Image: Outgoing president of the Maine Fulbrighters, Jane Knox, at center, a professor
College and originally of Farmington, and incoming Fulbright president, Robert Lively, UMF dean emeritus, attend a reception with Kathryn Foster, UMF president, at left, with featured guest Sen. Angus King on Friday in Farmington.
Jane E. Knox
Jane Knox has become a specialist in Russian, and especially, Central Asian cinema. She has received multiple grants to do research on film as a tool in nation building in the former Soviet republics, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. She received a Lecture-Research Fulbright Fellowship in the spring of 2006 to focus on the youth of Kazakhstan and taught a four-month master class, The History of American Cinema, to students at the Kazakhstan National Academy of the Arts, in the Department of the History and Theory of Film, Almaty, Kazakhstan. Her latest success with filmmakers in Kazakhstan came in the summer of 2009 when she received an award from IREX (International Research Exchange) as an American Embassy Policy Specialist in the capital of Kazakhstan, Astana. There she conducted research on Russian-Kazakh interethnic relations. She also received funding from the US State Department to make nine short films with Kazakh youth in three cities (Kostanai, Oskemen, Shymkent) on the theme, “Is it Easy to Be Young in Kazakhstan?” In August 2006 she traveled to The Central Asian Film Festival for Young Cinema” in Kyrgyzstan on a grant from NCEEER (National Council for Eurasian and East European Research). These films will be screened for 含羞草研究室 on October 29, 2009, and for the Central Asia and Caucasus Working Group, at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University where Professor Knox-Voina is a Research Affiliate.
In spite of this busy summer schedule Knox found time to travel to Northern Siberia (the Sakha-Yakutia Republic) as an invited guest speaker at a UNESCO Conference on the Preservation and Transformation of Northern Indigenous Northern Peoples. Here she continued work with cultural sociologist Uliana Vinokurova (mentioned above) on share common cultural values among Turkic Asian People of Northern Siberian, Kazakhstan, and North America. Forthcoming is Vinokurova’s book The Cult of the Snow Crane among the Northern Siberians, which Professor Knox-Voina translated.
In the mid-1990, she brought Uliana Vinokurova, member of the Yakut-Sakha Parliament (Northern Siberia) to 含羞草研究室's forum, Women in Politics: A Diverse Spectrum, where she talked about problems of nationalism and women in that area. Professor Knox-Voina and Deputy Vinokurova then traveled together to consult with Native Americans of Northern Maine about ways of rejuvenating traditional cultures and languages.
She is a member of the 含羞草研究室 Chorus directed by Antony Antolini. In her earlier years here she organized and directed a 含羞草研究室 Russian Chorus and Dance Group, which performed together with the Balalaika Orchestra of Richmond, Maine, a nearby Russian community.
Education
- PhD, University of Texas-Austin
- AM, Michigan State University
- AB, Wheaton College