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Skip to contentAmerican Culture StudiesMenu Close Search InitiativesUndergraduate ProgramPhD CertificateStudent ResourcesOur PeopleLet your curiosity lead the way:Apply TodayHomeCoursesUpcoming EventsRecent NewsContact Us Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SAMCS Postdoctoral FellowsWhat are you teaching in Spring 2024? Featuring Postdoctoral Fellow Balraj GillRead MoreWhat are you teaching in Spring 2024? Featuring Postdoctoral Fellow Eman GhanayemRead More Meet our current Postdoctoral Fellows! Eman Ghanayem Postdoctoral Fellow [email protected] Balraj Gill Postdoctoral Fellow [email protected] Meet our Former Postdocs! Daniel K. WooDaniel K. Woo - AMCS Postdoctoral Fellow in American Ethnic Studies (2021-2023) Where are you now? Bring us up to speed on what you’re doing. I am currenting serving as the inaugural Helen Zia Distinguished Lecturer in Asian American Studies and the deputy director of the Asian American Studies Program & Center at Hunter College. It has been deeply humbling to work alongside our exceptional teaching faculty, students, and staff to support and advance a critical lineage of Asian American social thought, scholarship, and activism in the tradition of Helen Zia.   Tell us a little bit about your experiences at WashU and as a part of the AMCS Community. What stood out to you from your time here?   What continues to stand out to me is the caring and supportive community that AMCS has provided. The wonderful faculty and staff in AMCS really made me feel at home and appreciated in my work. In addition to their professional guidance, they graciously offered the emotional support that was so critical to my advancement.   What did you learn, develop, or research that you’ve taken with you to wherever you are now? During my two years at WashU, I was able to further develop my research and teaching agenda in Asian American Studies. As a postdoctoral fellow, I was able to advance my research on Afro Asian relations in Hip Hop, as well as publish articles based on my book manuscript. Along the lines of my research interests, I also developed two courses that center relational approaches to Asian American Studies. The opportunity that AMCS gave me to build and teach these courses have been key to their current success. Lastly, as a postdoc, I had the pleasure of collaborating with the student groups Asian Multicultural Council and Asians Demanding Justice. These experiences have critically shaped my present investment in student support and mentorship. They have also given me a better sense of what I value most in this work.   What do you miss about WashU, or more broadly, St. Louis? What do you find yourself thinking/reflecting about from your time here?  My commute only being 15 minutes! But in all honesty, what I truly miss is the wonderful community that AMCS has provided. I miss walking into the tower and chatting with our wonderful teaching faculty and staff. I miss being able to knock on a colleague’s door without an agenda. I miss being able to ask for guidance without judgement. I guess I just miss the culture of AMCS. Jillian PowersJillian Powers - Postdoctoral Fellow in American Culture Studies (2011-2013)Where are you now? Bring us up to speed on what you’re doing. I currently work at JP Morgan Chase, as the executive director of research and experience for Responsible AI and Digital Ethics. I work with teams across our organization to understand how people and technology work together.   Tell us a little bit about your experiences at WashU and as a part of the AMCS Community. What stood out to you from your time here? I really enjoyed being part of the AMCS community; what stood out to me was the interdisciplinary and cross-disciplinary perspective and approach of AMCS. I have lots of great friends across the humanities and I am grateful for the opportunity to participate and grow as a scholar and an intellectual.   What did you learn, develop, or research that you’ve taken with you to wherever you are now? I was working on transforming my dissertation into a book, and what I learned while I was at Wash U was how to re-do the work and really focus on the narrative and the process. I became a better writer and communicator because of AMCS.   What do you miss about WashU, or more broadly, St. Louis? What do you find yourself thinking/reflecting about from your time here? I miss the community of scholars, the support, and networks. The admin team at WUSTL and in AMCS was top notch, the focus on undergraduate education aligned with my perspectives, and I appreciated the creativity we all brought to our work. I also miss the dining scene. I appreciate AMCS so much for introducing me to many of the people I now consider lifelong friends/family.   Megan Steigerwald IlleMegan Steigerwald Ille - AMCS Postdoctoral Fellow in Digital Cultures (2018-2020)Where are you now? Bring us up to speed on what you’re doing. I am currently in my first year serving as tenure track assistant professor of musicology at the College-Conservatory of Music, University of Cincinnati. After completing my AMCS postdoc at WashU, I began as an Educator faculty member at CCM, and have been fortunate to transition into this new role in Fall 2023. During my time at CCM, I've been busy completing my first book, Opera for Everyone: The Industry's Experiments with American Opera in the Digital Age (University of Michigan Press, 2024), and publishing articles in The Opera Quarterly, the Journal of the Society of American Music, and Sound, Stage, Screen--many of which were drafted while at WashU. I've also had the opportunity to create a number of new classes drawn from the time I was part of the AMCS community, including a course on contemporary music making ("Music of the Last Ten Years,") a doctoral seminar on coloniality ("The Postcolonial Canon"), and a class on digital cultures ("Digital Modes of Performance"). I've also collaborated with our Classics and Theatre divisions to serve as musical dramaturge for the Fall 2022 production of Lysistrata and The Trojan Women. Finally, I currently serve as the Graduate Program Advisor for Musicology, supporting our MM and PhD students. Outside of CCM, I am the General Editor of the Society of American Music Bulletin. My husband and I also welcomed the birth of our brilliant and beautiful daughter, Maeve, in late April 2023.    Tell us a little bit about your experiences at WashU and as a part of the AMCS Community. What stood out to you from your time here? What did you learn, develop, or research that you’ve taken with you to wherever you are now?  One of the most memorable aspects of my time at WashU was the incredible interdisciplinarity of the AMCS community and the thought-provoking research questions posed to me by faculty mentors and students alike. When teaching in AMCS I was pushed to consider a range of perspectives, disciplinary perspectives and forms of scholarly inquiry that continue to shape my writing and thinking. In addition, I still draw on techniques learned through the pedagogy certificate program offered by the Center for Teaching and Learning when teaching myself and in my work supporting our CCM graduate students with their work in pedagogy.    What do you miss about WashU, or more broadly, St. Louis? What do you find yourself thinking/reflecting about from your time here?  I miss the opportunity to chat daily with students, staff, and faculty members from areas outside of music. While, obviously, there is a rich community of scholars and students just beyond the walls of the conservatory where I currently work (to say nothing of my incredible colleagues and students at CCM), the AMCS community pushed me into interactions with those deep in research fields that initially seem distant from my own--Latin American Studies, Sports Studies, Popular Culture, English Literature—that, through my time at WashU, I discovered were actually more proximate than expected. While I miss more frequent interactions with my mentors (like the amazing current director of AMCS!) one of the gifts of a WashU postdoc is a network of mentorship and support that follows you wherever you go! Beyond the rich research and teaching community of Wash U, I miss taking students to the Scott Joplin House, browsing at Left-Bank Books, dinners at Olive and Oak, walks in Forest Park, and buying too much cheese at Parker's Table. (I would have also mentioned stuffing my face at Jeni's—but we got one in Cincinnati in July 2023!)   Quick LinksResourcesEventsOur PeopleRequest Financial SupportContactAdditional information Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SCopyright 2024 by:Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. LouisFollow Us Instagram Contact Us: American Culture Studies [email protected] Visit the main Washington University in St. Louis website1 Brookings Drive / St. Louis, MO 63130 / wustl.edu

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