Congratulations, Spring 2025 GNS+ Graduates!

GRADUATE
Morgan Cacic
Lauren Cassidy
Carsten Haas
Shawn Hansen
Mirva Johnson
Cody King
Andrei Liustrov
Sergei Miroshkin
Ailie Westbrook

UNDERGRADUATE
Oona Audley
Kiefer Aukland
Daniel Babenkov
Allie Bacholl
Katie Belfi
Ian Bohachek
Katelyn Bowman
Michael Brenton
Jadelyn Burris
Ian Burton
Catherine Grace Carroll
Nina Isabelle Castiglione
Jordan Florian Chao
Amanda Chastan
Vincent Chen
Mia Chomeau
Victoria Chowaniak
Jessica Chudy
Ava Clark
Malachi Clark
Hunter Cochran
Melanie Cohn
Lauren Cortright
Julia Mcintosh Daley
Hailey Davis
Mason DeCora
Nicholas Doermann

Kate Dupont
Ryan Echlin
Lexi Englebert
Liza Familiant
Kairui Fan
Larissa Foley
Margo Frauenheim
Dilan Kumar Garg
Evan Timothy Good
Erin Elizabeth Grisar
Will Grosspietsch
Kaitlyn Hanson
Thomas Harb
Colin Harkin
Kysten Harrold
Thomas Hickey Jr.
Abbigail Alexis Hickman
McKenna Hurlburt
Frankie Iovinelli
Daisy Jagoditsh
Robin Jolly
Arber Jonuzi
Lena Jung
Matiasse Kambandu Schilz
Dong-Yon Kim
Lyle Kirsch
Kaylee Knutson
Valeriya Kravchenko
Alex Kresnak
Reid Campbell Kuenzi
Sadie Leach
Hazel Lietz
Claudia Loppnow
Fei Lu
Riley Lynch
Adeline Lyons
Nicholas Marston
Olivia Melson
Bis Mishra

Michael Motschenbacher
Greta Nashold
Megan Olafsson
Katelyn Ollinger
Vanessa Palma
Jewell Petrowitz
Nicholas Piepenburg
Owen Pilot
Kayla Piskula
Podi Prichanont
Sunshine Prost
Collin Queen
Isabella Richter
Lucas Rochman
Joe Schmalstig
Sophi Schmidt
Rowan Seffens
Madison Sheen
Claire Shelly
Annika Steinbach-Mineau
Gus Strachan
Anna Thompson
Tatum Thompson
Gabrielle Trieloff
James Waldenberger
Grace Wall
Paige Watson
Audrey Wellington
Kayla Wells
Ryan Wickesberg
Natalie Winn
Trevor Wotruba
Joel Wurf
Brigid Zei
Oona Zilavy
Molly Zimmermann
Jan Zitko

Recent GNS+ Award Recipients

Pamela Potter named the Michael Ochs Professor of German and Music

Mark Louden Receives Griebsch Bascom Professorship

Mark Louden is the recipient of the Griebsch Bascom named professorship.

Marcus Cederstrom Recognized by 2022 McBurney Center Forward in Access Awards

The McBurney Disability Resource Center’s mission is “Leading the campus community forward in access for students with disabilities.” Eight faculty and staff members were presented with a Forward in Access Award from the McBurney Center in 2022.

Pam Potter Awarded Fellowship at Institute for Advanced Study

Pam Potter was awarded a fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study for the 2023-24 year. The position allows for uninterrupted curiosity-driven research in a community of scholars at one of the world’s foremost centers for intellectual inquiry.

The Department of German, Nordic, and Slavic+ Statement on Diversity

The Department of German, Nordic, and Slavic+ strives to create inclusive excellence by valuing the contributions of people of diverse backgrounds based on their race, ethnicity, culture, veteran status, marital status, socio-economic level, national origin, religious belief, ability, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, and class.

This is an ongoing task that requires each of us to unlearn our socialization in cultures where privilege and opportunity are unequally distributed along many of those lines and then to put that learning into practice in our classrooms, syllabi, decision-making structures, and research.

GNS+ Commitment to Social Justice

Note: the vocabulary we use for identity is complex because identities are themselves complex. We use the terms Black and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and Person of Color) to reflect the multiple identities individuals may hold, and we use Hispanic/LatinX/Chican@ to reflect the broader use of the former term and the critique to it posed by the latter two.

The tumultuous year of 2020 has brought about a reckoning in virtually every sphere that shapes U.S.-American cultural and institutional life. As an academic community that is also part of a larger U.S.-American cultural and institutional fabric, we commit our voice and action to the social issues that are facing our faculty, staff, and students, as well as the people living in the United States. Our statement is a response to:

  1. the COVID-19 pandemic, which has underscored the racial inequities in health care and economic access for Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic/LatinX/Chican@ communities, triggered xenophobia and racism against Asians and Asian-Americans, as well as amplified anti-Semitism and Islamophobia;
  2. the latest chapters in a long history of police violence against Black people, which sparked protests for racial justice led by Black Lives Matter in the spring and summer of 2020;
  3. the xenophobic targeting of international students in repeated executive orders attacking their right to study and learn in the United States, which threatened thousands of students and scholars, and the university-internal discrimination against paying international students fair wages;
  4. the September 22 executive order forbidding the use of federal funding for any discussions or trainings on racism, gender discrimination or misogyny, which attempted to stifle the work to undo those injustices;
    and finally,
  5. the chaotic presidential election of November 2020, which underscored that voter suppression continues systematically to disenfranchise Black voters and other People of Color.

While the past year of 2020 has led us to focus on the urgency of anti-racist work in particular, we recognize the complex intersections of identity in the US and worldwide, which include not just race and ethnicity but gender identity, dis/ability, sexual orientation, and religious affiliation. We hold that our commitment to anti-racist work will also help us challenge misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, xenophobia—including anti-Semitism and Islamophobia—, and prejudices about ability and religion.

Thus, we, the Department of German, Nordic and Slavic+ commit to the following concrete actions in the next two years:

  • We will mentor faculty in creating more inclusive syllabi that profoundly engage with race and its history.
  • We will formulate concrete steps toward fostering greater anti-racist and decolonizing pedagogy in our department courses and curricula.
  • We will invite lectures from Black and BIPOC scholars in our disciplines and promote those lectures.
  • We will develop criteria for evaluation and recognition of work in diversity, equity, and inclusion for hiring, promotion, and nominations for achievement awards. We will, further, feature such recognition in our nomination materials, newsletters, annual reports, and tenure dossiers.
  • We will pursue university funding (e.g., Target of Opportunity funding) to supplement departmental funds for hiring Black and BIPOC scholars and supporting them once hired.
  • We will prepare a grant application to UW–Madison’s Division of Diversity, Equity, and Educational Achievement to match departmental funds for scholarships and support programs for Black and BIPOC students, especially current or potential PhD students.
  • We will use departmental meeting and other committee time for all GNS+ workers to undertake individual development, self-reflection, and scholarship, such as study groups on particular texts, hiring Black and BIPOC experts in racial justice training, or internal UW–Madison courses or trainings.
  • We will create an application process for funding for faculty, staff, and graduate students to pursue trainings in racial and social justice on the UW–Madison campus and elsewhere.

We once again remind ourselves and our colleagues that each of us shares the responsibility to advance anti-racism and social justice.

Black Lives Matter.