Posted on

Gianna Depina Week 1 Blog

My interest in the Digital Scholarship Summer Research Fellowship initially steamed from my eagerness to conduct research outside of natural sciences, along with the ability to conduct research on a subject I am extremely passionate about. This semester, a new minor in humanities was presented to the student body which is health humanities. I have a strong belief that in order to be successful being a physician, it is important to put both STEM, and humanities requirements on the same level of importance. This also ties along with being a human being coexisting with others. I believe that humanities is critical for coexistence as well. With that being said, other than my interest in pursuing a minor in humanities, I wanted to also conduct my own research about my culture incorporating humanities, while working and learning from others in my group. The Fellowship program fulfilled all of my desires which is what drove me to be interested in applying for it. Digital humanities also opens up a new world for many individuals who have been underrepresented statistically throughout history. With new and improved technologies and methodologies, many minority groups, specifically those who do not reside in America, can no longer be left out. Overall I am grateful to be apart of this amazing opportunity!

My project is based on studying the demographics of Cape Verdeans in America, with both a primary and secondary objective. For some background knowledge, I am a Cape Verdean-American with little knowledge about our history when it comes to demographics. I was born in Boston MA with a large populations of both Cape Verdean-Americans and Cape Verdean immigrants. Throughout my lifetime, I have noticed that whenever I travel out of Boston, and tell locals my ethnicity, they have no idea what Cape Verdeans are. I want to investigate this further and understand why we are primarily located in Massachusetts other than our homeland. With that being said, my primary objective is to understand the current demographics of Cape Verdeans, including gender ratios, age distribution, ethnic backgrounds, and geographic distribution, both within Cape Verde and in the diaspora. My secondary objectives throughout this study is to analyze trends over time in migration patterns, population growth, employment sectors, and educational attainment.

Throughout this amazing fellowship opportunity, I plan on using a humanistic approach to learn more about my culture, as I have already learned many new things about it just in this first week. I also plan on coming out of this with a new perspective on my identity, along with learning more about the backgrounds of my group mates as we are a diverse group of people with many stories to tell. Many tend to generalize black individuals under one category when in reality, we all have unique cultures and stories which differentiate us from on another in beautiful ways. I want to bring light to these statistical disparities, along with the generalizations placed upon black people now through history, specifically Cape Verdeans. I am extremely excited and looking forward to seeing where this opportunity will take me!

Posted on

Gianna Depina

Hello!

Gianna Depina was born October 23 2003 in Boston, Massachusetts. She ethnically is a Cape Verdean American woman and identifies as a black woman. She has always been curious, outgoing, passionate, and extremely warm hearted. Gianna is a rising junior who is intending on graduating from Bucknell with a B.S in Neuroscience, on the premed track, with an intended minor in health humanities. She strongly believes that it is equally important for pre-health students to explore and learn about the humanities side of health, as it is the science side. Gianna loves nature, cars, working out, all types of animals, and her Mommy, Francisca Depina. Gianna has always been family orientated as she someday wants to start her own big family. Gianna is currently working on spreading awareness on several topics.