----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
Many thanks to our special guests Christina McPhee and Melinda Rackham.  Also 
to William Bain, Simon, Aviva Rahmani, Brett Stalbaum, Cengiz Salman, Gary Hall 
and of course my two fellow moderators Tim Murray and Junting Huang for posting 
this past week.  The tone this week has been introspective yet also critical of 
the political, social, and cultural conditions so many of us are facing 
globally.  We welcome our next set of invited guests Jonathan Basile, Sorelle 
Henricus, Gloria Kim, Cengiz Salman, Paul Vanouse, and Elizabeth Wijiaya.  We 
invite you all to share your thoughts about your own work and experiences from 
where you are writing this week.  Looking forward to hearing from all of you 
and again please be well and stay safe. 

Also, just to throw this out Christina McPhee had a great idea.  If any of you 
are making COVID inspired work or work that is generated from our current 
situation please feel free to post links within the empyre text but also to 
post on our FACEBOOK page.  
https://www.facebook.com/groups/empyrelistserv/

Best to you all, 
Renate Ferro

Week 2:  Biographies
Jonathan Basile is a Ph.D. Candidate in Emory University’s Comparative 
Literature program and the creator of an online universal library, 
libraryofbabel.info. His first book, Tar for Mortar: “The Library of Babel” and 
the Dream of Totality, has been published by punctum books and translated into 
Portuguese. His academic writing on biodeconstruction and on irony has been 
published in the Oxford Literary Review, Critical Inquiry, Derrida Today, 
Variaciones Borges, Environmental Philosophy, Postmodern Culture, CR: The New 
Centennial Review and is forthcoming in Angelaki. His para-academic writing has 
been published in The Paris Review Daily, Public Books, Berfrois, Guernica, and 
minor literature[s]. This work can be accessed at jonathanbasile.info.

Sorelle Henricus works in the areas of critical theory, modern and contemporary 
literature and visual arts, and aesthetics and politics especially as it 
pertains to science and technology in culture. Her doctoral work traced the 
significance of the parallels between deconstruction and molecular biology, 
particularly converging around the concept of the gene as being constructed as 
primarily an artefact of data. 

Gloria Kim is Assistant Professor of Media and Culture at the University of 
California-Riverside. She works in the areas of the environmental humanites, 
science and technology studies, and media and visual culture. She is currently 
writing a book manuscript titled "The Microbial Resolve: Vision, Mediation, and 
Security," in which she  explores modes of mediation, forms of kinship, means 
of capital, and senses of life and living surfacing amid efforts to manage 
emerging viruses. In a second project, Gloria examines discourses of the 
microbiome bridging insight from critical data studies, social theory, affect, 
security studies, material culture, and the anthropocene. 

Cengiz Salman (he/him) is a PhD candidate in the Department of American Culture 
(Digital Studies) at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His dissertation 
research broadly focuses on the relationship between digital media, algorithms, 
unemployment, and racial capitalism. He holds a
Master of Arts degree in Social Science from the University of Chicago (2013), 
and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Anthropology with a specialization in Muslim 
Studies from Michigan State University (2011). Salman is a recipient of a 
Fulbright IIE Award, which he used to conduct research on urban transformation 
projects in Turkey from 2011-2012.

Paul Vanouse is an artist and professor of Art at the University at Buffalo, 
NY, where he is the founding director of the Coalesce Center for Biological 
Art. Interdisciplinarity and impassioned amateurism guide his (bio-media) art 
practice, which uses molecular biology techniques to challenge “genome hype” 
and to explore critical issues surrounding contemporary biotechnologies. 
Vanouse’s projects have been funded by Rockefeller Foundation, Creative Capital 
Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the 
Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, Sun 
Microsystems, and the National Science Foundation. His bio-media and 
interactive cinema projects have been exhibited in over 25 countries and widely 
across the US. His scent-based bioartwork, Labor, was awarded a Golden Nica at 
Prix Ars Electronica, 2019. He has an MFA from Carnegie Mellon University.


Elizabeth Wijaya is Assistant Professor of East Asian Cinema in the Department 
of Visual Studies and Cinema Studies Institute at the University of Toronto. 
She is co-founder of the Singapore-based film production company, E&W Films. 
She is working on her book manuscript on the visible and invisible worlds of 
trans-Chinese cinema.  

Renate Ferro
Visiting Associate Professor
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Department of Art
Tjaden Hall 306
rfe...@cornell.edu
 
 

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