6.0471 NEH Summer Seminars (Full List) (1/561)
Elaine Brennan (EDITORS@BROWNVM.BITNET)
Wed, 3 Feb 1993 13:06:03 EST
Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 6, No. 0471. Wednesday, 3 Feb 1993.
Date: Wed, 3 Feb 1993 09:01:09 -0500 (EST)
From: jod@ccat.sas.upenn.edu (James O'Donnell)
Subject: NEH Summer Seminars
This list has been posted before, but it is an important opportunity for
many, and this is the time to remind those who might be interested that
finished applications for these seminars, for college teachers,
independent scholars, and others qualified to do the work of a given
seminar, are due to the directors on 1 March, so *now* is the time to
express interest, get application forms, and start preparing.
Jim O'Donnell
Classical Studies
University of Pennsylvania
1993 Summer Seminars for College Teachers
Participants receive a stipend of $3,200, $3,600, or $4,000, depending
on the length of the seminar.
Application deadline: March 1, 1993;
Announcement of awards: March 29, 1993
Application forms and information about individual seminars available
from the directors at the addresses below. Information about the
program is available from the Endowment at 202/606-8463.
**ANTHROPOLOGY**
GEOFFREY WHITE and
LAMONT LINDSTROM
Institute of Culture and Communication
East-West Center
Honolulu, Hawaii 96848
*The Politics of Culture and Identity: Pacific
Island Perspectives*
(eight weeks)
**ARTS**
ROBERT G. CALKINS
Department of Art History
Cornell University
Ithaca, New York 14853
*Narrative and Synthesis in Medieval Book
Illumination*
(seven weeks)
DALE KINNEY and
BIRGITTA WOHL
Department of History of Art
Bryn Mawr College
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania 19010
***Spolia**: Ancient Artifacts in Medieval
Re-Use*
Location: American Academy in Rome
(seven weeks)
JONATHAN D. KRAMER
Department of Music
c/o Summer Session Office
419 Lewisohn Hall
Columbia University
New York, New York 10027
*The Temporal Art of Music*
(eight weeks)
LEWIS LOCKWOOD
Department of Music
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
*The Beethoven String Quartets*
(seven weeks)
STEPHEN MURRAY
Department of Art and Archaeology
c/o Summer Session Office
419 Lewisohn Hall
Columbia University
New York, New York 10027
*Gothic in the **Ile-de-France***
Location: Paris
(eight weeks)
**ENGLISH AND AMERICAN LITERATURE**
WILLIAM L. ANDREWS
Hall Center for the Humanities
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas 66045
*The Slave Narrative Tradition in
African-American Literature and Culture*
LLOYD F. BITZER
Department of Communication Arts
6156 Vilas Hall
University of Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin 53706
*Invention in Classical and Modern Theories of
Rhetoric*
(six weeks)
LESLIE BRISMAN
Department of English
c/o Yale Summer Programs/NEH
Box 2145--Yale Station
New Haven, Connecticut 06520
*The Bible as Literature: Theory and Practice*
(seven weeks)
LEO DAMROSCH
Department of English
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
*Rousseau and Blake: Inventing the Modern Self*
(seven weeks)
JOSEPH C. HARRIS and
THOMAS D. HILL
Department of English
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
***Beowulf** and the Reception of Germanic
Antiquity*
(eight weeks)
JAMES OLNEY
Department of English
Louisiana State University
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803
*W.B. Yeats--The Poet as Autobiographer*
Location: County Sligo, Ireland
(six weeks)
RALPH W. RADER
Department of English
University of California
Berkeley, California 94720
*The Emergence and Development of the English
Novel*
(seven weeks)
THOMAS P. ROCHE
Department of English
Princeton University
Princeton, New Jersey 08544
*Epic Romance: Virgil, Ariosto, Tasso, Spenser*
(seven weeks)
DANIEL SCHWARZ
Department of English
Cornell University
Ithaca, New York 14853
*Theoretical and Critical Perspectives on the
Modernist Tradition*
(seven weeks)
JOHN SITTER
Department of English
Emory University
Atlanta, Georgia 30322
*Eighteenth-Century Satire and Theories of
Satire*
(seven weeks)
STEPHEN SPECTOR
Department of English
State University of New York
Stony Brook, New York 11794
*Absence and Presence: The Jew in Early English
Literature*
(seven weeks)
MARTIN STEVENS
c/o Summer Session Office
419 Lewisohn Hall
Columbia University
New York, New York 10027
*Chaucer in the Twentieth Century: Codicology,
Historiography, Interpretation*
(eight weeks)
ALBERT WERTHEIM
Department of English
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana 47405
*Contemporary Literature from Africa, the West
Indies, and the Pacific*
(eight weeks)
EVERETT ZIMMERMAN
Interdisciplinary Humanities Center
3591-B Library
University of California
Santa Barbara, California 93106
*Eighteenth-Century Historiography and Fiction*
(seven weeks)
See also:
History--Doyle
**FOREIGN AND COMPARATIVE LITERATURE**
RUSSELL A. BERMAN
Department of German Studies
Stanford University
Stanford, California 94305
*Inventing Germany: Cultural Symbols and
National Fictions*
(eight weeks)
MARCEL M. GUTWIRTH
Department of French
Haverford College
Haverford, Pennsylvania 19041
*Comic Theory and the Art of Comedy*
(six weeks)
RANDOLPH D. POPE
Department of Romance Languages
Washington University
St. Louis, Missouri 63130
*Spanish Autobiography in the European Context*
(eight weeks)
See also:
English and American Literature--Bitzer,
Damrosch, Roche
**HISTORY**
ALAN CAMERON
c/o Summer Session Office
419 Lewisohn Hall
Columbia University
New York, New York 10027
*Pagans and Christians in the Fourth Century*
(six weeks)
PHILIP D. CURTIN
Department of History
The Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, Maryland 21218
*Social and Economic History of the Plantation
Complex, 1450-1890*
(eight weeks)
DON H. DOYLE
Department of History
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, Tennessee 37235
*Southern History and Faulkner's Fiction*
(seven weeks)
GREGORY L. FREEZE
Department of History
Brandeis University
Waltham, Massachusetts 02254
*Church and Society in Modern Russia, 1860-1930*
Location: Moscow
(eight weeks)
TONY R. JUDT
Institute of French Studies
15 Washington Mews
New York University
New York, New York 10003
*Rethinking European History, 1945-89*
(eight weeks)
THOMAS KESSNER
Department of History
Graduate School/University Center
City University of New York
33 West 42nd Street
New York, New York 10036
*The Making of Modern America, 1918-41*
*Seminar designed for, but not limited to,
two-year-college teachers*
(six weeks)
ROGER L. NICHOLS
Department of History
University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona 85721
*Current Issues in Native American History*
(six weeks)
ELIZABETH PLECK
Center for Research on Women
Wellesley College
Wellesley, Massachusetts 02181
*Women and American Politics, 1920-88*
(seven weeks)
JEFFREY B. RUSSELL
Interdisciplinary Humanities Center
3591 Library
University of California
Santa Barbara, California 93106
*Late Antique and Medieval Conceptions of Heaven*
(six weeks)
MICHAEL F. STANISLAWSKI
Department of History
c/o Summer Session Office
419 Lewisohn Hall
Columbia University
New York, New York 10027
*History of Zionism, 1870-1948*
(eight weeks)
HENRY A. TURNER
Department of History
c/o Yale Summer Programs/NEH
Box 2145--Yale Station
New Haven, Connecticut 06520
*The German Experience of Partition and
Reunification*
(seven weeks)
DAVID J. WEBER
Department of History
Southern Methodist University
Dallas, Texas 75275
*Colonial North America: New Approaches to Its
Hispanic Past*
(seven weeks)
DONALD E. WORSTER
Hall Center for the Humanities
University of Kansas
Lawrence, Kansas 66045
*The American West: Environment and History*
(six weeks)
See also:
English and American Literature--Zimmerman
Politics and Society--Brown, Hamburger
Religious Studies--O'Donnell
**PHILOSOPHY**
MICHAEL E. BRATMAN
Department of Philosophy
Stanford University
Stanford, California 94305
*Intention*
(six weeks)
ROBERT C. CUMMINS
Department of Philosophy
University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona 85721
*Mental Representation*
(seven weeks)
THOMAS E. HILL, Jr.
Department of Philosophy
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599
*Kant's Moral Philosophy*
(eight weeks)
**POLITICS AND SOCIETY**
BERNARD E. BROWN
Political Science Program
CUNY Graduate School/University Center
33 West 42nd Street
New York, New York 10036
*Modern French Politics*
Location: Paris
(seven weeks)
JOSEPH HAMBURGER
Department of Political Science
c/o Yale Summer Programs/NEH
Box 2145--Yale Station
New Haven, Connecticut 06520
*Victorian Political and Social Thought: The
Intelligentsia and Modernity*
(eight weeks)
DONALD P. KOMMERS
Department of Government
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, Indiana 46556
*American Constitutionalism in Comparative
Perspective*
(seven weeks)
AARON WILDAVSKY
Survey Research Center
University of California
Berkeley, California 94720
*Political Cultures*
(seven weeks)
**RELIGIOUS STUDIES**
GARY A. ANDERSON and
MICHAEL E. STONE
Department of Religious Studies
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, Virginia 22903
*The Adam and Eve Narrative in Christian and
Jewish Tradition*
(eight weeks)
JAMES J. O'DONNELL
Department of Classical Studies
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
*Augustine and His Influence*
Location: Bryn Mawr College
(six weeks)
GEORGE SALIBA
c/o Summer Session Office
419 Lewisohn Hall
Columbia University
New York, New York 10027
*Islam and the Scientific Tradition*
(seven weeks)
HUSTON SMITH
c/o Director of Special Studies
Pacific School of Religion
1798 Scenic Avenue
Berkeley, California 94709
*The Esoteric Dimension of Religion: Four Case
Studies*
(eight weeks)
See also:
English and American Literature--Brisman, Spector
History--Cameron, Freeze, Russell
**1993 Summer Seminars for College Teachers**
The National Endowment for the Humanities is pleased to announce
that forty-seven seminars for college teachers and independent
scholars will be offered during the summer of 1993. Each year,
the Summer Seminars for College Teachers program provides
teachers at undergraduate institutions (and other scholars
without the resources of a graduate department) with a unique
opportunity for advanced study or research in their fields or in
fields related to their interests. In 1993, places will be
offered to 564 participants at institutions across the United
States plus two in Paris, one in Rome, and one in Ireland.
During the summer, participants will work together in an area of
mutual interest under the direction of a distinguished scholar.
They will have access to the collections of a major library,
will discuss a body of common readings with their colleagues in
the seminar, and, outside the seminar, will pursue individual
research or study projects of their own choosing and design.
Seminar topics are broad enough to encompass a wide range of
interests while remaining central to the major ideas, texts,
critical concerns, and approaches of the humanities. This
year's seminars are six, seven, or eight weeks long.
Participants receive a stipend to help cover travel to and from
the seminar location, books, and research and living expenses;
the stipend is $4,000 for participation in an eight-week
seminar, $3,600 for a seven-week seminar, and $3,200 for a
six-week seminar.
Application instructions and forms, as well as detailed
information about the subject matter and requirements of
individual seminars, are available directly from the seminar
directors at the addresses indicated on the following pages.
The application deadline is March 1, 1993, and the announcement
of awards will take place on March 29, 1993. General
information about the Summer Seminars for College Teachers is
available from the Division of Fellowships and Seminars,
Room 316, National Endowment for the Humanities,
1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington DC 20506