Announcements, Undergrad Research Holly Genovese Announcements, Undergrad Research Holly Genovese

Announcement: Interview with Kelli Schultz, AMS Senior and Dean's Distinguished Graduate

Today, we're pleased to share with you an interview with one of our undergraduates, Kelli Schultz, who was recently recognized as one of only twelve Dean's Distinguished Graduates in the College of Liberal Arts at UT. Congratulations to Kelli on this very prestigious honor!What was/is your favorite class in American Studies?I loved Prof. Ware’s AMS 310: Intro to American Studies course. I have taken a lot of specialized AMS 370 courses which I loved but I’m intrigued by how each professor teaches the whole story of American History in one semester. Her underlying mission, it seemed, was to tell the untold accounts of US History, the ones you weren’t told in high school. We learned about the Carlisle Indian School, Japanese Internment and Coney Island. This was the first class I took in the Department and it sparked my interest in the pedagogy of social studies, which I ultimately ended up writing my honors thesis on. What are your research interests? Any particular interests you were able to pursue in American Studies or elsewhere (in class or in extracurricular activities)?I have always been extremely interested in the history of History. How do we talk about our identity as Americans during different periods of time and who we associate ourselves with? Which stories do we leave out? Who do we choose to include? How do we tell their story? My honors thesis is called “Our TEKS” and is a theatrical exploration of the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills through Thornton Wilder’s Our Town. It is a devised theatre piece about the controversial 2010 standards chosen by the Texas State Board of Education which was covered by the media internationally. Over the past year, I have watched hours of footage from Board meetings, followed the media’s response and interviewed educators and textbook publishers who are affected by these standards. My play incorporates all of this research in a documentary-style live performance on April 30 and May 1 in WIN 2.180 on the UT campus.Did your work inform or influence your post-graduate plans?My work absolutely informed my post-graduate plans. Next year, I will be venturing out to San Francisco, CA to join the 2012 Teach for America corps where I will be teaching English to high school students. Over the past year, I have learned innovative ways to talk about tough issues such as race, class and identity in the classroom. There is some extremely exciting research taking place using Theatre in Education techniques which help improve classroom participation and performance. Though I will not be applying these to Texas education standards (which my thesis covers), I will undoubtedly incorporate them into my teaching for the next two years.Why did you ultimately decide to study American Studies?I came into UT with two majors: Plan II and Theatre and Dance. I started my freshman year with a lot of credits from high school and had plans to graduate early. However, I had tested out of my US History credit and, when I was making my schedule for the first two semesters, I found that I really missed learning about American history. I took Professor Ware’s AMS 310: Intro to American Studies course and fell in love with the major, particularly because we focused less on dates and battles in history and were asked to look at currents of culture. We studied music, art, politics, philosophy and the changing thoughts of the country. In this way, we saw how these people lived at a particular moment in time and this method really spoke to me. I have never once regretted my decision to pick up this third major and am so thankful to Val for helping me find a way to complete it in 4 years!Kelli Schultz will be graduating this spring with a Bachelor of Arts in Plan II Honors, American Studies and Theatre and Dance.  She chose the University of Texas as it allowed her to pursue all of her interests in just four years.   Her Honors thesis is a performative analysis of the 2010 Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills. These state-wide standards sparked international controversy two years ago when the Texas State Board of Education was accused of rewriting US History with a conservative bias.  Over the past year, Kelli has conducted interviews with educators and governmentofficials and poured over hours of footage from Board meetings and public testimony.  These transcripts, along with media coverage, will be incorporated into a documentary-based theatre piece to be performed in May 2012.Over the past four years, Kelli has received substantial scholarships from both the College of Liberal Arts and the College of Fine Arts.  She has been involved in numerous productions with the Department of Theatre and Dance including The Trojan WomenThe Threepenny OperaBr’er Wood and 360 (round dance).  She has also starred in numerous shows in Austin including the original cast of A. John Boulanger’s  House of Several Stories (now published in Samuel French) and ZACH Theater’s recent production of Next to Normal.  When she isn’t in class or rehearsing for a production, Kelli serves as a student ambassador and tour guide for the University of Texas Visitors Center.  Upon graduation, she will join the 2012 Teach for America corps in San Francisco, CA.
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Announcements Holly Genovese Announcements Holly Genovese

Announcement: American Studies Junior Wins TX Relay Decathlon

If you live in Austin, chances are you noticed that the immediate vicinity of the University was a little busier than usual. That's because this weekend, the Mike A. Myers Stadium hosted the annual Texas Relays, an enormous track and field competition bringing athletes to Austin from near and far.We're pleased to announce that Isaac Murphy, a junior in the American Studies department, won the decathlon of the Texas Relays, making him the first Longhorn to win the events since 2006.Want to get a taste of the action? Here's a video from day one, featuring Isaac's stellar performance.The Austin American-Statesman also has a great write-up of his accomplishment - check it out! And congratulations, Isaac!

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Announcements Holly Genovese Announcements Holly Genovese

Explore American Studies at Explore UT!

This weekend, American Studies students and professors will be taking part in Explore UT, "The biggest open house in Texas."AMS faculty members Janet Davis, Steven Hoelscher, and Randy Lewis will be giving public talks on different aspects of their research, and American Studies Graduate Students will be taking part in the Children’s International Festival on the South Mall from 11:00 a.m. - 4:40 p.m. This year, our booth features a game called "Follow that Food," which helps younger students understand how culture travels via international foodways. Kids will match the dishes and ingredients to their correct country and origin and win a prize!Click here for a full schedule of events, and make sure to stop by our booth and catch these great lectures by out very own Dr.s Davis, Hoelscher, and Lewis!American Animals: Culture, History, and Society (3:00 p.m. - 3:40 p.m. Parlin 203)Associate Professor Janet Davis will explore American history of animals from multiple vantages: from clashes between Native Americans and English colonists over wandering cows and pigs, to the rise of pet-keeping as a business in today’s world.Remembering America’s Past – and Forgetting It, Too (3:00 p.m. - 3:40 p.m. Parlin 204)

Memory forms the fabric of human life, affecting everything from the ability to perform simple, everyday tasks to defining our very identity as individuals. Dr. Steven Hoelscher explores the various ways that American cultural memory is created, and lost.The Magic of Austin: The Past and Future of the Weird City (12:00 p.m. - 12:40 p.m. Mezes 1.120)
This lecture, presented by Dr. Randy Lewis, will explore Austin’s sense of weirdness using film, music, art, and other cultural forms. We will examine the tensions between "keeping Austin weird" and the city’s mainstream development.
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Announcements, Faculty Research Holly Genovese Announcements, Faculty Research Holly Genovese

AMS Events this Week!

Hello AMS :: ATX community! We'd like to draw your attention to a couple of great events happening in and around the department this week!First, the inaugural showing of the 2011-2012 AMS Film Series will be tomorrow night, Wednesday, September 21, from 7:00-9:00pm in Parlin 203. This year the theme of the series is "The 'Other' Americans." Each of the films will deal with the interactions between the U.S. and the people and nations of the rest of the Western Hemisphere. In this first installment, we'll be vieweing Island in the Sun. Stay tuned for future showings packed with private armies, drug smugglers and cartoon llamas.Also, later this week, our very own Janet Davis will be giving a talk titled, “Docked Tails, Fighting Cocks, and Raging Bulls: Making Gendered Sense of the American Animal Welfare Movement, 1830-1940.” The talk will be presented as part of  the History Department's Gender Symposium this Friday, September 23, from 3:00-5:00pm in Garrison 1.102.Here's what Professor Davis has to say about this exciting event:

The title of my talk pays homage to Cynthia Enloe’s path-breaking book, Bananas, Beaches, and Bases: Making Feminist Sense of International Politics, which found international politics in unexpected places: women’s labor as wives of diplomats, plantation workers and service industry employees, and the sexual politics of U.S. military bases overseas. Likewise, my talk will explore racialized and classed historical constructions of American femininity and masculinity in unlikely places: in fashionably modified equine bodies; cockpits in the United States, the Philippines, Cuba, and Puerto Rico; and in the bullrings of Spain (through the eyes of American tourists), Mexico, and Texas.This talk is part of my current book project, “The Gospel of Kindness: Animal Welfare and the Making of Modern America,” which will be published by Oxford University Press. My book manuscript encompasses a long historical arc—from the genesis of the humane movement in the evangelical milieu of human perfectibility and moral free agency during the Second Great Awakening, to its growth and development in America’s overseas empire in the early and mid-twentieth century. Throughout, I contend that the growth of the U.S. animal welfare movement was inextricably tied to ideologies of nation building and the flowering of America’s exceptionalist mission. In other words, considerations of “the least among us” were always connected to larger questions of nation, benevolence as a barometer of American civilization, citizenship, and struggles over culturally specific animalpractices in a pluralistic society.

We hope to see you at these and all the other great events happening around campus and around Austin! For updates on events, check out our calendar page!

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