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IPRH Humanities Showcase – Awards & Honors

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  • Dean Edward Feser receives Edgar Fellowship

    Dean Edward Feser (Urban and Regional Planning) received a 2013 Edgar Fellowship from the Illinois Gov. Jim Edgar/Institute of Government and Public Affairs (Source

  • Scott Poole wins McGrath lifetime Achievement Award

    Marshall Scott Poole (Communications) won the 2013 Joseph E. McGrath Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Study of Groups from the Interdisciplinary Network for Group Research (Source)

  • Karen Flynn wins Lavinia L Dock Award

    Karen Flynn (Gender and Women’s Studies / African Studies / African American Studies) won the Lavinia L. Dock Award for Exemplary Historical Research from American Association for the History of Nursing for her book Moving Beyond Borders (Source

  • Joy Harjo wins Creative Nonfiction Prize for memoir "Crazy Brave"

    Joy Harjo (American Indian Studies / English) won the 2013 Creative Nonfiction Prize for her memoir “Crazy Brave” from PEN Center USA. (Source)

  • Dearborn and Stallmeyer win EDR Achievement Award

    Lynne Dearborn (Architecture / Urban and Regional Planning) and John Stallmeyer (Architecture) won the 2013 EDR Achievement Award from the Environmental Design Research Association for their book Inconvenient Heritage. (Source)

  • Ellen Swain named a fellow of the Society of American Archivists

    Ellen Swain (Library) was name a fellow of the Society of American Archivists (Source).

  • Lori Kendall elected President of the Association of Internet Researchers

    Lori Sue Kendall (Library and Information Science) became President of the Association of Internet Researchers (Source).

  • Rebecca Ginsburg wins 2012 Abott Lowell Cummings Prize

    At Home With Arpartheid: The Hidden Landscapes of Deomestic Service in Johannesburg by Rebecca GinsburgRebecca Ginsburg (EPOL, Landscape Architecture, and Director EJP) won the 2012 Abbott Lowell Cummings Prize from the Vernacular Architecture Forum for her book At Home With Arpartheid: The Hidden Landscapes of Deomestic Service in Johannesburg (Virginia, 2011). The prize recognizes a significant contribution to the study of vernacular architecture and cultural landscapes of North America.

  • Lindsay Russell awarded 2013 Rhetoric Society of America Dissertation Award

    Lindsay Russell (English) was awarded the 2013 Rhetoric Society of America Dissertation Award for her dissertation, “Women in the English Language Dictionary” (University of Washington, co-chairs Anis Bawarshi and Colette Moore). The award recognizes the best of the previous year's doctoral dissertations in the field of rhetoric and rhetorical studies. Professor Russell joined the Illinois faculty in fall 2012.

  • Alex Shakar named a winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for fiction

    Luminarium by Alex ShakarAlex Shakar (English) was named a winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for fiction for his novel Luminarium, which focuses on the roles of technology and spirituality in shaping people’s reality. 

  • Craig Koslofsky's "Evening’s Empire" cited by Atlantic magazine as one of best 2012 books

    Evening's Empire by Craig KoslofskyEvening’s Empire (Cambridge, 2011) by Craig Koslofsky (History, IPRH Fellow 2013–14) was cited by Atlantic magazine as one of the 15 best books reviewed by the magazine or published in 2012. Benjamin Schwarz, the magazine’s literary editor, assembled a top-five list for the year, followed by a list of ten runners-up, which included Koslofsky’s book. The book was reviewed in the April 2012 issue of Atlantic magazine. Evening’s Empire was also named the Longman-History Today Book of the Year for 2011 in January 2012. One criterion for the award is accessibility for the general reader of history. 

  • Daniel Schneider receives George Perkins Marsh Prize

    Hybrid Nature: Sewage Treatment and the Contradictions of the Industrial Ecosystem by Daniel SchneiderDaniel Schneider (Urban and Regional Planning) received the George Perkins Marsh Prize, for Hybrid Nature: Sewage Treatment and the Contradictions of the Industrial Ecosystem (MIT, 2011). Bestowed by the American Society for Environmental History, the prize is awarded to the best book in the field.

  • Bruno Nettl receives the inaugural Taichi Traditional Music Award

    Bruno NettlBruno Nettl, Professor Emeritus of Music and Anthropology, is one of four international musicians who received the inaugural Taichi Traditional Music Award, given by the China Conservatory and the Taichi Traditional Music Foundation. Professor Nettl was chosen for his achievements in the field that he helped establish: ethnomusicology, the study of social and cultural aspects of music in local and global contexts. The prize recognizes individuals or social groups who have made “outstanding and original contribution toward the performance, inheritance, theoretical studies or dissemination of traditional music.”

    Professor Nettl has also been awarded the Charles Homer Haskins Prize, presented annually to a distinguished humanist by the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS). This honor includes a cash award and asks the recipient to deliver the Haskins Prize Lecture reflecting on “a lifetime of work as a scholar and an institution builder” at the ACLS annual meeting in May 2014. Named for the first chairman of ACLS, the Haskins Prize Lecture series is entitled “A Life of Learning” and celebrates scholarly careers of distinctive importance. 

  • David Roediger and Elizabeth Esch awarded the International Labor History Association 2012 Book of the Year Award for 2012

    The Production of Difference: Race and the Management of Labor in U.S. History by David Roediger and Elizabeth EschDavid Roediger (History and IPRH Fellow 2012–13) and Elizabeth Esch have been awarded the International Labor History Association (ILHA) Book of the Year Award for 2012 for The Production of Difference: Race and the Management of Labor in U.S. History (Oxford, 2012).

  • David W. Plath receives 2013 Association for Asian Studies (AAS) Award for Distinguished Contributions to Asian Studies

    David W. PlathDavid W. Plath, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Asian Studies, received the 2013 Association for Asian Studies (AAS) Award for Distinguished Contributions to Asian Studies. Plath was the leader of the Media Production Group, for which he has designed, scripted, hosted, narrated, edited, directed, and often filmed productions. In 2000, the Society for East Asian Anthropology established the David Plath Media Award, given biennially for the best new educational media project on Asian societies and cultures. Professor Plath taught at the U. of I. for 35 years, is perhaps best known for Long Engagements: Maturity in Modern Japan(Stanford UP, 1980). The 2013 Distinguished Contributions to Asian Studies award celebrates his long engagement and many contributions to teaching about Japan at all levels and through many media.

  • Erik McDuffie receives the Wesley-Logan Prize

    Erik McDuffieErik McDuffie (African American Studies, IPRH Fellow 2010–11) received the Wesley-Logan Prize from the American Historical Association for his book Sojourning for Freedom: Black Women, American Communism, and the Making of Black Left Feminism (Duke, 2011). The Wesley-Logan Prize in African diaspora history is jointly sponsored by the American Historical Association and the Association for the Study of African American Life & History, and is is awarded annually for an outstanding book on some aspect of the history of the dispersion, settlement and adjustment, and/or return of peoples originally from Africa. 

  • Frederick Hoxie elected Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Science

    Frederick E. HoxieFrederick E. Hoxie, Swanlund Chair and Professor of History, was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAAS) in April 2013. Hoxie is a Center for Advanced Study Professor of history and holds appointments in the College of Law and the American Indian Studies Program. The AAAS is one of the nation’s most prestigious honorary societies, and a leading center for independent policy research.

    In October 2012, Professor Hoxie was also honored with the Western History Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award in American Indian History. He was recognized for his years of advancing the field of American Indian history, through publications, commitment to helping Native and other students in the field, and through service that includes working with tribal communities. His award was given at the annual meeting of the Western History Association. Professor Hoxie has published more than a dozen books on U.S. Indian policy, the history of Native American communities and the meaning of indigenous history in modern society. His most recent book is This Indian Country: American Indian Activists and the Place They Made (Penguin, 2012).

  • Jennifer Monson honored at the Movement Research Gala

    Jennifer MonsonJennifer Monson (Dance and IPRH Fellow 2013–14) was honored at the Movement Research Gala on May 13, 2013. Movement Research serves as a laboratory for exploration and experimentation in movement-based art forms while capturing the diversity of artists and audiences. Each year, choreographers, dancers, and other motion-centered innovators are recognized for their contributions.

  • Junaid Rana receives Association of Asian American Studies Book Award for the Social Sciences

    Terrifying Muslims: Race and Labor in the South Asian Diaspora by Junaid RanaJunaid Rana (Asian American Studies, IPRH Fellow 2005–06)received the Association of Asian American Studies (AAAS) Book Award for the Social Sciences, for Terrifying Muslims: Race and Labor in the South Asian Diaspora (Duke, 2011). The award was conferred at the AAS Annual Conference in Seattle in April 2013.

  • Karen Fresco named Officier dans l’Ordre des Palmes Académiques.

    Karen FrescoKaren Fresco (French, Medieval Studies & GWS) was named Officier dans l’Ordre des Palmes Académiques. This prestigious title is awarded to members of the international community for outstanding contributions to French pedagogy, scholarship, and culture, as well as to the French language. L’Ordre des Palmes Académiques was instituted by founded by Emperor Napoléon Bonaparte on March 19, 1808. 

  • Leslie Reagan receives the Arthur J. Viseltear Award

    Dangerous Pregnancies: Mothers, Disabilities, and Abortion in Modern America by Leslie ReaganLeslie Reagan (History and IPRH Fellow 2011–12 & 2001–02) received the Arthur J. Viseltear Award for her book Dangerous Pregnancies: Mothers, Disabilities, and Abortion in Modern America (California, 2010). The annual award is given by the Medical Care Section of the American Public Health Association to a historian for outstanding contributions to the history of public health.

  • Lisa Lucero named fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science

    Lisa LuceroLisa Lucero (Anthropology) was named a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Election as a fellow is an honor bestowed upon members of the association by their peers. Lucero was honored for “distinguished service in the field of archaeology, with emphasis on the role of water management in Maya society and its contemporary implications.”

  • Mahir Şaul receives Utne Reader magazine’s Visionaries Award

    Mahir ŞaulMahir Şaul (Anthropology) received Utne Reader magazine’s Visionaries Award for his role as a “debunker of African stereotypes.” For 15 years, Şaul has taught a course on African film and society, emphasizing their vast intellectual and cultural accomplishments. Last winter, he introduced the first African film series to Instanbul Museum of Modern Art audiences.

  • Matthew Sakiestewa Gilbert awarded 2013 Spur Award by the Western Writers of America

    Matthew Sakiestewa GilbertMatthew Sakiestewa Gilbert (American Indian Studies) was awarded a 2013 Spur Award by the Western Writers of America, in the category of Best Western Short Nonfiction, for “Marathoner Louis Tewanima and the Continuity of Hopi Running, 1908–1912,” which appeared in the Autumn 2012 issue of Western Historical Quarterly. Western Writers of America, Inc., was founded in 1953 to promote the literature of the American West and bestows Spur Awards for distinguished writing in the Western field.

  • Matthew Thibeault receives Outstanding Emerging Researcher Award

    Matthew ThibeaultMatthew Thibeault (Music Education, IPRH Fellow 2012–13) received the Outstanding Emerging Researcher Award from the Center for Music Education Research at the University of South Florida. The award honors music education researchers at an early stage of their careers who are producing high-quality research. Professor Thibeault’s paper, “The Shifting Locus of Musical Experience From Performance to Recording to New Media: Some Implications for Music Education,” will be published in the center’s journal and republished in a book. 

  • Michael Rothberg recognized by the International Society for the Study of Narrative

    Michael RothbergMichael Rothberg (English, Comparative and World Literature, Germanic Languages and Literatures, Program in Jewish Culture and Society, and IPRH Fellow 2003–04) was recognized by the International Society for the Study of Narrative (ISSN) for his essay, “Progress, Progression, Procession: William Kentridge and the Narratology of Transitional Justice,” which was selected as the best of the year’s publications in the journal Narrative, published by the ISSN. The article appeared in the January 2012 issue of Narrative. 

     

  • Paul Hardin Kapp and Paul J. Armstrong receive the 2013 Historic Book Preservation Prize

    SynergiCity: Reinventing the Postindustrial City Paul Hardin Kapp (Architecture) and Paul J. Armstrong (Architecture, emeritus), received the 2013 Historic Book Preservation Prize for SynergiCity: Reinventing the Postindustrial City (Illinois, 2013), which they co-edited. Presented by the University of Mary Washington Center for Historic Preservation, the yearly award goes to the book selected by a jury “for the most significant contribution to the intellectual vitality of historic preservation” in the United States.

  • Stephanie Foote launches "Resilience: A Journal of Environmental Humanities"

    Resilience: A Journal of Environmental Humanities

    Outgoing IPRH Advisory Committee Member Stephanie Foote (English and GWS) has launched Resilience: A Journal of Environmental Humanities, with co-editor Stephanie LeMenager, an Associate Professor of English at University of California, Santa Barbara. A digital, peer-reviewed journal of the Environmental Humanities, Resilience provides a forum for scholars from across humanities disciplines to speak to one another about their shared interest in environmental issues, and to plot out an evolving conversation about what the humanities contributes to living and thinking sustainably in a world of dwindling resources. Volumes will be published in digital form by the University of Nebraska Press. The journal can be visited at www.resiliencejournal.org

  • Tere O’Connor receives Doris Duke Artist Award

    Tere O’ConnorTere O’Connor (Dance) has received a Doris Duke Artist Award for 2013. Professor O’Connor brings metaphor, memory, and aspects of consciousness to the forefront in many of his works. Funding from the Doris Duke Artist Award will allow him to both explore projects that connect writing, teaching, experiencing dance, mentoring, and advocacy and move farther away from the concept of authorship toward dances that are structured to allow for external ideas from the performers and the audience to shape them. The award includes an unrestricted grant of $250,000 over three to five years, $25,000 toward a retirement account, plus the possibility of additional funds for outreach and audience engagement. The ten-year Doris Duke Artist Award program is designed to “recognize the potential of individual artists and insure their future viability.”

  • Yasemin Yildiz receives Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize

    Yasemin Yildiz Yasemin Yildiz (Germanic Languages and Literatures) received the Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for her book Beyond the Mother Tongue: The Postmonolingual Condition (Fordham, 2011). The Modern Language Association of America (MLA) awards this prize biennially for an outstanding scholarly work on the linguistics or literatures of the Germanic languages. Professor Yildiz received the prize in January at the MLA annual convention in Boston. Professor Yildiz received an IPRH Prize for Research in the Humanities in spring 2012.

  • LeAnne Howe wins USA Ford Fellowship in Literature from United States Artists

    LeAnne HoweLeAnne Howe (American Indian Studies and English) won a USA Ford Fellowship in Literature from United States Artists. The organization honors 50 of America’s finest artists each year with individual fellowship awards of $50,000. Howe joins a class of 2012 awardees that includes Annie Proulx, Coco Fusco, Guillermo Gomez-Peña, David Henry Hwang, Edgar Heap of Birds, Adrienne Kennedy, and many others. In 2012, Professor Howe was also the winner of the 2012 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers Circle of the Americas.

  • Kristin Hoganson receives the 2012 Ray Allen Billington Prize from the Western History Association

    Kristin HogansoKristin Hoganson (History), who delivered the 2013 IPRH Distinguished Lecture in the Humanities this fall, received the 2012 Ray Allen Billington Prize from the Western History Association for her article, “Meat in the Middle: Converging Borderlands in the U.S. Midwest, 1865–1900,” published in the Journal of American History. The association is dedicated to promoting the study of the North American West in its varied aspects and broad sense. 

  • Fellowships and Grants, 2012–13

    ACLS

     

    AMERICAN COUNCIL OF LEARNED SOCIETIES (ACLS)

    ACLS Fellow
    D. Fairchild Ruggles
    Project: Shajar al-Durr: The Extraordinary Architectural Patronage of a 13th-Century Egyptian Slave-Queen

    Digital Innovation Fellow
    Ted Underwood, English
    Project: Understanding Genre in a Collection of a Million Volumes

    Frederick Burkhardt Residential Fellow
    Carol Symes, History
    Project: Public Acts: Performance, Popular Literacies, and the Documentary Revolution of Medieval Europe
    For residence at the National Humanities Center during academic year 2013–14

    New Faculty Fellow
    Susan N. Johnson-Roehr, Architecture PhD, 2011
    Dissertation: "The Spatialization of Knowledge and Power at the Astronomical Observatories of Sawai Jai Singh II, c. 1721–1743 CE"
    Appointed in Art at University of Virginia, 2013–14 and 2014–15.

     

    NATIONAL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIESNATIONAL CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES

    Residential Fellowship
    Heather Hyde Minor, Architecture
    Project:Giovanni Battista Piranesi's Lost Words

     

    NEH

     NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES (NEH)

    Summer Stipend
    Mireya Loza, Latina/o Studies and History
    Project: The Bracero Program: A History of the U.S.-Mexico Guest Worker Program, 1942–1964

    Digital Start-Up Grant
    Ted Underwood, English
    Project: Understanding Genre in a Collection of a Million Volumes

    Humanities Collections and Reference Resources
    Mara Wade, Germanic Languages and Literatures
    Project: Emblematica Online II

     

     Fulbright FULBRIGHT PROGRAM

    Eda Derhemi, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese
    Fulbright Scholar for 2013–14, Albania, Spring 2014

    Bruce Michelson, English, Emeritus
    Fulbright Professor of American Literature, University of Antwerp, Spring 2014

    Zohreh Sullivan, English, Emerita
    Fulbright Scholar for 2013–14, University of Jordan
    Project: Writers and the Battlefield of History

     

    INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDIES 

    INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDIES (IAS), U OF BRISTOL

    IAS Colston Research Fellow &
    Benjamin Meaker Visiting Professor
    Sharon Irish

     

    AMERICAN THEATRE & DRAMA SOCIETY

    Faculty Research Travel Award
    Valeri Hohman, Theatre
    Project: Cold War Performances: Soviet Performances in America after Stalin

     

    CANADIAN SOCIAL SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL

    Insight Development Grant
    Jeananne Nichols, Music Education
    Louis Bergonzi, Music Education
    Project: To collect quantitative and qualitative data over a two-year period in order to investigate tenure status, gender/sexuality, and race/ethnicity in Canadian and US post-secondary music schools.

     

    COUNCIL FOR EUROPEAN STUDIES (CES)

    Mellon-CES Dissertation-Completion Fellowship
    Diana Georgescu, Ph.D. Candidate, History, and IPRH-Nicholson Fellow 2012–13
    Project: Ceauşescu’s Children': The Making and Unmaking of Romania’s Last Socialist Generation (1965–2005)

     

    DUMBARTON OAKS RESEARCH LIBRARY AND COLLECTION

    Junior Fellow, Garden and Landscape Studies
    Rachel Koroloff, Ph.D. Candidate, History (declined 2013–14 IPRH Fellowship)
    Project: "Seeds of Exchange: Russia's Apothecary and Botanical Gardens in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century"

  • Elenora Stoppino awarded 2012 AAIS Book Prize

     Eleonora Stoppino's book "Genealogies of Fiction: Women Warriors and the Dynastic Imagination in the Orlando furioso"The American Association for Italian Studies awarded Eleonora Stoppino and her book Genealogies of Fiction: Women Warriors and the Dynastic Imagination in the Orlando furioso one of two 2012 Book Prizes for best books in Italian studies published in 2012. Professor Stoppino is an Associated Professor of Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese as well as a member of the 2013–14 IPRH Advisory Committee.

  • Areli Marina wins the Marraro Prize

    Areli Marina (Art History / Medieval Studies) won the Howard R. Marraro Prize for best work in Italian history for her book, The Italian Piazza Transformed, from the American Catholic Historical Association and the American Historical Association (Source). 

  • James Brennan awarded 2013 Bethwell A. Ogot Book Prize

    James Brennan (History) has been awarded the 2013 Bethwell A. Ogot Book Prize for his book, Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania, published by Ohio University Press in 2012. The prize is given out by the African Studies Association for the best book on East African studies published the previous calendar year (Source).

  • David M. Chasco named a fellow by the American Institute of Architects

    David M. Chasco (Director of the School of Architecture) was named a fellow by the American Institute of Architects. The fellowship program was developed to recognize architects who have made a significant contribution to architecture and society and who have achieved a standard of excellence in the profession (Source). 

  • Journal edited by Illinois History Professor recipient of 2013 Codex Award.

    The Journal of Late Antiquity, edited by history professor Ralph W. Mathisen, has been named the 2013 recipient of the Codex Award, given by the Council of Editors of Learned Journals. The award is given for distinction within all disciplines and areas of the world covered in the ancient and medieval periods (Source).

  • Provost Fellows

    Three faculty members were appointed Provost Fellows for this academic year. The faculty members are Lauren Goodlad (Professor of English and director of the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory), Wendy Heller (professor of psychology and of gender and women’s studies), and Kelly Tappenden (the Kraft Foods Human Nutrition Professor in the department of food science and human nutrition).

    The program provides academic leadership experience in key campus administrative roles for distinguished faculty members. For more information, please visit http://news.illinois.edu/ii/13/1219/ach.html.

  • Alistair Black receives the Library History Essay Award for 2013

    Alistair Black (GSLIS) received the Library History Essay Award for 2013 for his essay "Organizational Learning and Home-Grown Writing: The Library Staff Magazine in Britain in the First Half of the Twentieth Century"  (Source).

  • Dr. Lisa Cacho awarded John Hope Franklin Publication Prize

    Dr. Lisa Cacho's Social Death: Racialized Rightlessness and the Criminalization of the Unprotected has received the the 2012 John Hope Franklin Publication Prize for best book in American Studies from the American Studies Association (Soruce).

  • Soo Ah Kwon and Nancy Abelmann Receive Spencer Foundation

    Soo Ah Kwon and Nancy Abelmann (Assian American Studies), as well as their co-principal investigators Adrienne Lo and Tim Liao have recieved a grant from the Spencer Foundation for their proposal for “The American University Meets the Pacific Century (AUPC).”  The project examines how the escalating number of degree-seeking international undergraduates is transforming the understanding and meaning of race and diversity at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (Source). 

     

  • Bruce Michelson named Fulbright grantee for 2013-2014

    Bruce Michelson (English / Director of the Campus Honors Program / President of the American Humor Studies Association) has been named a Fulbright grantee for 2013-2014. He will serve as Fulbrigh Professor of American Studies with the University of Antwerp (Source).

  • Fred Hoxie wins 2013 Caughey Western History Association Prize

    Fred Hoxie’s (Swanlund professor of history) book, This Indian Country: American Indian Activists and the Place They Made has won the 2013 Caughey Western History Association Prize for the most distinguished book on the history of the American West (Source).

  • Feisal Mohamed awarded Irene Samuel Memorial Award

    Feisal Mohamed (English) was awarded the Milton Society of America’s Irene Samuel Memorial Award, the highest honor from the society for a collection of essays, for his co-edited collection Milton and Questions of History (2012). This is the second consecutive year that he has received an award from the MSA (Source).

  • Valeria Sobol receives NEH Summer Stipend

    Valeria Sobol (Slavic Languages and Literatures) has received an NEH Summer Stipend for her work The Haunted Empire: The Russian Literary Gothic and the “Imperial Uncanny,” 1793–1844 (Source).

  • Valleri Hohman wins a Fulbright Award

    Valleri Hohman (Theatre) won a Fulbright Award from The J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board to work with Nikolai Kolyada at the Kolyada Theatre in Ekaterinburg, Russia in 2014 (Source).

  • Five Illinois professors named 2014 Guggenheim Fellows

    Five professors at the University of Illinois — Asef Bayat (sociology), Joy Harjo (American Indian studies), Cathy Prendergast (English), Stephen Taylor (music composition and theory), and Deke Weaver (Art + Design) — are among 178 Guggenheim Fellows named this year by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Fellowships are appointed to a to a diverse group scholars, artists, and scientists on the basis of prior achievement and exceptional promise (Source).

  • Kristin Hoganson named Harold Vyvyan Harmsworth Visiting Professor at Oxford University

    Professor Kristin Hoganson (History) has been invited to hold the Harold Vyvyan Harmsworth Visiting Professorship in American History at Oxford University for 2015-2016 (Source).

  • Jennifer Monson's work named best dance of 2013

    IPRH factuly fellow Jennifer Monson's (Dance) Live Dancing Archive has been named the best dance of 2013 by TimeOut New York (Source).