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Part of Notes on the authors ( special section) = Noty o autorach artykułów / Lud, 2016, t. 100
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Lud, t. 100, 2016
NOTES ON THE AUTHORS
(SPECIAL SECTION)
Iuliia Buyskykh graduated from the Taras Shevchenko National University of
Kyiv, B.A. in History, M.A. in Ethnology. She obtained her Ph.D. in 2011. Between
2010-2014 she worked at the M.T. Rylsky Institute of Art Studies, Folklore, and Ethnology at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. Currently she works at the
National Research Institute of Ukrainian Studies under the Ministry of Education and
Science of Ukraine. Her research interests include anthropology of religion, border
studies, Ukrainian studies, and folklore.
Address: National Research Institute of Ukrainian Studies, 18 Isaakiana Street,
01135 Kyiv, Ukraine.
julia.buj@gmail.com
Juraj Buzalka, Ph.D., works as Associate Professor of Anthropology in the Institute of Social Anthropology, Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences, at Comenius
University in Bratislava. His research interests include anthropology of social and
political movements; nationalism, populism and religion; social transformations in
Eastern Central Europe; politics of memory; wine and food movements.
Address: Institute of Social Anthropology, Comenius University, Mlynské luhy 4,
821 05 Bratislava, Slovakia.
juraj.buzalka@fses.uniba.sk
Marysia Galbraith is an Associate Professor in the New College Program and
Department of Anthropology at the University of Alabama. Her fields of interest include national and ethnic identity, globalization, and memory studies. As a 2014-2015 Fulbright Scholar at Adam Mickiewicz University’s Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, she developed a new research project, Fragments of
Memory: Reassembling Jewish Life in Poland.
Address: Department of Anthropology, University of Alabama, Box 870210,
Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, U.S.A.
mgalbrai@ua.edu
Chris Hann is Honorary Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of
Kent, the Martin Luther University, Halle-Wittenberg, and Leipzig University. Since
1999 he has served as Director at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology,
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Notes on the authors
Halle (Saale). His main interests are in economic and political anthropology. Regionally, he specialises in socialist and postsocialist Eastern Europe. He has also carried
out fieldwork in Turkey and in Xinjiang, China.
Address: Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Advokatenweg 36, 06114
Halle (Saale), Germany.
hann@eth.mpg.de
Anika Keinz received her Ph.D. in European Ethnology from Humboldt University of Berlin. She is currently Professor for Comparative Cultural and Social Anthropology of Late-modern Societies at European University Viadrina Frankfurt/Oder.
Her research interests include inequality studies, gender and queer studies, migration,
and Europeanization/globalization.
Address: Europa-Universität Viadrina, Große Scharrnstr. 59, D - 15230 Frankfurt
(Oder), Germany.
keinz@europa-uni.de
Joanna Mishtal is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of
Central Florida. She received her Ph.D. in cultural anthropology from the University
of Colorado at Boulder, and held a Postdoctoral Fellowship at Columbia University,
Mailman School of Public Health. Her research examines reproductive rights, health,
and policies in Poland (primarily) and in Ireland, while contextualizing her work
within the EU governance as related to gender equity, healthcare access, and human
rights.
Address: Department of Anthropology, University of Central Florida, Howard
Phillips Hall 309, Orlando, FL 32816, U.S.A.
Joanna.Mishtal@ucf.edu
Carole Nagengast is Regents Professor Emerita at the University of New Mexico
in Albuquerque. Her research interests include critical theory, class, ethnicity, and
gender, transnationalism and the state, and human rights. She has three main research
trajectories: Central Europe, primarily Poland; Mixtec migrant workers in Mexico
and the United States; and human rights.
Address: Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque,
NM 87131, U.S.A.
cnagenga@gmail.com
Frances Pine is Reader in Anthropology at Goldsmiths, University of London.
She received her Ph.D. from the London School of Economics, and worked in the
Anthropology Department at Cambridge University and at the Max Planck Institute
for Social Anthropology. She has been doing research in Poland since the late 1970s,
and has been involved in teaching and developing anthropology in eastern central
Europe. She has published widely on kinship, gender and generation, memory, place
and landscape, and work, divisions of labour and the household.
Notes on the authors
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Address: Department of Anthropology, Goldsmiths, University of London, Lewisham Way, London SE14 6NW, Great Britain.
f.pine@gold.ac.uk
Jessica C. Robbins-Ruszkowski, Ph.D., Assistant Professor at the Institute of
Gerontology and Department of Anthropology, Wayne State University in Detroit.
Her fields of interest include: aging and the life course, kinship and personhood,
memory, postsocialist studies, political economy, morality, education and learning,
palliative and hospice care, gardens, Poland, Europe, US.
Address: Institute of Gerontology and Department of Anthropology, Wayne State
University, 234 Knapp Building, 87 E. Ferry Ave., Detroit, MI 48202, U.S.A.
jrr@wayne.edu
Alexandra Schwell is Visiting Professor at the Department of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Hamburg. She obtained her Ph.D. in Comparative Cultural
and Social Anthropology in 2007 from the European University Viadrina in Frankfurt
(Oder). From 2008 to 2016 she worked at the Department of European Ethnology,
University of Vienna. Her research interests include border studies, Eastern Europe,
anthropology of the political, state bureaucracies, football, and Europeanization.
Address: Institut für Volkskunde/Kulturanthropologie, Universität Hamburg,
Edmund-Siemers-Allee 1 – West, Raum 215, 20146 Hamburg, Germany.
alexandra.schwell@uni-hamburg.de
NOTY O AUTORACH ARTYKUŁÓW
Magdalena Kozhevnikova, doktor nauk filozoficznych, absolwentka Instytutu
Etnologii i Antropologii Kulturowej UW, pracownik naukowy Instytutu Filozofii
Rosyjskiej Akademii Nauk w Moskwie. Interesuje się bioetyką i antropologią medyczną. Zajmuje się zagadnieniami przemian natury ludzkiej w związku z rozwojem
biotechnologii, etycznymi problemami klonowania, inżynierii genetycznej i nowych
metod reprodukcji.
Adres: Instytut Filozofii, Rosyjska Akademia Nauk, ul. Gonczarnaja 12/1, 109240
Moskwa, Federacja Rosyjska.
kmagdalena@yandex.ru
Katarzyna Majbroda, doktor nauk humanistycznych, adiunkt w Katedrze Etnologii i Antropologii Kulturowej Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego. Literaturoznawca
i antropolog, zajmuje się metodologią i teoriami antropologii społeczno-kulturowej.
Jej zainteresowania dotyczą także krytyki kulturowej, posthumanistyki i dyskursów
postzależnościowych w naukach humanistycznych i społecznych. Praktykuje antropologię edukacji.
Adres: Katedra Etnologii i Antropologii Kulturowej, Uniwersytet Wrocławski,
ul. Szewska 50/51, 50-139 Wrocław.
katarzyna.majbroda@uwr.edu.pl
Jacek Nowak, doktor habilitowany, socjolog i antropolog, pracuje w Zakładzie
Antropologii Społecznej Instytutu Socjologii w Uniwersytecie Jagiellońskim. Zajmuje się głównie problematyką etniczną. Prowadzi badania wśród mniejszości etnicznych i religijnych; ostatnio koncentruje się na zagadnieniach pamięci zbiorowej.
Adres: Instytut Socjologii, Uniwersytet Jagielloński, ul. Grodzka 52, 31-044 Kraków.
jacek.nowak@uj.edu.pl
Magdalena Zatorska, magister etnologii, doktorantka w Instytucie Etnologii
i Antropologii Kulturowej Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego. Jej zainteresowania naukowe skupiają się na relacjach polsko-żydowskich i ukraińsko-żydowskich, problematyce dziedzictwa, antropologii pamięci, antropologii prawosławia. Zajmuje się również antropologią medycyny, problemami etycznymi w antropologii i metodologią
badań antropologicznych.
Adres: Instytut Etnologii i Antropologii Kulturowej, Uniwersytet Warszawski,
ul. Żurawia 4, 00-503 Warszawa.
magda.zatorska@gmail.com
