Members

The programs and events of the Hemispheric Institute are open to all scholars, artists, activists and interested individuals regardless of institutional affiliation. Individuals participate in Encuentros and other Institute activities based on open applications, and our online Digital Video Library is free and accessible to all. Institutional membership gives affiliated faculty and students to the Hemispheric Institute Virtual Learning Environment, which includes courses, teaching resources and other materials for pedagogical and research purposes. The Hemispheric Institute's governance structure is based upon a network of member institutions, which constitute its Executive Board.


Senior Fellows of the Hemispheric Institute:

The distinction of Senior Fellow is awarded to scholars, artists and activists affiliated with the Hemispheric Institute whose work exemplifies the highest achievement in the field of performance and politics. Fellows are selected by the Institute's Executive Board. The first two fellows were named at the 2007 Encuentro in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Jesusa Rodríguez (2007)

Mexico’s most influential cabaret and political performance artist, recipient of an Obie Award. Often referred to as a chameleon, Rodríguez moves seemingly effortlessly and with vigor across the spectrum of cultural forms, styles, and tones. Her work challenges traditional classification, crossing with ease generic boundaries: from elite to popular to mass, from Greek tragedy to cabaret, from pre-Columbian indigenous to opera, from revue, sketch and carpa, to performative acts within political projects. She ran the famous El Hábito in Mexico City with her partner, Liliana Felipe, where they staged hundreds of shows over the course of fifteen years. Most recently, she heads up the Resistencia Creativa movement in Mexico, whose key strategy is using "massive cabaret" as a tool for political action www.resistenciacreativa.org.mx.

Luis Millones (2007)

As one of Peru's leading historians, Luis Millones is the recipient of Peru’s National Culture Fellowship and a founding member of the Interdisciplinary Seminar of Andean Studies in Lima. He is also a member of the Chilean Academy of History and a researcher with the National Ethnology Museum of Japan. Millones currently teaches in the graduate program of Social Sciences at the Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, Peru, is professor emeritus of the University of San Cristobal de Huamanga, Ayacucho, and a visiting professor at several universities outside Peru. He is the author of numerous articles and books on the Andean world, including Ser indio en el Perú.

Member Institution

American University
Arizona State University
Brown University
Centro Regional de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias
Columbia University
Dartmouth College
Fortaleza de la Mujer Maya
Harvard University
Indiana University
New York University
Northwestern University
Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
Rutgers University
Trinity College
Universidad Austral de Chile
Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León
Universidad Diego Portales
Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
University of California at Los Angeles
University of Chicago
University of Illinois at Chicago
University of Manitoba
University of Pittsburgh
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Partner Organizations Include:

Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance
Centro Cultural Recoleta
Centro do Teatro do Oprimido do Rio de Janeiro
El Museo del Barrio
Electronic Disturbance Theater
Grupo Cultural Yuyachkani
La MaMa
La Pocha Nostra
The Culture Project
Resistencia Creativa
Reverend Billy and the Church of Stop Shopping