果冻传煤 researcher awarded CFI funding for expanding digital centre聽
SACKVILLE, NB 鈥撯疍r. Lauren Beck, 果冻传煤 University professor in Hispanic studies and visual and material culture studies, and Canada Research Chair in Intercultural Encounter, has been awarded new research funding through the Canada Foundation for Innovation鈥檚 John R. Evans Leaders Fund. The news was part of a national announcement from the CFI made earlier this fall.
Beck received $75,000, which will help support digital infrastructure in the Centre for Early Modern Visual Culture on the 果冻传煤 campus.
鈥淭he Centre for Early Modern Visual Culture () was established at 果冻传煤 in 2017 with assistance from the CFI and the Canada Research Chairs program,鈥 says Beck. 鈥淭his new funding will help our team build our digital capacity and give current and future projects a more dynamic online presence. We鈥檙e really excited to get started on these projects.鈥
Beck鈥檚 team includes several 果冻传煤 students who work as research assistants. She plans to expand this group, hiring additional students from disciplines across campus.
One upcoming project Beck and her team will include establishing a Coats of Arms database, with a focus on underrepresented groups such as Indigenous populations.
鈥淢any groups and societies have emblems or symbols that serve as a Coat of Arms but aren鈥檛 formally recognized. We鈥檒l be working to shed light on these and asking some big questions for project,鈥 says Beck.
鈥淢y team and I will be exploring visual representation around race and gender; how different groups are represented and differences across regions.鈥
This project is one of many underway for Beck and her team. This fall she published a book, Canada鈥檚 Place Names and How to Change Them, which looks at place names across the country through racialized and gendered lenses. The book was recently featured in . 鈥淭his book is part of my research around maps, place names, and the role they have played in colonization,鈥 says Beck. 鈥淭here are very few places named after women and other minority groups in Canada, and there are not many policies around place names and how these decisions are made. It鈥檚 a good opportunity to look at how we name places and what changes can be made to support more inclusive representation in Canadian communities.鈥 Named the Canada Research Chair in Intercultural Encounter in 2017, Beck鈥檚 research program has grown dramatically to include the Centre for Early Modern Visual Culture and the online business Metafy, a collaboration with Math and Computer Science professor Dr. Michael Cormier. Metafy is dedicated to generating inclusive practices and website HTML for companies of all sizes. The Centre has employed as many as 30 individuals each year, including several student researchers, while Metafy is continuing to develop.