PULTENEY STREET SURVEY - Fall 2019
Exploring Knowledge
We asked faculty who received tenure this year to answer the question: What has been the idea you’ve spent your career investigating or exploring, and why?
Here are their responses.

Gabriella D’Angelo,
Associate Professor of Art
and Architecture
Architecture’s ability
to empower all people, to
confront issues, to elicit
conversations and to move
beyond ego in playful overtures
in order to realize new
opportunities for our built
environment are key driving
forces within my design work,
as well as within my teaching.
Given the uncertainties of our
future world and the current
problems we face, there is an
opportunity and obligation
to design more ethically,
intentionally and, at times,
radically. Questioning the
traditional boundaries that have
defined architecture with an
experimental, interdisciplinary,
collaborative and socially
conscious approach inspires a
momentum for me to conceive of an architecture that is
interactive, playful, adaptive
and democratic. Architecture
should afford spaces of joy,
renewal, protection, knowledge
building and sharing. Focusing
much of my efforts on
community-engaged projects
in addition to experimental
architectural performances
and poetics, I hope to continue
to challenge architectural
discourse while making good
design accessible to all.

David Finkelstein,
Associate Professor of
Geoscience
Modern lakes and ancient lake
deposits have fascinated me
for more than 35 years. Did
the earliest microbes evolve
in lakes and ponds? What role
did fire play in Cretaceous
lake ecosystems? What do the
minerals in ancient lake deposits
reveal about the paleo-water
chemistry? I use geochemical,
biogeochemical and
sedimentological information
recorded in lacustrine archives
(rocks and sediments) to answer
these questions. Over the last six
years, I have successfully built
a research program with Hobart
and William Smith students,
faculty from HWS and colleagues
from other institutions. My
recent scholarship focuses on
investigating rapid climate
change during the Holocene,
Pleistocene, and Cretaceous;
lake environments conducive
for harboring early terrestrial
life; characterization of the early
geochemical evolution of lake
and pond waters in the New York
Finger Lakes; and the modern
chemical and stable isotopic
signatures of precipitation in
Geneva, N.Y.

Keoka Grayson, Associate
Professor of Economics
I have spent my
career thinking about
inequalities and
inequities. Why? I
think it’s necessary.
And I owe the
universe.

Leslie Hebb, Associate
Professor of Physics
I have spent my career
measuring the fundamental
properties of stars other than the
sun and the extra-solar planets
that orbit them. A star’s mass, radius, temperature, chemical
composition, luminosity and
age are the basic properties
that define it, and these change
over time as a star evolves
throughout its lifetime. One
reason why this is important
has to do with our desire to
know whether we are alone in
the universe. Over the past 30
years, this has become more
than a philosophical question;
it has become a scientific one.
Scientists are working to detect
life on planets around other
stars, but the subtle signals from
biological organisms must be
made in the presence of the host
star’s overwhelming brightness.
Furthermore, just detecting
the presence of the planet itself
is only made by its indirect
gravitational or other influence
on the star itself. Therefore, in
order to detect planets around
other stars and any life that
may exist on them, we must
first know the stars and their
properties extremely well.

Christina Houseworth,
Associate Professor of
Economics
I examine the factors that
influence the decision to work,
including marital decisions,
as well as wages and other
determinants that influence
employment outcomes such as
education. More specifically,
I’m interested in inequalities
in the labor market. I study
measures of wage inequality,
the determinants that help
to explain why individuals
earn different wages and the
underlying factors that influence
those determinants. I make
connections between outcomes
and the factors that influence
those outcomes, while paying
close attention to the underlying
factors that affect those
determinants. Broadly defined,
I am interested in the many
connections between marital
outcomes, education and wages
and how those factors differ by
race, gender and nativity.

Christopher Lemelin,
Associate Professor of
Russian Area Studies
My research interests
encompass a range of subjects,
but there is one constant in all
of them: my fascination with
language. My love of languages
started with French in high
school and continued in college
with Russian, when I engaged
language directly. Then, when
I started studying linguistics in
college and graduate school,
I became fascinated not only
with how languages work as
systems, but also with how
language is used to express our
reality and even to shape it. My
research addresses these issues
in several ways: How does a
poet capture what a painter
expresses in her canvases? How
does a composer interpret in
music what a poet writes in
words? How does an émigré
writer use language not only
to express homesickness, but
also to assuage that sorrow and
reestablish his identity in a
culture not his own? Languages
— verbal, musical and painterly
— are tools with which we
understand and shape our
worlds and how they achieve
this has fascinated me from
the beginning of my academic
career.

Liliana Leopardi, Associate
Professor of Art and
Architecture
For the past seven years, I have
been interested in researching
magic and the renaissance
belief in the occult virtues of
precious and semi-precious
stones. Most elite class
individuals of that period, in
fact, owned and/or wore on
their person such stones in
order to protect themselves
from an illness or cure
themselves from one. Many
were also treated with potions
made of ground precious and
semi-precious stones. While
this might at first appear like a
rather unusual area of research
for an art historian, my interest
in the subject arose from an
earlier project that focused on
reframing the use of ornament
in Renaissance paintings. It was
that research that allowed me to
realize that what often appears
as ornamental and symbolic
to our eyes was instead highly
meaningful and functional to
the early modern individual. I
am currently finishing a book
project on this same subject.

Justin Rose, Associate
Professor of Political
Science
I’ve spent my career
seeking to find the best
means by which I can
use my perch within
higher education to
effect structural change. I
firmly believe that higher
education is a source of
structural injustice, but also
a potential antidote.

Katherine Walker,
Associate Professor of
Music
Frank Harte was quoted as
saying, “Winners write the
history, losers write the songs.”
The basic idea captured in this
statement underwrites all of
my professional work, namely
that music provides an alternate
— and too often unexamined
— lens for examining
our world and its history.
Music history often resides in
the cracks of our geopolitical
fault lines and, as such, it can
be used to make visible and
interrogate some of our biggest
assumptions about who we are.
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