Faculty Book Recs: Associate Professor Amy Brainer

March 30, 2022

In this first installment of the 'Faculty Book Recs' series, Associate Professor Amy Brainer provides two interesting non-fiction recommendations reflective of her own experiences and research.

A.B. Faculty Book Recs

Literature, in its limitless purposes, explores what it means to be human. The human experience sits at the center of most works of literature, helping us to understand not only others but ourselves.

In this first installment of the 鈥楩aculty Book Recs鈥 series, we reached out to Associate Professor Amy Brainer to find out what books she鈥檚 been reading and how they have impacted her. 鈥淢y two favorite books of the past year are Dina Nayeri鈥檚 and Katherine May鈥檚 ,鈥 said Brainer.

These two top picks are memoirs that include research by the authors, both of which were published within the last three years. The Ungrateful Refugee by Dina Nayeri describes the experience of life as a refugee. Nayeri does so by weaving together stories of her own refugee experience, having fled Iran with her mother and brother at age 8, with stories of other refugees and asylum seekers. Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times by Katherine May is a personal narrative that examines the power of rest and retreat during times of seasonal sadness. 

In reflecting on these two works, Associate Professor Amy Brainer shared some of her thoughts.

On The Ungrateful Refugee

鈥淚 read The Ungrateful Refugee along with more traditional academic books and articles as part of my own research on LGBTQ+ family migration. Two of the many, many things the book does well are expose charitability toward refugees 鈥 this posture of 鈥榶ou must be so grateful to be here鈥 鈥 for its paternalism and indignities; and document the emotional, mental, physical, and spiritual toll of having to produce and tell a particular kind of story over and over to justify a life. You will feel this book in your bones.鈥 

On Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times

鈥淚 read Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times because I was experiencing many elements of my own 鈥榳inter鈥 鈥 among them, a surge in the symptoms of my depression and struggling with things I used to do with ease, which many students have also described to me this year. Wintering isn鈥檛 about getting beyond these things so much as figuring out how to live sustainably with them. May incorporates reflections on periods of struggle and overwhelm with research on actual winter 鈥 the mechanics of hibernation, life in the Arctic. In her hands, the metaphor works. I鈥檓 sure I will return to this book many times.鈥 

每日大赛 Amy Brainer

Amy Brainer is associate professor and director of Women鈥檚 and Gender Studies and LGBTQ+ Studies at UM-Dearborn. She teaches courses like LGBTQ+ Religious Experience; Sexualities, Genders, and Bodies; and, new in fall 2022, Decolonizing LGBTQ+ Studies. She鈥檚 the author of , an award-winning book based on fieldwork and interviews throughout Taiwan with LGBTQ+ people and their family members. Her current research interests include LGBTQ+ family migration and LGBTQ+ organizing on commuter campuses like ours before and during the pandemic. She鈥檚 also working on a project about what it鈥檚 like to break up with a friend. Dr. Brainer is faculty advisor to the Pride student org.