Four Recent Graduates Receive Fulbrights
This year, from locations around the world, Matt Dell (BA ’09), Bretton Dimick (BA ’04), Neil Gong (BA ’08), and Agam Neiman (BA ’07) are having a shared experience: they are the latest Gallatin alumni to receive the prestigious Fulbright award. Established by the U.S. State Department in 1946, the J. William Fulbright Program’s aim is to increase understanding between the people of the United States and people of other countries. To this end, the U.S. student grant provides for one year of independent research, graduate study, or teaching abroad. Before they packed their bags, these adventurous alumni took time to fill in Gallatin Today on their plans.
While a student at Gallatin, Matt Dell
focused his studies on the colonial origins
of contemporary economic development
in the poorest parts of the world.
Continuing on this path, his Fulbright
research takes place in Bamako, Mali,
where he is utilizing ethnographic, historical,
and economic approaches to
study transnational labor and economic
development. He explains: "I’m excited
about connecting concrete, contemporary
trends to historical events that seem
distant and abstract. Colonial policies in
Africa in the 1930s, for example, seem
totally unrelated to the ways in which we
think about ‘philanthropy,’ or the unimpeachable
moral authority we attribute to
nonprofit and NGO work; however, these
things may be profoundly intertwined."When asked about how
his Gallatin experience has
informed his current work,
Dell humbly affirms, "I
would not be anywhere near
where I am today without
the unwavering motivation,
inspiration, and guidance of
my Gallatin adviser, Millery
Polyné, and my former professor,
Edmund Fong." After
his research is complete,
Dell plans to work in the international labor movement and eventually to
study labor relations and international development in graduate school.
Bretton Dimick came to Gallatin for the freedom to link musicology
and philosophy in one program. His studies focused on music
theory and history and also included course work on Irish music—
some of which he took while studying in Dublin—as well as private
lessons in music performance. Looking back on his work at NYU,
Dimick is grateful for the guidance he received from his Gallatin
adviser Gage Averill as well as from his “unofficial adviser” Patrick
McCreery, Gallatin’s director of global programs and an associate
faculty member. He also recalls, “My independent studies with NYC
fiddler Tony Demarco were instrumental in my development as an
ethnomusicologist.”
After graduating with
a senior colloquium
that explored “Ethics in
Ethnography,” Dimick
moved to Vietnam.
There he apprenticed
with a luthier and
worked with a violinist
and a dan bau (monochord)
player. He also
studied dan day (threestringed
lute) performance with funding from the Center for World
Performance Studies Residency. Currently a doctoral student in ethnomusicology
at the University of Michigan’s Center for Southeast Asian
Studies—he acknowledges that Gallatin’s interdisciplinary seminars
gave him “a foundation in critical theory that has been extremely
useful in graduate school”—his Fulbright work brings him back to
Hanoi, Vietnam. He will complete research for his dissertation on ca
tru, a form of Vietnamese sung poetry. “Ca tru is interesting because
it combines music and language, and it has a long history and connection
to the rich poetic and musical legacy of the region,” he states.
After finishing his dissertation, Dimick hopes to teach at a university
and continue to write, travel, and study music.
Neil Gong graduated from Gallatin magna cum laude with a concentration
in mental health and cultural theory. While a student, he participated
in clinical internships with Bellevue Hospital and Pathways
to Housing, a Harlem-based organization where he currently works.
He also completed research at the University of California–Berkeley’s
Center for Urban Ethnography and held a leadership role in Gallatin’s
student chapter of The Icarus Project, a peer-based mental health
support network.
He states, “Professor Brad Lewis has been an amazing mentor. He
forced me to reconsider some of my basic assumptions about science,
the body, and political struggle. Even after I graduated he continued
to meet with me and offer professional guidance. Professors Sara
Murphy, Edmund Fong, and Jack Tchen have all been great mentors
too, keeping me from getting too comfortable with any one way of
looking at things.”
The recipient of a
grant for research in
Hong Kong, Gong
is investigating the
clinical and cultural
effects of Westerninfluenced
psychotherapies
at the
University of Hong
Kong’s Centre on
Behavioral Health.
He states: “Gallatin
helped me turn a
critical eye towards
the literature on
Eastern versus
Western psychology,
which often misses
the complex hybridity
of contemporary societies. Hong Kong is a place where monolithic
notions of culture are being destabilized, so I’m excited to see what
mental health care looks like over there.” After returning to the U.S.,
he plans to continue his work in mental health and social justice and
to pursue graduate degrees in both sociology and a clinical specialty.
Agam Neiman graduated from Gallatin summa cum laude after studying
literature, sociology, film, and philosophy. He remembers, “My
adviser, Bill Caspary, sparked my interest in German philosophy during
my first year in his course ‘Ethics for Dissenters.’” Neiman then
honed this course of study by taking tutorials on anarchist theory and
on philosophers Nietzsche, Husserl, and Heidegger as well as an
independent study on political philosopher Carl Schmitt. His senior
colloquium was entitled “Heteronomy and the Ethical Subject.”
Since graduating, he has
been living and working
as an educator in Berlin,
Germany. As the recipient
of an English teaching assistantship
Fulbright grant for
Austria, Neiman will spend
a year teaching English and
U.S. cultural studies to high
school students in a small
town outside of Vienna. He
states, “I believe that sharing
aspects of my culture
through teaching, while I’m
immersed in another [culture]
will be a unique way to
experience, or re-experience, both. Meanwhile, it’s the ideal way for
me to continue working on my German, which I trust will help me in
graduate school, where I hope to study political philosophy and 20th century
European intellectual history.”
Those interested in applying for a Fulbright can learn more at www.iie.org/fulbright and are encouraged to sign up for NYU’s national scholarships information listserv at www.nyu.edu/scholarships.









