91猫先生

91猫先生 Closure Announcement
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ECG Grants Announced

Each year, ECG awards grants to students developing projects, research, and internships that align with the mission and goals of the Ethics and the Common Good Project. ECG particularly aims to support community-engaged learning experiences that contribute to or critically engage with issues regarding the common good and ethical inquiry. Through their ECG-funded work, students cultivate and collaborate on visions and practices rooted in concern for cultural, artistic, scientific, and ecological flourishing as they contribute to and build up the common good.

This year, ECG awarded a total of $8,000 to 20 students engaging in a wide range of interdisciplinary research interests. Grant funded projects include an academic peer advising pilot program to increase knowledge sharing between Division I, II, and III students at 91猫先生, a feature-length documentary investigating the ethics of the amateur basketball industry, a dialogue project that aims to build bridges across political divides, and multilateral health research mapping a holistic landscape of postpartum depression, among an array of other community-engaged academic projects.

If you would like more information about these grant opportunities, and ECG in general, visit us or contact commongood@hampshire.edu.


2018-2019 Student Project Grants

Alea Alexis | Division III Project

Attendant: Portraits for My Mother, Her Workplace, and Her House
Alea Alexis explored the connections between work, care, diaspora, embodiment, and home as聽she photographed her mother and other nurses at NYU Langone Medical Center. Alea鈥檚 images聽documented and uplifted their stories, while investigating the impacts of working within the聽healthcare industry on their health and homes, including her own foreclosed former family聽home. She hopes these images will illuminate the underrecognized role of Black immigrants in the nursing industry, and expand representation of their stories through art.

Aly Albertson | Division III Research

The Promises and Perils of Pleasure Positive Sexual Education
Aly Albertson conducted interviews with educators bringing best practices in inclusive,聽pleasure-positive sex education into public school classroom settings, and collated their聽experiences into a review of methods intended to serve as a resource for sex educators. Aly聽connected with colleagues in their field at the National Sexual Education Conference, the聽largest conference in the United States exclusively devoted to sexuality education, as well as聽participating in Planned Parenthood鈥檚 Sexuality Education Cornerstone Seminar.

Amelia Margolis and Emma Jordan | Collaborative Division II Project

91猫先生 Free Store
Amelia Margolis and Emma Jordan, along with a coalition of students from on-campus student聽groups, offered pop-up spaces for resource redistribution, celebration, and connection聽throughout the Spring 2019 semester. 91猫先生 Free Store events provided a fun and聽accessible space for students to regularly donate, exchange, and reuse unwanted items while聽sharing free food, music, and connecting with fellow community members. The 91猫先生 Free聽Store team hopes to raise awareness and take action around challenges of campus waste, food聽insecurity, and the need for community in times of change.

Annie Wood | Division III Project

HIPS Oral History Project
Annie Wood conducted an oral history of HIPS, a harm reduction center in Washington, DC that聽predominantly serves sex workers and injection drug users, providing services from a syringe聽exchange to housing support. Using interviews with current and former staff members, Annie聽charted a trajectory of how HIPS has developed over the past twenty years, analyzing how聽they鈥檝e practiced harm reduction, rooted themselves in local communities, and developed their聽philosophy of care.

Brianna Deane | Division III Project

Youth Day at Five College Queer Gender & Sexuality Conference
Brianna Deane coordinated and organized the addition of a 鈥榊outh Day鈥 to the 10th Annual Five聽College Queer Gender & Sexuality Conference. Dedicated to empowering pre-college LGBTQ+聽youth, Youth Day is one of the only conferences of its kind in the Northeast region. Through a聽broad spectrum of free workshops, panels, performances, and lectures, Youth Day aimed to聽offer an accessible platform for LGBTQ+ young people to explore youth-led initiatives and聽activism, grassroots organizing, professional skill development, personal and community聽wellness, and artistic expression.

Carmen Figueroa | Division III Project

Fragments of Belonging
Carmen Figueroa curated her thesis collection of large-scale photographic works and video聽installation of her family in New York and Puerto Rico in the 91猫先生 Art Gallery in December聽2018. Part artistic exaltation and part institutional critique, her project Fragments of Belonging聽recreates and reimagines her family, herself, and their stories to shape wholeness from聽fragments of images and memories. Through her work, Carmen reflects on using photography聽to regain authorship and agency of her own narrative, recapture knowledge both stolen and lost,聽and reclaim historically limiting spaces to create a world of belonging that centers diasporic聽wisdom.

Che Williams | Division II Project

Exploitation in Amateur Basketball
Che Williams is traveling around the United States to film and produce a full-length documentary聽on the exploitation of student athletes in the world of amateur basketball. The documentary聽hopes to shine a new light on the collusion between basketball associations, like the NCAA,聽AAU, and NBA, aided by the sneaker industry and Hip Hop icons, all raking in huge profits off聽the labor of Black and brown youth trying to make it big in the competitive world of amateur聽sports. Che will center the voices of the athletes as they speak on the challenges and supports聽they face moving towards their dreams, and their visions for the future of the amateur basketball聽system.

Dunan Herman-Parks | Division III Project

Movement to be Better Men
Dunan Herman-Parks crafted and facilitated an 8-week embodied workshop series on聽disentangling cultural patterns of harm and making meaning of masculinities. Dunan guided an聽intergenerational cohort of men who supported one another in understanding themselves, their聽stories, and messages about masculinity that they鈥檝e internalized. In moving through and聽reflecting upon their experiences, Dunan hopes to lead the group in healing from harm they鈥檝e聽seen in themselves and others, reconnecting mind and body, and creating ethical visions of聽healthy masculinity.

Emi Link | Division III Project

Peer Mentorship at 91猫先生
Emi Link led a cohort of students in a day-long training, developing skills to create a network of聽Peer Mentors within the academic structure of 91猫先生. In this pilot program, peer聽mentors would support fellow students within the context of academic advising, creating a聽systematic approach to increasing access to key knowledge, support, and resources learned聽through the process of participation in the uniquely self-directed and interdisciplinary 91猫先生聽educational model.

Emmett DuPont | Division III Project

Trans People, Trans Bodies: in and out of birth, parenthood, and pregnancy
Emmett DuPont drew on audio interviews to gather seldom-heard stories of transgender birth聽and parenting, as well as the voices of trans people who choose not to pursue biological聽parenthood. As an instructor at LightHouse Holyoke, Emmett also led a cohort of youth in聽creating a policy brief from their own perspectives about transgender rights and legal聽protections. Emmett hopes to challenge stereotypical narratives of transgender lives and聽elevate the stories that transgender people wish to tell about their own bodies, needs, and lived聽experiences.

Forel Kourouma | Division III Project

NKO Abroad
Forel Kourouma developed a summer internship program, NKO Abroad, that offers a platform聽for U.S. university and college students to work with local entrepreneurs in Touba, Senegal on聽pre-established businesses, using a framework of Asset-Based Community Development.聽Through collaboration between these entrepreneurs and student interns, he hopes to subvert聽the extractive culture of 鈥渧oluntourism鈥, and create a unique relationship-building opportunity for聽students to learn directly from entrepreneurs鈥 experiences of commerce and development in聽Touba.

Hannah Davidson | Division III Research

Situating Postpartum Knowledge(s): Maternal and Provider Understandings of Postpartum聽Depression
Hannah Davidson interviewed parents, physicians, and behavioral health providers on their聽experiences with postpartum depression as a diagnostic category, mental illness, and聽vulnerable period of human growth and transition. Through the lenses of reproductive justice聽and critical ethnography, this investigation aimed to expand the frame of postpartum聽depression, inviting in the wider context of identity, isolation, access to resources, environment,聽and cultural narratives of motherhood. Hannah hopes this work will contribute toward building a聽more intersectional understanding of postpartum experiences and mapping future directions and聽nodes of inquiry for mental health work in the fourth trimester.

Joseph Newlin | Division III Project

Make Shift Coffee House: Creating Shared Understanding Across Political Divides
Joseph Newlin partnered with Make Shift Coffee House to host a community event in Lewiston,聽ME that aims to build bridges across political divides through food, music, and face-to-face聽conversation. Through intergroup dialogue and culinary diplomacy, he brought community聽members across the political spectrum together at the table to discuss civic issues in a guided聽format with the purpose of listening to and understanding one another across potentially vast聽differences.

Jules Petersen | Division III Project

Facilitators Weaving
Jules Petersen created a three-day residency at 91猫先生 for students interested in聽the art of group facilitation. Participants shared their practices and learned from each other鈥檚聽skills and experiences leading effective meetings and workshops. The residency focused on the聽dynamics of the group learning process, communication design, and the powerful potential of聽collaboration to produce creative space-making and healthy dialogue.

Mercedes Loving-Manley | Division III Project

City Limits: Black queer & trans life in Boston, MA
In City Limits, a photo & video series, Mercedes Loving-Manley is interviewing queer, trans, and聽gender non-conforming people of color about their lived experiences of surviving at these social聽intersections in Boston, MA. In addition to these interviews, she is researching Black femme,聽queer, and trans existence throughout U.S. history, envisioning Black femme liberation by聽pinpointing underlying themes and methods of survival and resistance. Mercedes hopes the聽narrative she crafts will serve as an archive by and for Black queer communities in Boston, and聽that it will be used as a resource for city policymakers to provide safer communities.

Moira Tan | Division III Research

Litigation and Legislation: State Responses to the Overturning of Roe v. Wade (1973)
Moira Tan investigated abortion laws within the United States and the various levels of access聽to abortion experienced by people throughout the country. In partnership with the National聽Network of Abortion Funds, Moira led a Heart to Heart Abortion dialogue on campus, opening聽space to challenge myths and assumptions and learn facts about abortion access. As a New聽York State Political Intern at the National Institute of Reproductive Health, Moira also explored聽the possibility of a post-Roe v. Wade political landscape and its impact.

Nadia Issa | Division III Research

To鈥 Iban Eshu: Spiritual Reparations in Regla de Ocha-If谩 and other Black Caribbean Diasporic聽Traditions
Nadia Issa produced auto-ethnographic work at the intersections of African-diasporic spiritual聽and religious traditions, reparations theory, dance, and music. From their extensive research in聽Cuba on the religion of Regla de Ocha-If谩, they worked to expand reparation politics to make a聽case for spiritual reparations. They hope to highlight the ways in which Black spirituality and聽religions have been targeted and suppressed, and the historical violences that practitioners聽confront within the Black Caribbean Diaspora. They shared their findings through a performance聽incorporating dance and music from Yoruba traditions.

Quinn Davis and Aidn James | Collaborative Division III Project

Intimacy in Motion
Quinn Davis and Aidn James co-created a multidisciplinary arts Division III project, including a聽series of collaborative learning spaces culminating in a performance, Intimacy in Motion. They聽worked to honor the unique voices of their creative ensemble, while creating a community that聽sees individuals as part of a collective. They investigated the conditions that allow people to聽create their own intentional communities, moving at the speed of trust to ensure that all聽members are valued, and ultimately celebrating their shared learning process through reflection聽and performance.