Bard Graduate Center is hosting its fourth National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute from July 3 through 28, 2017. Eighteen college and university educators will have the opportunity to explore the use of material culture, both in their research and as an instructional medium in their classrooms, using New York City as their laboratory. Professor David Jaffee who died in January 2017, originated the BGC’s Summer Institute and was instrumental in planning the 2017 program. Project Co-directors Catherine Whalen and Katherine C. (Kasey) Grier are leading this year’s Institute, entitled American Material Culture: Nineteenth-Century New York, in accordance with his vision.
The goal of the Bard Graduate Center Summer Institute is to bring the field of material culture studies into wider use for both teaching and research in the humanities by focusing on the rich material record of the nineteenth century, using New York City as its case study. Then as now, the city was a national center for fashioning cultural commodities and promoting consumer tastes. Summer Scholars will explore these topics along with the material culture of ethnicity, race, gender, and class through field trips and exclusive sessions with curators at a range of cultural institutions and historic places.
Leading scholars and practitioners from around the country will join BGC’s interdisciplinary research community as guest faculty and conduct seminars, guide hands-on object study sessions, and direct activities promoting innovative classroom practice. It is hoped that American Material Culture: Nineteenth-Century New York will also have a broader curricular impact, one that goes well beyond New York and can be applied by Summer Scholars to their own locales. “We anticipate that participants will be able to utilize their Institute training to broaden and deepen their practices of interpreting material culture in the context of their own work,” said Catherine Whalen.
Among Bard Graduate Center’s rich academic resources available to Summer Scholars, are the Digital Media Lab, Visual Media Resources, Study Collection, and its specialized Library for the study of decorative arts, design, and material culture. In this setting, the variety of experiential sessions led by the project directors and guest faculty will equip Summer Scholars with valuable tools for incorporating American material studies into their own pedagogy and research projects. As Katherine C. Grier noted, “We want Summer Scholars to have a wide variety of hands-on experiences using material culture, both in the classroom and during field trips. These will help them create new tools for their own teaching.”
This year’s Summer Scholars hail from a wide variety of disciplines, namely history, art history, literature, American Studies, religious studies, media studies, fashion studies, art, architecture, design, and education. Likewise, they teach at many different kinds of academic institutions, including large state universities, small colleges, and art institutes. In the spirit of the National Endowment for the Humanities, Summer Scholars come from locations throughout the United States, ranging from Rhode Island and Florida on the east coast to Iowa and Indiana in the midwest to Idaho and California in the far west.
2017 Summer Scholars are:
Diana Anselmo, Postdoctoral Fellow in Film Studies at the
University of Pittsburgh
Stephanie K. Bacon, Professor of Graphic Design at Boise
State University and Director of the Idaho Center for the Book
Rhae Lynn Barnes, Postdoctoral Fellow in History at the
University of Southern California
Ariel Beaujot, Associate Professor of History at the
University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
Annette Becker, Assistant Director of the Texas Fashion
Collection at the University of North Texas
Keren Ben-Horin, Instructor at the Fashion Institute of
Technology
Anne Blankenship, Assistant Professor of History, Philosophy
& Religious Studies at North Dakota State University
Nancy A. Caronia, Assistant Professor of English, West
Virginia University
Douglas A. Guerra, Assistant Professor of English, State
University of New York/Oswego
Cheryl Hicks, Associate Professor of History at University
of North Carolina, Charlotte
Heidi Kolk, Associate Director of American Culture Studies
at Washington University
Amy Montz, Associate Professor of English at the University
of Southern Indiana
Jacqueline O’Connor, Professor of English at Boise State
University
Melissa Otis, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute for
Comparative Studies in Literature, Arts and Culture, and History at Carleton
University
Nora Rabins, Visiting Lecturer of Studio Art at Providence
College
Kelly L. Reddy-Best, Assistant Professor of Apparel,
Merchandising & Design at Iowa State University
Michelle Sammons, Instructor in Art History at the Cleveland Institute of Art
Jose R. Vazquez, Professor, School of Architecture at Miami
Dade College
About the National Endowment for the
Humanities:
Created
in 1965 as an independent federal agency, the National Endowment for the
Humanities supports research and learning in history, literature, philosophy,
and other areas of the humanities by funding selected, peer-reviewed proposals
from around the nation. Additional information about the National Endowment for
the Humanities and its grant programs is available at: www.neh.gov.