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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
March
Twelve win U. of I. fellowships
from research program in the humanities
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
3/13/06
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Six professors and six graduate students have won fellowships
for the academic year 2006-2007 from the Illinois
Program for Research in the Humanities at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign.
The newly elected Fellows will spend the year on research projects that
consider “Beauty,” IPRH’s theme through 2007.
Fellows also will participate in the yearlong Fellows’ Seminar
and will present their research at IPRH’s annual conference in
late spring 2007.
A postdoctoral scholar from another university has received IRPH’s
Illinois Humanities Post-Doctoral Fellowship. She will spend the year
in residence at the Urbana campus also engaged in a research project
related to the new theme and will teach a course.
The IPRH Faculty Fellows, their departments and projects:
•
Brett Kaplan, comparative and
world literature, “Landscape and Holocaust Postmemory.”
•
Richard Mohr, philosophy, ”Beauty,
Goodness, Love, and Sexuality in Plato’s ‘Symposium’
and ‘Phaedrus.’ ”
•
Isabel Molina, Institute of
Communications Research, “Consuming Latina Bodies and the
Racialized Politics of Beauty.”
•
Ned O’Gorman, speech communication,
“Catastrophic Vistas: Discourses About Disaster in Cold War America
and the American Sublime.”
•
Deke Weaver, narrative media, School
of Art and Design, ”The Palimpsest Project.”
•
Yutian Wong, dance and Asian American
Studies, ”Choreographing Asian America: Club O’Noodles
and Other Mis-Acts.”
IPRH Graduate Student Fellows, their departments and projects:
•
Sarah Dennis, English, ”Prose
for Art’s Sake: Creating and Documenting an American Aesthetic,
1820-1900.”
•
Aisha Durham, Institute of Communications Research, ”Beauty as
the Beast: Un/Desirable Iconic Black Female Bodies in Popular Culture.”
•
Danielle Kinsey, history,
“Modern Imperial Beauty: Diamonds and the Production of Taste
in Nineteenth-Century Britain.”
•
Anthony Perman, musicology, School
of Music, “Hearing an Ndau Past: The Semiotics of Music, History,
and Affect in Ndau Drumming Styles in Zimbabwe.”
•
Julia Sienkewicz, art history, ”Planting Ancient Mores on an ‘Untouched’
Land: Charles Willson Peale’s Citizen-Building Project at Belfield.”
•
Polyxeni Strolonga, classics,
“The Perils of Beauty and the Aesthetics of Exchange in Greek
Poetry.”
The Illinois Humanities Post-Doctoral Fellow is Elizabeth B. Boyd, a
senior lecturer in the American and Southern Studies Program at Vanderbilt
University. Boyd, who earned her doctorate in American Studies at the
University of Texas in 2000, will spend the year at Illinois doing research
on a project titled “Southern Beauty: Performing Region on the
Feminine Body”; she also will teach a course in the history department.
Matti Bunzl, IPRH director, said that the “Beauty” theme
should allow the scholars to consider the ways in which beauty has been
“a mainstay of humanistic thought across space and time.”
Beauty features prominently in Plato’s theory of mimesis and in
Confucius’ teachings on enjoyment in moral and political education,
Bunzl said. It became “systematized” in western thought
with the formal development of aesthetics.
“To this tradition, we owe an ongoing preoccupation with judgment
and criticism, the sublime and the ugly, imagination and pleasure,”
he said.
Kant and Schiller emphasized the “unencumbered play of the imagination,”
Bunzl said, while those from Hegel to Bourdieu stressed “historical
and cultural specificity.”
Much 20th-century art, music and literature “actively defied the
beautiful.” Marxist critics regarded certain forms of beauty with
political and aesthetic suspicion, and feminist and anti-colonial thinkers
“expanded on this critique of kitsch, identifying ideologies of
beauty as central sites of systemic oppression.”
“While the pursuit of beauty was antithetical to serious creative
work for much of the 20th century, it seems to be making something of
a comeback in the 21st century,” Bunzl said.
“In a postmodern world where composers return to tonality and
artists rediscover painting, the distinction between high and popular
culture has effectively evaporated. Whether the attendant retreat into
aesthetics should be critiqued as a reactionary move or celebrated as
a strategic response to the geopolitical transformations of the post-9/11
order is just one of the many questions beauty continues to pose today.”
Faculty Fellows are released from one semester of teaching. They also
are asked to teach one course during their award year or the year immediately
following it on a topic related to their fellowship.
Graduate Student Fellows receive a stipend and a tuition and fee waiver
from IPRH.
All IPRH Fellows, including the post-doctoral Fellows, are expected
to remain in residence on the U. of I. campus during their award year.
Applications for IPRH Fellowships are typically distributed in the early
fall for the following academic year, and U. of I. faculty and graduate
students are invited to apply for the awards.
For more information about the IPRH
Fellowship Programs, contact IPRH associate director Christine Catanzarite
at 217-244-7913.
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