In alphabetical order, followed by appointment name, year, academic affiliation, and project title/description.
Christine Adams, Mellon Fellow, 1999, Saint Mary's College, “The society for maternal charity in 19th century France.”
Yury Afanasiev, Distinguished Visiting Scholar, 2003, Rector, Russian State University “Old and new drives in Russian foreign policy.”
Mustafa Aksakal, International Studies Fellow, 2004, Monmouth University, “Defining Ottoman public opinion on the eve of World War I.”
Muhammed Bin Naji Al-Qina'i, Scholar in Residence, 2002, Director, Kuwait Institute for Judicial and Legal Studies, “Arab law colloquium.”
Robert Albro, International Studies Fellow, 2003, Wheaton College, “'Popular contortions: the politics of misrecognition and modern Bolivian publics.”
Sylvia Albro, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2001, “History of hand paper-making in Fabriano, Italy from the 13th century to the present.”
Mikhail A. Alexseev, Kluge Fellow, 2003, San Diego State University, “The origins of hostility: migration, insecurity, and ethnic prejudice at the Russia-China border.”
Alden Almquist, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2003, “Indigenous knowledge and practices as resources in the preservation of wildlife and biodiversity in Africa.”
James Anderson, Luce Fellow, 2003, University of North Carolina in Greensboro, “The rebel den of Nung Tri Cao: 11th century rebellion and response along the Sino-Vietnamese frontier.”
Mark D. Anderson, Kluge Fellow, 2007, University of Georgia, “The
fruits of disaster: cultural responses to catastrophe in Latin America.”
Webcast: The Natural Nation: Tropical Imaginings and Ecologies of Abjection in Brazilian Literature.
Mohammed Arkoun, Distinguished Visiting Scholar, 2000, independent scholar, "Islamic studies."
Annette Seidel Arpaci, 2006, British Research Council Fellow, University of Leeds, “Perspectives on constructions of ’German victimhood' from outside within: post 1945.”
Jeffrey Bale, Mellon Fellow, 1997, Lewis and Clark College, Portland, OR, “Codename ’Gladio': clandestine anti-communist stay-behind networks and paramilitary violence in Cold War Europe, 1950-1990.”
Enikö Molnár Basa, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2003, “Useful and didactic nature of contemporary Hungarian literature and its direction in the 21st century.”
Christopher Bayly, Kluge Chair in Countries and
Cultures of the South, 2005, Cambridge University, “Emergence
and transformation of liberal ideas among the intelligentsia of India.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Alice Bellini, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Cambridge University, “Aspects of meta-theatre in 18th century Italian opera.”
Sergei Belyakov, Fulbright Fellow, 2006, “Developing a humanities website portal for the National Library of Russia and the St. Petersburg State University.”
Ruth Ben-Ghiat, Mellon Fellow, 1999, New York University, “Italian film between fascism and democracy.”
Carol Benedict, International Studies Fellow, 2004, Georgetown University, “Golden-silk smoke: a social and cultural history of tobacco consumption in China, 1550-2000.”
Rachel Bohlmann, J. Franklin Jameson Fellow Research in American History, 2008, Newberry Library, “The Woman's Christian Temperance Union in Chicago.”
Gregg Brazinsky, Kluge Fellow, 2003, George Washington University, “Cultural interactions between the US and East Asia during the 20th century and American intellectual and cultural relations with South Korea during the 50s and 60s.”
Asa Briggs, Kluge Chair in Countries and Cultures of the North, 2005, British historian, “A comparative history of American and British broadcasting.”
Nathan Brooks, Mellon Fellow, 1999, New Mexico State University, “Social contexts of Dmitri Mendeleev's involvement in controversies that stirred Russian society during the 19th century.”
Michael C. Brose, Kluge Fellow, 2006, University of Wyoming, “Social and political roles of Central Asian elites in China after the fall of the Mongol Yuan dynasty.”
Elspeth Brown, Kluge Fellow, 2003, University of Toronto, “Model Americans: a history of commercial modeling in the United States, 1884-1969.”
Juliet Bruce, David B. Larson Fellow in Health and Spirituality, 2004, Executive Director, Institute for Transformation through the Arts, “The theory and practice of creative self-expression for healing, especially for those affected by violence, underachievement, and marginalization.”
Geert Buelens, Kluge Fellow, 2008, Utrecht University, “National and/or European identity in the avant-garde and traditional poetry of the First World War.”
Clarrisa Burt, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2003, American University in Cairo, “Felicity's parting: imitation, trope and gender in classical Arabic poetry.”
Anita Callaway, Kluge Fellow, 2003, Australian National University, “The making of American visual culture: the enduring legacy of ephemeral art.”
Ozgur Can, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Lancaster University, “Investment and human rights: the doctrine of state responsibility, extra-territorial protection of human rights and financial institutions.”
Gian-Mario Cao, Kluge Fellow, 2004, Herzog August Bibliothek, “Diogenes Laertius: Medieval and Renaissance ’Fortuna' and bibliography.”
Zuoya Cao, Mellon Fellow, 1999, Lincoln University, “Out of the crucible: literary works about the lives of Zhiqing.”
Christopher Capozzola, J. Franklin Jameson Fellow Research in American History, 2005, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “Uncle Sam wants you: citizenship and obligation in World War I America.”
Toni Carbo, Madison Council Fellow in Library
and Information Science, 2002, University of Pittsburgh, “Information
ethics and policy related to electronic government in the United
States and the European Union.”
Webcast:
Information Ethics: Challenges for Library and Information Science Professionals.
Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Distinguished Visiting
Scholar, 2004, former President of Brazil, “Socio-political
aspects of contemporary Brazil.”
Webcast:
The Need for Global Democratic Governance: The Perspective from Latin America
(Kissinger Lecture).
Ruth Cardoso, Distinguished Visiting Scholar, 2004, former first lady of Brazil, “Socio-political aspects of contemporary Brazil.”
John Carlson, Kislak Fellow in American Studies,
2005, Director of the Center for Archaeoastronomy in College Park,
Maryland. “Mayan flasks and miniature vessels: a comprehensive
study with catalog/database.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Peter J. Carroll, International Studies Fellow, 2003, Northwestern University, “Changing significance of suicide as a social phenomenon in China during the first half of the 20th century.”
Karen L. Carter, Kluge Fellow, 2007, University of North Florida, “Art in the streets; late 19th century French posters.”
Robert L. Carter, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2002, United States District Court for the Southern District of New
York,
“Memoirs.”
Press Release:
Historian John Hope Franklin and Judge Robert L. Carter Discuss Brown v.
Board of Education.
Press Release:
Judge Robert L. Carter's Memoirs.
Webcast:
A Matter of Law: A Memoir of Struggle in the Cause of Equal Rights.
Gerhard Casper, Kluge Chair in American Law and
Governance, 2006, Former President, Stanford University,
“Max Weber and definitions of democracy.”
Press Release: Appointment
Webcast:
Caesarism in Democratic Politics: Reflections on Max Weber.
C. Andrew Causey, Mellon Fellow, 1998, Columbia College, “Historical documents related to the Toba Bataks of North Sumatra, Indonesia.”
Michael Chang, International Studies Fellow, 2003, George Mason University, “Local perspectives on the Southern tours: state-society relations in 18th century China.”
Subarno Chattarji, Kluge Fellow, 2008, Swansea University (UK), “Will there be peace again? Vietnamese-American writings in the U.S.”
Xiaomei Chen, Mellon Fellow, 1998, Ohio State University, Columbus, “Acting the right part: cultural performance in contemporary China.”
Jorge Chinea, Mellon Fellow, 1999, Wayne State University, Detroit, “The quest for freedom: manumission prospects for maritime Maroons in the Hispanic Caribbean.”
Eva Chou, International Studies Fellow, 2002, City University of New York, Baruch College, “Lu Xun cuts his queue: writing, politics, and identity in early 20th century China.”
Archbishop Chrysostomos of Etna, David B. Larson Fellow in Health and Spirituality, 2005, Center for Traditional Orthodox Studies, “A therapeutic approach to mental illness that incorporates Eastern Orthodox Hesychastic spiritual exercises into traditional psychoanalytical methodologies.”
Gemma Clarke, British Research Council Fellow, 2008, Cambridge University, “Drug assisted sexual assault in England, Wales and the U.S.”
Ruth Clements, Kluge Fellow, 2004, Orion Center for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, “Biblical interpretation and Christian-Jewish controversy: interaction, influence, and rhetoric in the 2nd-3rd centuries C.E.”
Frans Coetzee and Marilyn Coetzee, Mellon Fellows, 1997, George Washington University, “Defining the nation: citizenship, nationalism and war in Germany and Britain, 1914-19.”
Harvey Cohen, Kluge Fellow, 2005, University of Maryland, “Duke Ellington's America.”
Anne E. B. Coldiron, Kluge Fellow, 2003, Louisiana State University, “Between Caxton and Tottel: verse translation from French 1476-1557 and earlier English Renaissance poetry.”
Kimberly Coles, Kluge Fellow, 2005, California State University, Bakersfield, “Making sects: women as reformers, writers, and subjects in reformation England.”
Anna Collar, British Research Council Fellow, 2006, University of Exeter, “Networks of innovation and the spread of religious influence in the Roman Empire.”
Theodore Cook, Mellon Fellow, 1998, William Paterson University, “The Japanese soldier's experience of War, 1937-1945: violence, citizenship, and the individual in modern Japan's lost war.”
Paul Crego, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2007, “History
of Abkhazia and the Abkhazians.”
Webcast:
Abkhazia and the New Cold War
Robert Crews, International Studies Fellow, 2003, American University, “A faith for the Tsar: Islam, community, and the state in Imperial Russia.”
Kathleen M. Crowther-Heyek, Kluge Fellow, 2007, University of Oklahoma, “Creating Adam and Eve: body, soul and gender in 16th century Germany.”
Amy Crumpton, Kluge Fellow, 2003, American Association for the Advancement of Science, “Barry Commoner and Margaret Mead (1958-1968): relations between science, democratic organization, and social change.”
Anne E. A. David, Kluge Fellow, 2006, Anne Arundel Community College,“A new conspectus of old Tamil verb forms.”
Fabrizio de Francesco, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of Exeter, “The emergence and evolution of Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA) in comparative perspective: the case of the USA and Canada.”
Derrick de Kerckhove, Harissios Papamarkou Chair
in Education, 2003, 2008, Director, McLuhan Program in Culture &
Technology at the University of Toronto, “Education and the digital
future.”
Press Release:
Managing Knowledge and Creativity in a Digital Context.
Press Release:
Role of Electricity in Contemporary Life.
Mario Del Pero, Kluge Fellow, 2007, Universita di Bologna, “Detente, Europe, and bipolarism: U.S. and EEC responses to the ’Southern European Malaise'of the 1970s.”
David W. Del Testa, Kluge Fellow, 2007, Bucknell University, “Paint the trains red: labor, nationalism, and the railroads in French colonial Indochina, 1898-1954.”
Francis Mading Deng, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2005, Director of the Center for Displacement Studies at the Paul H.
Nitze School of Advanced International Studies of Johns Hopkins University,
“Somalia: north and south.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Press Release:
Recent Developments in Sudan.
Press Release:
Lessons from the Sudan.
Webcast:
Sudan: A Nation in Turbulent Search for Itself.
Webcast:
African Dilemmas of Self-Determination: Lessons from the Sudan.
Margaret Dikovitsky, Kluge Fellow, 2004, Central European University, “Russian imperial colonial attitudes: an analysis of photographs from the Prokudin-Gorskii collection.”
Beatriz Domingues, International Studies Fellow, 2001, Federal University of Juiz de Fora, MG, Brazil, “Materializing public memory: national identity and cultural institutions in modern Peru.”
Aleksandra Duda, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of Birmingham, “Youth activism as the driving force behind the development of democratic opposition campaigns and peaceful revolutions.”
Finis Dunaway, Kluge Fellow, 2003, Cornell University, “Thirteen ways of looking at a river: the Mississippi in the American imagination.”
Raymond Dwek, Kluge Chair in Technology and Society,
2007, Director of the Glycobiology Institute at Oxford University. “The
environment, specifically the desertification or absence of water and
the ’real Green Line,' the rehabilitated land in the Negev, the
desert region of Israel. Public health, specifically the acceleration
of the development of an AIDS vaccine. University/industry relationships:
does commercialization of research results threaten a university's
principal mission?”
Press Release:
Appointment
Webcast:
Eradicating HIV and Hepatitis B.
Webcast:
Commercializing University Research.
Article: The Other
Green Line and the Sweetest Tomato in the World.
Article: George
Washington and the First Mass Military Inoculation.
Max Edelson, Kislak Fellow in American Studies,
2007, University of Illinois, “The transformation of geographic
consciousness in colonial British America.”
Webcast:
Mapping the New Empire: Britain's General Survey of North America, 1763-1782.
Ahmed El-Khamlichi, Scholar in Residence, 2002, Director, Royal Law Institute, Rabat, Morocco, “Arab law colloquium.”
Awad El-Mor, Scholar in Residence, 2002, former Chief Justice of the Egyptian Supreme Constitutional Court, “Arab law colloquium.”
Jean Bethke Elshtain, Cary and Ann Maguire Chair
in American History and Ethics, 2003, University of Chicago, “Harry
Potter, St. Augustine and the confrontation with evil.”
Press Release: Harry
Potter, St. Augustine and the Confrontation with Evil.
Webcast:
Harry Potter, St. Augustine and the Confrontation with Evil.
Ann Farnsworth-Alvear, Mellon Fellow, 1997, University of Pennsylvania, “The practice of community in the Colombian Choco.”
Lawrence Feldman, Kislak Fellow in American Studies, 2005, independent scholar, .“The last days of the English colony of West Florida.”
Blenda Femenias, International Studies Fellow, 2001, Brown University, “Materializing public memory: national identity and cultural institutions in modern Peru.”
Mark Fenemore, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Manchester Metropolitan University, “Policing a divided city. Berlin, 1945-1961.”
John Hope Franklin, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2001, James B. Duke Professor Emeritus of History at Duke University, “His
memoirs.”
Kluge Prize:
2006
Press Release: Historian
John Hope Franklin and Judge Robert L. Carter Discuss Brown v. Board of Education.
Webcast:
Mirror to America: The Autobiography of John Hope Franklin.
Webcast:
Where Do We Go From Here?
Aaron Friedberg, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair
in Foreign Policy and International Relations, 2001,
Princeton University, “The United States as an Asian power
1787-2002.”
Webcast: The United
States as an Asian Power: 1787-2002.
Louis Galambos, Cary and Ann Maguire Chair in
American History and Ethics, 2005, Johns Hopkins University, “The
creative society – and the price Americans pay for being creative.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Frances Garrett, David B. Larson Fellow in Health and Spirituality, 2007, University of Toronto, “Religious healing and the history of medicine in pre-17th century Tibetan literature.”
Pamela Geller, Kislak Fellow in American Studies, 2006, “Embodied texts: the messages encoded in Maya bodies.”
Armenuhi Ghambaryan, International Research & Exchanges Board Fellow, 2002, National Academy of Sciences of the Republic of Armenia, “U.S. policy towards Armenia between 1918 and 1920.”
Chad A. Goldberg, J. Franklin Jameson Fellow Research in American History, 2005, University of Wisconsin, “Citizens and paupers: civic inclusion, race and the American welfare state.”
James Goldgeier, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair
in Foreign Policy and International Relations, 2005, Council
on Foreign Relations, “The growing division between the European
Union, NATO, and the former Soviet Union.”
Press Release: End of
the Cold War.
Press Release:
America Between the Wars
Webcast:
End of the Cold War
Seth Graebner, International Studies Fellow, 2001, Washington University, St. Louis, “History from above: looking at the city in Paris and Algiers.”
Andrew Graham, Distinguished Visiting Scholar, 2006, Balliol College, “Radio, TV and a viable internet business model.”
Claudia B. Haake, Kluge Fellow, 2008, University of York, “The roots of identity: indigenous societies and land in the Americas.”
Armen Hachikyan, Fulbright Scholar, 2003, Armenian State Pedagogical University, Yerevan, “Woodrow Wilson's policies towards Armenian self-determination during the period of the Versailles Peace Conference.”
Amirul Hadi, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2005, State Institute of Islamic Studies Ar-Raniry, Banda Aceh, Indonesia, “War and peace among a Muslim people of Sumatra: a study of Acehnese Hikayat Prangs (heroic poems).”
Athanase Hagengimana, Kluge Fellow, 2003, Harvard Medical School, “Psycho-social causes of Rwanda genocide.”
Leor Halevi, Mellon Fellow, 2003, Texas A&M University, “Death, ritual, and society in the early Islamic world”; Kluge Fellow, 2005, “Commerce with infidels: economic exchange between Muslims and non-Muslims in the Middle Ages”
John Hanson, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2004, Indiana University, “Modernity, transnational Islam, and Africa: the Ahmadiyya Muslim movement in the 20th century Gold Coast/Ghana.”
Katherine “Kate” Harper, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of York, “Periodicals and the literary circle of Frances Taylor,”
Katherine Harrison, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Lancaster University, “The statue of Liberty as a paradoxical icon of U.S. sovereignty and global democracy.”
Oz Hassan, British Research Council Fellow, 2008, University of Birmingham, “Understanding U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East after 9/11: theory and practice in the ’forward strategy for freedom in the Middle East.'”
Václav Havel, Kluge Chair in Modern Culture,
2005, former President of the Czech Republic, “Continuation of
past work writing a play.”
Webcast:
The Emperor Has No Clothes.
Alexander Hinchliffe, British Research Council Fellow, 2005, University of Nottingham, “The hegemonic construction of ’American' identity and difference in the early years of the Cold War particularly through 1950s Hollywood cinema.”
Susan Hirsch, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies,
2003, Wesleyan University, “The embassy bombings reframed: constructing
identities, legal meanings, and justice.”
Press Release: Terrorism
and Grief.
Webcast:
Terrorism and Grief.
Victor Hobson, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of East Anglia, “The context of the development of the blues within jazz.”
Jack Holland, British Research Council Fellow, 2008, University of Warwick, “American, British and Australian foreign policy discourse in the ’War on Terror.'”
Alastair Horne, Distinguished Visiting Scholar, 2005, “Henry Kissinger papers.”
Michael Howard, Kluge Chair in Countries and
Cultures of the North, 2003, University of Texas, “Constitutional
law.”
Press Release: Philip
Bobbitt and Sir Michael Howard discuss Bobbitt's book The Shield of
Achilles: War, Law and the Course of History.
Webcast:
The Shield of Achilles: War, Law and the Course of History.
Shigemi Inaga, Kluge Chair in Modern Culture,
2006, International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto,
Japan,
“Comparative literature and culture and the history of cultural
exchange.”
Press release: Appointment
Press release:
Shigemi Inaga To Discuss Western Influence on Japanese Art.
Webcast:
Modern Japanese Arts and Crafts in Kyoto: From Asai Chu to Yagi Kazuo.
Vyacheslav Vsevolodovich Ivanov, Kluge Chair
in Modern Culture, 2004, University of California at Los Angeles, “Symbols
of the Old Slavic, proto and ancient Indian, ancient near oriental
and pre-Columbian MesoAmerican cultures”
Press Release:
Appointment
Maurice Jackson, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Georgetown University, “Anthony Benezet (1713-1784) and the Atlantic Antislavery Crusade.”
Eric Jacobson, Kluge Fellow, 2003, University of Sussex, England, “Papers of Hannah Arendt.”
Toby James, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of York, “Comparative electoral reform in the USA.”
Maya Jasanoff, Kluge Fellow, 2006, University of Virginia, “British loyalists who fled to various parts of the British Empire during and after the American Revolution.”
Krzysztof Jaskulowski, Kluge Fellow, 2006, University of Wroclaw, Poland. “Anglophone theories of nationalism and the construction of Eastern Europe; the condition of the current debate on nationalism and recent theories explaining the rise of Eastern European nations.”
Laura Jones, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, “Conspiracy theory after September 11.”
Lynn Jones, Mellon Fellow, 1999, University of Maryland, “The visual expression of Armenian kingship: ceremonial and portraiture.”
Jenna Weissman Joselit, Distinguished Visiting
Scholar, 2007, Princeton University, “The variety of cultural
forms in which the Ten Commandments appear in American culture.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
Holy Moses! A Cultural History of the Ten Commandments.
Webcast:
Holy Moses! A Cultural History of the Ten Commandments.
Ablet Kamalov, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2003, Institute of Oriental Studies, Kazakh Academy of Science, “Globalization, Islam, and Uygar nationalism in Xinjiang.”
Marianne Kamp, Kluge Fellow, 2006, University of Wyoming, “Oral histories relating to the collectivization of agriculture by the Soviets in Uzbekistan.”
Tomasz Kamusella, Kluge Fellow, 2003, European University Institute, Florence, “Nationalism and the politics of language in East Central Europe during the 19th and 20th Centuries.”
Xiaofei Kang, Kluge Fellow, 2006, St. Mary's College of Maryland, “Contesting the Yellow Dragon: religion, tourism, and local history at China's ethnic borderland.”
Ivan Katchanovski, Kluge Fellow, 2003, George Mason University, “Soviet prisoners' dilemma: the politics of mass terror.”
Jennifer Keene, Mellon Fellow, 2003, University of Redlands, “African American and African soldiers in the Great War.”
Thomas Keirstead, Mellon Fellow, 1997, State University of New York, Buffalo, “Reclaiming Japan's past: reinventing the Middle Ages, reinventing Asia.”
Suk-Young Kim, Kluge Fellow, 2006, Dartmouth
College, “Filmed propaganda performances about the family: a
comparative study of China and North Korea, 1966-1979.”
Press Release:
Kim Jong-il and North Korean Films.
Press Release:
For the Eyes of the Dear Leader: Fashion and body politics in North Korean
Visual Arts.
Webcast:
Kim Jong-il and North Korean Films.
Webcast:
For the Eyes of the Dear Leader: Fashion and body politics in North Korean
Visual Arts.
Robin Kornman, Luce Fellow, 2001, Nalanda Translation Committee, “Nomadic self-knowledge in Inner Asia: the Tibetan Gesar of Ling Epic.”
Joseph K. Kosek, Kluge Fellow, 2007, George
Washington University, “Acts of conscience: Christian nonviolence
and American democracy.”
Webcast:
God and Gandhi: The Radical Spiritual Politics of the Reverend John Haynes
Holmes (1879-1964).
Kathleen Kuehnast, Mellon Fellow, 1999, George Washington University, “Islam and the new politics of gender ideologies in Central Asia.”
Svetlana Kujumdzieva, Kluge Fellow, 2003, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, “A cross-cultural study of the Oktoechos: John of Damascus, John Koukouzeles, Chrysaphes the New.”
Charles Kupchan, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair
in Foreign Policy and International Relations, 2007, School
of Foreign Service and Government Department at Georgetown University, “Factors
that make for peace among groups.”
Website: Charles
Kupchan at the Council on Foreign Relations - from Council on Foreign Relations
website.
Press Release:
Appointment
Press Release:
The Collapse of Bipartisanship.
Webcast:
The Collapse of Bipartisanship.
Paper:
“The 50th Anniversary of the EU: Re-launch Immediately To Counter
the Risk of Disaggregation” from Council on Foreign Relations
website.
Paper:
“Watching from Across the Divide” from International
Herald Tribune.
Paper: “Putin's
’Bolt from Blue' on Missile Defense Highlight of G8 Conference” from
Council on Foreign Relations website.
Paper:
“Grand Strategy for a Divided America” from Foreign
Affairs.
Paper:
“Strengthen Regional Cooperation” from Democracy: A
Journal of Ideas.
Celso Lafer, Kluge Chair in Countries and Cultures of the South, 2005, University of São Paulo, Brazil, “Decision making in foreign policy.”
Nelly Lahoud, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2005, Goucher College, “Islamic political claims.”
Ana Lalaj, Fulbright Scholar, 2003, Director of the Institute of History, Academy of Sciences of Albania, “Warsaw Pact and Albania.”
Klaus Larres, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair in
Foreign Policy and International Relations Scholar, 2002, Queen's
University, Belfast, “The United States and the ’Unity
of Europe': a comparative analysis of American policy-making and
European integration in the post-1945 and post-1990 eras.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
Downward Course: European-American Relations from the 1970s to the Present.
Libby Larsen, Harissios Papamarkou Chair in Education,
2003, Composer, “'The global ’green room': an attempt to
identify the soul of contemporary America's culture.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release: The Concert
Hall That Fell Asleep and Woke up as a Car Radio.
Emily Laurance, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Duke University and University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, “The single-action harp in the early American republic: a social history.”
Melvyn P. Leffler, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair
in Foreign Policy and International Relations, 2005, University
of Virginia,
“The Cold War: why it started, why it lasted as long as it did,
and, why it ended when it did.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
Retreat from Armageddon? Khrushchev, Kennedy, Johnson and the Elusive Quest
for Peace.
Webcast:
Retreat from Armageddon? Khrushchev, Kennedy, Johnson and the Elusive Quest
for Peace.
Althea Legal-Miller, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, 2008, King's College London, “Eyes on the girl: African American girlhood and the visual politics of racial equality.”
Gerardo Leibner, Kluge Fellow, 2003, University of Tel Aviv, “Ideology, action, and social views of the Uruguayan Communist Party, 1945-1973.”
David Levy, Harissios Papamarkou Chair in Education,
2005, University of Washington, “Managing knowledge and creativity
in a digital context.”
Webcast:
Mindful Work and Technology.
Webcast:
From the Fixed Page to Movable Electrons.
Lu Liu, Kluge Fellow, 2004, University of Tennessee, “Mass migration in wartime China.”
Irina Livezeanu, International Studies Fellow, 2001, University of Pittsburgh, “Ideas, art, and radical politics in interwar Romania and beyond, 1914-1947.”
Jason Loviglio, J. Franklin Jameson Fellow Research in American History, 2003, University of Maryland, “The intimate public: network radio and mass mediated democracy.”
Kathleen Lynch, Kluge Center Visiting Fellow, 2003, Executive Director, Folger Institute, Folger Shakespeare Library, “A pattern or more: the uses of religious experience in 17th century Britain.”
Anneliese Mackintosh, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of Glasgow, “Deafness and blindness: literature and experience, 20th century and beyond.”
Neil Maher, Kluge Fellow, 2008, New Jersey Institute of Technology, “Ground control: an environmental history of NASA and the space race.”
Helgard Mahrdt, Kluge Fellow, 2003, Danish Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, Copenhagen, “Hannah Arendt.”
David Makarenko-Smith, British Research Council Fellow, 2006, “The post 9/11 transformation of the goals and methods of American foreign and security policy.”
Chibli Mallat, Scholar in Residence, 2003, St. Joseph Law School, Beirut, “Arab law colloquium.”
Rama Mantena, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Brown University, “Language, temporality, and progress in colonial South India.”
Mina Marefat, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies,
2003, independent scholar, “Zaher va Baten: complexity and contradiction
in Islamic architecture: a case study of Teheran” and “Islamic
Cities Project.”
Press Release: Conference
on Tehran.
Press Release: Bam, Past
and Future.
Robert Mason, Kluge Fellow, 2004, University
of Edinburgh, “America's minority: the Republican Party and the
U.S. Electorate from Hoover to Reagan.”
Press Release:
Richard Nixon and the Quest for a New Majority.
Kate Masur, Kluge Fellow, 2004, University of Maryland, “Unworthy of the nation: black rights and the failure of democracy in Civil War-era America.”
Daniel Matlin, British Research Council Fellow, 2006, 2008, Cambridge University, “African-American intellectuals and the urban crisis, 1960-1975.”
Carol S. Matthews, Kluge Fellow, 2003, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas, “Race, ethnicity, and American exceptionalism in American sectarian religious texts, including histories of American sectarian movements, Mormon materials, and Spiritualist journals produced in the United States since 1830.”
William May, Cary and Ann Maguire Chair in American
History and Ethics, 2007, University of Virginia, “The
new Manichaeism: the religious construal of the shift in political
anxiety in the West.”
Webcast:
Containing Runaway Fear in Foreign Policy: Recovering Our National Identity.
Amanda McKeever, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of Sussex, “The restless dead and notions of eternity in early modern Britain and France.”
Mary McMaster, Mellon Fellow, 1998, Castleton State College, Castleton, Vermont, “Toward a reconstruction of the Rwandan past in the wider context of Great Lakes History.”
Jacqueline Messing, Kislak Fellow, 2008, Change in Sixteenth-Century Tlaxcala.
Tobie Meyer-Fong, Kluge Fellow, 2006, Johns Hopkins University, “Rebellion remembered: violence, community, and commemoration in 19th century China.”
Suzana Milevska, Fulbright Scholar, 2004, Museum of the City of Skopje, Macedonia, “Photographic representation of gender differences of Balkan immigrants to the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.”
Sarah Moody, British Research Council Fellow, 2008, University of Lincoln, “How school history curriculum is shaped and taught in the U.S.”
Krystyn Moon, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Georgia State University, “Performing race: the rise of Asians and Asian Americans in Vaudeville, 1880s-1930s.”
Stephen Moonie, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of Essex, “The crisis of the easel picture circa 1958-1962.”
Michael Moore, Mellon Fellow, 1999, Wellesley College, “Rulers of darkness: demons in early Medieval society.”
Marina Moskowitz, Kluge Fellow, 2006, University of Glasgow, “Seed money: the economies of horticulture in 19th century America.”
Anthony Mullan, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2005, “Travel and exploration in Hispanic America, 1600-1900: a selective and annotated guide to original materials in special collections of the Library of Congress.”
Eleanor Kate Nichols, British Research Council Fellow, 2008, Birkbeck College, “Greece and Rome at Chicago and Nashville.”
Mark A. Noll, Cary and Ann Maguire Chair in American
History and Ethics, 2004, Wheaton College, “Significance
of the Bible in American public life.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
The Bible in American Public Life, 1860-2005.
Press Release:
The King James Version of the Bible in American History.
Webcast:
The Bible in American Public Life, 1860-2005.
Webcast:
The King James Version of the Bible in American History.
John T. Noonan, Cary and Ann Maguire Chair in American History and Ethics, 2001, Senior Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, “History of moral thought and the relation between religion and government.”
Marcia Norton, Kluge Fellow, 2003, George Washington University, “American offerings: tobacco and chocolate in the Spanish Empire, 1492-1700.”
Jeanne Nuechterlein, Kluge Fellow, 2005, University of York, “The emergence of Netherlandish oil painting in its historical context and in modern historiography.”
Chidibere Nwaubani, Kluge Fellow, 2004, University of Colorado-Boulder, “Nigeria: the politics of decolonization, 1937-1960.”
Gerard O'Donoghue, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Oxford University, “Postwar-absurdist-fiction, American autographic metafiction.”
David Orique, Kislak Fellow, 2007, University of Oregon, “Evolution of Bartolome de las Casas' view of human rights.”
Vladimir Sergeevich Orlov, Fulbright Fellow, 2005, State Institute of Art Research, Moscow, “Prokofiev in America.”
Karen Oslund, Mellon Fellow, 2003, University of Maryland, College Park, “Of whales and men: the North Atlantic as a zone of contested scientific ethics and cultural politics.”
Major Owens, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2007, former Member of the U.S. House of Representatives for the 11th
Congressional District of New York State, “History of the Black
Caucus.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Elizabeth Ann Oyler, International Studies Fellow, 2003, Washington University, St. Louis, “Swords, oaths, and prophetic visions: narrative cycles and the authoring of warrior rule in Medieval Japan.”
Ricardo A. Padron, International Studies Fellow, 2001, University of Virginia, “Mapping by paces: cartography and literature in the early modern Hispanic world.”
Scott Palmer, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Western Illinois University, “Forging Colossus: monumentality, modernity, and the Soviet-built environment.”
Jaroslav Pelikan, Kluge Chair in Countries and
Cultures of the North, 2001, Yale University, “Creeds
and Confessions of Faith in the Christian tradition.”
Kluge Prize:
2004
Madeline Pill, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Cardiff University, “Neighborhood governance in the US: which factors help and which hinder its remit?”
Mark J. Pitchford, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Cardiff University, “The conservative party and the extreme right, 1945-1979.”
Joseph Platnauer, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of Warwick, “Classical models in 18th century reform opera.”
Stefanie Reetz, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, College of Art and Design, University of Dundee. “The ’nationality question' in the Soviet Union with regard to the Baltic States (Estonia).”
Robert Remini, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2002, Professor emeritus, University of Illinois at Chicago, “History
of the U.S. House of Representatives.”
Press Release: The House:
The History of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Press Release: The House:
The History of the U.S. House of Representatives.
Neil Renwick, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Cambridge University, “The United States and the United Nations during the early Cold War, c.1946-c.1965.”
Hassan Rezaei, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2005, Max Planck Institute, “The immutable and the mutable in the Islamic criminal justice theory and the Iranian post-revolutionary practice.”
Monica Ringer, Mellon Fellow, 1998, independent scholar, “The 19th century Iranian Safarnameh as a mirror of change.”
Marcia Ristaino, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2004, “Robert Jacquinot de Besange, S.J. and Chinese refugees in Shanghai during the Sino-Japanese War years, 1937-1940.”
Timothy M. Rohan, Kluge Fellow, 2008, University of Massachusetts, “Enriching modernism: Paul Rudolph's buildings and projects, 1945-1997.”
Reuben S. Rose-Redwood, Kluge Fellow, 2008, Texas A&M University, “Rationalizing the landscape: a critical spatial history of street and house numbering in the United States.”
Janet Roseman, David B. Larson Fellow in Health and Spirituality, 2005, Brown University Medical School, “Martha Graham and the Southwest.”
Emma Ruckley, British Research Council Fellow, 2006, Oxford University, “The quest for a masculine ideal in the 1950s America: popular representations of the American man and the crisis of masculinity.”
Walid Saleh, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2004, Middlebury College, “A history of Islamic apocalyptic imagination.”
George Saliba, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2005, Columbia University, “Development of scientific ideas from
late antiquity to early modern times with a special focus on the various
planetary theories that were developed within Islamic science and the
impact these theories had on early European astronomy.”
Press Release: Appointment
Webcast:
Islamic Science and the Making of Renaissance Europe.
Melhem Salman, Rockefeller Fellow in Islamic Studies, 2003, World Bank, ret'd., “A biography of Salman al Farsi: 7th century luminary and model for the present.”
James E. Sanders, Kluge Fellow, 2007, Utah State University, Logan, “Cultural and social history of democratic republicanism across Latin America in the context of the Atlantic world, from its rise in the 1820s until its demise in the 1880s.”
Lamin Sanneh, Kluge Chair in Countries and Cultures
of the South, 2004, Yale University, “Institutions of
Islamic governance and law before, during and after British rule
in Nigeria.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
The Changing Face of Christianity: Africa, the West and the World.
Webcast:
The Changing Face of Christianity: Africa, the West and the World.
Webcast:
Sacred Truth and Secular Agency: Sharí'ah Norms and Political Enforcement.
Dario Sarlo, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, 2008, Goldsmiths College, London, “A performing violinist's study of Jascha Heifetz's recorded legacy.”
Teresita C. Schaffer, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair in Foreign Policy and International Relations, 2008, Ambassador, “Diplomatic history.”
Michael Schiltz, Kluge Fellow, 2007, University
of Leuven, “Building the ’Yen Bloc': financial policy,
learning, and search for empire in prewar Japan.”
Webcast:
A Money Doctor from Japan: Megata Tanetaro in Korea, 1904-1907.
Menahem Schmelzer, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2004, Jewish Theological Seminary of America, “The interrelationship
between Jewish and non-Jewish printers and publishers in 18th century
Germany.”
Press Release: Appointment
Webcast:
The Royal Court Preacher and the Hebrew Book.
Joel Seltzer, Kluge Fellow, 2008, Skidmore
College, “Annals of revolt: Czech city chroniclers and the fashioning
of the Bohemian Reformation.”
Webcast:
Cruelty, Savagery and the Formation of a National Community in the Bohemian
Reformation.
David Sergeant, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, Oxford University, “Rudyard Kipling: form and ideology.”
Jennifer Elson Sessions, Kluge Fellow, 2007,
University of Iowa, “The culture and politics of colonialism
in 19th century France and Algeria, 1830-1851.”
Webcast:
An Empire for a King: The Conquest of Algeria at Louis-Philippe's Versailles.
Kay Kaufman Shelemay, Kluge Chair in Modern Culture,
2007, 2008, Harvard University, “Ethiopian music and musicians
in the United States.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
Music in the Ethiopian American Diaspora: A Preliminary Overview.
Julia D. Shevchenko, Kluge Fellow, 2003, European University, St. Petersburg, “Parliamentary autonomy in post-communist countries: a comparative study.”
Eleanor Shevlin, Kluge Fellow, 2005, West Chester University of Pennsylvania, “Harrison & Co.'s print corpus and the making of the English novel.”
Petr Shuvalov, Fulbright Fellow, 2005, St. Petersburg State University, “Late Roman military doctrine in the epoch of Balkan Wars: East European influences in the Mediterranean.”
Patricia Sieber, International Studies Fellow, 2004, Ohio State University, “The formation of modern Sinology.”
Douglas Slaymaker, Kluge Fellow, 2004, University of Kentucky, “The Japanese imagination of France during the prewar and postwar years.”
Neil J. Smelser, Kluge Chair in Countries and
Cultures of the North, 2006, Professor Emeritus, University
of California, Berkeley, “The Odyssey experience: psychological
and social dimensions.”
Webcast:
Why Are Terrorist Ideologies So Powerful?
Kathleen Smith, Mellon Fellow, 1998, Hamilton College, “Mythmaking in the new Russia: constructing a usable past after communism.”
William Smyser, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair
in Foreign Policy and International Relations, 2008, Georgetown
University, “Studies on diplomacy.”
Webcast: Is Diplomacy the Answer?
Scott Spector, International Studies Fellow, 2002, University of Michigan, “Utopian fantasies of sexual identity and violence in fin-de-siècle Vienna and Berlin.”
Owen C. Stanwood, Kluge Fellow, 2007, Catholic University of America, “An imperial faith: the Catholic threat and the making of British America, 1678-1713.”
Stephen Stathis, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2006, “Congress: crucible of American democracy.”
Jacqueline Stewart, Kluge Fellow, 2003, University of Chicago, “Race film at the crossroads: style, segregation, and the films of Spencer Williams, 1928-1948.”
Michael Stone, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2003, Hebrew University in Jerusalem, “The ’Adamagirk'
(‘Book of Adam’), written by Arakel of Siwnik.”
Webcast: A Hidden Treasure:
The Armenian Adam Epic by Arakel of Siwnik.
Robert Stone, Mellon Fellow, 1998, George Washington University, “Images of the English in 17th century Spain.”
Elsa Suckle, British Research Council Fellow, 2006, University of Warwick, “Negotiating public neutrality: Islam and liberal institutions.”
Patricia Sullivan, Distinguished Visiting Scholar, 2005, University
of South Carolina, “Struggle toward freedom: a history of the
NAACP.”
Press Release:
Freedom Writer: Virginia Foster Durr, Letters from the Civil Rights Years.
Webcast:
Freedom Writer: Virginia Foster Durr, Letters from the Civil Rights Years.
Pamela Swett, Kluge Fellow, 2002, McMaster University, “Selling under the Swastika: the refashioning of German advertising after 1933.”
Balázs Szelényi, International Studies Fellow, 2003, “The social roots of ethnic conflict: the German diaspora in East Central Europe.”
Brian Taves, Kluge Staff Fellow, 2002, “Papers of producer Thomas H. Ince (1882-1924).”
Temur Temule, Kluge Fellow, 2004, Nanjing University, “Mongolia of the imagination: western travelers in the 19th and early 20th centuries, with special emphasis on Owen Lattimore.”
Romila Thapar, Kluge Chair in Countries and Cultures
of the South, 2003, Professor Emeritus, Jawaharlal Nehru University,
“Historical consciousness in early India.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Webcast: Stories
of our Nations, Footprints of our Souls: History Textbooks in Middle Schools
and High Schools.
Press Release Kluge
Prize
Elizabeth Thompson, International Studies Fellow, 2003, The University of Virginia, “Sex, space and spectacle in colonial cinema: a nexus of cultural and political transaction in the late French Empire.”
Cecelia Tichi, Kluge Chair in Modern Culture,
2006, 2007, Vanderbilt University, “The shift that occurred in
U.S. culture from the Gilded Age to the Progressive Era examining how
certain figures who grew up in the late-19th century Gilded Age were
able to guide the nation into a new era by thinking freshly about society,
economics and culture.”
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
Justice, Not Pity: Julia Lathrop, First Chief of the U.S. Children's Bureau.
Webcast:
Justice, Not Pity: Julia Lathrop, First Chief of the U.S. Children's Bureau.
Roy Tsao, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Yale University, “The Political Philosophy of Hannah Arendt.”
James Turner, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2004, University of Notre Dame, “American and British intellectual
history with respect to the history of academic knowledge and higher
education.”
Press Release:
Philology and the Generation of New Disciplines, 1825-1900.
Herman Van der Wee, Kluge Chair in Countries
and Cultures of the North, 2007, Professor Emeritus of Economic
History at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, “Belgian economic
history: the Ancien Régime, c. 1100-c. 1820.”
Press Release: Economic
Globalization in the Mirror of History.
Webcast:
Globalization Through the Centuries
Jordan Vibert, British Research Council Fellow, 2007, University of York, “Female friendship and British-Atlantic commercial relations, 1770-1790.”
Elvira Vilches, International Studies Fellow, 2003, “The economy of the marvelous: transatlantic values and fictions of the Spanish Empire, 1492-1665.”
Edward Weismiller, Scholar in Residence, 2002, Professor Emeritus, George Washington University, “A variorum commentary on the poems of John Milton and a line by line analysis of versifications of Milton's minor poems.”
Gillian Weiss, Kluge Fellow, 2004, Case Western Reserve University, “Back from Barbary: French slavery in the early modern Mediterranean.”
Jenny Woodley, British Research Council Fellow, 2006, “The NAACPs campaigns to challenge negative portrayals of African Americans in popular culture.”
Jin Wu, Distinguished Visiting Scholar,
2006, former Education Minister for Taiwan, “Zheng He, the Chinese
mariner.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Lanxin Xiang, Henry Alfred Kissinger Chair in
Foreign Policy and International Relations, 2003, Institut Universitaire
de Hautes Etudes Internationales, Geneva, “The idea of democracy
and Sino-U.S. Relations.”
Press Release:
Appointment
Press Release:
The Ideological context of U.S.–China Relations.
Webcast:
The Ideological context of U.S.–China Relations.
Olena Yatsunska, Kluge Fellow, 2005, Mykolayiv Branch of Odessa National University, “New electoral system: revolution or evolution of the local government in Ukraine?”
Galina Yermolenko, International Studies Fellow, 2004, DeSales University, “Roxolana: from slave to legend.”
Man Shun Yeung, Kluge Fellow, 2003, University of Hong Kong, “Western image of Canton (Guangzhou) and its inhabitants, 1760-1860.”
Yu Ying-Shih, Distinguished
Visiting Scholar, 2005, Professor Emeritus, Princeton University,
“Comparative history of China.”
Kluge Prize:
2006
Press Release: Appointment
Press Release:
Despotism, Market and Confucianism in the Age of Wang Yang-Ming (1472-1529).
Webcast:
Despotism, Market and Confucianism in the Age of Wang Yang-Ming (1472-1529).
Webcast:
China Rediscovers its Own History.
Webcast:
China's Return to Tradition: How to Interpret the New Forces Emerging in
China.
Thomas Zeller, Kluge Fellow, 2005, University
of Maryland, “The view from the road in the U.S. and Germany.”
Webcast:
Consuming Landscapes: Parkways in Germany and the United States, 1920-1970.
Sergei Zhuk, Mellon Fellow, 2004, “Peasants, millennialism and radical sects in Southern Russia and Ukraine, 1830-1917.”
Andrei Znamenski, Kluge Fellow, 2002, Alabama State University, “Athabaskan Indians and Russian Orthodoxy (1840s-1917).”
Chitralekha Zutshi, Kluge Fellow, 2007,
College of William and Mary, “A Sociocultural history of the
Kashmiri shawl.”
Webcast:
Translating
“History”: Rajatarangini and the Making of India's Past.