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Honors College
King Hall D1045
CSULA
5151 State University Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90032
Telephone: (323) 343-5969
FAX: (323) 343-5966
Email: honorscollege@calstatela.edu
Honors Faculty
Faculty for 2012-2013
Kevin Baaske
Kevin Baaske earned a Ph.D. at the University of Southern California after receiving his MA and BA from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. He has been on the CSULA faculty since 1986. His teaching and research interests lie in Argumentation and Rhetorical Theory, Criticism, and Pedagogy. His inquiries specifically focus on how people argue over social issues and political campaigns. He is the former Director of Forensics at CSULA and a former winner of the GE Honors Outstanding Professor Award. Dr. Baaske currently serves as one of two CSULA senators on the statewide academic senate. He was recently elected Secretary of that body. He also serves on, and is the former Chair of, the Chancellor's General Education Advisory Committee.
Choi Chatterjee
Choi Chatterjee has spent most of her adult life studying revolutions and thinking about revolutionaries. She is very interested in charismatic individuals who connect with the people in meaningful ways, and bring about effective change by developing powerful political movements. Although trained as specialist of Russia and the Soviet Union, she has subsequently developed a keen interest in global history, especially in the many material, cultural, and intellectual links that connect the local to the world. Her honors courses will explore the role of individuals in history of globalization in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In her first book, Celebrating Women. Gender, Festival Culture and Bolshevik Ideology, 1910-1939 (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2002), she analyzed the many ways that Soviet languages, rhetoric and propaganda empowered women to create meaningful changes in their life. Recently she published a co-edited volume of essays along with Beth Holmgren entitled, The Russian Experience: Americans Encountering the Enigma, 1890 to the Present. (Routledge Press, November 2012) that excavates little known stories about Russian-American friendships, scholarly exchanges, travel experiences and other imaginary encounters in the twentieth century. She is currently writig a history of American communist women.
Christopher Endy
A professor in CSULA's History Department since 2000, Chris Endy teaches classes on U.S. international relations and on popular culture. He believes that history revolves around interpretation and debate--not memorization--and that the past matters most when it shines light on today's problems. Dr. Endy's research examines globalization and foreign policy. His first book, Cold War Holidays, explored the rise of international tourism after World War II. He is currently at work on a book about multinational corporations. Before moving to Los Angeles, he received his B.A. from Duke University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His non-academic interests include cooking, learning the German language, and downloading music from murky corners of the internet.
Allison Fuligni
Dr. Fuligni received her Ph.D. in Developmental Psychology from the University of Michigan, and Bachelors Degrees in Cognitive Science and Psychology from Brown University. Her research focuses on how children's experiences influence their development, particularly the language, cognitive, and social development of young children with different experiences in child care and preschool, and the effects of family poverty, being a dual language learner, and the influences of various types of parenting. She spent 12 years as a researcher at Columbia University and UCLA before joining the faculty of Cal State LA in 2008. Dr. Fuligni enjoys sharing with students the fascinating ways that children learn and develop, as well as the importance of understanding research methods and how they are used to enhance our knowledge about development.
Linda Margarita Greenberg
Dr. Greenberg joined the CSULA faculty in 2009 after earning her Ph.D. in English from UCLA; she specializes in U.S. Ethnic Literature and Women's Studies. Passionate about teaching, Dr. Greenberg is dedicated to fostering curious, thoughtful and dynamic student communities that promote intellectual growth inside and outside the classroom. She is also interested in interdisciplinary teaching approaches that enable students to make substantive connections between the literature they read and the historical, social, economic, and cultural context of that literature. Drawing from the teacher-scholar model, Dr. Greenberg's teaching and research interests complement and reinforce each other: she is currently working on a book-in-progress that examines the connection between literary genres, violence and justice in Chicana and Asian American Women's Literature; she is also beginning a second book project on the Chicana author, Helena Marķa Viramontes. In the future, Dr. Greenberg would like to undertake a historical account of racial and gendered narratives about undocumented immigrants to the United States from the late nineteenth century to the present, examining how those narratives complicate the contours of citizen and nation.
Catherine Haras
Catherine Haras has been a member of the University Library faculty since 2005. She received her BS from Boston University and an MLIS from the Information School at the University of Washington. As a research librarian she is preoccupied with the following questions: How do we identify and understand information needs? How do people learn using technology? What are the social, cultural, and political aspects of information technology? What does it mean to be information literate? She has taught courses for the Honors College, the University Library, and the College of Engineering, Computer Science and Technology. She also works with faculty across campus building information literacy into their courses and programs and teaches search for the departments of Political Science, Anthropology, and the Charter College of Education's EdD program. Professor Haras also mentors 12 undergraduate and graduate student assistants who are trained as peer tutors for the library. She has published on information literacy, including information education policy; and human information behavior, including the information seeking of undergraduates.
David Olsen
David S. Olsen received his Ph.D. from Northwestern University, his MA from University of Virginia and has been a faculty member at CSULA since 1993. He teaches courses in Rhetorical Theory and Criticism, Public Address and Performance Studies. He has published work on the 1988-1992 controversy over the National Endowment for the Arts, religion in the classroom, performance in the classroom, and "nuclear education," and has co-edited special editions of the Journal of Film and Video and the American Communication Journal. He has received an innovative instruction award, and has twice received the GE Honors Outstanding Professor Award. Since 1993, Dr. Olsen has mentored over fifty students to present their written work at local, regional, national and international conferences. He believes every Honors student is a scholar, with the potential to contribute greatly to the academic conversation.
Veena Prabhu
Dr. Veena P. Prabhu is an Assistant Professor at the California State University, Los Angeles. Her academic career spans a wide spectrum of scholarships, beginning with undergraduate degrees in chemistry (B.Sc.) and law (L.L.B.), an MBA in marketing, M.S. in human resource management (HRM), and a PhD. in organizational change and human resource management (HRM). She currently teaches general management, HRM, and organizational behavior. Her research interests include change management, creativity, entrepreneurship, international HRM and executive leadership and management. She has published in the areas of creativity, entrepreneurship and management, and has presented her work at several national and international conferences. Dr. Prabhu mentors both graduate and undergraduate students to conduct research and present their work in the form of thesis and/or at various academic conferences.
Bidhan Roy
Dr. Bidhan Roy is an Associate Professor in the English Department at CSULA. He teaches classes in twentieth century British and Anglophone literature and postcolonial theory. Born in England, Dr. Roy received his PhD from the University of London where his research analyzed the contemporary South Asian diasporic novel in light of recent theories of globalization. He has published widely in his field, including articles and book chapters on Hanif Kureishi, Muslim identity and literature, Buddhism and the novel, Christopher Isherwood, literary representations of South Asian ethnicity and the travel writing of V.S. Naipaul. He is currently working on a book examining the relationships between globalization and the contemporary Anglophone novel and looks forward to sharing the global outlook of his research with honors college students.
Matthias Selke
Matthias Selke was born in Hannover/Germany, and came to the United States after High School. He obtained his B.S. in Chemistry at the University of Southern California, and his Ph.D. at UCLA under the direction of Professor C.S. Foote. After a postdoctoral stint in the laboratory of Prof. J.S. Valentine at UCLA, he joined the faculty at California State University, Los Angeles where he currently is a full professor of chemistry. His research interests include oxidation of biomolecules and antioxidants, inorganic and organic photochemistry, and photochemistry of nanostructures. His research in chemistry has been funded by the National Institute of Health (NIH) and the National Science Foundation (NSF). He has won several awards, including a Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award and the Research Corp. Cottrell Award. He also has long-standing interests in climatology, political economy, critical theory, music sociology and history and culture of China and the Philippines. He is teaching the year-long thesis course in the Honors College. He believes that the Honors College provides a wonderful opportunity to teach students the historical and scocio-cultural context of whatever their field of study may be.
Mike Shim
Mike Shim received his BA in philosophy from Vassar College and MA and PhD from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. He specializes in 20th century Continental Philosophy, with an emphasis on the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl; he also has research interests in the history of early modern philosophy, especially in the works of Leibniz and Kant. He has published numerous articles in these areas. His extra-professional interests include films, walking, and eating.
Mark Wild
Mark Wild was hired as a specialist on the history of Los Angeles (even though he's from San Francisco) at CSULA ten years ago. Since then he's taught classes on a lot of other subjects, but he especially likes to study the economic, religious, and urban histories of the modern United States. In his honors courses he looks forward to exploring with his students the unexpected connections among disparate elements of the urban experience, in how, for instance, a map might tell you something about the poem you just read, and how that poem might help you design a planning document for a local community. His first book, Street Meeting, explores relationships among different ethnic communities in early twentieth century L.A. These days he's working on a new project examining efforts by Protestant missionaries to create more "city-friendly" churches after World War II.
