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The National Endowment for the Humanities provides support to independent centers for advanced study and international research
organizations for fellowship programs for humanities scholars through its Fellowship Programs at Independent Research Institutions (FPIRI). NEH fellowships
provide scholars with a collegial environment and access to resources that might not be available at their home institutions.
Fellowship programs may be administered by independent centers for advanced study, libraries, and museums in the United States, or American overseas
research centers or other organizations that have expertise in promoting research on foreign cultures. The centers and organizations establish their
own peer review procedures for the selection of NEH grant recipients and administer the awards. NEH provides funding to programs for humanities fellowships
of four to twelve months. Fellowship tenure must be continnuous. Eligibility for NEH Fellowships and research awards is limited to United States citizens,
as well as foreign nationals who have been residents in the United States for three years immediately preceding the application deadline for the grant.
NEH research opportunities are intended for persons who have already completed their formal academic training.
Eligibility for NEH fellowships and research awards is limited to United States citizens as well as foreign nationals who have been residents
in the United States for the three years immediately preceding the application deadline for the grant. NEH research opportunities are
intended for persons who have already completed their formal academic training. Consequently, persons seeking support for work in pursuit
of a degree are not eligible for NEH fellowships and research grants. Some of the institutions listed below support predoctoral students with
non-NEH funding; interested applicants should contact the organizations or centers directly.
For further information and application materials, contact the
appropriate center or organization. No application materials
are available from NEH.
In 2008-2009, NEH fellowships will be available at each of the following centers in the United States:
NEH fellowships and other research grants supporting international research will also be available
through the following American overseas centers and international research organizations:
CENTERS FOR ADVANCED
STUDY IN THE UNITED STATES
American Antiquarian Society
The American Antiquarian Society (AAS) maintains a major research library in American history, literature,
and culture through 1876. The library includes some 700,000 books and pamphlets; 20,000 newspaper titles; 200,000 pieces of graphic arts
materials including broadsides, political cartoons, maps, and photographs; 60,000 pieces of sheet music; and nearly 1,600 collections of
manuscripts. The society’s holdings are especially rich for projects in the history of the book, including bibliography and the history
of printing and publishing; literature; the history of Puritanism; cultural history; intellectual history; environmental history; American
state and local history; and social history, including the history of reform, family history, and women’s history. The collections are
strong chronologically from the early colonial period to the late nineteenth century. The AAS-NEH fellows are part of a community that
includes the AAS staff, area faculty, and the recipients of AAS short-term fellowships (including scholars from all over the U.S. and
abroad, Ph.D. candidates, and creative artists and writers producing work for the general public) and other long-term fellows. Further
opportunities for collegial association are provided by the society’s Program in the History of the Book in American Culture; the Center
for Historic American Visual Culture; its series of seminars in American history and culture through 1876; lunchtime colloquia; public
lectures; and more informal gatherings. Three AAS-NEH fellowships are available for 2008-2009. Detailed information and a link to request
an application packet may be found on the AAS website.
Application deadline: January 15, 2008
Caroline F. Sloat, Director of Scholarly Programs
Room 106
American Antiquarian Society
185 Salisbury Street
Worcester, Massachusetts 01609-1634
Telephone: 508/755-5221
FAX: 508/754-9069
E-Mail: csloat@mwa.org
Website: http://www.americanantiquarian.org
Inquiries about American Antiquarian Society Collections should be addressed to: jchaison@mwa.org
Inquiries about fellowships generally should be addressed to Caroline Sloat
Website: http://www.americanantiquarian.org
Folger Shakespeare Library
Known internationally for its preeminent collections of Shakespearean and Elizabethan writings, the Folger Shakespeare
Library is also a center for research on virtually every aspect of social, cultural, and political life from the medieval period to the mid-eighteenth
century. The Folger holds the largest collection outside Britain of early English books, with about 50,000 volumes from the period 1475-1700 and
30,000 eighteenth-century imprints. Its early Continental imprint collection of 35,000 volumes includes 450 incunables, a 2,000-volume Reformation
collection, and significant holdings in French and Dutch political pamphlets. The manuscript collection, which numbers 55,000, is especially strong
in early correspondence and commonplace books and is extended by such microfilm holdings as the State Papers Domestic from Edward VI through Charles
I and papers from the Cecil, Loseley, Harleian, and Lansdowne collections. In secondary materials, the Library holds approximately 100,000 titles.
Fellows also have easy access to the Library of Congress. Three NEH fellowships carrying stipends of up to $40,000 are available for 2008-2009.
Application deadline: November 1, 2007
Gail Kern Paster, Director
Folger Shakespeare Library
201 East Capitol Street, S.E.
Washington, D.C. 20003
Telephone: 202/675-0348
E-Mail: cbrobeck@folger.edu
Website: http://www.folger.edu/
The Huntington
The Huntington is an independent research center with extensive holdings in British and American history,
literature, art history, and the history of science and medicine. These collections range chronologically from the eleventh century to the
present. The Library contains approximately 500,000 rare books, pamphlets, extra-illustrated books, maps, and ephemera, 500,000 reference
works, nearly six million manuscripts, and 600,000 photographs. Catalogues of the Library’s book and manuscripts collections can be found
on our website. Further details can be obtained from the curatorial staff. The Art Division holds 75,000 British and American paintings,
drawings, watercolors, and fine prints. The Smithsonian Archives of American Art also has a center at the Huntington. There are separate
reference libraries in the Art and Botanical Divisions. The Research Division supports an extensive fellowship program to fund short-term
fellows and sponsors a number of conferences, lectures, and seminars. Up to three NEH fellowships are available for 2008-2009.
Application deadline: December 15, 2007
Robert C. Ritchie, Director of Research
The Huntington
1151 Oxford Road
San Marino, California 91108
Telephone: 626/405-2194
FAX: 626/449-5703
E-Mail: cpowell@huntington.org
Website: http://www.huntington.org/
Institute
for Advanced Study, School of Historical Studies
The Institute is an independent private institution founded in 1930 to create a community of scholars
focused on intellectual inquiry, without the obligations and distractions associated with the teaching of undergraduates.
Scholars from around the world come to the Institute to pursue their own research. Those chosen are offered membership
for a set period and a stipend. The Institute provides access to extensive resources including offices, libraries,
subsidized restaurant and housing facilities, and some secretarial services. Open to all fields of historical research,
the School of Historical Studies' principal interests are the history of western, near eastern and far eastern civilizations,
with particular emphasis upon Greek and Roman civilization, the history of Europe (medieval, early modern, and modern),
the Islamic world, East Asian studies, the history of art, the history of science, modern international relations, and
music studies. Candidates of any nationality may apply for a single term or a full academic year. Residence in Princeton
during term time is required. The only other obligation of Members is to pursue their own research. To be eligible scholars
must have the Ph.D. (or equivalent) and substantial publications. If they wish, Members may participate in seminars and meetings
within the Institute. There are also ample opportunities for contacts with scholars at nearby universities. Approximately
forty Members are appointed each year. Member awards are funded by the Institute for Advanced Study or by other sources,
including the National Endowment for the Humanities. About three NEH fellowships are available for 2008-2009.
Application deadline: November 15, 2007
Marian Zelazny, Administrative Officer
School of Historical Studies
Institute for Advanced Study
Einstein Drive
Princeton, New Jersey 08540
Telephone: 609/734-8300
E-Mail: mzelazny@ias.edu
website: http://www.hs.ias.edu
John
Carter Brown Library
The John Carter Brown Library is an independently funded and administered center for advanced research
in history and the humanities, founded in 1846 and located on the campus of Brown University since 1901. The library’s
collection consists almost entirely of primary printed sources (books, pamphlets, maps) with some manuscripts, relating to
all aspects of the discovery, exploration, settlement, and development of the Americas, from Hudson Bay to Tierra del Fuego,
during the colonial period (1493 - ca. 1825). The library’s principal holdings emphasize such diverse areas as European accounts
of the Americas, Braziliana, native American languages, American revolutionary pamphlets, and Caribbeana. Maritime history and
the comparative history of the Americas -- Spanish, Portuguese, French, Dutch, English, African, Amerindian -- are particular subjects
of interest, as is the general history of European expansion to the West before ca. 1800. The library awards approximately
twenty five short-term fellowships (two to four months) each year, which are open to citizens of every country and to both
pre- and post-doctoral scholars, and five or six long-term post-doctoral fellowships (five to ten months), supported by the
NEH, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and other agencies. NEH fellowships are restricted to U.S. citizens or to foreign
nationals who have been legal residents of this country for the three years immediately preceding the application deadline
for the grant. Candidates for long-term fellowships may not be engaged in work leading to a graduate degree. Prospective
applicants should write to the John Carter Brown Library for further details and for application forms or may access the Library’s
web site. Two or three NEH fellowships will be available for 2008-2009.
Application deadline: January 10, 2008
Write to:
Fellowship Coordinator
The John Carter Brown Library
Box 1894
Providence, Rhode Island 02912
Telephone: 401/863-2725
FAX: 401/863-3477
E-Mail:
JCBL_Fellowships@Brown.edu
website: http://www.JCBL.org
The Library Company of Philadelphia
Founded by Benjamin Franklin in 1731, the Library Company was the largest public library in America until the
latter part of the 19th century, and it contains printed materials relating to every aspect of American culture and society in
that period. The Library Company now holds over half a million rare books and graphics, including the nation's second largest
collection of pre-1801 American imprints and one of the largest collections of 18th-century British books in America. The collections
reflect the whole range of early American print culture, including books, pamphlets, and magazines from all parts of the country,
as well as books imported from Britain and the Continent. It is especially strong in printed materials relating to the history of
women and African-Americans, popular literature, business and economics, popular medicine, philanthropy and reform, education,
natural sciences, technology, art, architecture, German Americana, American Judaica, and the history of printing and publishing.
The Library Company also holds strong collections of local newspapers and printed ephemera, and its print and photograph collection
is rich in images of the Philadelphia region and graphics by local artists. A catalog of rare books and graphics is available
through the website. The Library Company's Cassatt House fellows' residence offers rooms at reasonable rates, along with a kitchen,
common room, and offices with Internet access. One fellowship will be awarded, tenable from September 2008 to May 2009, or it may be
divided between two applicants, each of whom would spend a semester in residence.
Application deadline: November 1, 2007
James N. Green, Librarian
Library Company
1314 Locust Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107
Telephone: 215/546-3181
FAX: 215/546-5167
E-Mail: jgreen@librarycompany.org
website: http://www.librarycompany.org
Massachusetts
Historical Society
The Massachusetts Historical Society (MHS) was founded in 1791 for the threefold purpose of collecting, preserving, and
disseminating resources for the study of American history. It was the first institution anywhere to devote its attention primarily to
collecting and publishing in the field. Today the society’s manuscripts form the centerpiece of its holdings. It has more than 12,000,000
manuscript items in 3,600 collections of personal papers and institutional records. These holdings cover such diverse subjects as the history
of religion, law, education, and medicine; diplomacy and international commerce; the American Revolution and the Civil War; and Native American
and women’s history. Although collections in the history of New England and in the period from colonization through the late 19th century
are especially strong, the society also has significant materials for the study of the West Indies, Latin America, the China trade, and the
20th century. The society’s collection of 200,000 published items complements its manuscript holdings. Printed materials include more than
20,000 broadsides, 30,000 18th- and 19th-century pamphlets, and 5,000 maps. The society also owns more than 150,000 microforms and 200,000
historic photographs as well as major collections of portraits, engravings, silhouettes, busts, and memorabilia. The staff does all it can
to make the MHS a friendly, welcoming place for researchers. MHS-NEH fellows join a community that includes active scholars on the staff as
well as more than thirty visiting scholars on short-term grants over the course of a typical year. A busy calendar of programs affords frequent
opportunities to meet with scholars from across New England. The society hosts three ongoing seminar series -- in early American history,
immigration and urban history, and environmental history -- as well as frequent brown-bag lunches at which fellows and other researchers discuss
their work. Many years the MHS also holds a major conference: recent topics have included Transcendentalism, immigration to Massachusetts,
the intellectual life of Ralph Waldo Emerson, women’s role in modern warfare, and the environmental history of Boston. The MHS will award
at least two MHS-NEH fellowships for 2008-2009. For additional information or to apply, contact the Massachusetts Historical Society.
Application deadline: January 15, 2008
Long-Term Fellowships
Massachusetts Historical Society
1154 Boylston Street
Boston, MA 02215
Telephone: 617/536-1608
FAX: 617/859-0074
E-Mail:
publications@masshist.org
website: http://www.masshist.org
National
Humanities Center
The National Humanities Center offers 40 residential fellowships for advanced study in the humanities during the
academic year, September 2008 through May 2009. Applicants must hold the doctorate or have equivalent scholarly credentials. Young scholars
as well as senior scholars are encouraged to apply, but they must have a record of publication, and recent Ph.D.s should be aware that the
Center does not support the revision of a doctoral dissertation. In addition to scholars from all fields of the humanities, the Center
accepts individuals from the natural and social sciences, the arts, the professions, and public life who are engaged in humanistic projects.
The Center is also international and gladly accepts applications from scholars outside the United States. Most of the Center’s fellowships
are unrestricted. Several, however, are designated for particular areas of research. These include environmental studies and history; English
literature; art history or visual culture; French history, literature, or culture; Asian Studies; and theology. Scholars interested in the
impact of recent scientific research on the concept of the human are also encouraged to apply; see "Autonomy, Singularity, Creativity" on the
Center’s website. Fellowships up to $60,000 are individually determined, the amount depending upon the needs of the Fellow and the Center’s
ability to meet them. The Center provides travel expenses for Fellows and their dependents to and from North Carolina. Located in the Research
Triangle Park of North Carolina, near Chapel Hill, Durham, and Raleigh, the Center provides an environment for individual research and the
exchange of ideas. Its building includes private studies for Fellows, conference rooms, a central commons for dining, lounges, reading areas,
a reference library, and a Fellows’ workroom. The Center’s noted library service delivers books and research materials to Fellows, and support
for information technology and editorial assistance are also provided. The Center locates housing for Fellows in the neighboring communities.
Application materials and information may be found on the Center’s website.
Application deadline: October 15, 2007
Kent Mullikin
National Humanities Center
7 Alexander Drive
P. O. Box 12256
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709-2256
Telephone: 919/549-0661
FAX: 919/990-8535
E-Mail: kent@ga.unc.edu
website: http://www.nhc.rtp.nc.us/
Newberry
Library
The Newberry Library, founded in 1887, is a privately endowed independent research library dedicated primarily to study
in the humanities. Its collections comprise more than 1.5 million volumes, 5 million manuscripts, and 300,000 historic maps, with a
strong general collection focused on Europe and the Americas from the late Middle Ages to the twentieth century. The Newberry's internationally
noted special collections include materials in the following fields: European discovery, exploration, and settlement of the Americas; American
literature and history: local history, family history, and genealogy; American Indian history and literature; the Renaissance; the French
Revolution; Portuguese and Brazilian history; British literature and history; the history of cartography; the history and theory of music;
the history of printing; and early philology and linguistics. A variety of fellowships, conferences, and seminars enriches the Newberry's
academic community. Three NEH fellowships are available for 2008-2009.
Application deadline: January 10, 2008
Committee on Awards
The Newberry Library
60 West Walton Street
Chicago, Illinois 60610
Telephone: 312/255-3666
E-Mail: research@newberry.org
website: http://www.newberry.org
The
Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture
The Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture supports study and publication in early American history
and culture from circa 1450 to 1820. Its field of interest includes related developments in the Caribbean, Latin America, Europe,
and Africa -- in short, any subject encompassing the Atlantic World in this period. Founded in 1943 as the Institute of Early American
History and Culture by the College of William and Mary and the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation and still jointly sponsored by those
institutions, the Institute was renamed in 1996, in recognition of a generous endowment pledged by Mr. and Mrs. Malvern H. Omohundro,
Jr. The Institute publishes the William and Mary Quarterly, monographs, documentary editions, and a newsletter, regularly plans and
supports scholarly conferences, and annually offers one two-year postdoctoral fellowship, a year of which is supported by the NEH,
and a one-year Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Research Fellowship. Fellows are encouraged to participate with the senior staff of
working scholars in the Institute’s varied academic activities, in addition to conducting their own research. Institute/NEH fellows
also have the option of spending a summer at the Huntington Library, on a full grant, within five years of their residency in Williamsburg.
The potential of an applicant’s project for book publication by the Institute is a major factor in awarding both fellowships.
Application deadline: November 1, 2007
Ronald Hoffman, Director
The Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture
P. O. Box 8781
Williamsburg, Virginia 23187-8781
Telephone: 757/221-1114
E-Mail: IEAHC1@wm.edu
website: http://www.wm.edu/oieahc/
Schomburg
Center for Research in Black Culture ~ New York Public Library
The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture is a research unit of the New York Public Library.
It is devoted to collecting, preserving, and providing access to research resources on the black experience. Established in
1926 as a reference collection, it has evolved into a comprehensive research library whose collections number more than 10
million items. They include more than 170,000 bound volumes, 9,000 serials, 84,000 microforms, over 800 manuscript collections,
20,000 works of art, 750,000 photographic images, and over 25,000 sound recordings, 5,000 hours of spoken arts, 4,500 video
recordings, and 450 motion picture films. The Schomburg Center’s Scholars-in-Residence Program assists scholars whose research
and writing on black history and culture would benefit from extended access to the Center’s resources. The program supports
postdoctoral research in the humanities on African, Afro-American, and Afro-Caribbean themes. Fellowships funded by the program
allow recipients to spend from six to twelve months in residence at the Schomburg Center. Although fellows devote most of their
time to research and writing, they are also encouraged to take part in the center’s scholarly and educational program, which
includes colloquia, symposia, seminars, forums, and research conferences. Approximately two NEH fellowships are available for 2008-2009.
Application deadline: December 1, 2007
Dr. Colin Palmer, Director
Scholars-in-Residence Program
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
515 Malcolm X Boulevard
New York, New York 10037-1801
Telephone: 212/491-2228
E-Mail: sir@nypl.org
website:
http://www.nypl.org/research/sc/scholars/index.html
Winterthur
Museum and Country Estate
Winterthur is a public museum, library, and garden that supports the advanced study of American art, culture, and history.
The collections consist of American material culture with strong supporting resources in British and Continental art and culture.
Winterthur offers an extensive program of short and long-term fellowships open to academic, independent, and museum scholars, including
advanced graduate students. The library holds more than 87,000 volumes and one-half million manuscripts and images. Resources for research
from the seventeenth to the early twentieth centuries include period trade catalogs, auction and exhibition catalogs, an extensive reference
photograph collection of decorative arts, printed books, and ephemera. These may be searched online, and from remote locations. Museum collections
include 85,000 artifacts and works of art made or used in America to 1860, with a strong emphasis on domestic life. Winterthur supports a program
of scholarly publications, including Winterthur Portfolio: A Journal of American Material Culture.
Winterthur’s collections support research in architectural and art history, design history and the decorative arts, and social
and cultural history. Past fellowships have focused on such topics as the history of manners, changing perceptions of the body and dress,
the history of advertising, the development of consumer society, American painting, vernacular architecture, Shaker studies, travel and
tourism, domestic life, cultural memory and commemoration, gendered culture, colonial culture in the Atlantic World, the history of childhood,
sentimental literary culture, food and nationalism, the American arts and crafts movement, and the visual culture of early America.
One to three NEH fellowships are available for 2008-2009. NEH Fellows must have received the Ph.D. prior to beginning the fellowship.
NEH Fellows receive office space and computer support, 24-hour access to the library’s circulating collections, and circulating privileges
at nearby Morris Library at the University of Delaware. Collections access is available for artifact-based research. A furnished stone
farmhouse on the Winterthur grounds serves as the fellows’ residence. NEH Fellows also participate in the lively scholarly community at
Winterthur, the nearby Hagley Museum and Library, the University of Delaware, and area museums.
Application deadline: January 15, 2008
Katherine C. Grier
Professor of Material Culture Studies
Director, Research Fellowship Program
Winterthur Museum and Country Estate
Winterthur, Delaware 19735
Telephone: 302/888-4627
E-Mail: kgrier@winterthur.org
Website: http://www.winterthur.org/
AMERICAN OVERSEAS
CENTERS FOR ADVANCED STUDY AND INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH ORGANIZATIONS
Albright
Institute of Archaeological Research, (Jerusalem)
The W. F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research in Jerusalem (AIAR) was originally established as the principal overseas
center of the American Schools of Oriental Research (ASOR), founded in 1900. In 1970, AIAR was incorporated as an independent institution
and renamed after its most distinguished director, W. F. Albright. Since then, AIAR, one of ASOR’s three affiliated centers, has continued
the American Schools’ tradition of promoting and supporting resident doctoral and post-doctoral research in Near Eastern studies from pre-history
through the early Islamic period in archaeology, anthropology, art history, Bible, epigraphy, historical geography, history, language, literature,
philology and religion and related disciplines. The Albright Institute, located near the Old City of Jerusalem, includes a research library,
workshops, computer facilities, and a residence with a hostel and apartments. The living accommodations provide rooms for thirty people, a
served dinner, self-service breakfast, and a garden area for tea and coffee, which is also used for receptions. The library, dedicated to
ancient Near Eastern studies, contains more than 28,500 volumes, over 600 journal titles, and significant map and artifact collections. In
addition to administrative and library computers, the fellows have access to a wide range of hardware and software programs, and the hostel
rooms are wired for web access and e-mail communications. The Albright’s annual program is composed of a series of more than 85 lectures,
reports, seminars, workshops, field trips, and social events organized according to its fellows’ interests. More than fifty-three fellows
from the United States, Europe, and around the world—as well as those from the Israeli and Palestinian academic communities—participate
mainly as long-term research appointees. AIAR also serves as a support base for numerous short-term scholars and visitors and for a large
number of staff, student, and volunteer participants in the twenty-four annual excavation and publication projects affiliated with ASOR.
AIAR conducts, with the Hebrew University, a joint excavation and publication project on the Philistine site of Tel Miqne-Ekron. It is also
the organizing institution for an international research project, The Neo-Assyrian Empire in the 7th Century BC: A Study of the Interaction
between Center and Periphery. This project, under the aegis of the Council of American Overseas Research Centers (CAORC), involves 50 scholars
working in Bahrain, Cyprus, Egypt, Greece, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Spain, Syria, Tunisia, and Turkey. The Albright annually awards up to
four NEH fellowships, for periods ranging from four to twelve months, with a maximum grant of $40,000 for 12 months and $20,000 for 6 months.
Application deadline: October 1, 2007
AIAR/NEH Fellowship Program
Professor Joan R. Branham
Chair, Albright Fellowship Committee
Department of Art and Art History
Providence College
Providence RI 02918
Telephone:401/865-1789
Fax: 401/865-1036
E-Mail: jbranham@providence.edu
Website: http://www.aiar.org
American
Academy in Rome
The American Academy in Rome is one of the leading centers for independent study and advanced research in the arts and
humanities. For over 100 years, the Academy has offered support, time, and an inspiring environment to some of America's most gifted
artists and scholars. In the historic setting of Rome, Academy artists and scholars pursue their work independently and collaborate
with each other and with Italian colleagues. The Academy's significant resources include a library, photographic archive, and archaeology
study collection. The Library is strong in the fields of classical studies and the history of art and architecture. The Photographic Archive
provides a visual record of the architecture and topography of ancient Rome and Italy and the Roman Empire, as well as collections on
archaeology, art and architecture, landscape architecture, and gardens. Objects in the Archaeology Collection are available for study and
educational purposes. Each year the Academy invites applications for its prestigious Rome Prize Competition. Through a nationally juried
process, up to 30 Rome Prize fellowships are awarded in the arts and humanities. Within the humanities, the Academy accepts applications
in the following fields: Ancient Studies (through the 6th century), Medieval Studies (6th through the 14th centuries), Renaissance and Early
Modern Studies (14th through the 18th centuries) and Modern Italian Studies (18th century to the present). The Academy invites proposals
in archaeology, history, the history of art and architecture, literature, and musicology. These disciplines are intended to be suggestive,
and comparative projects that cut across the chronological limits listed above are welcome. Two NEH post-doctoral fellowships are available
in 2008-2009. The winners of these fellowships, which are 11 months in length, receive room and board, a study, and a stipend of at least $23,000.
For further information on the Academy or to apply please visit http://www.aarome.org.
Application deadline: November 1, 2007
American Academy in Rome
Programs Department
7 East 60th Street
New York, New York 10022
Telephone: 212/751-7200
E-Mail: info@aarome.org
Website: http://www.aarome.org/
American
Center of Oriental Research (Amman)
Founded in 1968, the American Center of Oriental Research (ACOR) in Amman, Jordan, is a private, international, non-profit
academic institution dedicated to promoting research and publication in the fields of archaeology, anthropology, ancient through modern history,
art history, conservation and preservation studies, Arabic and other Near Eastern languages, Islamic studies, and many other fields related to
Near Eastern studies. The center has 11 full-time employees, a six-story residential facility, and a fellowship program that grants over 20
awards annually for periods of two to six months. The library has more than 30,000 books and periodicals in a variety of disciplines. ACOR also
offers offices and workrooms; equipment for field projects; computer facilities and wireless Internet access; a lecture room; and an archaeological
conservation laboratory. In addition to these facilities, ACOR assists researchers by coordinating introductions and giving advice on conducting
research projects in Jordan and the region. One NEH fellowship award of $20,000 for a tenure of 4 months at ACOR in Amman will be available for
2008-2009. Further information about ACOR and its NEH fellowship program, including applications, can be obtained by visiting ACOR's website or
by contacting our offices in Boston or Amman.
Application deadline February 1, 2008
In the U.S.:
American Center of Oriental Research
ATTN: Donald Keller
656 Beacon Street, 5th floor
Boston, MA 02215-2010
Telephone: 617/353-6571
FAX: 617/353-6575
E-Mail: acor@bu.edu
Website: http://www.bu.edu/acor
In Jordan:
American Center of Oriental Research
Barbara A. Porter, Director
P.O. Box 2470
Amman 11181
Telephone: 962 6 534-6117
FAX: 962 6 534-4181
E-Mail: acor@go.com.jo
Website: http://www.bu.edu/acor
American
Council of Learned Societies: American Research in the Humanities
in the People's Republic of China
American research in the humanities in China is supported by the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) and its affiliate
the Committee on Scholarly Communication with China (CSCC), which administers the program inside China. The program is open to scholars in the
humanities and humanities-related social sciences who have received their Ph.D. or its equivalent by the time of application. Support is offered
to specialists in all fields of the humanities and humanities-related social sciences. Applicants must submit a carefully formulated research
proposal that reflects an understanding of the present Chinese academic and research environment. The proposal should include a persuasive
statement of the need to conduct the research in China. Those submitting a joint proposal must apply individually. Grant tenure is from four
months to one year of continuous research in China. The grant period must fall between July 1, 2008, and December 31, 2009. Grants will include
allotments for travel, extraordinary living expenses, research expenses, and academic-year salary replacement. No support is offered for summer
salary. The award will be reduced if the candidate also receives full or partial salary during the grant period. There is no financial support
for dependents. To be eligible, applicants must be US citizens or permanent residents with three years continuous residence in the US. The program
will offer at least three fellowships for the 2008-2009 academic year.
Application deadline: November 15, 2007 (Postmarked)
AHRC Fellowships
Office of Fellowships and Grants
American Council of Learned Societies
633 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10017
Telephone: 212/697-1505, ext. 136 or 138
E-mail: grants@acls.org
Website: http://www.acls.org/csccguid.htm
American
Council of Learned Societies and Social Science Research Council:
International Postdoctoral Fellowships
The ACLS is a private federation of 68 national scholarly organizations dedicated to the advancement of humanistic
scholarship in all fields of learning. The SSRC is an international association devoted to the advancement of interdisciplinary research
in the social sciences. Jointly they offer postdoctoral fellowships to encourage humanities research in area studies. Special funding by
the National Endowment for the Humanities and the ACLS has been set aside for up to ten ACLS/SSRC/NEH International and Area Studies Fellows,
to be designated among the successful applicants to the central ACLS Fellowships competition. Scholars who have completed the Ph.D. or
equivalent by October 3, 2007, may apply for six- to twelve-month fellowships to pursue research and writing on the societies and cultures
of Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and the former Soviet Union. Completed applications must
be submitted through the ACLS Online Fellowship Application system (OFA) no later than 9 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, October 3, 2007. OFA is
accessible at http://ofa.acls.org or through the Fellowship and Grant Programs
section of the ACLS website.
Application deadline: October 3, 2007 (Online)
American Council of Learned Societies
Office of Fellowships and Grants
633 Third Avenue
New York, New York 10017
Telephone: 212/697-1505, ext. 136 or 138
E-Mail: grants@acls.org
Website: http://www.acls.org
American
Councils for International Education: ACTR/ACCELS and the National
Council on Eurasian and East European Research
The NEH Collaborative Research Fellowship, administered by American Councils for International Education: ACTR/ACCELS and
the National Council for Eurasian and East European Research (NCEEER), supports research and travel for U.S. post-doctoral scholars conducting
collaborative projects in the humanities with researchers in any country of Eastern Europe or Eurasia (Russia, Central Asia, the South Caucasus,
Belarus, Moldova, and Ukraine). Research topics are not restricted to regional or area studies, but must involve at least one collaborator from
the region and research in the region itself. Applicants must propose to conduct at least four months of full-time research, of which at least
two months must be spent overseas. The grant does not provide for collaborators to come to the U.S., but does provide support for collaborators'
time spent on projects while working with U.S. scholars. Applicants must plan to complete their NEH fellowships by August 31, 2009. American
Councils is an international not-for-profit organization working to advance education, research, and mutual understanding across the United
States and the nations of Eurasia, Southeastern Europe, and Afghanistan. Its mission is to foster democratic development and civil societies by
advancing education and research, cultivating leadership, and empowering individuals and institutions through learning. American Councils programs
include academic exchange, professional training, distance learning, research and evaluation, and institution building. American Councils has 31
offices throughout Russia, Eurasia, Southeastern Europe, South Asia, and the Middle East and a full-time professional staff of over 375 to support
its programs in the region. The National Council for Eurasian and East European Research (NCEEER) has operated for over two decades to support
research in the humanities and social sciences on Eastern Europe and Eurasia by providing grants to U.S. scholars and researchers and counterpart
scholars in the region.
Application deadline: February 15, 2008
Applicants seeking to conduct research in Belarus, Central Asia, Moldova, Russia, the South Caucasus, and Ukraine should contact
American Councils for applications and information:
Russian and Eurasian Outbound Programs/
Jeanette Owen, Senior Program Manager
American Councils for International Education
ACTR/ACCELS
1776 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Suite 700
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202/833-7522
Fax: 202/833-7523
E-Mail: jowen@americancouncils.org
Website: http://www.americancouncils.org
Applicants seeking to conduct research in Eastern Europe
(the Baltics, and countries outside the former Soviet Union) should
contact NCEEER for applications and information:
Dana Ponte, Program Officer
NEH Collaborative Humanities Fellowships
NCEEER
2601 Fourth Avenue, Suite 310
Seattle, WA 98121
Telephone: 206/441-6433
E-Mail: danochka@nceeer.org
Website: http://www.nceeer.org
American
Institute of Indian Studies (Calcutta, Chennai, New Delhi, and Pune)
The American Institute of Indian Studies, a consortium of fifty-nine U.S. colleges and universities, was founded in 1961
by scholars committed to increasing accurate, intensive knowledge of India's culture, history, languages, and traditions. The institute's
principal activity is the awarding of fellowships to support scholarly research in India on the broadest possible range of topics and disciplines
in the humanities. With U.S. offices in Chicago and headquarters in New Delhi, the institute maintains regional offices in Calcutta, Chennai,
and Pune. Each provides a meeting place for scholars and organized opportunities for seminars, receptions, and lectures. In addition, the institute
maintains an Archives and Research Center for Ethnomusicology and a Center for Art and Archaeology, both located at the main administrative center
at Gurgaon, just outside Delhi. The staffs at these regional offices and centers obtain necessary clearances for the fellows from the Indian government,
secure affiliations for fellows with Indian academic and research institutions, and otherwise facilitate the fellows' scholarly research. The institute
awards approximately eighteen long-term doctoral fellowships, ten long-term postdoctoral fellowships, and a few short-term postdoctoral fellowships,
all payable in rupees. The fellowships are awarded to scholars of distinction or high promise in all academic disciplines. For 2008-2009, NEH will
supplement up to four fellowships in the humanities with U.S. dollars.
Application deadline: July 1, 2007
Ralph W. Nicholas, President
Elise Auerbach, Grant Administrator
American Institute of Indian Studies
1130 E. 59th Street
Chicago, Illinois 60637
Telephone: 773/702-8638
E-Mail: aiis@uchicago.edu
Website: http://www.indiastudies.org
American
Philological Association/Thesaurus Linguae Latinae (Munich)
The American Philological Association invites applications for a one-year Fellowship, tenable from July 2008 through June 2009,
which will enable an American scholar to participate in the work of the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae Institute in Munich. Fellows at the TLL develop
a broadened perspective of the range and complexity of the Latin language and culture from the classical period through the early Middle Ages,
contribute signed articles to the Thesaurus, have the opportunity to participate in a collaborative international research project, and work with
senior scholars in the field of Latin lexicography. The Fellowship carries a stipend in the amount of $40,000 and is made possible in part by a
grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. The incumbent Fellow may re-apply for a second year, but all applications will be judged
on an equal footing. Applicants must (i) be United States citizens or permanent residents and (ii) already have the Ph.D. or anticipate the award
of the degree by July 1, 2008. The opportunity to be trained in lexicography and contribute articles to be published in the lexicon may be of special
interest to scholars who are already established in tenure-track positions as well as those who are just entering the profession. The Fellowship
offers valuable experience for scholars in a variety of specialties (e.g., Latin language and literature, Roman law, Roman history, the literature of
early Christianity); although it is not limited to individuals working in Latin philology, applicants should possess a thorough familiarity with and
a special interest in the Latin language, as well as advanced competence in Greek. It is anticipated that applicants will already have a reading
knowledge of German and will be willing to work toward proficiency in spoken German. Women and members of minority groups underrepresented in
Classics are particularly encouraged to apply. Applications should include a curriculum vitae, a statement of what benefits the applicant expects
to derive from the Fellowship for his/her research and teaching, and the names of three referees, whom the applicant should ask to send supporting
letters to the Executive Director without further notice. It will be in the candidate’s interest if at least one letter can specifically address
the candidate’s suitability for the Fellowship. Candidates will be considered by the APA’s TLL Fellowship Committee, which serves as the selection
committee. The committee will choose a short-list of candidates to be invited for interview at the Annual Meeting in January 2008 in Chicago, Illinois,
and the name of the successful candidate will be announced shortly thereafter. Applications must be received by the deadline.
Application deadline: November 16, 2007
Applications should be sent to:
Dr. Adam D. Blistein
Executive Director
American Philological Association
292 Logan Hall
University of Pennsylvania
249 S. 36th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6304
Website: http://www.apaclassics.org
For additional information about the Fellowship, contact the Chairperson
of the APA's TLL Fellowship Committee:
Professor Kathleen Coleman
Department of the Classics
Harvard University
204 Boylston Hall
Cambridge, MA 02138
Telephone: 617/495-2024
E-mail: kcoleman@fas.harvard.edu
Website: http://www.apaclassics.org
The
American Research Institute in Turkey (Istanbul and Ankara)
The American Research Institute in Turkey (ARIT), a consortium of thirty-four North American universities and museums, was founded
in 1964 to promote research and study in Turkey, and to enhance academic exchanges between the U.S. and Turkey. ARIT maintains centers in Istanbul
and Ankara to support American researchers and to provide full-time representation in Turkey for American institutions of higher education.
Administered by U.S. directors, each branch provides researchers with an institutional affiliation, a base of operations, orientation assistance,
and introductions to host-country scholars. In Istanbul, ARIT maintains a research facility with an 11,000-volume library in Byzantine, Ottoman,
and modern Turkish studies. In Ankara, scholars have access to an 11,000-volume library on archaeology and modern Turkey. ARIT’s fellowship
program supports individual research projects in the fields of the humanities and social sciences. For the NEH fellowship, scholars who have
completed their formal academic training may submit humanistically-oriented applications in the fields of anthropology, prehistory, history, art,
archaeology, literature, and linguistics, as well as interdisciplinary aspects of cultural history. Applicants must be U.S. citizens or foreign
nationals who have lived in the U.S. for the three years preceding the application deadline. For 2008-2009, there are two or three NEH fellowships
providing support for four months to one year. The stipend amount is up to $40,000 for one year. For further information and application format, see
the website or contact the ARIT office listed below.
Application deadline: November 1, 2007
Nancy Leinwand, Grant Administrator
American Research Institute in Turkey
c/o The University of Pennsylvania Museum
3260 South Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6324
Telephone: 215/898-3474
FAX: 215/898-0657
E-Mail: leinwand@sas.upenn.edu
Nancy Leinwand
E-Mail: arit-o@tr.net Ankara
E-Mail: gwood@boun.edu.tr
Istanbul
Website: http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/ARIT/
American
School of Classical Studies at Athens
Founded in 1881, the American School of Classical Studies at Athens is the most significant resource in Greece for American scholars
in the fields of ancient and post-classical studies in Greek language, literature, history, archaeology, philosophy, and art, from pre-Hellenic times
to the present. It offers two major research libraries: the Blegen, with 90,000 volumes dedicated to the ancient Mediterranean world; and the Gennadius,
with 113,000 volumes and archives devoted to post-classical Hellenic civilization and, more broadly, the Balkans and the eastern Mediterranean. The
School also sponsors excavations and provides centers for advanced research in archaeological and related topics at its excavations in the Athenian
Agora and Corinth, and it houses an archaeological laboratory at the main building complex in Athens. By agreement with the Greek government, the
School is authorized to serve as liaison with the Greek Ministry of Culture on behalf of American students and scholars for the acquisition of permits
to excavate and to study museum collections. The fellowships are open to postdoctoral scholars and professionals in relevant fields such as architecture
or art who are U.S. citizens or foreign nationals who have lived in the U.S. for the three years immediately preceding the application deadline.
Applicants must hold the Ph.D. or equivalent terminal degree at the time of application. Two to four fellowships are available, for projects of five
to ten months. The maximum stipend for a five-month project is $20,000; for a ten-month project, $40,000. The fellowship term must coincide with the
American School's academic year, September to June. Full application information and requests for further information about the American School of
Classical Studies or the Fellowship may be obtained from the address below.
Application Deadline: December 1, 2007 (Postmarked)
NEH Fellowships
American School of Classical Studies
6-8 Charlton Street
Princeton, NJ 08540-5232
Tel: 609/683-0800
Fax: 609/924-0578
E-mail: ascsa@ascsa.org
Website: http://www.ascsa.edu.gr
Medici
Archive Project (Florence)
The Medici Archive Project (MAP) offers a three-year fellowship (15 September 2008-15 July 2011) with 20 months of fulltime document
assessment and description for the Documentary Sources database onsite in the Florentine State Archive in collaboration with the Project’s research
team and 10 months of independent research on a topic related to the Medici Granducal Archive carried out in two 5-month segments in the second and
third year of the fellowship period. The fellowship stipend is $36,000 per year plus an allowance for travel expenses. Qualifications: completed PhD
or equivalent in a humanities field relevant to 16th-18th century European history and culture; fluency in English and Italian; substantial research
experience with original documentary material; the ability to master database programs and work in a computer environment; and personal commitment to
a scholarly career involving archival research. This fellowship is supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and is offered to scholars
who are United States citizens or have been residents of the United States for three years at the time of application.
Application Deadline: April 20, 2008
Application forms and further instructions are available at:
http://www.medici.org/positions/fellowships.html
In the U.S.:
The Medici Archive Project
E-mail: martinharms@earthlink.net
and fellowshipsny@medici.org
In Italy:
The Medici Archives Project
Email: fellowshipsitaly@medici.org
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