Contributors
Jelena Bogdanović (PhD Princeton), an architect and architectural historian, is an assistant professor at Iowa State University. She specializes in architecture in the Balkans and Mediterranean basin. jelenab@iastate.edu.
Jessica Christie (PhD University of Texas in Austin) specializes in the visual culture of the Maya and Inka as well as in the Southwest and Northwest of Native North America. She is an associate professor at East Carolina University. christiej@ecu.edu.
Talinn Grigor (PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology) is a professor of art history at the University of California, Davis. Her research concentrates on the cross-pollination of art, architecture, and (post)colonial politics, focused on Iran and India. tgrigor@ucdavis.edu.
Eulogio Guzmán (PhD UCLA) is an art historian who specializes in the art and architecture of post-Classic and colonial Central Mexico. He teaches at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in collaboration with Tufts University. eulogio.guzman@tufts.edu.
Gregor Kalas (PhD Bryn Mawr College) is an associate professor of architectural history at the University of Tennessee. His research concerns the late antique and early medieval reuse of preexisting buildings in Rome. gkalas@utk.edu.
Melody Rod-ari (PhD UCLA) is an assistant professor of art history at Loyola Marymount University. Her research investigates the development and evolution of Buddhist art in Southeast Asia with focus on modern and contemporary Buddhist visual culture in Thailand. melody.rodari@gmail.com.
Anne Parmly Toxey (PhD the University of California, Berkeley) applies to her field of architectural history the tools of ethnographers, cultural anthropologists, and cultural geographers. She founded and directs Arc Boutant Historic Preservation Program, and cofounded and codirects a museum exhibit research and design company, Toxey/McMillan Design Associates. She teaches at the University of Texas at San Antonio. annetoxey@tmdaexhibits.com.
Alexei Vranich (PhD University of Pennsylvania) finished several seasons of fieldwork at the pre-Columbian site of Tiwanaku, Bolivia, and is continuing his interest in ancient urbanism at the Inca capital of Cusco, Peru. avranich@gmail.com.
Stephanie Zeier Pilat (PhD University of Michigan) is an assistant professor of architecture at the University of Oklahoma. A historian and designer, she examines points of intersection between architecture and politics. She is the author of Reconstructing Italy: The Ina-Casa Neighborhoods of the Postwar Era (Ashgate, 2014). spilat@ou.edu.