
and
publication
of
this
book.
His
article,
"Witnesses
to
Freedom:
Paula's
Enslavement,
Her
Family's
Freedom
Suit,
and
the
Making
of
a
Counterarchive
in
the
South
Atlantic
World,"
will
be
published
in
2021
in
the
Hispanic
American
Historical
Review.
At
Colorado
College,
he
teaches
on
various
aspects
of
Latin
American
and
Caribbean
history,
emphasizing
their
transnational
and
global
dimensions.
This
year,
he
will
co-teach
the
History
Department's
junior
seminar,
and
offer
courses
on
revolts
and
uprisings,
Brazil,
and
global
Latin
America.
Liliana
Carrizo,
Music
Carrizo
is
an
ethnomusicologist
whose
work
focuses
broadly
on
music
and
migration
across
numerous
transregional
contexts.
She
received
her
Ph.
D.
and
MM
in
ethnomusicology
from
the
University
of
Illinois
at
Urbana-Champaign,
and
holds
a
BA
in
music
from
Williams
College.
She
joins
Colorado
College
after
completing
a
postdoctoral
fellowship
in
the
humanities
at
Harvard
University,
while
also
serving
as
a
faculty
affiliate
at
the
Immigration
Initiative
at
Harvard
(IIH).
Her
current
book
project
examines
biographical
songs
of
migration
and
cultural
exile
among
Iraqi
Jews.
Based
on
two
and
half
years
of
ethnographic
and
archival
research,
her
work
considers
how
interreligious
soundscapes
associated
with
Arab,
Jewish,
and
Muslim
modal
practices
converge
with
biographical,
edible,
and
sonic
memories
among
Iraqi
immigrants,
wherein
singers
access
powerful,
multi-sensorial
memories
that
are
crucial
to
their
self-conceptions
in
the
present
day.
Inspired
by
her
background
as
a
child
of
Iraqi
immigrants
raised
in
northern
New
Mexico,
Carrizo's
next
research
project
will
focus
on
the
music
of
Arab
and
Jewish
immigrants
within
the
wider
regional
fabric
of
the
American
Southwest.
This
year
Carrizo
will
teach
a
range
of
courses
in
ethnomusicology,
including
Music,
the
Supernatural,
and
Otherworldly
Realms,
Musical
Lives
of
Song
and
Migration,
Musical
Tapestries
of
the
American
Southwest,
and
Worlds
of
Musical
Meaning.
Her
courses
incorporate
performative
and
experiential
learning
modules
with
ethnographic
methodology,
where
students
learn
to
reflect
on
the
nature
of
power,
social
hierarchy,
and
sociocultural
meaning
as
embodied
and
transformed
through
music
and
sound.
Lisa
Marie
Rollins,
Theatre
and
Dance
Rollins
comes
to
CC
after
many
years
as
an
accomplished
theater
professional.
She
is
a
freelance
director,
writer,
and
new
play
developer,
and
a
Sundance
Institute
Theatre
Lab
Fellow
(directing)
and
a
Directors
Lab
West
and
Stage
Directors
and
Choreographers
member.
Directing
and
dramaturg
work
include
New
York
Stage
and
Film,
Hedgebrook
Women's
Play
Festival,
Crowded
Fire
Theater,
American
Conservatory
Theatre
MFA
program
(ACT),
TheatreWorks
(CO),
Playwright
Foundation,
TheatreFirst,
Berkeley
Repertory
Theater
(Ground
Floor),
Shotgun
Players,
Custom
Made
Theatre,
Magic
Theatre,
San
Francisco
Playhouse,
Arizona
Repertory
Theatre,
and
new
plays
by
Lauren
Gunderson,
Geetha
Reddy,
Idris
Goodwin,
Tearrance
Arvelle
Chisholm,
and
creative
collaborations
with
comedic
artists
W.
Kamau
Bell
and
Zahra
Noorbakash.
She
has
been
a
writing
fellow
with
Hedgebrook,
Djerassi,
SF
Writers
Grotto,
CALLALOO
London,
VONA,
Just
Theater
Play
Lab
and
Joshua
Tree
Highlands
Artist
Residency.
Rollins
currently
is
developing
her
new
play
"Love
is
Another
Country."
She
holds
graduate
degrees
from
Claremont
Graduate
University
and
University
of
California,
Berkeley.
Her
chapbook
of
poems,
"Other
Words
for
Grief"
(2018,
winner,
Mary
Tanenbaum
Literary
Award)
is
available
from
Finishing
Line
Press
and
she
is
beginning
the
book
proposal
for
her
memoir
project.
She
was
honored
with
a
"Bay
Brilliant"
artist
award
from
San
Francisco's
KQED
and
recently
received
a
Wallace
Alexander
Gerbode
Special
Award
in
the
Arts
in
which
she
will
be
working
with
Crowded
Fire
Theater
to
write
and
develop
a
new
commission.
She
currently
is
the
artistic
associate/literary
manager
with
Intiman
Theater
in
Seattle,
a
Community
Arts
Fund
juror
for
Zellerbach
Family
Foundation,
and
a
resident
artist
with
Crowded
Fire
Theater
in
San
Francisco.
She
taught
Black
Women
in
the
United
States
and
Diasporic
Theatrical
Performance
in
Block
2,
directing
a
live,
streaming
digital
experiment
with
Susan
Lori-Parks
365
Plays/365
Days
in
Blocks
3
and
4,
and
hopes
to
teach
Acting
and
Directing
in
person
in
Blocks
5
and
7.
Nene
Diop,
French
Diop
graduated
from
the
University
of
Colorado-Boulder
with
a
Ph.D.
and
M.A.
degrees
in
French
and
Francophone
Studies.
She
holds
a
License
es
Lettres
and
a
Master's
degree
in
Linguistics
from
the
Université
Gaston
Berger
in
St.
Louis
(Sénégal).
Diop
came
to
Colorado
College
as
a
block
visitor
in
2012
and
became
a
lecturer
in
2018.
Her
research
interests
include
20th-century
French/Francophone
literature
and
cultures,
women's
writings
in
Francophone
West
African
literature,
and
Senegalese
literary
works.
She
published
her
first
book,
"Combat
Socio-Politique
et
Représentation:
Le
droit
de
la
Femme
en
Question
dans
le
Roman
Sénégalais"
in
2020
and
her
article
"L'humour
dans
Les
nouveaux
contes
d'Amadou
Koumba
de
Birago
Diop
et
La
belle
histoire
de
Leuk-le-lièvre
de
Léopold
S.
Senghor
et
Abdoulaye
Sadji"
is
under
review
by
the
journal
Jeunesse:
Young
People,
Texts,
Cultures.
She
teaches
French/Francophone
Literature,
Language
and
Cultures.
She
also
teaches
in
the
CC
Summer
Culture
and
Language
Study
program
in
Sénégal.
Sofia
Fenner,
Political
Science
Fenner
is
a
scholar
of
regimes
and
opposition
in
Southwest
Asia
and
North
Africa.
She
holds
a
Ph.
D.
in
political
science
from
the
University
of
Chicago
(2016),
where
she
focused
on
both
comparative
politics
and
political
theory.
Her
current
book
project,
"Life
after
Co-optation,"
explores
how
two
North
African
political
parties
(the
Wafd
in
Egypt
and
the
Istiqlal
in
Morocco)
were
damaged
by
authoritarian
co-optation
but
nevertheless
managed
to
survive.
Drawing
on
the
histories
of
these
two
parties,
she
finds
that
co-optation
has
much
more
to
do
with
discourse
and
much
less
to
do
with
material
transactions
than
dominant
theories
claim.
This
year,
Fenner
is
teaching
courses
on
Syria,
Middle
East
Politics,
and
authoritarianism
that
emphasize
local
voices,
the
politics
of
storytelling,
and
the
importance
of
context
and
history.
CC also welcomes two new Riley Scholars this year. They join returning Riley Scholars Solomon Seyum in the Geology Department and Ryan Buyco in Asian Studies. The new Riley Scholars are:
Ahmad
Alswaid,
Arabic,
Islamic,
and
Middle
Eastern
Studies
Alswaid
graduated
from
Cornell
University
in
2020
with
a
Ph.D.
in
Comparative
Literature.
Prior
to
obtaining
his
doctorate,
Alswaid
taught
at
Marshall
College
in
Pennsylvania,
Portland
State
University
in
Oregon,
and
Tishreen
University
in
Syria.
He
currently
is
finishing
an
Arabic
language
textbook
co-authored
with
Dr.
Munther
Younes
of
Cornell
University
based
on
Tayeb
Salih's
novel
"Season
of
Migration
to
the
North."
Alswaid
will
be
teaching
Elementary
Arabic,
Intermediate
Arabic,
and
a
review
of
these
courses
for
students
who
have
already
taken
them.
Juan
Miguel
Arias
'12,
Education
Arias
(he/él)
teaches
in
and
co-facilitates
Colorado
College's
Teaching
and
Research
in
Environmental
Education
(TREE)
program;
this
year
he
is
teaching
Foundations
of
Environmental
Education
and
Educational
Psychology
for
the
Education
Department's
undergraduate
program,
as
well
as
Teacher
and
Teaching
Identities
for
CC's
Master
of
Arts
in
Teaching
program.
As
a
critically-minded
and
interdisciplinary
education
scholar,
who
graduated
from
CC
with
a
degree
in
neuroscience,
Arias
uses
insights
from
developmental
and
educational
psychology
to
explore
questions
of
environmental
and
social
justice.
Specifically,
his
research
examines
what
culturally-responsive
teaching
practices
look
like
when
enacted
in
environmental/outdoor
education
settings,
and
how
such
practices
in
turn
influence
those
environmental
spaces.
He
received
his
Ph.D.
in
Education
from
Stanford
University
and
his
master's
degree
in
developmental
psychology
from
the
University
of
St
Andrews.