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Maddy Tevonian, a senior religious studies and art history double major, studied in India and Nepal. She is now preparing a capstone analyzing Buddhist art through the lens of religious studies.
Diana Van Gilder, a history major from Moraga, California, is heading to France this summer to present a paper at a conference that explores links between tourism and fiction.
In addition to his teaching in religious studies and global studies, Martyn Smith has led the First-Year Studies program the past two years. He embraces learning through big conversations and interdisciplinary thinking.
Meet Gustavo Fares, a member of the Spanish faculty whose background includes training in law, painting, and printmaking, as well as a Ph.D. in Latin American literature.
Constance Kassor, associate professor of religious studies, focuses much of her teaching on Buddhist thought and Asian religious traditions and has been a frequent collaborator across departments since arriving at Lawrence in 2016.
Claire Chamberlin, a double major in global studies and French, used a research opportunity to pursue the translation of four Molière-inspired plays from French to English. Two were later performed on stage.
Karen Carr has taught courses on 19th- and 20th-century religious thought and philosophy of religion for 35 years.
Melissa Range, an associate professor of English at Lawrence, is an acclaimed poet with a love of both creative writing and literature.
Avery Greene '24 is collecting stories and histories about constellations in the night sky as part of a research project.
Tom Zoellner ’91 carved out a career as a journalist by seeing stories others didn’t, drilling down to the why, and always being present, all skills he developed as a Lawrence student three decades ago.
Earl Simons Jr. '22 is embracing the chance to explore all his interests at Lawrence, even if they have nothing to do with his primary area of study.
Eilene Hoft-March joined the Lawrence University faculty with a student-focused teaching style and a deep love of French literature and autobiographies. Thirty-two years later, that all remains true.
Celia Barnes, associate professor of English, has forged an impressive track record in working across departments, merging her deep interest in 18th-century literature with seemingly far-ranging subject matters.