Silver McKie

Silver McKie

2024-2025 A&S CREATES Cohort Member

PhD Student in Sociocultural Anthropology

Silver Mckie is a doctoral student in Anthropology, broadly interested in experiences of self, consciousness, and embodiment. Drawing from mad studies, transcultural psychology, and anthropological frameworks of consciousness, their work critically explores how Western psychology has traditionally over-pathologized non-normative experiences of selfhood. Silver holds a particular interest in exploring post-clinical or otherwise non-pathological multiplicity, where […]

Lauren Malone

Lauren Malone

2024-2025 A&S CREATES Cohort Member

PhD Student in Archaeology

Lauren Malone is a PhD student in the Department of Anthropology. Her involvement with WashU’s Office of Public Scholarship began as a member of the CREATES cohort in 2024. Here, she quickly grew passionate for the dynamic modes of making academic research accessible. Since then, she has joined the Office as a guest speaker for […]

Gloria Fall

Gloria Fall

2024-2025 A&S CREATES Cohort Member

PhD Student in Sociocultural Anthropology

Gloria Fall is a PhD student in sociocultural anthropology. Her research focuses on how race, gender, class, and body size/ability inform the eating disorder experience. Her project is situated outside of clinical boundaries and seeks to understand how individuals find support and care beyond stringent, racialized diagnostic categories and exclusionary treatment protocols. More broadly, Gloria […]

Trevin Corsiglia

Trevin Corsiglia

MPE

PhD Student in Comparative Literature & Thought

In the 2024-2025 academic year, Trevin completed two Mentored Professional Experiences (MPEs) with the Office of Public Scholarship. With the guidance of Chris Schaberg and Liz Wolfson, he launched the Public Scholars Hub for The Public Scholar Substack, which details a list of opportunities in public scholarship as well as musings on the historical development […]

Cristina Correa

Cristina Correa

MPE

PhD Student in Comparative Literature & Thought

Cristina Correa’s writing and research focus on ecocriticism and grief in diasporic Caribbean & Latine poetics as a conduit for anticolonial power. Her work testifies to what she and her dead have come to bear in language that supports the ones who follow still. She is the recipient of fellowships and awards from CantoMundo, Carolyn […]