Colleagues:
Here's an opportunity to incorporate disability studies/disability
history into historical research.
Paul K. Longmore, Professor
Department of History
San Francisco State University
1600 Holloway Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94132
phone: 415-338-6498 or 415-338-3382
fax: 415-338-7539 or 415-338-0952
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 17 Dec 2003 17:29:27 -0800
From: David Leonard <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To: H-NET List for American Studies <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: FUND: Charles Warren Center Fellowships,
2004-5: "Built Environment"
Date: Wednesday, 17 December 2003 -- 13:15 PST
From: Pat Denault <[log in to unmask]>
THE CULTURE AND POLITICS OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT IN NORTH AMERICA
The Charles Warren Center invites applications for its 2004-5
fellowships from scholars whose work focuses on "The Culture and
Politics of the Built Environment in North America." We encourage
applications from those studying the evolution of buildings, landscapes,
and urban forms in any era from the colonial period into the
twenty-first century. We are particularly interested in investigations
that connect the built environment with American attitudes and actions
toward public and private life, cities and open space, government
provision and private markets, and modernism and "national heritage."
Although the primary focus will be on North American history, we welcome
comparative, international, and interdisciplinary perspectives. We hope
fellows will share a concern with the methodological and theoretical
issues involved in studying the built environment.
Fellows will participate in a biweekly seminar, coordinated by Lizabeth
Cohen (Department of History) and Margaret Crawford (Graduate School of
Design). In addition to discussing the work of invited speakers, fellows
will be expected to present their own work over the course of the year.
Applicants must not be degree candidates at any institution and should
have a Ph.D. or equivalent degree.
Fellows are members of the University, with access to the Harvard
libraries
and other facilities, and they receive a private office with telephone
in the Center. Fellows must remain in residence at the Center for the
nine-month academic year, or four months for one-term Fellows. Stipends
are individually determined in accordance with the needs of each fellow
and the Center's ability to meet them. Completed applications are due in
the Center by January 15, 2004; decisions will be announced in early
March.
For downloadable application forms and other information about the
Center,
please visit our Web site at
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~cwc/fsprogram04-05.html
Pat Denault
<[log in to unmask]>
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