AMERICAN COUNCIL OF LEARNED SOCIETIES FREDERICK BURKHARDT FELLOW
Dror Wahrman
Associate Professor of History, Indiana University
The Making of the Modern Self in Eighteenth-Century England
ANNETTE KADE FELLOW IN FRENCH OR GERMAN STUDIES IN THE MIDDLE AGES OR RENAISSANCE
Stephanie A. Leitch
Ph.D. Candidate in Art History, University of Chicago
“Better than the Prodigies”: The Prints of Hans Burgkmair, Joerg Breu, and the Marvels of the New World
LLOYD LEWIS / NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOWS
Carolyn Eastman
Assistant Professor of History, University of Texas at Austin
“A Nation of Speechifiers”: Oratory, Print, and the Making of a Gendered American Public, 1780–1830 Associate Professor of History, University of Illinois at Chicago
MELLON POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWS IN THE HUMANITIES
Raymond Clemens
Assistant Professor of History, Illinois State University
Mapping on the Margins: Dati's Sfera and the Teaching of Renaissance Geography
Gregory Nobles
Professor of History, Georgia Institute of Technology
Pleasures of the Feathered Tribes: The Art and Science of Birds in Audubon's America
Eric Slauter
Assistant Professor of English, University of Chicago
The State as a Work of Art: Politics and the Cultural Origins of the Constitution
MELLON FOUNDATION / NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOW
Elizabeth Rose Wingrove
Associate Professor of Political Science and Women's Studies, University of Michigan
Disclosing Practices: The Politics of Epistolarity in 18th Century France
Ruth MacKay
Independent Scholar
The Republic of Labor in Early Modern Spain
MONTICELLO COLLEGE FOUNDATION FELLOW
Tilar J. Mazzeo
Assistant Professor of English, University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh
Plagiarism and Literary Property in the Romantic Period
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES FELLOWS
Jeffrey Sklansky
Assistant Professor of History, Oregon State University
Currency Crusaders: Money and American Political Culture in the Nineteenth Century
Paula M. Higgins
Professor of Music, University of Notre Dame
Parents and Preceptors: Authority, Lineage, and the Conception of the Composer in Early Modern Europe
ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION FELLOW IN THE HUMANITIES
Clara Sue Kidwell
Professor of History, University of Oklahoma
The Choctaws in Oklahoma, 1855–1970
AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR EIGHTEENTH CENTURY STUDIES FELLOWSHIP
James E. Tierney
Professor of English, University of Missouri – St. Louis
British Periodicals, 1600–1800: An Index
AUDREY LUMSDEN-KOUVEL FELLOW
Gioia Filocamo
Independent Scholar
Florence, BNC, Panciatichi MS 27: Texts and Contexts
LESTER J. CAPPON FELLOWS IN DOCUMENTARY EDITING
Hans Bak
Professor of American Literature and American Studies, University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands
The Selected Letters of Malcolm Cowley, an annotated edition, with an introduction
Agnès Guiderdoni-Bruslé
Visiting Scholar of Modern Languages, University of Pittsburgh
Fac-simile edition of Les Pieux Désirs by Herman Hugo (Antwerpen, 1627), with an introduction, notes and indices
Murray Steib
Assistant Professor of Music, Ball State University
An Edition of the Motets of Johannes Martini
CENTER FOR GREAT LAKES CULTURE / MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY FELLOWS
Deborah Ann Skok
Assistant Professor of History, Hendrix College
Catholic Ladies Bountiful: Chicago's Catholic Settlement Houses and Day Nurseries, 1893–1930
Joseph A. Dimuro
Lecturer in English, UCLA
Critical Edition of Henry Blake Fuller's The Cliff Dwellers (1893)
COMMITTEE ON INSTITUTIONAL COOPERATION GRADUATE STUDENT FELLOWS
Catherine J. Denial
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Iowa
“Hostile Incursions and Mutual Desires”: The Political Dimensions of Kinship in Wisconsin and Minnesota, 1825–1845
Matthew Holt Jennings
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Illinois
“This Country is Worth the Trouble of Going to War to Keep It”: Colonization, Communities, and the Conflict in South Carolina, 1650–1740
Michael J. Sherfy
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Illinois
Narrating Black Hawk: Constructing and Reconstructing a Native American Historical Subject, 1832–2002
Owen Stanwood
Ph.D. Candidate in History, Northwestern University
Creating the Common Enemy: Religion and Race Relations on the English Imperial Frontier, 1685–1713
SUSAN KELLY POWER AND HELEN HORNBECK TANNER FELLOW
Jeffrey David Means
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Oklahoma
From Buffalo to Beeves: The Transformation of Oglala Lakota Culture, 1868–1917
ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION FELLOWS IN THE HUMANITIES
Richard Chilton
Amelia Bird
Omaha Tribal Historical Reserach Project
Mining the Riches Anew: Omaha References at the Newberry
Charles Red Corn
Writer, Osage
Tribal customs and ritual of Indian tribes that had trust funds held for them by the Bureau of Indian Affairs during the period of 1880 through 1960
Philip H. Red Eagle
Writer, Assiniboine & Sioux
Time is a River; Grey; Dwellers
SOUTH CENTRAL MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION FELLOW
Bérénice V. Le Marchand
Ph.D. Candidate in Modern Languages, Vanderbilt University
The Mirror in French Medieval and Early Modern Literature
NEWBERRY LIBRARY SHORT-TERM FELLOWS IN THE HISTORY OF CARTOGRAPHY
Angelo Cattaneo
Researcher in History, European University Institute
The Reception of the Ptolemaic Theory of Geographical Projections within the Framework of Renaissance Drawing Techniques (1409–1598) and European Expansion
Jessica Maier
Ph.D. Candidate in Art History, Columbia University
Imaging Rome: The Art and Science of Renaissance City Views
Deborah Allen
Ph.D. Candidate in English, Rutgers University
To Measure and Describe “the Whole Globe of the Earth”: Geographical Writing and Imperial Enterprise in North America, 1700–1815
ARTHUR WEINBERG FELLOW
Oleg Yasenenko
Editor-in-Chief, First Americans Magazine
The Unknown Collection at the Museum of Ethnography of Kazan State University (Russia)
NEWBERRY LIBRARY SHORT-TERM RESIDENT FELLOWS
Carl Abbott
Professor of Urban Studies and Planning, Portland State University
How Cities Won the West
Gillian T.W. Ahlgren
Associate Professor of Theology, Xavier University
Francisca de los Apóstoles: Analysis of a Sixteenth-Century Inquisitional Trial
Samuel Baker
Assistant Professor of English, University of Texas at Austin
Written on the Water: British Romanticism and the Culture of Maritime Empire
Daniel M. Cobb
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Oklahoma
A War for Self-Determination: Culture, Poverty, and the Politics of Indian Community Action, 1960–1975
Scott A. Cohen
Ph.D. Candidate in English, University of Virginia
Mapping Imperial Trajectories
Cecilia Cristellon
Researcher in History, European University Institute
Marriage and Conjugal Conflict in Venice (1420–1600)
Christian Crouch
Ph.D. Candidate in History, New York University
Imperfect Reflections: New France's Adoption of Indian Violence and the Six Nations Confederacy's Exercise of European Patronage during the Seven Years' War, 1754–1761
Michelle Ephraim
Assistant Professor of English, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Deborah's Kin: Playing the Jewish Woman on the Early Modern English Stage, 1558–1603
James R. Green
Professor of History and Labor Studies, University of Massachusetts Boston
Social Tension and Urban Violence in an Industrial Age: The Meaning and Memory of Chicago's Haymarket Tragedy of 1886
Shelley Gruendler
Ph.D. Candidate in Typography, University of Reading, England
The Life and Work of Beatrice Warde
Laurent Guillo
Consultant, Cabinet Six & Dix
A corpus of 12 music manuscripts, illustrated with “traits de plume” and calligraphed on vellum (Paris ? ca. 1640–1660)
April L. Hatfield
Assistant Professor of History, Texas A & M University
Anglo-Spanish Relations in the Caribbean and Southeastern North America, 1680–1720
Deanna K. Kreisel
Assistant Professor of English, Mississippi State University
Economic Woman: Political Economy, Medical Discourse, and Problems of Closure in Victorian Prose
Charles D. McGraw
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Connecticut
“Every Nurse is not a Sister”: Sex, Work, and the Invention of the Spanish-American War Nurse
Robert M. Morrissey
Ph.D. Candidate in History, Yale University
Bottomlands & Borderlands: Empire and Identity in 18th Century Illinois Country
Michael J. Murphy
Ph.D. Candidate in Art History, Washington University in St. Louis
White Collared: Fashioning Masculinity in American Visual Culture, 1820–1930
Su Fang Ng
Assistant Professor of English, University of Oklahoma
Revolutionary Politics and the Languages of Family in Seventeenth-Century England
Rachel O'Toole
Assistant Professor of History, Villanova University
Africans, Indians, and the Creation of Casta in Peru (1640s–1720s)
Robert Edward Paulett
Ph.D. Candidate in History, College of William and Mary
Augusta Seen: Contests of Power and Meaning in Colonial Georgia's Upcountry Landscapes
Micah A. Pawling
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Maine, Orono
Petitions and the Reconfiguration of Homeland: Persistence and Tradition Among Wabanaki Peoples in the Nineteenth Century
Randy J. Ploog
Coordinator of International Programs, College of Arts and Architecture, Pennsylvania State University
The Mitchell Dawson Collection
Todd W. Reeser
Assistant Professor of Modern Languages, University of Utah
Translating Platonic Sexuality in the Renaissance
Nicolas G. Rosenthal
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of California, Los Angeles
Re-imagining “Indian Country”: American Indians and the Los Angeles Metropolitan Area
Goran Stanivukovic
Associate Professor of English, Saint Mary's University
Shakespeare and the Mediterranean
ASSOCIATED COLLEGES OF THE MIDWEST FACULTY FELLOWS
Paul Solon, Professor of History, Macalaster College
Clay Steinman, Professor of Communication and Media Studies, Macalester College
Picturing the Past: Studies in the Visual Representation of History
FRANCES C. ALLEN FELLOWS
Julie A. Lakota
M.A. Candidate, Oglala Lakota College
The Migration and Adaptation of the Tiospaya (extended family of the Lakota people)
Sandra L. Momper
Ph.D. Candidate in Social Work, University of Pittsburgh
Research on the Chippewa/Ojibwa Indian Family
Nichole S. Prescott
Ph.D. Candidate in History, SUNY Stony Brook
Glance of the Basilisk: The Figure of the Tapada and the Making of National Identity in 17th-Century Spain
BRITISH ACADEMY EXCHANGE FELLOWS
James Grantham Turner
Professor of English, University of California, Berkeley
Sexuality in Graphic Art and Art Criticism, 1520–1700
Raymond Clemens
Assistant Professor of History, Illinois State University
Mapping on the Margins: Dati's Sfera and the Teaching of Renaissance Geography
COMMITTEE ON INSTITUTIONAL COOPERATION FACULTY FELLOW
David Martínez
Assistant Professor of American Indian Studies, University of Minnesota
American Indian Intellectuals
ÉCOLE DES CHARTES EXCHANGE FELLOWS
To the École des Chartes:
Aleksandra Nicole Pfau
Ph.D. Candidate in History, University of Michigan
Social and Cultural Constructions of Madness in Medieval France
To the Newberry Library:
Sébastien Chaufour
École Nationale des Chartes
The French Architect Jean-Jacques Huvé (1742–1808)
NEWBERRY LIBRARY UNDERGRADUATE SEMINAR FACULTY FELLOWS
Douglas Bradburn
Newberry Library Scholar-in-Residence and Lecturer in History, Roosevelt University
Lawrence Howe
Associate Professor of English, Roosevelt University
New Nation / New Culture: American Culture in the Early Republic, 1770–1850
WEISS/BROWN PUBLICATION SUBVENTION AWARD
Michael Wintroub
Assistant Professor of History, University of Michigan
A Savage Mirror: Power, Identity and Knowledge in Early Modern France (Stanford University Press)
Rebecca Zorach
Harper Fellow and Collegiate Assistant Professor, Humanities Division, University of Chicago
Blood, Ink, Milk, Gold: Matters of Excess in the Visual Culture of the French Renaissance (University of Chicago Press)