2007–2008 Fellows in Their Fields

Anette (Peko) Hosoi RI ’08

Anette (Peko) Hosoi, photo by Webb ChappellSnails slither across the landscape “like nature’s ultimate all-terrain vehicle,” says Anette (Peko) Hosoi RI ’08. The humble clam burrows at a rate of a centimeter per second. Hosoi, a physicist and associate professor of mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, specializes in how small animals move. In her lab, Hosoi and her graduate students study the fluttering, slithering, hopping movements that propel animals from one place to another. Her research group then creates robotic creatures that mimic these movements.

Another case of the natural world inspiring innovations in design.

Mulatu Astatke RI ’08

Mulatu Astatke, photo by Webb ChappellAfter conquering the pop charts in his native Ethiopia, originating the musical hybrid Ethiojazz, and composing for the Jim Jarmusch film Broken Flowers, Mulatu Astatke RI ’08 continued his musical explorations at the Radcliffe Institute.

The Berklee-trained composer and multi-instrumentalist worked with electronic specialists to develop a traditional instrument called the krar and wrote an electronic opera, The Yared Opera, which debuted at Sanders Theatre. He also worked with other fellows on an oral history project, exploring cultural creativity in the American Ethiopian diaspora, and performed regularly in the Boston area with the Either/Orchestra.

“It was one of the best years of my life,” Astatke said.

Catherine Lutz RI ’08

Catherine Lutz, photo by Webb ChappellHaving lost a cousin in a car crash and feeling firsthand the frustration of a car-dependent suburban lifestyle, Catherine Lutz RI ’08, a professor in the department of anthropology and the Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University, turned her ethnographic eye on the place of the car in everyday American life.

She found that much of the research on cars in the United States is historical, not ethnographic. And yet, how Americans relate to the automobile says a lot about collective cultural values and debates.

Lutz is completing research on a book that she hopes will stimulate debate on alternatives to a car-dependent way of life.

 

Photos by Webb Chappell