Researcher

Juan Jiménez
Juan Pablo Jiménez-Caicedo is a Lecturer in discipline at the Latin American and Iberian Cultures Department at Columbia University, where he teaches elementary and intermediate courses, and an advanced language course on Latin Popular Music and socio-cultural history in New
KC Trommer
KC Trommer is the author of We Call Them Beautiful (Diode Editions, 2019) and is the founder of the online audio project QUEENSBOUND. She holds an MFA from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, where she was awarded an Academy
Tao Leigh Goffe
Tao Leigh Goffe is a writer, dj, and professor specializing in the narratives that emerge from histories of imperialism, migration, and globalization. She received her Bachelor’s degree in English from Princeton University and PhD in American studies from Yale University.
Christina Thompson
Christina Thompson is graduate of NYU’s Draper Interdisciplinary Master’s Program, now known as the Center for Experimental Humanities, where she focused on digital humanities. She also completed an Advanced Certificate in Museum Studies. Christina currently works as a historical interpreter
Charlie Moffett
Charlie is a data science graduate student with five years of professional experience delivering platform solutions for SMBs, enterprise clients, and government partners. He is also a Prototyping Fellow at NYC Media Lab and LC Labs Innovation Intern at the
Tierney Gleason
Tierney Gleason is a Reference and Digital Humanities Librarian at Fordham University. She worked for over a decade in the nonprofit sector for progressive social change before shifting the course of her activist career towards librarianship. A graduate of the
Tamar Barzel
Tamar Barzel is an ethnomusicologist and lecturer at Harvard University whose research addresses the interface between creative identity, cultural heritage, and adventuresome sounds. Her first book, New York Noise: Radical Jewish Music and the Downtown Scene (Indiana University Press, 2014,
Nicholas Wolf
Nicholas Wolf is a research data management librarian at NYU Data Services, affiliated faculty of Glucksman Ireland House, and subject specialist in Irish Studies for NYU Libraries. He received his PhD in history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and his
Tom Augst
Thomas Augst teaches courses in American literature and culture. His writing focuses on literary history of the nineteenth-century, interpreting diverse forms of literacy and media in relation to questions about ethics and self-cultivation, the organization of knowledge, and the cultural