Reimagining the PhD Cohort

Reimagining the PhD Big Image

In July 2015, the Simpson Center launched Reimagining the Humanities PhD and Reaching New Publics with the generous support of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The conviction animating this initiative was that doctoral education, especially at a public university, must be guided by a capacious vision of its fundamental purpose: to contribute to the public good. From 2015-2021, the program prepared UW doctoral students in the humanities for this task by meaningfully connecting them to the diverse, access-oriented institutions of higher education in the Seattle District community colleges, and by supporting the development of both doctoral students’ public projects and publicly engaged graduate seminars taught by UW faculty in the humanities. Find out more about our programming below.

2021 - 2022 Scholars

A black and white close up portrait of Paul Tubig wearing glasses.
Assistant Professor
Philosophy, Georgia Southern University
Anna Bates stands in front of plants and wears a white shirt.
Doctoral Student
Department of Philosophy
Photo of Alec Fisher in front of a palm tree.
Doctoral Candidate
Close-up portrait of a white woman with pink and brown hair and blue eyes wearing a blue shirt
Doctoral Candidate
English
A portrait of Anna Nguyen wearing glasses.
Doctoral Candidate
History
Profile of Madison Heslop standing in front of a dark background and wearing a dotted shirt.
Doctoral Candidate
Department of History
Portrait of Anis Bawarshi sitting in front of a white brick wall.
Professor, Chair
Portrait of Charles LaPorte wearing glasses and standing in front of a tree.
Professor
English
Portrait of Linda Nash sitting in front of a bookcase.
Professor
Department of History
Portrait of Lynn Thomas wearing glasses and yellow dangle earrings.
Professor
History
Sara Goering professional photo smiling at the camera, blurred trees in the background, wearing a blue blazer, necklace, and hair pulled back
Professor
Philosophy
Portrait of Michael Blake wearing a suit and sitting outside.
Professor
Department of Philosophy

2021 - 2022 Reimagining the Humanities PhD Scholar

Portrait of Anis Bawarshi sitting in front of a white brick wall.

Anis Bawarshi (he/him/his)

Professor, Chair

Genre as/for Social Action

Anis Bawarshi’s seminar (developed in partnership with Charles LaPorte) introduces the notion of genre and its possibilities for engaging publics. Rhetorical Genre Studies (RGS) examines the ways that genres help create and respond to recurrence, making genres important social and rhetorical constructs. More recent attention to genre uptakes in RGS has shifted the focus of attention from genres as normalizing phenomena to the dynamic forces that mobilize knowledge and action between genres. This shift opens possibilities for thinking of genre not only as social action but also of how genre can be deployed for social action, including ways that new genres or reconfigurations of genres can help transform how we relate to, engage with, and mobilize publics. Topics the seminar explores include imagining ways to make genre knowledge (and its complex formations) public and useful to local communities; helping students develop methods for studying genres in their public contexts; and exploring how existing genres often manage boundaries that separate academic and public spheres and how genres can be changed or new genres developed that enable more interactive and reciprocal relations between universities and various publics.