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Institute supports two levels of fellows each academic year: doctoral fellows in different stages of their PhD, and postdoctoral fellows, who have obtained their degrees but would benefit from a concentrated year of research and writing. Doctoral fellows are, for the most part, graduate students at the University of Virginia, while postdoctoral fellows come to the Institute from all over the United States and beyond.
The following
fellows are in residence for the 2008-2009 academic year:
Habib Babai
Religious Studies, Doctoral Fellow
Babaei studies the relationship between Islam and the West. In particular, he is interested in the relationship between temporal love and spiritual love; existential spirituality; the theory of civilization; the bases of freedom in Islamic thought; philosophy of history; and, most recently, interpretation and modernization. He has studied the Arabic language, logic, Islamic philosophy, theology, jurisprudence, history and theosophy and has taught occidentalism, theology, and literature. He serves as the Director of the group, “Islam and the West” at the AISC in Qom, Iran.
Wilson Brissett
English, Research Fellow / Ph.D. University of Virginia (2008)
Wilson specializes in early American literature and culture. He also writes on theology and politics in the United States and the global south.
Matthew B. Crawford
Political Thought, Research Fellow / Ph.D. University of Chicago (2000)
A contributing editor of The New Atlantis, Matthew is currently writing a book for The Penguin Press that will explicate the experiences of making things and fixing things. These activities illuminate the mutual entanglement of mind and hand, and thereby shed light on certain permanent requirements of human flourishing that material culture must answer to. Entitled Shop Class as Soulcraft: Manual Competence and the Struggle for Agency in Modern Life, it questions the inevitability of our increasing manual disengagement from the world as mystified consumers. It also seeks to rehabilitate the honor of the manual trades, as a life worth choosing for young people who often feel hustled off to college, then to the cubicle, against their own inclinations and natural bents.
Jeffrey Dill
Sociology, Doctoral Fellow
Jeff is interested in questions of pluralism and difference in educational systems, specifically moral education and the legitimation and socialization processes in schools. His dissertation examines the cosmopolitan ideal in education and its implications for individual and collective identity.
Ann W. Duncan
Religious Studies, Associate Fellow
Ann's work focuses on intersections of religion and public life in American history. Her past work has examined American Christianity during times of war and intersections of religion and government. Her dissertation examines the varied and changing understandings of motherhood in American Christianity and American culture and how these understandings are shaped by doctrinal, historical and social factors.
David Franz
Sociology, Postdoctoral Fellow / Ph.D. University of Virginia (2008)
David studies the relationship of economic life to the broader culture, especially the often unnoticed interplay between business and conceptions of the good. His dissertation, titled “The Ethics of Incorporation,” examines the latent moral content of business management theory, exploring the influence of management theory on ideas of leadership, collective purpose, responsibility, and guilt. David has also written about the history of cubicles, intellectuals, and the role of religion in public life. His work has been featured in several print and online publications, including Arts & Letters Daily, the Atlantic, the New Republic, and the Wilson Quarterly.
Amy Gilbert
Philosophy, Associate Fellow
Edward J. K. Gitre
History, Postdoctoral Fellow / Ph.D Rutgers University (2008)
Ed is a modern U.S. historian, with specialization in intellectual, cultural, and religious history. He holds a Ph.D. in history from Rutgers University, as well as two masters degrees, one in theology and the other in European cultural history. As a postdoctoral fellow, he will be revising his Ph.D. dissertation for press publication. This project, titled “America Adjusted: Conformity, Boredom, and the Modern Self, c.1920–1980,” explores the problem of boredom as a social problem in postwar American culture. While the project focuses on the specific development of post-Darwinian social theory (“social adjustment”) and the relationship between social scientific knowledge and non-academic discourse, it seeks to illuminate the long-term effects of World War II and the Cold War militarization of American society.
Karen Guth
Religious Studies, Graduate Fellow
Karen’s field of study is theological ethics. Her work focuses on Christian social ethics and religion in public life. She is particularly interested in the role of Christianity in cultural, social, and political criticism in 20th century America. Her current work focuses on Christian thinkers who address the relationship between Christianity and the “world” and how these thinkers envision Christian political engagement.
Jonas Hart
Sociology, Associate Fellow
Adam Kadlac
Philosophy, Research Fellow / Ph.D. University of Virginia (2008)
Adam's primary research interests are in contemporary and historical ethics. His recently completed dissertation examines personhood as a moral concept and the way differing approaches to personhood are related to more general approaches to moral philosophy. He has also published a paper on Descartes' moral theory in the journal Ethical Theory and Moral Practice and has interests in political philosophy, the philosophy of religion, and the history of philosophy.
Ryan McDermott
English, Associate Fellow
Ryan studies medieval English literature and focuses on the intersections of Christian theology and literature in late 14th-century poetry, especially the poetry of Geoffrey Chaucer, William Langland, and the Pearl Poet. His dissertation project seeks models for ethical deliberation in these poets' adaptations of biblical exegesis to poetic invention, and theorizes a more robust literary ethics than the ethics of alterity that dominates contemporary critical discourse.
Christopher McKnight Nichols
History, Postdoctoral Fellow / Ph.D. University of Virginia (2008)
Chris specializes in American intellectual, cultural, and political history from the late nineteenth through the twentieth century, with a focus on the Progressive Era. He is revising for publication his Ph.D. dissertation, titled “From Empire to Isolation: Internationalism and Isolationism in American Thought,” which examines the dynamic interplay of international engagement, isolationist thought, and domestic reform from 1890 to 1940. Chris has presented papers and published articles and opinion pieces in academic journals and newspapers on subjects including historical debates over the role of the U.S. in the world, transnationalism, the Spanish-American War, race and segregation, the philosophy of history, deliberative democracy, and foreign policy. With Charles T. Mathewes, Dr. Nichols is co-editor of Prophesies of Godlessness: Predictions of America’s Imminent Secularization from the Puritans to the Present Day.
Scott Nesbit
History, Doctoral Fellow
Scott‘s research interests lie in the religious grounds for post-conflict resolution in the modern world. More specifically, his dissertation examines the idea of forgiveness as a moral and political problem for northern whites, southern whites, and African Americans after slavery and the Civil War.
Hilde Restad
Politics, Doctoral Fellow
Christina Simko
Sociology, Graduate Fellow
Regina Smardon
Sociology, Associate Fellow
Greg Thompson
Religious Studies, Associate Fellow
Greg is a PhD student in the Theology, Ethics, and Culture program in the University of Virginia's Department of Religious Studies. His research interests include theology, social theory, political thought, and American religious history. Currently his work focuses on love as a political idea.
Free Williams
Religious Studies, Associate Fellow
Andrew Witmer
History, Postdoctoral Fellow / Ph.D. University of Virginia (2008)
Andrew’s research and publications explore the intersection of religion, science, and racial thought in the nineteenth-century United States, with particular attention to competing understandings of the human person and efforts to deny full humanity to certain racial groups. He is currently at work on a book manuscript that examines the influence of nineteenth-century Protestant missionary work in sub-Saharan Africa on American conceptions of race and approaches to race relations. His publications include essays in Prophesies of Godlessness, The North Star: A Journal of African-American Religious History, and Crucible of the American Civil War, along with entries in African American National Biography and the Encyclopedia of Missions and Missionaries.
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