Seo and Hirabayashi Families Symposium
Seo-Hirabayashi Families Student Fellowship Symposium 25-26
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On May 4th, 2026, the Center of the American West hosted its first iteration of the Seo-Hirabayashi Families Student Fellowship Symposium. When the idea to develop a student fellowship focused on Japanese-American Incarceration in the American West arose--a special thank you to Julia Popham for her contribution in developing this idea--we initially had the funds to award six students with our new fellowship. After an enthusiastic response from students all across campus with different expertise, experience levels, and interests delivered a large number of thoughtful and lively proposals, we decided to expand the students admitted to this fellowship. With the help and support of Dean Daryl Maeda and the College of Arts & Sciences, the Center for the Humanities and Arts, and the Department of History, we were able to award fellowships to twelve students for our inaugural fellowship opportunity.Ìý
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CAW funded the fellowship projects of six undergraduate and six graduate students. Funded students came to the fellowship with proposals from a plethora of campus units and degree paths. Awarded fellowship projects included students from product design, political science, history, English, theatre, design engineering, and art. We also awarded students at every level of academic experience: undergraduates, MAs/MFAs, and PhD candidates. This provided a unique experience where the hierarchy of their experience level was flattened to cultivate collaboration and feedback at all levels of experience doing prolonged funded research on a single topic.Ìý
The creative and intellectual freedom we offered the students upon accepting their research proposals drew in these students to engage in an experimental fellowship opportunity. We wanted to offer a fellowship opportunity that appealed to both undergraduate and graduate students interested in engaging with a subject looming in Coloradan and Western US histories. Throughout the fellowship, students from vastly different projects, experience levels, research methods, approaches, and scopes gathered regularly to meet with CAW faculty advisors to discuss their project progress culminating in the symposium in May 2026. During these meetings, CAW faculty and staff shared a syllabus of materials, resources, and research methods while supporting the completion of these projects and/or to inspire further investigation and research for later in their academic careers.
Like strands to a single tapestry, these students wove together a culminating presentation of their research that was singular, engaging, and poignant. We are very proud and appreciative of the hard work each student contributed to making our first traverse into student funded research a resounding success.Ìý
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ÌýI’m so grateful that I had the opportunity to participate in this fellowship! I received the flyer with the fellowship information through the head of the English department, and I started my application immediately—I was really drawn to the chance to pursue a larger-scale creative project in my first year of my MFA program, especially a research-based project that would allow me to further explore different parts of Asian American history more deeply.
The topic of Japanese and Japanese American incarceration was something I had already known about through prior study and personal interest, but through the Center of the American West, I learned so much and really broadened my wealth of knowledge in the subject. I loved how I was able to get a more localized look at the history and learn more about Colorado specifically, which ultimately led to my decision to focus specifically on Amache.
It was really great to see everyone’s final presentations and see how each project shaped up after our progress checkpoints during our meetings. Having everyone together again at the symposium reminded me of what a great community we had throughout the duration of the fellowship. As I was eating lunch outside during the symposium intermission, Brooke was talking about how she was feeling nostalgic for the fellowship as we were still in it, and I know that this is going to be an experience I’ll be nostalgic about far into the future.
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- Keira Deer, MFA in Poetry
