News, Achievements, and Awards
Jeremy Marchese, GLI's New Undergrad Advisor
Globalization Studies is pleased to welcome undergraduate advisor Jeremy Marchese.
With Professor Andrea Fedi transitioning to his new role as Director of the Center for Italian Studies, we are happy to announce that Jeremy Marchese will be assuming all advising responsibilities for Globalization Studies and International Relations (GLI). Jeremy has worked at Stony Brook for nearly 16 years and brings a wealth of advising expertise to this role.
From 2009-2013 he served as an Undergraduate College Advisor for first year students at SBU, and then went on to run the University Scholars Honors Program, to which he was named Director in 2019. While working with University Scholars, Jeremy advised students across all majors/minors from their point of acceptance through graduation, so he is well-versed in all academic requirements, regulations, policies, and procedures. In 2023 Jeremy became a Business Manager in the Dean's Office in the College of Arts and Sciences, and we are very pleased that he will be assisting the students in GLI.
Jeremy can be contacted via email at jeremy.marchese@stonybrook.edu to schedule an in-person or virtual advising appointment.
Academy of Civic Life
The Academy of Civic Life gives high school students a real college experience, living on campus and attending a three-week seminar with Professor Tracey Walters (Dept. of Africana Studies). Through this seminar, “Democracy and Justice for All,” part of the BA in Globalization Studies curriculum (GLI 102: Academy of Civic Life), the students learned about the global history of democratic movements, politics, and labor through readings and in-class debate.
Read more about the program here
Congratulations Class of 2022!
Please join us in congratulating the first cohort of Globalization Studies & International
Relations graduates! We're very proud of you, and wish you the best as you journey into your bright futures!
B.A. Majors
Demi Bhojedat
Emily Hope McGhee
Solange-Renee Puryear Thompson
Minors
Brenda Aguilar
Vassili Alexandros Boletsis
Erin Byers
Vincent Paul D'Elia
Anne Elizabeth Green
Aniqah Nashiat
Javier Uriarte, The Desertmakers
Congratulations to Associate Professor Javier Uriarte on his book The Desertmakers! This book studies how the rhetoric of travel introduces different conceptualizations of space and time in scenarios of war during the last decades of the 19th century, in Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay. By examining accounts of war and travel in the context of the consolidation of state apparatuses in these countries, Uriarte underlines the essential role that war (in connection to empire and capital) has played in the Latin American process of modernization and state formation. In this book, the analysis of British and Latin American travel narratives proves particularly productive in reading the ways in which national spaces are reconfigured, reimagined, and reappropriated by the state apparatus. War turns out to be a central instrument not just for making possible this logic of appropriation, but also for bringing temporal notions such as modernization and progress to spaces that were described — albeit problematically — as being outside of history.
Benjamin Tausig wins 2020 BFE Book Prize
Benjamin Tausig, a board member for the IGS, was awarded the 2020 BFE Book Prize for his 2019 monogram, Bangkok is Ringing: Sound, Protest, and Constraint (New York: OUP).
The 2020 Book Prize Panel - Ioannis Tsioulakis (Chair), Britta Sweers and Jonathan Stock - noted that Benjamin's book "is superbly written—it turns its own pages—and admirably represents the best new writing in ethnomusicology today".
The book is available on Amazon and Oxford University Press.
Professor Eric Zolov, The Last Good Neighbor
Eric Zolov, a history board member for the IGS, has recently published his book, The Last Good Neighbor: Mexico in the Global Sixties.
The Last Good Neighbor presents a revisionist account of Mexican domestic politics and international relations during the long 1960s, tracing how Mexico emerged from the shadow of FDR's Good Neighbor policy to become a geopolitical player in its own right during the Cold War.
The book is available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and PDF.