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Skip to contentCenter for the HumanitiesMenu Close Search Our InitiativesResearch & Funding OpportunitiesUndergraduate ResearchEventsEvent Co-sponsorshipsSignature EventsOur PeopleAbout the CenterLet your curiosity lead the way:Apply TodayHomeRecent NewsHuman Ties BlogContact Us Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SDivided City Graduate Summer Research Fellowship ABOUTDATES & DETAILSHOW TO APPLYFELLOWSThe Center for the Humanities, in collaboration with the Sam Fox School and with funding from the Office of the Provost’s Here and Next initiative, is pleased to offer a new round of Divided City Graduate Fellowships for Summer 2024 for MA/PhD students in the Humanities, Humanistic Social Sciences, Art, Architecture, Urban Design and Landscape Architecture. As part of our interdisciplinary initiative on The Divided City, we will award multiple grants of up to $5,000 each in support of two months of full-time research by graduate students on urban segregation broadly conceived. This year’s fellowship program will extend Divided City’s aim to foster public engagement by funding original writing and public-making activities that connect WashU graduate students with communities off campus.  The primary responsibilities of fellows will be to produce original writing and develop a program or event that draws on their existing research projects for the purposes of connecting with a broader audience. Preference will be given to those proposals that have clearly articulated goals for both addressing and engaging with a defined audience, and a clear understanding of that audience (beyond merely the “off campus public”). For instance, proposals could outline projects like developing a reading group with a local library, working directly with K-12 educators, convening an event in a public space, conducting interviews or shadowing people whose work is related to your scholarly project, undergoing training in a skill that will enhance your research methodology… and more!  All grant activities are to take place before September 1, 2024. All fellows will present on their summer projects and the results of their work at a symposium in mid October, as well as produce a short (500-700 word) blog post on their fellowship experience.    Application DeadlineApril 12, 2024Important dates & detailsFor students applying during the 2023–24 academic year Application deadline: April 12, 2024 Award notification: May 8, 2024 Grant amount: Up to $5,000 Grant period: May 2024–August 2024 Eligibility: MA/PhD students in the Humanities, Humanistic Social Sciences, Art, Architecture, Urban Design and Landscape Architecture at Washington University How to ApplySubmit applications to [email protected] by April 12, 2024. Please include your name in the file name and save application as a Word document. 1. Narrative description of the project  A narrative description of the project, not to exceed 1000 words, that details the disciplinary and intellectual underpinnings of your work and your plan to curate your project for an audience beyond the dissertation committee.  Why does this project matter, and to whom? We strongly encourage fellows to include a detailed description of their outreach and documentation plans that articulates both how you will connect your work with that particular public and how you will document your project. All fellows should factor in the costs of documenting their research / programming experience for the fall symposium. 2. Budget Please provide an estimation of any costs associated with your project, including travel, events, documentation (photography, recording, evaluation) and research costs. 3. Current transcript 4. Reference A brief letter of reference from your advisor, chair, or DGS in support of this application and your plans to pursue the project over the summer. Letters can be sent by email to [email protected]. Contact Meredith Kelling, assistant director for student research and engagement, with any questions. Current and Former Fellows Tahia Farhin Haque, Sam FoxTahia Farhin Haque, Sam FoxSummer 2024 The Map to Home: Making Artwork and Research on the Theme of Home Sophia Hatzikos, Sam FoxSophia Hatzikos, Sam FoxSummer 2024 Community Coil Pots: Water Conversations Sushil Kumar Jha, Comparative LiteratureSushil Kumar Jha, Comparative LiteratureSummer 2024 City as Soundscape Amira Jihane Khelfallah, Comparative LiteratureAmira Jihane Khelfallah, Comparative LiteratureSummer 2024 The Third Space Derick Mattern, Comparative LiteratureDerick Mattern, Comparative LiteratureSummer 2024 Yining Pan, AnthropologyYining Pan, AnthropologySummer 2024 Laboring IVF: A Collaborative Epistemology Project Anca Roncea, Comparative LiteratureAnca Roncea, Comparative LiteratureSummer 2024 Khashayar Shahriyari, MusicKhashayar Shahriyari, MusicSummer 2024 Gbenga Adeoba, Comparative LiteratureGbenga Adeoba, Comparative LiteratureSummer 2023 “Poetry for the People”: Taxi Poetry Project, Placemaking, and the Lyric Form Rajnesh Chakrapani, Comparative Literature International Writers TrackRajnesh Chakrapani, Comparative Literature International Writers TrackSummer 2023 “Periphery as the New Center: Translation Workshops in Ferentari, Bucharest” Kevin Corrigan, Sam FoxKevin Corrigan, Sam FoxSummer 2023 “Landscape Architecture, Shifting Sands: Depositing Possibilities Amidst a Coal Plant Decommissioning” Zihan Feng, East Asian Languages and CulturesZihan Feng, East Asian Languages and CulturesSummer 2023 “Narrating the Audiophile Soundscape in Post-socialist Beijing: An Acoustic Reinforcement and/or Interrogation of Urban Segregation” Sarah María Medina, Comparative LiteratureSarah María Medina, Comparative LiteratureSummer 2023 “International Writers track, Feminine Experimental City Networks: Paris, Mexico City, and New York (1910s to the 1940s)” Lee M. Morrison, HistoryLee M. Morrison, HistorySummer 2023 “The Men of Santo Stefano: Witnessing and Local Identity around a Thirteenth-Century Urban Monastery” / “The Women of the Gate: Neighborhood Development in Late Medieval Genoa” Michael Lamont Scarboro, Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, and Brown SchoolMichael Lamont Scarboro, Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, and Brown SchoolSummer 2023 “‘Funeral home, church, church, liquor store’: Supportive Housing as a Reparative Typology for Black St. Louisans” Sylvia Sukop, Germanic Languages and LiteraturesSylvia Sukop, Germanic Languages and LiteraturesSummer 2023 “Performing Black Memory in St. Louis: An Oral History of Public Historian and Community Elder Angela da Silva” Francisco Tijerina, Romance Languages and LiteraturesFrancisco Tijerina, Romance Languages and LiteraturesSummer 2023 “Urban Extractivism: An Ecofeminist Reading of Monterrey (2000-2023)” Karla Aguilar Velásquez, Romance Languages and LiteraturesKarla Aguilar Velásquez, Romance Languages and LiteraturesSummer 2023 “Artistic Landmarks: Remembrance through Interaction in Counterpublic 2023” Quick LinksAbout the CenterResearch OpportunitiesHuman Ties BlogInitiativesEventsOur PeopleContactDonateHumanities BroadsheetPublications & RecordingsAdditional information Arts & Sciences Graduate Studies in A&SCopyright 2024 by:Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. LouisFollow Us Facebook Twitter Contact Us: Center for the Humanities [email protected] Visit the main Washington University in St. Louis website1 Brookings Drive / St. Louis, MO 63130 / wustl.edu

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