American Council of Learned Societies Names Fellows
First-ever Mellon/ACLS Scholars & Society Fellows
The American Council of Learned Societies has named the inaugural recipients of the Mellon/ACLS Scholars & Society Fellowship. The fellowships offer faculty who teach and advise PhD students opportunities to serve as ambassadors for humanities and humanistic social science scholarship beyond the academy and deepen their support for doctoral curricular innovation on their campuses. The awards are made possible by a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Scholars & Society Fellows conduct research projects in the humanities or humanistic social sciences while in residence at cultural, media, government, policy, or community organizations of their choice. The awards promote mutually beneficial partnerships between fellows and their colleagues at the host institutions, through which they can collaborate, interact, and learn about each other’s work, motivating questions, methods, and practices.
Among this year’s projects are a collaboration with the Cambridge, Massachusetts city government to explore approaches to equitable and sustainable transit design; a study that illuminates the lived experiences of migrants in detention in the United States; and a partnership with the Utah AIDS Foundation to chronicle the challenges that faced the only doctor in the state willing to treat HIV positive patients and the nuns of Holy Cross Church who ministered to Utahns living with AIDS.
Fellows are selected through multi-disciplinary peer review on the basis of the strength of their proposed projects and their commitment to connecting their community engaged scholarship with doctoral education at their institutions. The fellowships offer a stipend of $75,000 plus $6,000 for research and project costs, as well as additional funding in the year following the fellowship for programming on the fellows’ campuses that promotes the public value of humanities scholarship. Fellows also take part in workshops on best practices for public scholarship and doctoral curricular innovation in the humanities.
The 2019 Mellon/ACLS Scholars & Society Fellows are listed below. Listings for those with a social science bent include their project:
Jonathan Shapiro Anjaria | Associate professor of anthropology, Brandeis University: Designing Sustainable and Equitable Streets: A Scholarly and Governmental Collaboration, in residence at the City Council – City of Cambridge, Massachusetts
David S. Barnes | Associate professor of history and sociology of science, University of Pennsylvania: “Our Misery Was Great”: Narratives of Suffering and Resilience as Windows on Immigrant Health in the United States, Past and Present, in residence at Puentes de Salud, Philadelphia
Deborah A. Boehm | Professor of anthropology and gender, race, and identity, University of Nevada, Reno: A Study of Unseen Spaces: US Immigration Detention in the Twenty-first Century, in residence at Freedom for Immigrants, Los Angeles and Oakland, California
Elizabeth Alice Clement | History at University of Utah
Helena Feder | English, East Carolina University
Kimberly A. Gauderman | History, University of New Mexico
Catherine Gudis | History, University of California, Riverside
Ralina L. Joseph | Associate professor of communication, University of Washington: Interrupting Privilege, in residence at the Northwest African American Museum, Seattle
Marissa López | English, University of California, Los Angeles
Sunaina Maira | Professor of Asian American studies, University of California, Davis: Sanctuary, Solidarity, and Missing Stories: Arab Immigrants and Refugees in the Trump Era, in residence at the Arab Resource and Organizing Center, San Francisco
Rayna Rapp | Professor of anthropology, New York University: Remix: Disability Arts in an Age of Genetic Testing, in residence at Positive Exposure, New York City
Elizabeth Son | Theatre, Northwestern University
Learn more about the fellows’ projects and host organizations here.
Announcing the 2019 ACLS Fellows
The American Council of Learned Societies has also announced its much larger cohort of 2019 ACLS Fellows. This year’s 81 fellows were selected by their peers from over 1,100 applicants in a review process with multiple stages. Awards range from $40,000 to $70,000, depending on the scholar’s career stage, and support six to 12 months of full-time research and writing.
The 2019 ACLS Fellows are listed below, with social scientists’ fellowship projects identified:
Francesca Russello Ammon | City, regional planning, and historic preservation, University of Pennsylvania
Adrian Anagnost | Art, Tulane University
Kevin B. Anderson | Professor of sociology, political science, and feminist studies, University of California, Santa Barbara: Mapping the Late Marx: On Colonialism, Gender, Development, and Multilinear Concepts of Revolution
Laurie Arnold | History, Gonzaga University
Yury P. Avvakumov | Theology, University of Notre Dame
Anthony Barbieri-Low | History, University of California, Santa Barbara
Janine G. Barchas | Professor of English, University of Texas, Austin
Marsha E. Barrett | History, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Erin Beeghly | Assistant professor of philosophy, University of Utah: What’s Wrong with Stereotyping?
Shanna Greene Benjamin | English, Grinnell College
Susanna Berger | Art history, University of Southern California
Allan M. Brandt | History of science, global health, and social medicine, Harvard University
Susan Burch | Professor of American studies, Middlebury College: Committed: Native Self-determination, Kinship, Institutionalization, and Remembering
Christopher Collins | Professor of linguistics, New York University: The Eastern Khoisan Languages of Botswana
Catherine Conybeare |Professor of Greek, Latin, and classical studies, Bryn Mawr College
Jay Crisostomo | Assistant professor of Middle East studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor: The Social Lives of Sumerian
Joanna Dee Das | Performing Arts, Washington University in St. Louis)
Marlene L. Daut | Associate professor of African American studies, University of Virginia: Awakening the Ashes: An Intellectual History of Haiti
Joshua Foa Dienstag | Professor of political science, University of California, Los Angeles: The Human Boundary: Freedom, Citizenship, and Democracy in a Post-Human Age
Polina Dimova : Visiting scholar of German, Russian, and East European studies, Vanderbilt University
Laura F. Edwards | History, Duke University
Jonathan E. Elmer (English, Indiana University, Bloomington
Amy Erdman Farrell | Professor of American studies and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Dickinson College: Girl Scouts of the USA: Democracy, Sisterhood, and Empire
Julia Fawcett | Theater, dance, and performance studies, University of California, Berkeley
Amanda H. Frost | Law, American University
Matthew John Garcia | Ralph and Richard Lazarus Professor of History, Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies, and Human Relations, Dartmouth College: Eli and the Octopus: The Man Who Failed to Tame United Fruit Company
Valentina N. Glajar | Professor of modern languages, Texas State University, San Marcos
Andrea S. Goldman | History, University of California, Los Angeles
Isabel Cherise Gómez | Assistant Professor of Latin American and Iberian Studies, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Cam Grey|Associate professor of classical studies, University of Pennsylvania
Christopher Hager | English, Trinity College, Connecticut
Amy A. Hasinoff | Associate professor of communication, University of Colorado, Denver: The Traffic in Images of Women: Revenge Porn and Shared Accountability for Online Harm
Matthew S. Hedstrom | Associate professor of religious studies and American studies, University of Virginia: The Religion of Humanity: Spiritual Cosmopolitanism, Politics, and the United Nations
James Heinzen | History, Rowan University
Anna Henchman | English, Boston University
Isabel Huacuja Alonso | History, California State University, San Bernardino
Calvin Hui | Assistant professor of modern languages and literatures, College of William and Mary: Useless: Fashion, Media, and Consumer Culture in Contemporary China
Jennifer Jahner | Assistant Professor of Humanities, California Institute of Technology
Richard Janko | Professor of classical studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (ACLS Barrington Foundation Centennial Fellow in Classical Studies)
Katie L. Jarvis | History, University of Notre Dame
Jeannette Eileen Jones | Associate professor of history and ethnic studies, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Hilary Falb Kalisman | History and Endowed Professor of Israel/Palestine Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder
Ippolytos Andreas Kalofonos | Assistant professor of psychiatry, University of California, Los Angeles: “All I Eat Is ARVs”: Surviving the AIDS Economy in Central Mozambique
Catherine M. Kearns | Assistant professor of classics, University of Chicago
Greta L. LaFleur | Assistant professor of American studies, Yale University
Priya Lal | History, Boston College
Melinda Latour | Music, Tufts University
Keith D. Leonard | Literature, American University
James S. Leve | Music, Northern Arizona University
Darryl Li | Assistant professor of anthropology, University of Chicago: The Universal Enemy: Jihad, Empire, and the Challenge of Solidarity
Marc Matera | History, University of California, Santa Cruz)
Ndubueze L. Mbah | History, State University of New York
Julie A. Minich | Associate professor of English, Mexican American, and Latina/o studies, University of Texas, Austin: Health, Justice, and Latina/o/x Expressive Culture
Ada Palmer | History, University of Chicago
Nandini B. Pandey | Associate professor of classical and ancient Near Eastern studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Sun-Young Park | History and art history, George Mason University
Gerard Passannante | English and comparative literature, University of Maryland
Nathalie M. Peutz | Assistant professor of Arab crossroads studies, New York University Abu Dhabi: Gate of Tears: Migration and Impasse in Yemen and the Horn of Africa
Anne Pollock | Professor of Global health and social medicine, King’s College London: Race and Biopolitics in the Twenty-first Century
Emily Remus | History, University of Notre Dame
Jennifer Rhee | English, Virginia Commonwealth University
Sara Ritchey | History, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Kathryn Susan Roberts | Assistant professor of American studies, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, Netherlands
Joshua D. Rothman | History, University of Alabama
Britt Rusert | Associate professor of Afro-American studies, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Rashmi Sadana | Associate professor of sociology and anthropology, George Mason University: Gender, Urban Space, and Everyday Life in the Age of the Delhi Metro, 2002-2018
Joel Alden Schlosser | Assistant professor of political science, Bryn Mawr College: Refusing Mere Existence: Philosophical Asceticism and the Politics of Refusal
Erik Rattazzi Scott | History, University of Kansas
Samantha Katz Seal | English, University of New Hampshire
W. Anthony Sheppard | Music, Williams College
Satoko Shimazaki | Associate professor of East Asian languages and cultures, University of Southern California: Kabuki Actors, Print Technology, and the Theatrical Origins of Modern Media
Heather Streets-Salter | History, Northeastern University
Xiaofei Tian | Professor of East Asian languages and civilizations, Harvard University (ACLS Donald J. Munro Centennial Fellow in Chinese Arts and Letters)
Katherine Unterman | History, Texas A&M University
Don Edward Walicek | English and linguistics, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras
Keren Weitzberg | History, University College London
Kimberly Welch | History and law, Vanderbilt University
Claire Wendland | Professor of anthropology, University of Wisconsin, Madison: Partial Stories: Maternal Death in a Changing African World
Ashli White | History, University of Miami
Michael E. Woods | History, Marshall University
Marcia Yonemoto | History, University of Colorado
For more information about the recipients and their projects, click here.