Women and Gender Studies Student Wins Award

Women and Gender Studies Student Wins Award

Women and Gender Studies graduate student Karen Wolf has received the MAIS Outstanding Thesis Award for her work Our Bodies, Our (Virtual) Selves. Karen’s thesis, an ethnography of Second Life, asks what happens to gender, body, and identity in a seemingly infinitely mutable world where “all elements are defined by the user.” She argues that Second Life allows individuals to explore and perform their gender and sexuality in new ways, while simultaneously reifying dominant notions of gendered bodies.

This is the third year in a row that a Women and Gender Studies student has received the MAIS Outstanding Thesis Award. Brianne Russell-Morris received the award in 2009 for her thesis The Logic of Welfare Reform: An Analysis of the Reauthorization of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, and Nicole McCoy in 2008 for Voices From the Slums: Brazilian Women on Domestic Service and Favela Life. Dr. Nancy Hanrahan, Associate Professor, Sociology and Anthropology served as thesis chair for all three awarded students.