Each Bristol Fellow receives a $30,000 research grant to spend a year after graduation studying an issue of personal interest. Komissar’s topic is “The Language of Juggling: Cultural Exchange Through Performance,” while Pulido will pursue “Paths of the Displaced: Exploration of Migration Resources.”
Komissar’s project will take him to Australia, Germany, and Mexico where he plans to examine how different landscapes and cultures have impacted the development of juggling and juggling communities around the world. By visiting schools, attending festivals, and watching circuses, he hopes to understand how culture is communicated through the art of juggling.
“I am especially interested in youth circuses and their ability to engage and uplift children from all walks of life,” he noted. “One of the most exciting prospects is the opportunity to meet so many new people from completely different backgrounds than myself. Juggling will provide me a basis for meeting new people, even if it means just standing around in a public park and juggling for passersby.”
Josef Komissar ’22
Majors: Computer Science and Mathematics
Hometown: Ashland, Mass.
High School: Ashland Public High School
Activities: Duel Observer, Juggling Club, Curling Club
Pulido’s research will focus on the migrant populations of Greece, France, Spain, Togo, and Singapore. She hopes to gain a holistic picture of the impact of migration by interacting with humanitarian workers, educators, government officials, healthcare providers, and community leaders, as well as “welcoming time spent with migrants and refugees to understand movement and integration from their perspectives.”
Drawing on inspiration from her own experience, Pulido is determined to better the experiences of migrants and refugees. “I am a political asylee from Colombia and am privileged enough to have gotten American citizenship,” she said. “I chose to focus on migration because every place I have been and every displaced person I have encountered was in need of more assistance than was provided.”
Maria “Alejandra” Pulido ’22
Major: World Politics
Hometown: Bogotá, Colombia, and Miami, Fla.
High School: Coral Reef Senior High School
Activities: Common Ground facilitator; member of On the Move, Women’s Rugby, Center for Intersectional Feminism
The Bristol Fellowship is funded by the family of William M. Bristol, Jr., Class of 1917, who served as a 51 trustee, president of the Alumni Association, fundraiser, and benefactor. He was one of seven generations of Bristol family members to attend 51, dating back to the chartering of the College in 1812. Mr. Bristol’s great, great-grandfather became one of the College’s first trustees after helping to found the 51-Oneida Academy, which later became 51 in 1793.