Nicholas Bascuñan-Wiley
Assistant Professor
Ph.D. Northwestern University, 2024
Nicholas.Bascunan-Wiley@stonybrook.edu
Areas of Interest
Migration; Culture; Globalization; Foodways; Sensation/The Body; Ethnography
CV
Bio
At the intersection of migration and cultural studies, my research examines the embodied dimensions of diasporic culture and transnational connectivity. My most recent project focuses on the culture of food and eating as it is shaped by the long-term and long-distance connections between communities in Chile and Palestine. Additionally, I enjoy exploring new forms of critical qualitative inquiry, particularly in global, culinary, and digital worlds.
Selected Publications
Bascuñan-Wiley, N. and Brockway, E. (2023). Making and Breaking Bread: The Promises and Pitfalls of Migration Discourse in Food Tour Television. Food, Culture, and Society, online first.
Bascuñan-Wiley, N., DeSoucey, M., and Fine, G.A. (2022). Convivial Quarantines: Cultivating Co-presence at a Distance. Qualitative Sociology, 45(3), 371-392.
Bascuñan-Wiley, N. (2021) Migration and the Senses. Sociology Compass, 15(3), 1-16.
Miller, M., Bascuñan-Wiley, N., and Busse-Cárdenas, E. (2020). Families and Migration in the 21st Century. In Tanja Bastia and Ronald Skeldon (Eds.), Routledge Handbook of Migration and Development, 191-200.
Bascuñan-Wiley, N. (2019). Sumud and Food: Remembering Palestine through Cuisine in Chile. Mashriq & Mahjar: Journal of Middle East and North African Migration Studies, 6(2), 100-131.