Migrations Program
ILR Professor Wins APSA Latin@/x Book Award
Shannon Gleeson, Migrations
ILR/Brooks faculty Shannon Gleeson (Migrations) has won the 2024 Best Book Award from the Latin@/x Caucus of the American Political Science Association for her coauthored book Scaling Migrant Worker Rights.
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Writing in a Time of War: Conversation with Shahla Ujayli, Award-Winning Syrian Novelist
October 7, 2024
5:00 pm
A. D. White House, Guerlac Room
Book talk and conversation with award-winning Syrian novelist Shahla Ujayli, author of "A Sky So Close to Us" and "Summer with the Enemy," both shortlisted for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction. Joining the discussion to talk about her work and challenges of translating Arabic literature will be translator Michelle Hartman, Professor of Arabic Literature at McGill University.
In the words of Shahla Ujayli: “Writing about war means writing about oneself—the harsh fate of the family, the home, the special places, and memories. But writing about your place at war is a great challenge, since you find the whole world talking about your house, slums, and city, yet no one who debated its fate had ever visited it or known it before the war. They talk about strange, complicated, fantastic things, and you find yourself writing novels to tell them that only you know the truth.”
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
SHAHLA UJAYLI is a Syrian writer, born in 1976. She holds a doctorate in Modern Arabic Literature and Cultural Studies from Aleppo University in Syria and is currently a professor of Modern Arabic Literature at the University of Aleppo and the American University in Madaba, Jordan. She is the author of two short-story collections The Mashrabiyya (2005) and The Bed of the King’s Daughter (2017), winner of Al Multaqa Prize, and four novels: The Cat’s Eye (2006), winner of the Jordan State Award for Literature; Persian Carpet (2013); A Sky So Close to Us, shortlisted for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction (Interlink, 2016); and Summer with the Enemy, shortlisted for the International Prize for Arabic Fiction (Interlink, 2018). She has also published a number of critical studies, including The Syrian Novel: Experimentalism and Theoretical Categories (2009), Cultural Particularity in the Arabic Novel (2011) and Mirror of Strangeness: Articles on Cultural Criticism (2006).
ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR:
MICHELLE HARTMAN is a professor of Arabic Literature at McGill University and literary translator of fiction, based in Montreal. She has written extensively on women’s writing and the politics of language use and translation and literary solidarities. She is the translator of several works from Arabic, including Asmaa Alatawna’s A Long Walk from Gaza, Radwa Ashour’s memoir The Journey, Iman Humaydan’s novels Wild Mulberries and Other Lives, Jana Elhassan’s IPAF shortlisted novels The Ninety-Ninth Floor and All the Women inside Me, Alexandra Chreiteh’s novels Always Coca Cola and Ali and His Russian Mother as well as Shahla Ujayli’s IPAF shortlisted novels A Sky So Close to Us and Summer with the Enemy.
Lecture Sponsored by:
Department of Near Eastern Studies
Cosponsors:
Department of Literatures in English
Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies and its Southwest Asia and North Africa (SWANA) initiative and Migrations Program
Society for the Humanities
Institute for Comparative Modernities
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Migrations Program
Einaudi Welcomes Migrations Program
New Migrations, EAP, SEAP Program Directors
Cornell’s first Global Grand Challenge continues this year as Einaudi's Migrations Program. We also welcome three program directors.
We're excited to announce that Cornell's Migrations initiative is stepping into a new phase as the Migrations Program, part of the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies. Einaudi's newest regional and thematic program will build on the work of Migrations: A Global Grand Challenge to inform real-world policies and outcomes for populations that migrate.
Migrations researchers and students will continue the important work of studying movement across borders, racism and dispossession, and migration of all living things under the leadership of the program's new director, Kathryn Fiorella. Fiorella is an associate professor of public and ecosystem health in the College of Veterinary Medicine.
“We look forward to building the new Migrations Program at Einaudi to advance our understanding of migration and contribute to solutions for one of the most pressing challenges of our time.”
“I am excited to join Migrations and support scholarship and learning on this critical topic,” said Fiorella.
Fiorella plans to continue expanding Migrations' campuswide footprint established since Global Cornell launched the initiative in 2019.
“Migration has a profound impact on human and wildlife health,” she said. “I'm looking forward to furthering those connections and extending our engagement with faculty in the Master of Public Health program, Department of Public and Ecosystem Health, and College of Veterinary Medicine.”
New Program Directors
Joining the Migrations Program's Kathryn Fiorella are new fall 2024 program directors in the East Asia Program and Southeast Asia Program.
East Asia Program: John Whitman
John Whitman is a professor of linguistics in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S). His main research focus is the problem of language variation in Japanese, Korean, and other languages.
Southeast Asia Program: Marina Welker
Marina Welker is a professor of anthropology in A&S. Her research centers on the ethical relationship between business and society. She is currently studying a clove cigarette company in Indonesia founded by a Chinese immigrant and controlled by his descendants until 2005, when it was taken over by Philip Morris International.
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Outdoor Photo Exhibit Illustrates Migrant Workers’ Stories
Funded by Migrations
A new outdoor exhibit of 6-foot-high interactive portraits will explore the history of migrant workers’ struggles to attain American citizenship. The project, “Stories of Belonging: Central American TPS Workers & the Defiant Struggle to Stay Home in the U.S.," was funded by the Migrations Global Grand Challenge and will be available to view on the Cornell campus Sept. 16-20.
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Mangrove Trees are on the Move, Taking the Tropics with Them
Andrew Farnsworth, Migrations
As the climate warms, mangroves are migrating farther poleward, transforming the coast as they go.
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Migrants Follow News of Danger but Are Undeterred
Angel Alfonso Escamilla García, Migrations
Angel Alfonso Escamilla García, our Migrations postdoctoral fellow, writes about his work on people migrating from the U.S. to Mexico. His research has shown that migrants pay close attention to any information that can give them clues about the dangers that lie between them and the U.S.
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Workshops for Displaced Artists & Scholars
Watch free online workshops from the Migrations-supported Opportunity Network for At-Risk Writers, Artists, Rights Defenders, and Scholars (ONWARDS).
Contact Us
The Migrations Program is part of the Mario Einaudi Center for International
Information Session: Fulbright Opportunities for Undergraduate Students
November 11, 2024
4:45 pm
The Fulbright U.S. Student Program supports U.S. citizens to study, conduct research in any field, or teach English in more than 150 countries. Students who wish to begin the program immediately after graduation are encouraged to start the process in their junior year. Recent graduates are welcome to apply through Cornell.
The Fulbright program at Cornell is administered by the Mario Einaudi Center for International studies. Applicants are supported through all stages of the application and are encouraged to start early by contacting fulbright@einaudi.cornell.edu.
Register for the virtual session.
Can’t attend? Contact fulbright@einaudi.cornell.edu.
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies
East Asia Program
Southeast Asia Program
Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Institute for African Development
Institute for European Studies
South Asia Program
Migrations Program