Akiko Nozawa • anozawa@umich.edu
Affiliated Scholar 2017
Ph.D. Letters (anthropology), Nagoya University, 2013
Ph.D. Science of Arts (musicology), Osaka University of Arts, 2001
M.A. Science of Arts (musicology), Osaka University of Arts, 1998
B.A. Letters (aesthetics), Keio University, 1996
Akiko Nozawa is a musical anthropologist of Indonesian performing arts with Ph.D.s both in Musicology and Anthropology. She currently works for Nagoya University as a joint researcher at the Research Center for Cultural Heritage and Texts and also for Nanzan University as an adjunct researcher at the Anthropological Institute. In 2015 her book ‘An Ethnography of the Sacred Iron Metallophone Ensemble of SELONDING: Life, Ritual, and Music in Tenganan Pegeringsingan Village, Bali’ (written in Japanese) was published by Shumpu-sha, Yokohama. Now she is working on her interdisciplinary project ‘‘Reciting’ the Cosmology of Life and Death in Medieval Java: The Qualitative Shift of Relief Interpretation by Audiovisual Narrative and its Potential for Cultural Transmission’ which is sponsored by The TOYOTA Foundation (project period: 2018-2020).
Loren Ryter • lryter@umich.edu
Affiliated Scholar 2014
- Ph.D., Political Science, University of Washington, 2002
Research Areas of Interest
- Southeast Asian political history, criminality and the state, postcolonialism.
Etienne Turpin • sturpin@umich.edu
CSEAS Research Fellow
Phone: 734-764-1300
As a Research Fellow for the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Etienne's research considers the consequences of climate change on urban settlements and develops potential design responses. Dr. Turpin is Principal Investigator, with Assistant Professor Meredith Miller, of the Architecture + Adaptation: Designing for Hypercomplexity research initiative, which explores architecture's potential response to inundation in Southeast Asian megacities. In the spring of 2012, Dr. Turpin and Professor Miller led the INDUNDATION Bangkok/Jakarta research studio for Taubman College, with the generous support of CSEAS and the International Institute. The initial phase of research will be published as Architecture + Adaptation: Jakarta (forthcoming from Universitas Indonesia Press, 2013).
Etienne is also a lecturer in architecture at the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Design, University of Michigan, where his current research focuses on the turn to the Anthropocene within geological discourse and its potential effect on architecture and design; this research is part of a longer study of the relations among architecture, philosophy, and geology, entitled Terrible is the Earth. This research also informs his hyperstitial study of misery and cumulus landscape aesthetics as they are explored in the theoretical-fiction manuscript North of Architecture, currently in preparation with Lisa Hirmer.
As the Taubman College 2011-2012 Walter B. Sanders Fellow, Etienne curated The Geologic Turn: Architecture's New Alliance. Etienne is currently editing the proceedings of the symposium, as well as a number of additional essays, interviews, and design projects, for the book Architecture in the Anthropocene: Encounters Among Design, Deep Time, Science and Philosophy (forthcoming from MAP Office/MAP Books Publishers, 2013). During the Sanders Fellowship, Etienne also developed research from the Bentley Historical Library's Albert Kahn Papers and the Hatcher Graduate Library's Joseph A. Labadie Collection for his contribution to the 2012 Fellows exhibition, Stainlessness. The exhibition materials and associated publication consider the iconography of steel in North American architecture, urbanism, and consumerism at the end of the 19th Century, focusing on sites of extraction (Sudbury Basin), production (Pittsburgh), extrusion (Chicago), and circulation (Detroit) that constitute the relays of mineralization in the Anthropocene.
Etienne Turpin completed his Ph.D. at the University of Toronto, where his doctoral dissertation analyzed Georges Bataille's concept of expenditure in relation to post-Kantian aesthetic commitments, as advanced by the American artist Robert Smithson. Prior to his doctoral research, he completed an M.A. (Philosophy) at the Universit? d'Ottawa and a Bachelor of Humanities at the College of the Humanities, Ottawa, Canada. In addition to philosophy, his teaching and research areas include architecture theory, design research, political economies of land use and resource extraction, aesthetics, modern and contemporary art, contemporary philosophy and philosophy of nature, and post-industrial environments of desolation. Prior to his position as the 2011-2012 Walter B. Sanders Research Fellow at Taubman College, he taught in the graduate programs for Architecture and Landscape Architecture in the Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design at the University of Toronto, as well as Art History and Visual Culture in the Department of Visual Studies at the University of Toronto Mississauga.
Etienne is also founding editor of the architecture, landscape, and political economy journal Scapegoat; he is a sustainability research expert for the Graham Environmental Sustainability Institute; and, his research, writing, and other public projects are collected online.