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HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES IN ACTIONHUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYSUPPORT USCONTACT US The National Humanities Center is a national resource devoted to advancing significant humanistic study. RELIGION IN POST-WORLD WAR II AMERICA, BY JOANNE BECKMAN Contrary to what many observers predicted in the 1960s and early 1970s, religion has remained as vibrant and vital a part of American society as in generations past. New issues and interests have emerged, but religion’s role in many Americans’ lives remains undiminished. Perhaps the one characteristic that distinguishes late-twentieth-century religious life from the rest Continued THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY: VOL. I, 1500-1865 Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. KNOWLEDGE OF OUR OWN THOUGHTS IS JUST AS INTERPRETIVE AS Philosophers have traditionally assumed that knowledge of our own thoughts is special.Descartes famously believed that knowledge of our current thoughts is infallible.He also believed that those thoughts themselves are self-presenting, so that whenever one entertains a thought, one is capable of infallible knowledge of it.Many figures in the history of philosophy have shared these beliefs TOOLBOX LIBRARY: PRIMARY RESOURCES IN U.S. HISTORY AND Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. LOSS, GRIEF, AND THE HUMANITIES IN THE TIME OF PANDEMIC Voices. What some experts are saying: On Letting Go of Certainty in a Story That Never Ends, Rebecca Solnit, Literary Hub, 4/23/20; How Not to Panic during the Coronavirus Pandemic: Welcome Hard Times like a Stoic, Brigid Delaney, The Guardian, 3/17/20; Philosopher in Italian Coronavirus Lockdown on How to Think Positively about Isolation, Silvia Panizza, The Conversation, SCIENCE AND THE THEFT OF HUMANITY « ON THE HUMAN Geoffrey Harpham Director of the National Humanities Center. ONCE UPON A TIME, thinkers simply thought.They pondered deep questions using all the resources at their disposal, and expressed astonishing insights in language at once precise and poetic, descriptive and evocative. LENA COWEN ORLIN, “SHAKESPEARE’S MARRIAGE” By 1832 Shakespeare’s biographers had already concluded that “among the very few facts of his life that have been transmitted to us, there is none more clearly proved than the unhappiness of his marriage.” Anne Hathaway was eight years older; her premarital pregnancy led to a shotgun wedding; Shakespeare’s dying bequest of a “second-best” bed confirmed his loathing for her. But is FUGITIVE SLAVES IN CANADA, AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY Supplemental Sites Canada: The Promised Land, in In Motion: The African American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) The Black Canadian Experience in Ontario, 1834-1914: Flight, Freedom, Foundation, from Archives of Ontario The Underground Railroad: Niagara's Freedom Trail, from the City of St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada COME UP FROM THE FIELDS FATHER Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass , 1891-92 edition. COME UP FROM THE FIELDS FATHER. COME up from the fields father, here's a letter fromour Pete,
IN OUR IMAGE: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND THE HUMANITIES The In Our Image conference (held April 7–22, 2021) examined issues surrounding the integration of artificial intelligence through a series of virtual events—presentations, conversations, webinars, film screenings, and an art exhibition—highlighting perspectives from leading humanists, scientists, engineers, artists, writers, and software company executives collectively advancing inquiry TEACHER ADVISORY COUNCIL 2021–22 Teacher Advisory Council Members, 2021–22 Michael Alfieri Mount Saint Joseph High SchoolBaltimore, MD Candace Bailey North Carolina Central UniversityDurham, NC (NHC Fellow 2019–20) Josh Cabat Roslyn High School Roslyn, NY Stacie Christensen Horizon Elementary School Boise, ID Hashim Davis Albemarle High School Charlottesville, VA Judi Freeman Boston Latin School Boston, MA Tisha Hooks CHRISTOPHER MOORE, “SÔPHROSUNÊ AND SELF-KNOWLEDGE: AN Christopher Moore, The Pennsylvania State University Christopher Moore is a scholar of classical Greek philosophy and intellectual history, with a focus on Socrates, self-knowledge, and disciplinary origins. His first book, Socrates and Self-Knowledge, reconstructed classical reflections on the Delphic “Know Yourself” and used it to explain Socrates’ leading purpose, his pursuit of self ROBERT D. NEWMAN, “THE ROAD TO EVERYWHERE” One of our legislators recently referred to liberal arts degrees as “degrees to nowhere,” arguing instead for graduating more students in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) fields (“Lawmaker laments ‘degrees to nowhere’,” Tribune, Feb. 4).For Sen. Howard Stephenson, 21st century career opportunities and economic development are dependent on training exclusively in HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARY The National Humanities Center (est. 1978) The National Humanities Center is a private, nonprofit organization, and the only independent institute dedicated exclusively to ROBERT D. NEWMAN, “THE VIRTUES OF SILENCE” Vacations often seem like a rush to escape anxiety, missions of restoration doomed to disappointment. Last summer my wife and I visited the Grand Teton and Yellowstone national parks and plan to ABRAHAM TERIAN, 2018–2019 Abraham Terian (Robert F. and Margaret S. Goheen Fellow) spent most of his time at the Center working on a commentary on a once lost work of Philo of Alexandria: On Providence in two books. He completed work on two other books: Armenian Moralia: The “Oft-repeated Discourses,” a sixth-century collection of twenty-three moral discourses in Armenian by an anonymous abbot, to be published by GATHERING MEDICINES: NATION AND KNOWLEDGE IN CHINA’S In the early 2000s, the central government of China encouraged all of the nation’s registered minorities to “salvage, sort, synthesize, and elevate” folk medical knowledges in an effort to create local health care systems comparable to the nationally supported institutions of traditional Chinese medicine. Gathering Medicines bears witness to this remarkable moment of knowledge ACCOUNTS OF SLAVE CAPTURE IN AFRICA, FREEDOM, AFRICAN Venture Smith, account of capture in Guinea, ca. 1735; from Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, in In Motion: The African-American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) Primary resources related to the transatlantic slave trade, mid 1700s, in Slavery and Freedom in American History and Memory, from NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER RESOURCE TOOLBOX THE MAKING OF National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox The Making of African American Identity: Vol. I, 1500-1865 RELIGIOUS PRACTICE Jenny Proctor,ca. 1937
HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES IN ACTIONHUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYSUPPORT USCONTACT US Humanities in Class Online Courses. Virtual courses exploring relevant topics | Summer Session Begins May 17, 2021. Register Now. National Humanities Center Announces 2021–22 Fellows. 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nations. Read More. Center Receives Award to Support Scholarly Work on Chinese History. THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY: VOL. I, 1500-1865 Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. RELIGION IN POST-WORLD WAR II AMERICA, BY JOANNE BECKMAN Contrary to what many observers predicted in the 1960s and early 1970s, religion has remained as vibrant and vital a part of American society as in generations past. New issues and interests have emerged, but religion’s role in many Americans’ lives remains undiminished. Perhaps the one characteristic that distinguishes late-twentieth-century religious life from the rest Continued LOSS, GRIEF, AND THE HUMANITIES IN THE TIME OF PANDEMIC The humanities demonstrate we are never alone in our experience, but are always caught up in recurring and collective cycles of life, death, and suffering. 3. The humanities are shared. They connect us outwardly, toward others; backward, through time, to other experiences; and forward, to the future experiences of generations tocome.
ACCOUNTS OF SLAVE CAPTURE IN AFRICA, FREEDOM, AFRICAN Venture Smith, account of capture in Guinea, ca. 1735; from Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, in In Motion: The African-American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) Primary resources related to the transatlantic slave trade, mid 1700s, in Slavery and Freedom in American History and Memory, from ABRAHAM TERIAN, 2018–2019 Abraham Terian (Robert F. and Margaret S. Goheen Fellow) spent most of his time at the Center working on a commentary on a once lost work of Philo of Alexandria: On Providence in two books. He completed work on two other books: Armenian Moralia: The “Oft-repeated Discourses,” a sixth-century collection of twenty-three moral discourses in Armenian by an anonymous abbot, to be published by LENA COWEN ORLIN, “SHAKESPEARE’S MARRIAGE” Lena Orlin discusses new ways of thinking about Shakespeare’s marriage. Listen to an interview with Lena Orlin about the topic on WUNC-FM’s The State of Things. Lena Cowen Orlin is professor of English at Georgetown University and was previously executive director of the Folger Institute at the Folger Shakespeare Library. THE FOREIGN MISSIONARY MOVEMENT IN THE 19TH AND EARLY 20TH In the decades before about 1870, although the natural tendency was for American Protestants to preach both the evangelical Protestant gospel of individual conversion and regeneration and the secular gospel of American values and institutions, there was some consciousness of the difference between the two, and debate occurred over the appropriateness of expecting the "heathen" to become like REV. JONATHAN MAYHEW A DISCOURSE CONCERNING UNLIMITED National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox Becoming American: The British Atlantic Colonies, 1690-1763 Rev. Jonathan Mayhew “Assertor of the Civil and Religious SOUTH CAROLINA, 1739 Godfrey’s house and killed him, his Daughter and Son. They then turned back and marched Southward along Pons Pons, which is the Road through Georgia to Augustine. HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES IN ACTIONHUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYSUPPORT USCONTACT US Humanities in Class Online Courses. Virtual courses exploring relevant topics | Summer Session Begins May 17, 2021. Register Now. National Humanities Center Announces 2021–22 Fellows. 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nations. Read More. Center Receives Award to Support Scholarly Work on Chinese History. THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY: VOL. I, 1500-1865 Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. RELIGION IN POST-WORLD WAR II AMERICA, BY JOANNE BECKMAN Contrary to what many observers predicted in the 1960s and early 1970s, religion has remained as vibrant and vital a part of American society as in generations past. New issues and interests have emerged, but religion’s role in many Americans’ lives remains undiminished. Perhaps the one characteristic that distinguishes late-twentieth-century religious life from the rest Continued LOSS, GRIEF, AND THE HUMANITIES IN THE TIME OF PANDEMIC The humanities demonstrate we are never alone in our experience, but are always caught up in recurring and collective cycles of life, death, and suffering. 3. The humanities are shared. They connect us outwardly, toward others; backward, through time, to other experiences; and forward, to the future experiences of generations tocome.
ACCOUNTS OF SLAVE CAPTURE IN AFRICA, FREEDOM, AFRICAN Venture Smith, account of capture in Guinea, ca. 1735; from Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, in In Motion: The African-American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) Primary resources related to the transatlantic slave trade, mid 1700s, in Slavery and Freedom in American History and Memory, from ABRAHAM TERIAN, 2018–2019 Abraham Terian (Robert F. and Margaret S. Goheen Fellow) spent most of his time at the Center working on a commentary on a once lost work of Philo of Alexandria: On Providence in two books. He completed work on two other books: Armenian Moralia: The “Oft-repeated Discourses,” a sixth-century collection of twenty-three moral discourses in Armenian by an anonymous abbot, to be published by LENA COWEN ORLIN, “SHAKESPEARE’S MARRIAGE” Lena Orlin discusses new ways of thinking about Shakespeare’s marriage. Listen to an interview with Lena Orlin about the topic on WUNC-FM’s The State of Things. Lena Cowen Orlin is professor of English at Georgetown University and was previously executive director of the Folger Institute at the Folger Shakespeare Library. THE FOREIGN MISSIONARY MOVEMENT IN THE 19TH AND EARLY 20TH In the decades before about 1870, although the natural tendency was for American Protestants to preach both the evangelical Protestant gospel of individual conversion and regeneration and the secular gospel of American values and institutions, there was some consciousness of the difference between the two, and debate occurred over the appropriateness of expecting the "heathen" to become like REV. JONATHAN MAYHEW A DISCOURSE CONCERNING UNLIMITED National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox Becoming American: The British Atlantic Colonies, 1690-1763 Rev. Jonathan Mayhew “Assertor of the Civil and Religious SOUTH CAROLINA, 1739 Godfrey’s house and killed him, his Daughter and Son. They then turned back and marched Southward along Pons Pons, which is the Road through Georgia to Augustine. HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER Humanities in Class Online Courses. Virtual courses exploring relevant topics | Summer Session Begins May 17, 2021. Register Now. National Humanities Center Announces 2021–22 Fellows. 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nations. Read More. Center Receives Award to Support Scholarly Work on Chinese History. TEACHER ADVISORY COUNCIL 2021–22 Teacher Advisory Council Members, 2021–22 Michael Alfieri Mount Saint Joseph High SchoolBaltimore, MD Candace Bailey North Carolina Central UniversityDurham, NC (NHC Fellow 2019–20) Josh Cabat Roslyn High School Roslyn, NY Stacie Christensen Horizon Elementary School Boise, ID Hashim Davis Albemarle High School Charlottesville, VA Judi Freeman Boston Latin School Boston, MA Tisha Hooks IN OUR IMAGE: ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND THE HUMANITIES The In Our Image conference (held April 7–22, 2021) examined issues surrounding the integration of artificial intelligence through a series of virtual events—presentations, conversations, webinars, film screenings, and an art exhibition—highlighting perspectives from leading humanists, scientists, engineers, artists, writers, and software company executives collectively advancing inquiry RACHEL WATSON, “EVIDENCE AND RACIAL DISCOURSE IN Rachel Watson, Howard University Rachel Watson is assistant professor of American literature at Howard University. She earned her BA from Sarah Lawrence College, and her PhD in English from the University of Chicago. Her work focuses on American and African American literature since the late-nineteenth century, with a particular interest in representations of race, law, and criminal procedure. LOG IN | HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARY The Humanities in Class Digital Library provides access to the best instructional resources and scholarly materials in support of humanities education. Resources are tagged by subject matter, topics and material type, making it easy to discover and combine content you need from institutions you trust. NHC About Page. Find out more. RELIGION IN POST-WORLD WAR II AMERICA, THE TWENTIETH Joanne C. Beckman is a Ph.D. candidate in American religious history at Duke University. She is currently working on her dissertation, Refashioning Eros: The Role of Romantic Love in Evangelical Courtship and Marriage Literature.. Her areas of interest include the history of Christianity, ethnicity and religion, women and religion, American religious history of the nineteenth and twentieth HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARY The National Humanities Center (est. 1978) The National Humanities Center is a private, nonprofit organization, and the only independent institute dedicated exclusively to advance study in all areas of the humanities. The Center is supported by the generosity of individual donors, grants from private and public foundations, corporate FUGITIVE SLAVES IN CANADA, AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY Supplemental Sites Canada: The Promised Land, in In Motion: The African American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) The Black Canadian Experience in Ontario, 1834-1914: Flight, Freedom, Foundation, from Archives of Ontario The Underground Railroad: Niagara's Freedom Trail, from the City of St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada THE EFFECTS OF REMOVAL ON AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES, NATIVE Essays on American environmental history. Nature Transformed is an interactive curriculum enrichment service for teachers, offering them practical help in planning courses and presenting rigorous subject matter to students. Nature Transformed explores the relationship between the ways men and women have thought about their surroundings and the ways they have acted toward them. ALICE WALKER, ROSELILY, CA. 1967 National Humanities Center Resource Toolbox The Making of African American Identity: Vol. III, 1917-1968 ♦ ROSELILY ♦ Alice Walker_____Short Story HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES IN ACTIONHUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYSUPPORT USCONTACT US Humanities in Class Online Courses. Virtual courses exploring relevant topics | Summer Session Begins May 17, 2021. Register Now. National Humanities Center Announces 2021–22 Fellows. 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nations. Read More. Center Receives Award to Support Scholarly Work on Chinese History.SUMMER RESIDENCIES
Summer residents in the NHC Commons The National Humanities Center will offer its next Summer Residency Program in June 2022. Scholars from NHC Institutional Sponsor universities are exclusively eligible to participate in a four-week summer residency program intended to assist in jump-starting or making substantial progress on a current project.. Summer Residents are provided individualSTAFF BY DEPARTMENT
Executive Assistant to the President and Director. jodie@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Matthew M. Booker. Vice President for Scholarly Programs. mbooker@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Heidi N. Camp. Vice President for Institutional Advancement. hcamp@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Andrew T. Mink. THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY: VOL. I, 1500-1865 Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. LOG IN | HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYHUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES CENTERMINNESOTA HUMANITIES CENTERNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER DURHAMNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER NORTH CAROLINA The Humanities in Class Digital Library provides access to the best instructional resources and scholarly materials in support of humanities education. Resources are tagged by subject matter, topics and material type, making it easy to discover and combine content you need from institutions you trust. NHC About Page. Find out more. HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARY The National Humanities Center (est. 1978) The National Humanities Center is a private, nonprofit organization, and the only independent institute dedicated exclusively to advance study in all areas of the humanities. The Center is supported by the generosity of individual donors, grants from private and public foundations, corporate ABRAHAM TERIAN, 2018–2019 Abraham Terian (Robert F. and Margaret S. Goheen Fellow) spent most of his time at the Center working on a commentary on a once lost work of Philo of Alexandria: On Providence in two books. He completed work on two other books: Armenian Moralia: The “Oft-repeated Discourses,” a sixth-century collection of twenty-three moral discourses in Armenian by an anonymous abbot, to be published by ACCOUNTS OF SLAVE CAPTURE IN AFRICA, FREEDOM, AFRICAN Venture Smith, account of capture in Guinea, ca. 1735; from Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, in In Motion: The African-American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) Primary resources related to the transatlantic slave trade, mid 1700s, in Slavery and Freedom in American History and Memory, from HOW SLAVERY AFFECTED AFRICAN AMERICAN FAMILIES, FREEDOM'S On large plantations, slave cabins and the yards of the slave quarters served as the center of interactions among enslaved family members. Here were spaces primarily occupied by African Americans, somewhat removed from the labor of slavery or the scrutiny of owners, overseers, and patrollers. THE EFFECTS OF REMOVAL ON AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES, NATIVE Essays on American environmental history. Nature Transformed is an interactive curriculum enrichment service for teachers, offering them practical help in planning courses and presenting rigorous subject matter to students. Nature Transformed explores the relationship between the ways men and women have thought about their surroundings and the ways they have acted toward them. HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES IN ACTIONHUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYSUPPORT USCONTACT US Humanities in Class Online Courses. Virtual courses exploring relevant topics | Summer Session Begins May 17, 2021. Register Now. National Humanities Center Announces 2021–22 Fellows. 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nations. Read More. Center Receives Award to Support Scholarly Work on Chinese History.SUMMER RESIDENCIES
Summer residents in the NHC Commons The National Humanities Center will offer its next Summer Residency Program in June 2022. Scholars from NHC Institutional Sponsor universities are exclusively eligible to participate in a four-week summer residency program intended to assist in jump-starting or making substantial progress on a current project.. Summer Residents are provided individualSTAFF BY DEPARTMENT
Executive Assistant to the President and Director. jodie@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Matthew M. Booker. Vice President for Scholarly Programs. mbooker@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Heidi N. Camp. Vice President for Institutional Advancement. hcamp@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Andrew T. Mink. THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY: VOL. I, 1500-1865 Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. LOG IN | HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYHUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES CENTERMINNESOTA HUMANITIES CENTERNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER DURHAMNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER NORTH CAROLINA The Humanities in Class Digital Library provides access to the best instructional resources and scholarly materials in support of humanities education. Resources are tagged by subject matter, topics and material type, making it easy to discover and combine content you need from institutions you trust. NHC About Page. Find out more. HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARY The National Humanities Center (est. 1978) The National Humanities Center is a private, nonprofit organization, and the only independent institute dedicated exclusively to advance study in all areas of the humanities. The Center is supported by the generosity of individual donors, grants from private and public foundations, corporate ABRAHAM TERIAN, 2018–2019 Abraham Terian (Robert F. and Margaret S. Goheen Fellow) spent most of his time at the Center working on a commentary on a once lost work of Philo of Alexandria: On Providence in two books. He completed work on two other books: Armenian Moralia: The “Oft-repeated Discourses,” a sixth-century collection of twenty-three moral discourses in Armenian by an anonymous abbot, to be published by ACCOUNTS OF SLAVE CAPTURE IN AFRICA, FREEDOM, AFRICAN Venture Smith, account of capture in Guinea, ca. 1735; from Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, in In Motion: The African-American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) Primary resources related to the transatlantic slave trade, mid 1700s, in Slavery and Freedom in American History and Memory, from HOW SLAVERY AFFECTED AFRICAN AMERICAN FAMILIES, FREEDOM'S On large plantations, slave cabins and the yards of the slave quarters served as the center of interactions among enslaved family members. Here were spaces primarily occupied by African Americans, somewhat removed from the labor of slavery or the scrutiny of owners, overseers, and patrollers. THE EFFECTS OF REMOVAL ON AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES, NATIVE Essays on American environmental history. Nature Transformed is an interactive curriculum enrichment service for teachers, offering them practical help in planning courses and presenting rigorous subject matter to students. Nature Transformed explores the relationship between the ways men and women have thought about their surroundings and the ways they have acted toward them.STAFF BY DEPARTMENT
Executive Assistant to the President and Director. jodie@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Matthew M. Booker. Vice President for Scholarly Programs. mbooker@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Heidi N. Camp. Vice President for Institutional Advancement. hcamp@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Andrew T. Mink. RESIDENTIAL FELLOWSHIPS AT THE NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER Residential Fellowship Application. The Center will begin accepting applications for the 2022–23 academic year on July 1, 2021 with a deadline of October 7, 2021. Fellowship applicants are asked to complete the online application form and to upload the following documents: 1,000-word project proposal. short bibliography (up to 2pages)
THE U.S. CONSTITUTION THEN AND NOW Tuesday, April 7, 2020 at the National Humanities Center. For over 230 years, the U.S. Constitution has served as the central document shaping life and law in the United States. Originally consisting of seven articles, the Constitution has been amended 27 times to meet the changing needs of the country and its citizens. RACHEL WATSON, “EVIDENCE AND RACIAL DISCOURSE IN Rachel Watson, Howard University Rachel Watson is assistant professor of American literature at Howard University. She earned her BA from Sarah Lawrence College, and her PhD in English from the University of Chicago. Her work focuses on American and African American literature since the late-nineteenth century, with a particular interest in representations of race, law, and criminal procedure. WHAT ARE THE HUMANITIES? What do they “do”? Why are they so important? From an academic standpoint, the humanities include the study of history, philosophy and religion, modern and ancient languages and literatures, fine and performing arts, media and cultural studies, and other fields. Humanities research adds to our knowledge of the world, as scholars investigate differences between cultures FUGITIVE SLAVES IN CANADA, AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY Supplemental Sites Canada: The Promised Land, in In Motion: The African American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) The Black Canadian Experience in Ontario, 1834-1914: Flight, Freedom, Foundation, from Archives of Ontario The Underground Railroad: Niagara's Freedom Trail, from the City of St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada LENA COWEN ORLIN, “SHAKESPEARE’S MARRIAGE” Lena Orlin discusses new ways of thinking about Shakespeare’s marriage. Listen to an interview with Lena Orlin about the topic on WUNC-FM’s The State of Things. Lena Cowen Orlin is professor of English at Georgetown University and was previously executive director of the Folger Institute at the Folger Shakespeare Library. THE EFFECTS OF REMOVAL ON AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES, NATIVE Essays on American environmental history. Nature Transformed is an interactive curriculum enrichment service for teachers, offering them practical help in planning courses and presenting rigorous subject matter to students. Nature Transformed explores the relationship between the ways men and women have thought about their surroundings and the ways they have acted toward them. FOR MANY ENSLAVED AFRICAN ON SLAVEHOLDERS’ SEXUAL ABUSE OF bein’ knocked in de head. I done seen Mack Williams kill folks an’ I done seen ’im have folks killed. One day he tol’ me dat if my wife had been good lookin’, I never would sleep wid her agin ’cause he’d kill me SOUTH CAROLINA, 1739 Godfrey’s house and killed him, his Daughter and Son. They then turned back and marched Southward along Pons Pons, which is the Road through Georgia to Augustine. HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES IN ACTIONHUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYSUPPORT USCONTACT US Humanities in Class Online Courses. Virtual courses exploring relevant topics | Summer Session Begins May 17, 2021. Register Now. National Humanities Center Announces 2021–22 Fellows. 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nations. Read More. Center Receives Award to Support Scholarly Work on Chinese History.SUMMER RESIDENCIES
Summer residents in the NHC Commons The National Humanities Center will offer its next Summer Residency Program in June 2022. Scholars from NHC Institutional Sponsor universities are exclusively eligible to participate in a four-week summer residency program intended to assist in jump-starting or making substantial progress on a current project.. Summer Residents are provided individualSTAFF BY DEPARTMENT
Executive Assistant to the President and Director. jodie@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Matthew M. Booker. Vice President for Scholarly Programs. mbooker@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Heidi N. Camp. Vice President for Institutional Advancement. hcamp@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Andrew T. Mink. THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY: VOL. I, 1500-1865 Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. LOG IN | HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYHUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES CENTERMINNESOTA HUMANITIES CENTERNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER DURHAMNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER NORTH CAROLINA The Humanities in Class Digital Library provides access to the best instructional resources and scholarly materials in support of humanities education. Resources are tagged by subject matter, topics and material type, making it easy to discover and combine content you need from institutions you trust. NHC About Page. Find out more. HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARY The National Humanities Center (est. 1978) The National Humanities Center is a private, nonprofit organization, and the only independent institute dedicated exclusively to advance study in all areas of the humanities. The Center is supported by the generosity of individual donors, grants from private and public foundations, corporate ABRAHAM TERIAN, 2018–2019 Abraham Terian (Robert F. and Margaret S. Goheen Fellow) spent most of his time at the Center working on a commentary on a once lost work of Philo of Alexandria: On Providence in two books. He completed work on two other books: Armenian Moralia: The “Oft-repeated Discourses,” a sixth-century collection of twenty-three moral discourses in Armenian by an anonymous abbot, to be published by ACCOUNTS OF SLAVE CAPTURE IN AFRICA, FREEDOM, AFRICAN Venture Smith, account of capture in Guinea, ca. 1735; from Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, in In Motion: The African-American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) Primary resources related to the transatlantic slave trade, mid 1700s, in Slavery and Freedom in American History and Memory, from HOW SLAVERY AFFECTED AFRICAN AMERICAN FAMILIES, FREEDOM'S On large plantations, slave cabins and the yards of the slave quarters served as the center of interactions among enslaved family members. Here were spaces primarily occupied by African Americans, somewhat removed from the labor of slavery or the scrutiny of owners, overseers, and patrollers. THE EFFECTS OF REMOVAL ON AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES, NATIVE Essays on American environmental history. Nature Transformed is an interactive curriculum enrichment service for teachers, offering them practical help in planning courses and presenting rigorous subject matter to students. Nature Transformed explores the relationship between the ways men and women have thought about their surroundings and the ways they have acted toward them. HOMEPAGE | NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES IN ACTIONHUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYSUPPORT USCONTACT US Humanities in Class Online Courses. Virtual courses exploring relevant topics | Summer Session Begins May 17, 2021. Register Now. National Humanities Center Announces 2021–22 Fellows. 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nations. Read More. Center Receives Award to Support Scholarly Work on Chinese History.SUMMER RESIDENCIES
Summer residents in the NHC Commons The National Humanities Center will offer its next Summer Residency Program in June 2022. Scholars from NHC Institutional Sponsor universities are exclusively eligible to participate in a four-week summer residency program intended to assist in jump-starting or making substantial progress on a current project.. Summer Residents are provided individualSTAFF BY DEPARTMENT
Executive Assistant to the President and Director. jodie@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Matthew M. Booker. Vice President for Scholarly Programs. mbooker@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Heidi N. Camp. Vice President for Institutional Advancement. hcamp@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Andrew T. Mink. THE MAKING OF AFRICAN AMERICAN IDENTITY: VOL. I, 1500-1865 Primary resources--historical documents, literary texts, and works of art--thematically organized with notes and discussion questions. LOG IN | HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARYHUMANITIES CENTERHUMANITIES CENTERMINNESOTA HUMANITIES CENTERNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER DURHAMNATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER NORTH CAROLINA The Humanities in Class Digital Library provides access to the best instructional resources and scholarly materials in support of humanities education. Resources are tagged by subject matter, topics and material type, making it easy to discover and combine content you need from institutions you trust. NHC About Page. Find out more. HUMANITIES IN CLASS DIGITAL LIBRARY The National Humanities Center (est. 1978) The National Humanities Center is a private, nonprofit organization, and the only independent institute dedicated exclusively to advance study in all areas of the humanities. The Center is supported by the generosity of individual donors, grants from private and public foundations, corporate ABRAHAM TERIAN, 2018–2019 Abraham Terian (Robert F. and Margaret S. Goheen Fellow) spent most of his time at the Center working on a commentary on a once lost work of Philo of Alexandria: On Providence in two books. He completed work on two other books: Armenian Moralia: The “Oft-repeated Discourses,” a sixth-century collection of twenty-three moral discourses in Armenian by an anonymous abbot, to be published by ACCOUNTS OF SLAVE CAPTURE IN AFRICA, FREEDOM, AFRICAN Venture Smith, account of capture in Guinea, ca. 1735; from Bruce Dorsey, Swarthmore College The Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, in In Motion: The African-American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) Primary resources related to the transatlantic slave trade, mid 1700s, in Slavery and Freedom in American History and Memory, from HOW SLAVERY AFFECTED AFRICAN AMERICAN FAMILIES, FREEDOM'S On large plantations, slave cabins and the yards of the slave quarters served as the center of interactions among enslaved family members. Here were spaces primarily occupied by African Americans, somewhat removed from the labor of slavery or the scrutiny of owners, overseers, and patrollers. THE EFFECTS OF REMOVAL ON AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES, NATIVE Essays on American environmental history. Nature Transformed is an interactive curriculum enrichment service for teachers, offering them practical help in planning courses and presenting rigorous subject matter to students. Nature Transformed explores the relationship between the ways men and women have thought about their surroundings and the ways they have acted toward them.STAFF BY DEPARTMENT
Executive Assistant to the President and Director. jodie@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Matthew M. Booker. Vice President for Scholarly Programs. mbooker@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Heidi N. Camp. Vice President for Institutional Advancement. hcamp@nationalhumanitiescenter.org. Andrew T. Mink. RESIDENTIAL FELLOWSHIPS AT THE NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER Residential Fellowship Application. The Center will begin accepting applications for the 2022–23 academic year on July 1, 2021 with a deadline of October 7, 2021. Fellowship applicants are asked to complete the online application form and to upload the following documents: 1,000-word project proposal. short bibliography (up to 2pages)
THE U.S. CONSTITUTION THEN AND NOW Tuesday, April 7, 2020 at the National Humanities Center. For over 230 years, the U.S. Constitution has served as the central document shaping life and law in the United States. Originally consisting of seven articles, the Constitution has been amended 27 times to meet the changing needs of the country and its citizens. RACHEL WATSON, “EVIDENCE AND RACIAL DISCOURSE IN Rachel Watson, Howard University Rachel Watson is assistant professor of American literature at Howard University. She earned her BA from Sarah Lawrence College, and her PhD in English from the University of Chicago. Her work focuses on American and African American literature since the late-nineteenth century, with a particular interest in representations of race, law, and criminal procedure. WHAT ARE THE HUMANITIES? What do they “do”? Why are they so important? From an academic standpoint, the humanities include the study of history, philosophy and religion, modern and ancient languages and literatures, fine and performing arts, media and cultural studies, and other fields. Humanities research adds to our knowledge of the world, as scholars investigate differences between cultures FUGITIVE SLAVES IN CANADA, AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY Supplemental Sites Canada: The Promised Land, in In Motion: The African American Migration Experience, from the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library) The Black Canadian Experience in Ontario, 1834-1914: Flight, Freedom, Foundation, from Archives of Ontario The Underground Railroad: Niagara's Freedom Trail, from the City of St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada LENA COWEN ORLIN, “SHAKESPEARE’S MARRIAGE” Lena Orlin discusses new ways of thinking about Shakespeare’s marriage. Listen to an interview with Lena Orlin about the topic on WUNC-FM’s The State of Things. Lena Cowen Orlin is professor of English at Georgetown University and was previously executive director of the Folger Institute at the Folger Shakespeare Library. THE EFFECTS OF REMOVAL ON AMERICAN INDIAN TRIBES, NATIVE Essays on American environmental history. Nature Transformed is an interactive curriculum enrichment service for teachers, offering them practical help in planning courses and presenting rigorous subject matter to students. Nature Transformed explores the relationship between the ways men and women have thought about their surroundings and the ways they have acted toward them. FOR MANY ENSLAVED AFRICAN ON SLAVEHOLDERS’ SEXUAL ABUSE OF bein’ knocked in de head. I done seen Mack Williams kill folks an’ I done seen ’im have folks killed. One day he tol’ me dat if my wife had been good lookin’, I never would sleep wid her agin ’cause he’d kill me SOUTH CAROLINA, 1739 Godfrey’s house and killed him, his Daughter and Son. They then turned back and marched Southward along Pons Pons, which is the Road through Georgia to Augustine.page
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Group Created with Sketch. NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER ANNOUNCES 2021–22 FELLOWS 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nationsMeet the Fellows
DISCOVERY AND INSPIRATION PODCASTS SEASON FIVE Humanities scholars discuss the questions that intrigue them and the passions that drive themListen Now
CENTER RECEIVES AWARD TO SUPPORT SCHOLARLY WORK ON CHINESE HISTORY The James P. Geiss and Margaret Y. Hsu Foundation FellowshipRead More
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NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER ANNOUNCES 2021–22 FELLOWS 36 scholars representing 19 disciplines, 16 states, and six nationsMeet the Fellows
*
DISCOVERY AND INSPIRATION PODCASTS SEASON FIVE Humanities scholars discuss the questions that intrigue them and the passions that drive themListen Now
*
CENTER RECEIVES AWARD TO SUPPORT SCHOLARLY WORK ON CHINESE HISTORY The James P. Geiss and Margaret Y. Hsu Foundation FellowshipRead More
*
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SCHOLARLY PROGRAMS
NEWS THIS MONTH
National Humanities Center Receives NEH Grant in Support ofFellowship Program
------------------------- The Center provides a rich intellectual setting for individual research and the exchange of ideas among leading scholars working across the humanities. Read MoreEDUCATION PROGRAMS
NEWS THIS MONTH
Humanities in Class Digital Library ------------------------- The Center builds bridges between the academic world and the working classroom, addressing both classic and contemporary aspects of the humanities. See MorePUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
NEWS THIS MONTH
The National Humanities Center’s Statement Condemning Anti-AsianViolence
------------------------- The Center’s public programs highlight the importance of the humanities as the foundation of a democratic culture, a fulfilling life, and an informed citizenry. Learn MorePath
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with Sketch. Shape Copy Created with Sketch. Shape Copy 2 Created with Sketch. 2021 NATIONAL HUMANITIES CENTER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.Details
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