Cross/Currents

Summary

Fall 2021 launch

The Cross/Currents H-Lab takes the word currents as its inspiration, as both a metaphor and a tool, enveloping not only its main definition in relation to water or its movements, but also its broader reverberations. By connecting the words cross and currents, our main goal is to bring into dialogue environmental humanities and migration studies (with an emphasis on race, diaspora, and indigeneity). In our work together we hope to rehearse ways of bringing literary and artistic analyses to bear on issues of the environment and migration, and vice-versa. We have outlined three main trajectories around the notion of Cross/Currents: mobility, transmission, and flow. Firstly, mobility considers how water has been a conduit for migration– the movement of people and non-human elements–with its historic and contemporary iterations defined by violence and trauma. Secondly, transmission engages recent scholarship in media studies, the history of science, and the history of technology. It pushes us to think about the material aspects of technologies, and to consider newer models of communication like undersea cable systems or transoceanic internet traffic. Finally, we use the flow of water and air as points of reference from which to build new critical vocabularies and frameworks for knowledge production beyond traditional conceptualizations of human agency. Our ultimate purpose is to decenter an anthropocentric and imperialistic understanding of global interconnection and exchange.

Lab Team

  • Dantaé Elliot
    Doctoral Candidate, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Arts and Science
  • Fan Fan
    Doctoral Candidate, Lab Coordinator, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Arts and Science
  • Luis Francia
    Adjunct Professor, Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, Arts and Science
  • Linda Luu
    Doctoral Candidate, Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, Arts and Science
  • Jordana Mendelson
    Associate Professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese; Director, King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center 
  • Michael Salgarolo
    Doctoral Candidate, Department of History, Arts and Science 
  • Laura Torres-Rodríguez
    Associate Professor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Arts and Science
  • Emilie Tumale
    Doctoral Candidate, Sociology of Education, Steinhardt 
  • Mariko Chin Whitenack
    Doctoral Candidate, Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, Arts and Science
  • Lee Xie
    Doctoral Candidate, Department of Spanish and Portuguese, Arts and Science

Activity


“… within the context of H-Lab, I was able to really listen and learn from colleagues with out the more practical pressures that I usually bring to a lecture, symposium or professional seminar environment…”

Jordana Mendelson, Cross/Currents Lab