Amount of Award
All teachers selected to participate in an NEH seminar or institute will be awarded a fixed stipend based on the length of the seminar or institute to help cover travel costs, books and other research expenses, and living expenses: $2,100 (2 weeks), $2,700 (3 weeks), $3,300 (4 weeks), $3,900 (5 weeks), or $4,500 (6 weeks).
Eligibility
These projects are designed for full‑time teachers including home-schooling parents. Applications from teachers in public, private, charter, and religiously affiliated schools receive equal consideration. Other K-12 school personnel, such as librarians and administrators, may also be eligible to apply, depending on the specific seminar or institute. Substitute teachers or part-time personnel are not eligible.
New this year: Up to two seminar spaces and three institute spaces are available for current full-time graduate students who intend to pursue careers in K-12 teaching.
Teachers at schools in the United States or its territorial possessions or Americans teaching in foreign schools where at least 50 percent of the students are American nationals are eligible for this program. Applicants must be United States citizens, residents of U.S. jurisdictions, or foreign nationals who have been residing in the United States or its territories for at least the three years immediately preceding the application deadline. Foreign nationals teaching abroad at non-U.S. chartered institutions are not eligible to apply.
Applicants should consult the guidelines and application information received directly from seminar and institute directors concerning any additional eligibility requirements specific to the project. Selection committees are directed to give first consideration to applicants who have not participated in an NEH-supported seminar or institute in the last three years.
New this year: An individual may apply to up to three projects in any one year (seminars, institutes or Landmarks workshops), but may participate in only one. Please note that eligibility criteria differ significantly between the Seminars and Institutes and the Landmarks Workshops Programs.
How to Apply
Please e-mail, telephone, or send by U.S. Post a request for application information and expanded project descriptions to the seminar and institute directors listed; in some cases, these materials will also be available on project Web sites. You may request information about as many projects as you like. You may apply to up to three projects in any one year (seminars, institutes or Landmarks workshops), but may participate in only one. The application deadline is March 2, 2010 (postmark).
Information
Please direct all questions concerning individual seminars and institutes, as well as all requests for application materials, to the appropriate information contact person listed below for each program.
Equal Opportunity
Endowment programs do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability, or age. For further information about NEH’s EEO policy, write to the Equal Employment Opportunity Officer, National Endowment for the Humanities, 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20506. TDD (for the hearing impaired only): 202‑606‑8282.
The Abolitionist Movement: Fighting Against Slavery and Racial Injustice from the American
Revolution to the Civil War
Philadelphia, Pa.
June 21–July 16, 2010 (4 weeks)
Richard Newman, Rochester Institute of Technology
Information:
Department of History
Rochester Institute of Technology
92 Lomb Memorial Drive
Rochester, NY 14607
716-597-9860
rsngsm@rit.edu
www.librarycompany.org/abolitionseminar/
America and the Great War:
An Interdisciplinary Seminar in Literature and History
Lawrence, Kan.
June 27–July 30, 2010 (5 weeks)
Janet Sharistanian and Ted Wilson, University of Kansas
Information:
NEH Summer Seminar
c/o Hall Center for the Humanities
900 Sunnyside Avenue
Lawrence, KS 66045-7622
785-864-7884
greatwar@ku.edu
www.greatwar.ku.edu
The Arabic Novel in Translation
Swarthmore, Pa.
July 5–July 30, 2010 (4 weeks)
Roger Allen, University of Pennsylvania
Information:
Patricia Maloney
Facilities Management Office
Swarthmore College
500 College Avenue
Swarthmore, PA 19081
Patricia Maloney: pmalone1@swarthmore.edu
ccat.sas.upenn.edu/neh/index.html
The Canterbury Tales and Medieval Culture
New Haven, Conn.
June 28–August 6, 2010 (6 weeks)
Lee Patterson, Yale University
Information:
Prof. Lee Patterson or Ms. Roberta Hudson
Yale Conference and Event Services
P.O. Box 208355
Yale University
New Haven, CT 06520-8355
lee.patterson@yale.edu
www.yale.edu/medieval/neh.html
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
London, U.K.
July 19–August 14, 2010 (4 weeks)
David Raybin, Eastern Illinois University;
Susanna Fein, Kent State University
Information:
David Raybin
Canterbury Tales Seminar
English Department
Eastern Illinois University
600 Lincoln Ave.
Charleston, IL 61920
217-581-2428
draybin@eiu.edu
www.eiu.edu/~neh2010/
Historical Interpretations of the Industrial Revolution in Britain
London and Nottingham, U.K.
June 27–July 30, 2010 (5 weeks)
Gerard M. Koot, University of Massachusetts
Information:
Gerard M. Koot
University of Massachusetts
285 Old Westport Road
North Dartmouth, MA 02747
508-999-8305
gkoot@umassd.edu
www.umassd.edu/ir
Germany’s Cosmopolitan Capital:
Berlin and the Myth of German Monoculturalism
Berlin, Germany
(seminar conducted in German)
June 21–July 23, 2010 (5 weeks)
Robert R. Shandley, Texas A & M University;
Brent O. Peterson, Lawrence University
Information:
Robert R. Shandley
Department of European and Classical Languages and Cultures
Texas A&M University
4215 TAMU
College Station, Texas 77843-4215
979-845-2175 or 920-832-6663
r–shandley@tamu.edu or
brent.peterson@lawrence.edu
euro.tamu.edu/neh/neh2010/index.html
Literary Picaros and Picaras and Their Travels in Early Modern Spain
Madrid, Salamanca, Toledo, and Sevilla, Spain
(seminar conducted in Spanish)
June 20–July 17, 2010 (4 weeks)
Anne J. Cruz, University of Miami;
Adrienne L. Martin, University of California, Davis
Information:
Ms. Michelle Prats
Department of Modern Languages and Literatures
University of Miami
P.O. 248093
Coral Gables, FL 33123-5585
305-284-5585
nehspainseminar@miami.edu
www.as.miami.edu/personal/neh
The Political Theory of Hannah Arendt:
The Problem of Evil and the Origins of Totalitarianism
San Diego, Calif.
June 27–August 5, 2010 (6 weeks)
Kathleen B. Jones, San Diego State University
Information:
Simone Arias
P.O. Box 17308
San Diego, CA 92117
858-663-8827
sarias2@earthlink.net
www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~arendt/
Poetry as a Form of Life, Life as a Form of Poetry
Cambridge, Mass.
July 5–July 31, 2010 (4 weeks)
Helen Vendler, Harvard University
Information:
William J. Holinger, Project Manager
Secondary School Program, Harvard Summer School
51 Brattle Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-3722
617-998-8515
william_holinger@harvard.edu
www.summer.harvard.edu/2010/programs/neh/
Punishment, Politics, and Culture
Amherst, Mass.
June 28–July 30, 2010 (5 weeks)
Austin Sarat, Amherst College
Information:
Austin Sarat
Department of Political Science
Clark House
Amherst College
Amherst, MA 01002
413-542-2380
adsarat@amherst.edu
www.amherst.edu/go/neh
An institute for school teachers, typically led by a team of core faculty and visiting scholars, is designed to present the best available scholarship on important humanities issues and works taught in the nation's schools. The 25 to 30 participants, of whom three may be current full-time graduate students who intend to pursue careers in K-12 teaching, compare and synthesize the various perspectives offered by the faculty, make connections between the institute content and classroom applications, and often develop improved teaching materials for their classrooms.
Abolitionism and the Underground Railroad in Upstate New York
Hamilton, N.Y.
June 27–July 23, 2010 (4 weeks)
Graham Russell Hodges, Colgate University
Faculty: Manisha Sinha, David Gellman, Patrick Rael, Fergus Bordewich, Milton Sernett, Kim and Reggie Harris, James Horton, Lois Horton, Norman Dann, Bruce Laurie, Douglas Egerton, Richard Newman, Julie Jeffrey, John Stauffer, Marcus Rediker
Information:
Professor Graham Hodges
Department of History
Colgate University
Hamilton, NY 13346
315-228-7517
ghodges@colgate.edu
www.colgate.edu/Abolitionism/Hodges
African-American Political History
Chicago, Ill.
July 4–July 30, 2010 (4 weeks)
Julieanna L. Richardson, The HistoryMakers; Charles Branham, DuSable Museum
Faculty: Eric Arnesen, Chris Benson, James Conyers, Leon Dash, Michael Dawson, V.P. Franklin, Ashley Howard, Bruce Laurie, Joseph Lipari, Josh Radinsky, Christopher Reed, Frances Jones Sneed, Kathryn Stine
Information:
Julieanna Richardson, Director
The HistoryMakers
1900 S Michigan Ave
Chicago, IL 60616
312-674-1900
jlr@thehistorymakers.com
www.thehistorymakers.com
Cotton Culture in the South from the Civil War to the Civil Rights Movement
Macon, Ga.
June 27–July 301, 2010 (5 weeks)
Sarah E. Gardner, Mercer University
Faculty: Charles Aiken, James Giesen, David Carlton, Joseph Crespino, Chester Fontenot, Fitzhugh Brundage, Andrew Manis, James Peacock, Benjamin Wise, Robert Jackson, Allen Tullos, John Vlach, Stan Brown
Information:
Carmen Hicks
Willingham Hall 201
Mercer University
1400 Coleman Ave
Macon, GA 31207-0001
478-301-2562
Hicks_cg@mercer.edu
www.mercer.edu/SST/NEH/
Dvorák in America
Pittsburgh, Pa.
July 12–30, 2010 (3 weeks)
Joseph Horowitz, independent scholar
Faculty: Tim Barringer, Robert Winter, Michael Beckerman, Stephen Mayer, Mariana Whitmer, Kevin Deas, Jean Snyder, Dale Cockrell, Harry Dawe
Information:
Nicole Longevin-Burroughs
Manager of Education and Community Programs
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra
Heinz Hall
600 Penn Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
412-392-8991
institute@pittsburghsymphony.org
www.pittsburghsymphony.org/dvorakinstitute
Exploring the Past:
Archaeology in the Upper Mississippi River Valley
La Crosse, Wis.
July 12–30, 2010 (3 weeks)
James Theler, Bonnie Jancik, and Katherine Stevenson, University of Wisconsin, La Crosse
Faculty: Robert Boszhardt, Loren Cade
Information:
Bonnie Jancik
Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center
University of Wisconsin-La Crosse
1725 State Street
La Crosse, WI 54601
608-785-6473
jancik.bonn@uwlax.edu
www.uwlax.edu/mvac/neh.htm
Folger Shakespeare Library’s Teaching Shakespeare Institute
Washington, D.C.
June 28–July 23, 2010 (4 weeks)
Robert Young, Folger Shakespeare Library
Faculty: Stephen Dickey, Jay Halio, Caleen Sinette Jennings, Margaret Maurer, Michael Ellis-Tolaydo, Michael Collins, Paul Daniel Menzer, Peggy O’Brien, Sue Biondo-Hench, Michael LoMonico
Information:
Caitlin Smith, Education Programs Assistant
Teaching Shakespeare Institute
Folger Shakespeare Library
201 East Capitol Street, SE
Washington, DC 20003
202-675-0395
educate@folger.edu
www.folger.edu/tsi2010
Houses of Mortals and Gods: Latin Literature in Context
Baltimore, Md., and Rome, Italy
June 27–July 30, 2010 (5 weeks)
Therese Marie Dougherty and Theresa Lamy, College of Notre Dame of Maryland
Visiting Faculty: Darius Arya, Henry Bender, Glenn Bugh, Steven Ellis, Thomas Hayes, Roger Macfarlane, Kurt Raaflaub
Information:
Sister Therese Marie Dougherty
Department of Classical and Modern Foreign Languages
College of Notre Dame of Maryland
4701 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21210
410-532-5559
tdougherty@ndm.edu
www.ndm.edu/NEHInstitute.cfm
Johann Sebastian Bach:
Celebrating the 325th Anniversary of Bach’s Birth
Eisenach, Leipzig, and Potsdam, Germany
June 28–July 23, 2010 (4 weeks)
Hilde Binford, Moravian College; Allen Viehmeyer, Schwenkfelder Library and Heritage Center
Faculty: Michael Marissen, Peter Wollny, George Stauffer
Information:
Dr. Hilde Binford
Music Department
Moravian College
1200 Main St.
Bethlehem, PA 18018
610-861-1691
hbinford@moravian.edu
www.bachforteachers.org
The Lost World of Early America
New Haven, Conn.
July 18–31, 2010 (2 weeks)
John Demos, Yale University
Information:
Seminar Department
The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
19 West 44th Street
Suite 500
New York, NY 10036
646-366-9666
seminars@gilderlehrman.org
www.gilderlehrman.org/education/seminar_NEH.php
Making the Wright Connection:
Reading Native Son, Black Boy, and Uncle Tom’s Children
Lawrence, Kan.
July 11–24, 2010 (2 weeks)
Maryemma Graham, University of Kansas
Faculty: Jerry W. Ward Jr., Howard Rambsy II, Joyce Ann Joyce, James A. Miller, Hazel Rowley, Carmaletta Williams, Julia Wright, Greg Carroll, Yoshinobu Hakutani, Abdul JanMohamed, Toru Kiuchi, Deborah McDowell, Arnold Rampersad, Amritjit Singh, Randel Jelks, Madison Davis Lacy, David Taylor
Information:
Department of English
University of Kansas
1445 Jayhawk Boulevard, Rm 3001
Lawrence, KS 66045
785-864-2565
wrightconnection@ku.edu
www.richardwrightat100.ku.edu
The Many and the One:
Religion, Pluralism, and American History
Indianapolis, Ind.
July 12–30, 2010 (3 weeks)
Philip Goff, Arthur Farnsley II, and Rachel Wheeler, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Faculty: Darren Dochuk, Sylvester Johnson, Sheila Suess Kennedy, Laura Olsen, Amanda Porterfield, Douglas Winiarski
Information:
Arthur Farnsley II
Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
425 University Blvd., CA 417
Indianapolis, IN 46202
317-274-8409
raac@iupui.edu
www.iupui.edu/~raac/projects
Mesoamerica Cultures and Their Histories:
Spotlight on Oaxaca
Oaxaca, Mexico
July 11–August 7, 2010 (4 weeks)
Stephanie Wood, and Judith L. Musick, University of Oregon
Faculty: Ron Lancaster, Gabriela Martínez, Lynn Stephen, Alejandro de Avila, Margarita Dalton, Sergio Navarrete Pellicer, Angeles Romero Frizzi, Ronald Spores, Michael Swanton, Bas van Doesburg, Julia Barco, Concepción Nuñez, Marietta Bernstorff, Luna MarAn
Information:
Stephanie Wood, Director
Oaxaca Summer Institute
2085 University Street
Eugene, OR 97403-1541
541-346-5771
swood@uoregon.edu
whp.uoregon.edu/mesoinstitute
Mozart’s Worlds: The German Operas
Vienna, Austria
June 21–July 16, 2010 (4 weeks)
Richard Benedum, University of Dayton
Faculty: Fred Amrine, Marilyn Fischer, Thomas Froeschl, Richard Fuller, R. Alan Kimbrough, Paul Morman, Christian Otto, Julane Rodgers, James Schindler
Information:
Annie Milliron
NEH Institute
University of Dayton
Dayton, OH 45469-0310
937-229-4229
amilliron@udayton.edu
www.udayton.edu/~nehinstitute2010
The New Negro Renaissance in America, 1919–1941
St. Louis, Mo.
July 12–30, 2010 (3 weeks)
Gerarld Early, Washington University
Faculty: Harper Barnes, Katharine Capshaw Smith, Amina Gautier, Donald Spivey, Robert G. O'Meally, Gene Dobbs Bradford, Jonathan C. Smith
Information:
Gerald Early or Jian Leng
The Center for the Humanities
Old McMillan Hall, Room S101
Campus Box 1071
Washington University in St. Louis
One Brookings Drive
St. Louis, MO 63130
314-935-5576
cenhum@artsci.wustl.edu
cenhum.artsci.wustl.edu
Peoples of the Mesa Verde Region
Cortez, Colo.
June 27–July 17, 2010 (3 weeks)
Elaine Franklin, Western Carolina University
Faculty: Mark Varien, Shirley Powell, Leigh Kuwanwisiwma, Tessie Naranjo, Joseph Suina, Lewis W. Matis, Rebecca Hammond, Ernest M. Vallo, Sr.
Information:
Debra Miller
Crow Canyon Archaeological Center
23390 Road K
Cortez, CO 81321
970-564-4346
dmiller@crowcanyon.org
www.crowcanyon.org/NEHsummer2010
Picturing Early America:
People, Places, and Events, 1770-1870
Salem, Mass.
June 27–July 23, 2010 (4 weeks)
Patricia Johnston, Salem State College
Faculty: Ellen Miles, Melissa Dabakis, Lucretia Giese, Alan Wallach, Janice Simon, Maureen Creegan
Information:
Patricia Johnston or Pamela Poppe
Art Department
Salem State College
352 Lafayette Street
Salem, MA 01970
978-542-2230
picturing-america@salemstate.edu
www.salemstate.edu/picturing-america
Political and Constitutional Theory for Citizens
Los Angeles, Calif.
July 10–31, 2010 (3 weeks)
Will Harris, Center for the Constitution at James Madison's Montpelier and University of Pennsylvania
Information:
John Hale or Professor Will Harris, Director
NEH Institute/National Academy
Center for Civic Education
5145 Douglas Fir Rd.
Calabasas, CA 91302-1440
818-591-9321 or 800-350-4223
hale@civiced.org
www.civiced.org
Social Movements in Modern America:
Labor, Civil Rights, and Feminism
Bloomington, Ind.
July 11–31, 2010 (3 weeks)
John Bodnar and Edward Carmines, Indiana University
Faculty: Lynn R. Nelson, Jeffrey Ogbar, Carl R. Weinberg, Jennifer Maher
Information:
Barbara Truesdell, Assistant Director
Center for the Study of History and Memory
Weatherly Hall North, Room 122
400 North Sunrise Drive
Indiana University
Bloomington, IN 47405
812-855-2856; Fax: 812-855-0002
barbara@indiana.edu
www.indiana.edu/~inst2010
Winston Churchill and the Anglo-American Relationship
Cambridge and London, U.K.
July 11–31, 2010 (3 weeks)
James W. Muller, University of Alaska, Anchorage
Faculty: Piers Brendon, David Dilks, Allen Packwood, Kevin Theakston, Sir Max Hastings, Richard Overy
Information:
Daniel N. Myers
The Churchill Centre
P.O. Box 945
Downers Grove, IL 60515-0945
630-512-9341 or 888-972-1874
NEH2010@winstonchurchill.org
www.winstonchurchill.org/support/for-educators/neh-teachers-institute
NEH Information
General questions concerning the National Endowment for the Humanities’ Seminars and Institutes Program may be directed to
202-606-8463 or sem-inst@neh.gov.
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