Organisation & Researchers
Research Centre Directors
The Directors, Dr Andrew Asibong and Dr Nathalie Wourm, coordinate the activities of the Centre, and in consultation with the Steering Committee are responsible for developing strategic initiatives and priorities. The Advisory Board includes sixty researchers from nine subject areas at Birkbeck as well as other institutions inside and outside London and the UK, who advise the Directors and Steering Committee on strategic priorities.
Steering Committee
Silke Arnold-de Simine (European Cultures & Languages)
Damian Catani (European Cultures & Languages)
Matt Cook (History, Classics and Archaeology)
Akane Kawakami (European Cultures & Languages)
Gabriel Koureas (History of Art & Screen Media)
Joanne Leal (European Cultures & Languages)
Ann Lewis (European Cultures & Languages)
Paul Watt (Geography, Environment and Development Studies)
Zhu Hua (Applied Linguistics and Communication)
Advisory board / Consultant
Researchers
FILM AND VISUAL CULTURE
Andrew Asibong (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Subject Co-ordinator
Representations of new kinships and communities in contemporary French film and literature, Marie NDiaye.
Marie-Claire Barnet (Durham - French)
Representations of family in contemporary French writing and visual culture.
Shirley Jordan (QMUL - French)
Contemporary French women's writing and visual culture.
Joanne Leal (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Post-political masculinities in German cinema and cultural representation.
FINE ARTS
Carmen Fracchia (Birkbeck - Iberian and Latin American Studies)
The construction of the image of black slaves in the Spanish Empire and its visual representation.
Gabriel Koureas (Birkbeck - History of Art & Screen Media)
Subject Co-ordinator
Memory, conflict and commemoration in the construction of national and gender identities.
Katarzyna Murawska-Muthesius (Birkbeck - History of Art & Screen Media)
Mechanisms of staging the sense of community in cartoons, 'Eastern European' emigrees in Britain.
Kate Retford (Birkbeck - History of Art & Screen Media)
Representations of the family in eighteenth-century Britain, representations of the domestic sphere.
HISTORY AND MEMORY
Sunil Amrith (Birkbeck - History, Classics and Archaeology)
Cosmopolitanism and race in Tamil Southeast Asia, migration and diaspora in Modern Asia.
Silke Arnold-de Simine (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Subject Co-ordinator
Memory communities and German cultural identities.
Matt Cook (Birkbeck - History, Classics and Archaeology)
Queer families and domesticity in the twentieth century.
Vanessa Harding (Birkbeck - History, Classics and Archaeology)
History of the family in London, family and household groups in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Jonathan D Mackintosh (Birkbeck - Media and Cultural Studies)
Masculinities in modern Japan, Japanese migration in the 20th century.
Jessica Reinisch (Birkbeck - History, Classics and Archaeology)
Refugees and displaced people in Central-Eastern Europe after 1945.
Hilary Sapire (Birkbeck - History, Classics and Archaeology)
'Black Atlantic' history, black loyalism in the British Empire.
Martin Shipway (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
French nationalism; decolonisation.
Luis Trindade (Birkbeck - Iberian and Latin American Studies)
Portuguese nationalism and national identity.
LITERATURE
Anthony Bale (Birkbeck - English and Humanities)
Histories and theories of anti-semitism.
Andrew Billing (Macalester College, USA - French)
The animal/human relation, colonialism.
Jean Braybrook (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Remy Belleau and the power of kinship bonds.
Emma Campbell (Warwick - French)
Kinship and community in Old French hagiography.
Aude Campmas (King's College, London - French)
Subject Co-ordinator
Representations of kinship and community in Wajdi Mouawad plays, representations of the recomposed family in the Second French Empire.
Damian Catani (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Terror and slavery in Hugo, consumerism and politics in Mallarmé.
Jennifer Cooke (Loughborough University - English and Drama)
Intimacy, affect, and experimental twentieth-century literature.
Nora Cottille-Foley (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA - French)
Literary practices of oppositional discourses in the context of identity politics in contemporary texts.
Nicolette David (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Psychoanalysis and gender, love, hate, desire, in literature.
Isabel Davis (Birkbeck - English and Humanities)
Representations of family and the Trinity in late medieval literature and art.
Stephen Dodd (SOAS - Japanese)
Representations of the native place in modern Japanese literature.
Ella Dzelzainis (Newcastle University - English)
Women, the family and political economy in English industrial fiction, 1832-1855.
Jessamy Harvey (Birkbeck - Iberian and Latin American Studies)
Catholic girlhood in twentieth century Spain, the place of children's culture in adult memory.
Jane Hiddleston (Exeter College, Oxford University - French)
The relation between poststructuralism and postcolonial theory; notions of universality, specificity and community.
Thomas Karshan (Queen Mary, London - English)
Nabokov; theories of family cultures and memory.
Ann Lewis (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Subject Co-ordinator
The representation of the figure of the prostitute in eighteenth-century France, sensibility and the eighteenth-century novel.
Robin Howells (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
The emerging bourgeois family: representations in 18C France and England.
Akane Kawakami (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
The mother-son relationship in Proust, the image of Japan in the French literary imagination.
Mpalive Msiska (Birkbeck - English and Humanities)
Identity in theory and in literature, particularly post-colonial African theory and literature.
Gill Rye (IGRS, London - French)
Representations and narratives of mothering in contemporary women's writing in French.
Peter Sorrell (Rutgers University, USA - French)
Fictional worlds and the role of the reader in worldbuilding; representations of film in literature.
Nathalie Wourm (Birkbeck - European Cultures & Languages)
Subject Co-ordinator
Post-structuralist visions of kinship; anticapitalism in contemporary French literature.
PHILOSOPHY AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Cécile Fabre (Lincoln College, Oxford University - Political Philosophy)
Philosophy of war: just war theory from a cosmopolitan perspective.
Patrick ffrench (King's College, London - French)
Post-structuralist philosophies of community; kinship and belonging in contemporary French cinema.
Peter Hallward (Kingston University - Philosophy)
Postcolonial criticism and theory; contemporary political movements in postcolonial states.
Susan James (Birkbeck - Philosophy)
Subject Co-ordinator
The social position of women.
Cécile Laborde (UCL - Political Philosophy)
Contemporary theories of nationalism, toleration, republicanism, and multiculturalism.
PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHOSOCIAL STUDIES
Lisa Baraitser (Birkbeck - Psychosocial Studies)
Maternal subjectivity, psychosocial understanding of motherhood, therapeutic interventions with mothers.
Virginia Eatough (Birkbeck - Psychological Sciences)
Phenomenological research into kindred spirits.
Margarita Palacios (Birkbeck - Psychosocial Studies)
New forms of sociality accompanying general processes of individualization.
Lynne Segal (Birkbeck - Psychosocial Studies)
Shifting gender practices, changing family forms, new sexual dilemmas.
LAW
Kim Everett (University of Greenwich - Law and Criminology)
Family law, medical law and legal education.
Sarah Lamble (Birkbeck - Law)
Law, gender and sexuality; criminal justice, punishment and imprisonment; political activism and social movements.
Daniel Monk (Birkbeck - Law)
The family, law and society; education and childhood.
LINGUISTICS
Jean-Marc Dewaele (Birkbeck - Applied Linguistics and Communication)
Subject Co-ordinator
Multilingualism studies.
Penelope Gardner-Chloros (Birkbeck - Applied Linguistics & Communication)
European Immigrant Languages.
Li Wei (Birkbeck - Applied Linguistics and Communication)
Diaspora studies, bilingualism (including bilingual education) and cross-cultural pragmatics.
Maria Elena Placencia (Birkbeck - Iberian and Latin American Studies)
Small talk and politeness; service encounters and public sociality; youth talk.
Zhu Hua (Birkbeck - Applied Linguistics and Communication)
Diaspora studies, changing family values and linguistic practices in Chinese families in Britain.
SOCIOLOGY
William Ackah (Birkbeck - Department of Social Policy and Education)
Pan-Africanism; black identities in Liverpool.
Dina Kiwan (Birkbeck - Department of Social Policy and Education)
Education for inclusive citizenship.
Linda Milbourne (Birkbeck - Department of Social Policy and Education)
Young people and communities.
Yasmeen Narayan (Birkbeck - Psychosocial Studies)
Racisms in contemporary London; sexualisation and racialisation.
Paul Watt (Birkbeck - Geography, Environment and Development Studies) Subject Co-ordinator
Socio-spatial inequality and difference in the city and the suburb.







