News

Announcing the Spring 2023 Funding Round Award Recipients

Row of chairs

 

The Simpson Center for the Humanities is proud to announce our Second and Third Book Fellowship and Collaborative Project awards for 2023-2024 after receiving many strong proposals from University of Washington faculty and graduate students during our most recent spring funding round.

The Simpson Center for the Humanities is proud to announce our Second and Third Book Fellowship and Collaborative Project awards for 2023-2024 after receiving many strong proposals from University of Washington faculty and graduate students during our most recent spring funding round.

Generally speaking, the Simpson Center Executive Board makes awards decisions twice during each academic year. During the spring funding round, the Simpson Center welcomes proposals for collaborative projects and graduate research clusters. Check back for announcements on upcoming funding round dates, instructions, and deadlines.

Congratulations to our award recipients and our warm thanks to all who applied.

Second and Third Book Fellowships

Paul S. Atkins (Asian Languages & Literature)
Annotated Translation with Critical Introduction of Shōkenkō, Selected Poems of Zekkai Chūshin (1336-1405)

Elena Campbell (History)
The Northward Turn: Nationalism, Development, and Environment in Late Imperial Russia

Laura Chrisman (English)
Changing Tides: Transnational Blackness Across the US and South Africa, 1870-1930

Betsy Evans (Linguistics)
Perceptual Dialectology: Past, Present, and Future

Ted Hiebert (Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, UW Bothell)
Photographing Ambiguity

Sunila Kale (Jackson School of International Studies)
The Company Village: Extractive Economies in 21st India

Colin Marshall (Philosophy)
The Roots of Respectful Persuasion

Jamie Mayerfeld (Political Science)
Shelters of Injustice

Sonnet Retman (American Ethnic Studies)
Sounding Migration, Recording Black Modernity

Joel Thomas Walker (History)
Witness to the Mongols: A Global History Source Book

Collaborative Projects

Nancy Bou Ayash (English), Aria Fani (Middle Eastern Languages & Cultures), Sasha Senderovich (Slavic Studies)
Translation Studies Hub

Amaranth Borsuk (Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, UW Bothell), Ching-In Chen (Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, UW Bothell), Jasmine Mahmoud (Drama)
ASAP/14: Arts of Fugitivity

Marika Cifor (iSchool), Anna Hoffman (iSchool), Regina Lee (Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies), Daniela Rosner (Human Centered Design & Engineering), 
Feminist / Critical Digital Studies

Shannon Dudley (Music)
Seattle Participatory Arts Network

Moon-Ho Jung (History), Oliver Rollins (American Ethnic Studies), Stephanie Smallwood (Honors Program),
The Black Radical Tradition: Appreciating Jack O’Dell

Jasmine Mahmoud (Drama), Ching-In Chen (Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, UW Bothell), Whitney Lynn (Art), Daniela Rosner (Human Centered Design & Engineering)
Minoritarian Performance Studies

Anna Preus (English), Geoffrey Turnovsky (French & Italian), Melanie Walsh (Information School), Richard Watts (French & Italian)
The Impact of AI on Authorship, Reading, Translation, and Critique

Anita Ramasastry (Law), Tony Lucero (Comparative History of Ideas)
Reimagining Global Engagement, Reciprocity, and Repair

Lynn Thomas (History), Alys Weinbaum (English)
Reproductive Cultures and Politics

Anand Yang (History)
Translations of Migration

Faculty Summer Reading Groups

Suhanthie Motha (English)
Community-Based Language Teacher Education Programs

Ron Krabill (Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, UW Bothell)
Critical Directions in Recent Media Studies Scholarship

Janelle Rodriques (English)
Sylvia Wynter Reading Group

Graduate Research Clusters

Jori Bercier (College of the Built Environment) and Tiffany-Ashton Gatsby (Anthropology)
QueerCrip Research Collective

Mackenzie Bounds (School of Drama) and Cain Miller (Cinema & Media Studies) 
Platform Perspectives

Ellen Chang (Cinema & Media Studies) and Ananya Sikand (Art + Art History + Design)
Feminist Writing

Shayla Chatto (Education) and Elizabeth Wessells (Anthropology)
Indigenous Praxis in In/formal Settings

Tess Chen (Anthropology) and Celine Liao (Sociology)
Sinophone Public Scholarship

Ryan DeCarsky (Sociology) and Madalena Monnier-Reyna (Geography)
Gender and Sexuality

Rachael Herren (Drama) and Amanda Marie Rogus (Drama)
Shakespeare and Early Modern Textual Studies

Susan Hou (Education) and Sue Zhou (History)
Study of Emotions and Affect

Soohyung Hur (Geography) and Jenny Lee (Communication)
Constellations of Asian Racialization

Jamelah Jacob (History) and Marielle Marcaida (Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies)
Transnational Filipinx Diaspora Studies

Nikita Willeford Kastrinos (English) and Thea Lund (Scandinavian)
Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Studies

Inji Kim (Art + Art History + Design) and Anna Parkhurst (Cinema & Media Studies)
Dismantling the Canon

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