麻豆精选 is merging research with global connections in the Global Understanding Research Initiative (GURI). The recently displayed 鈥淲e the People鈥� and the upcoming 鈥淚mport/Export鈥� exhibition provide cultural kaleidoscopes with local and international reflectors.

GURI is led by 麻豆精选Professor of French translation and Director of the Institute for Applied Linguistics Fran莽oise Massardier-Kenney, Ph.D., from the department of Modern & Classical Languages and Paul Haridakis, Ph.D., interim director of the School of Communication Studies. The initiative is an interdisciplinary look into how people and culture move across national borders.
鈥淭he intent is to increase understanding as to what it means to build contact with people whose cultures are different from yours and to appreciate that point of view,鈥� Massardier-Kenney said.
Massardier-Kenney spearheaded the 鈥淲e the People鈥� exhibit that was showcased on Kent State鈥檚 campus in the fall of 2019 and in downtown Cuyahoga Falls this past fall. The exhibit featured 25 panel photographs of refugees living within the Northeastern Ohio region. The photos, shot by photographer Erin LaBelle, were accompanied with a short bio and statement.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to show everyone who their neighbors are,鈥� Massardier-Kenney said. 鈥淭he U.S. was built on different waves of immigration. The display makes people think about why people come to the U.S. and what they struggle against and reminds them of the enormous contribution of refugees.鈥�
Massardier-Kenney said the refugee partners were pleased to participate and happy to see their contributions displayed on the campus. There was a large turnout of refugee communities and others at the exhibits.
鈥淨uite a few people from the community came to see the exhibit,鈥� Massardier-Kenney said. 鈥淭hey came with their neighbors. Each person in the portraits received copies of the professional photographs to keep.鈥�
The 鈥淲e the People鈥� exhibit finished its run in Cuyahoga Falls on December 7. But GURI has continued the theme of global understanding with the upcoming project 鈥淚mport/Export.鈥�
The 鈥淚mport/Export鈥� project, set to be displayed April 5th, consists of 25 images that were selected by juror Dawit Petros, visual artist and professor of photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Submissions came in from around the world through an international open call.
In every piece of art, the artist reflects on the way the process of importing and exporting has affected their communities. Diverse ideas are relayed through varying styles of art that will be stretched over metal frames and displayed across campus, similar to the 鈥淲e the People鈥� format.

鈥淭he 鈥業mport/Export鈥� idea is not just about the shipment of goods or the movement of people,鈥� said Joseph Underwood, Ph.D, assistant professor in the School of Art, 鈥渋t鈥檚 an invitation to think about the way things, people, ideas and philosophies are moving across borders, and how they move in the 21st century.鈥�
Underwood collaborated with J. Leigh Garcia, assistant professor of print media and photography in the School of Art, in creating the project and choosing the theme as the co-curators.
鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty relevant politically, with borders being shut down and walls being built,鈥� Underwood said. 鈥淓ven with COVID, it鈥檚 a health crisis in which people cannot move.鈥�
J. Leigh Garcia studies the movement of capital between Latin American countries and the United States and the resulting inequities. Garcia believes the 鈥淚mport/Export鈥� project is very much in line with GURI鈥檚 cultural understanding initiative.
鈥淭he movement of culture is an interesting theme of this project,鈥� Garcia said. 鈥淚t is very open ended, the theme can be interpreted in many different ways.鈥�

More than 100 works were submitted and the 25 that were chosen represent 30 different nationalities. Underwood explained that many artists come from multiple backgrounds of culture, and their work represents ideas of multiculturalism.
鈥淪ome of the artists are multiple nationalities, it鈥檚 not necessarily always 鈥業 represent Mexico,鈥� or 鈥業 represent Iran鈥� it can be 鈥業鈥檓 American and Belarusian.鈥� There is an in-betweenness,鈥� Underwood said. 鈥淓ven people don鈥檛 fit in those really rigid boundaries of nation states.鈥�
Underwood says he hopes the large-panel outdoor exhibit will become a biennial project with a changing theme each season.
GURI supports research for faculty of many backgrounds and areas of study, education, business, aeronautics, communication and public health to name a few. The research is not strictly limited to classical science research.
鈥淚t is open to anyone who is interested in global understanding,鈥� Massardier-Kenney said. 鈥淭here are some studies that are scientific with a hypothesis that is tested but there is also a strong commitment to taking the research out of a very narrow academic circle and having it lead to a broader understanding.鈥�
Underwood expressed the importance of connecting researchers across disciplines to gain global understanding.
鈥淚n terms of global understanding it鈥檚 not limited to any one field of study,鈥� Underwood said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 about drawing connections in a transnational and transglobal fashion and asking 鈥榟ow do we as researchers address these issues?鈥欌€�
Learn more about Kent State鈥檚 Global Understanding Research Initiative.