Fellows Directory

Displaying 1 - 7 of 7
Azam headshot

Hina Azam

Alumni
Middle Eastern Studies
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College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Student Success
Skill-Building

Dr. Hina Azam teaches courses in Islamic Studies such as Islamic theology, Islamic law, the Qur'an, Qur'an interpretation, and Islamic feminism, as well as a course on comparative religions of the Middle East. Her research focuses on women/gender/sexuality in Islam, ethics, and pedagogy. She supervises or serves as reader for undergraduate and graduate theses and dissertations across the University.

Deborah Beck

Deborah Beck

Current Fellow
Classics
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Experiential Learning

Deborah Beck has won various awards for both teaching and research, including the 2021 Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Classics at the College and University Level from the Society for Classical Studies and a prize for Excellence in Faculty Teaching from the Gamma Sigma chapter of the national Classics undergraduate honors society Eta Sigma Phi (2019) and two Plumer Visiting Research Fellowships at St Anne’s College, Oxford (2017 and 2019). Her main research interest is ancient Greek and Roman epic poetry, especially Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey.

Photo of Daniel Birkholz

Daniel Birkholz

Alumni
English
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Digital Humanities
Experiential Learning

Janet Davis

Alumni
American Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Experiential Learning

Juan Dominguez

Alumni
Psychology
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Skill-Building
Phot of Julia Mickenberg

Julia Mickenberg

Current Fellow
American Studies
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Curriculum Redesign
Skill-Building

Julia Mickenberg is Professor of American Studies and an affiliate in the Center for Women and Gender Studies, the Schusterman Center for Jewish Studies, and the Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies. She is the author of American Girls in Red Russia: Chasing the Soviet Dream (Chicago, 2017) and Learning from the Left: Children's Literature, the Cold War, and Radical Politics (Oxford, 2006) and editor or co-editor of several other books, along with articles in journals ranging from the Journal of American History to Radical Teacher.

person in green tanktop

Amy Nathan Wright

Current Fellow
Human Dimensions of Organizations
|
College of Liberal Arts
Initiative Focus
Experiential Learning

Amy Nathan Wright got her PhD in American Studies at UT Austin and returned in 2019 as an Assistant Professor of Instruction in Human Dimensions of Organizations.  She is a civil rights scholar completing a book on the Poor People’s Campaign and has taught interdisciplinary courses focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion for the past decade and a half.