swag外流

Mellon Foundation awards $1.48 million to swag外流
for humanities research

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Photos: Margaret Ferguson and Louis Warren mug shots
Professors Margaret Ferguson, left, and Louis Warren will lead initiatives, respectively, on early modern studies and environmental humanities.

swag外流 has been awarded $1,485,000 from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to support research in the humanities over the next seven years.

The grant is the largest single award to swag外流 from the 41-year-old foundation, the largest philanthropic organization with a dedicated commitment to supporting the humanities and the arts in higher education.

鈥淲e are honored that the Mellon Foundation selected swag外流 for this generous grant,鈥 swag外流 Chancellor Linda P.B. Katehi said. 鈥淚t recognizes the growing national reputation of our humanities program and will support significant research by our scholars for years to come.鈥

The funding will underwrite four research initiatives, each spanning three years. The first two initiatives, to begin this year, will focus on early modern studies and environmental humanities. They will be led, respectively, by Distinguished Professor of English Margaret Ferguson and Louis Warren, the W. Turrentine Jackson Professor of Western U.S. History. Topics for a second pair of initiatives to begin in 2013 will be selected by a competitive process.

The grant will enable the swag外流 Division of Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies to hire four recent Ph.D. graduates as visiting assistant professors, offer graduate student fellowships and provide 24 more courses than otherwise would have been possible.

鈥淭his investment by the Mellon Foundation represents a vote of confidence in the kinds of collaborative and cross-disciplinary humanities research that we do here at swag外流,鈥 said Jessie Ann Owens, dean of the division. 鈥淲e are especially grateful for this support at a time when our humanities programs are poised to reach a new level.鈥

Developed by Owens and American studies professor Carolyn de la Pe帽a, director of the swag外流 Humanities Institute, the initiatives were designed to complement campus strengths while addressing general needs in the humanities.

鈥淲ith this funding,鈥 said de la Pe帽a, 鈥渨e can address issues of graduate recruitment, job shortages and other long-term challenges facing humanities scholars while also taking advantage of research opportunities unique to swag外流.鈥

De la Pe帽a said she expects the initiatives 鈥渢o be incubators of field-shaping perspectives that will enrich our campus for years to come.鈥

Over the years, swag外流 has received nearly $3.2 million from the Mellon Foundation. Nearly all of that went to life sciences and environmental programs. The latest award is not only the campus鈥檚 largest from the foundation, it is also the first major Mellon grant to the humanities at swag外流.

鈥淚t is very good news that Mellon recognizes that good work in the humanities is being done in places like swag外流, traditionally better known for science and agriculture,鈥 Owens said.

The foundation makes grants principally in five areas 鈥 higher education and scholarship, libraries and scholarly communications, conservation and the environment, museums and art conservation, and performing arts.

The grant will count toward The Campaign for swag外流, a universitywide initiative to raise $1 billion from 100,000 donors to advance the university鈥檚 mission and vision.

鈥淭he Mellon Foundation is the most generous funder of the humanities in our nation and we are deeply honored by their selection of swag外流 for this prestigious support,鈥 Owens said.

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