List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 2005

List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 2005.

U.S. and Canadian Fellows

A

  • Mark Abley, Writer, Pointe Claire, Québec, Canada: A book about language change.
  • Kim Addonizio, Poet, Oakland, California: Poetry.
  • Anne Aghion, Film Maker, New York City: Film making.
  • Ian Agol, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of Illinois at Chicago: Studies in 3-manifold geometry and topology.
  • Alito Alessi, Choreographer, Eugene, Oregon; Artistic Director, Joint Forces Dance Company/Dance Ability: Choreography.
  • Michael Almereyda, Film Maker, New York City: Film making.
  • Fernando Arenas, Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese Studies, University of Minnesota: The contemporary cultural production of Portuguese-speaking Africa.
  • Sarah Arvio, Poet, New York City; Free-lance Translator, United Nations, New York City and Geneva, Switzerland: Poetry.

B

C

D

E

  • Mark Edmundson, NEH/Daniels Family Distinguished Teaching Professor, University of Virginia: The death of Sigmund Freud.
  • John Elder, Stewart Professor of English and Environmental Studies, Middlebury College: Forestry, sugarmaking, and the destiny of Vermont.
  • Mark Ellis, Professor of Geography, University of Washington, Seattle: Daily geographics of the color line in American cities.
  • Steven Englund, Writer, Paris, France: A biography of Charles de Gaulle.

F

G

H

  • Yotam Haber, Composer, New York City: Music composition.
  • Brooks Hansen, Writer, New York City: Fiction.
  • Paul L. Harris, Professor of Education, Harvard University: The development of trust and doubt.
  • Richard Harris, Professor of Urban Historical Geography and Urban History, McMaster University: The commercialization of owner-building in North America and Australia, 1945-1960.
  • Adam Haslett, Writer, New York City: Fiction.
  • Marc D. Hauser, Professor of Psychology, Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, and Biological Anthropology, Harvard University: Evolution of a moral instinct.
  • Jake Heggie, Composer, San Francisco; President, Bent Pen Music, San Francisco: Music composition.
  • Maria Heim, Assistant Professor of Religion, Amherst College: Buddhist theories of intention.
  • Ian Hodder, Dunlevie Family Professor of Cultural and Social Anthropology, Stanford University: The emergence of settled villages in Anatolia and the Middle East.
  • Dorothy L. Hodgson, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director, Anthropology Graduate Program, Rutgers University: Transnational advocacy and the concept of "indigenous" among Maasai in Tanzania.
  • Mamie Holst, Artist, Fort Myers, Florida: Painting.
  • Eric Hongisto, Artist, Bozeman, Montana; Assistant Professor of Art, Montana State University: Installation art.
  • Fanny Howe, Poet and Writer, West Tisbury, Massachusetts; Richard L. Thomas Visiting Professor of Creative Writing, Kenyon College; Professor Emerita of English, University of California, San Diego: Essays on the relationship between conversion and rhetoric.
  • John Huehnergard, Professor of Semitic Philology, Harvard University: A historical grammar of biblical Hebrew.

I

  • Judith T. Irvine, Professor of Anthropology, University of Michigan: Ideologies of language in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Pico Iyer, Writer, Santa Barbara, California: Reflections on the fourteenth Dalai Lama.

J

K

  • Sabre Kais, Professor of Chemistry, Purdue University: Studies in finite-size scaling theory.
  • Woowon Kang, Associate Professor of Physics, University of Chicago: Studies in the physics of correlated electrons.
  • Theresa M. Kelley, Marjorie and Lorin Tiefenthaler Professor of English, University of Wisconsin–Madison: Botany and Romantic culture.
  • Yannis G. Kevrekidis, Professor of Chemical Engineering and the Program in Applied and Computational Mathematics, Princeton University: Equation-free studies of complex systems.
  • Adeeb Khalid, Associate Professor of History, Carleton College: The making of Soviet central Asia, 1917-1929.
  • Victoria Kirkham, Professor of Romance Languages, University of Pennsylvania: The marriage of Laura Battiferra and Bartolomeo Ammannati.
  • Claudia Koonz, Professor of History, Duke University: Ethnic panic and the headscarf controversies in Europe, 1945-2004.
  • Lisa Kron, Playwright and Actor, New York City: Play writing.
  • Arnold Krupat, Professor of Literature and Global Studies, Sarah Lawrence College: Studies in Native American literatures.

L

M

N

O

  • Dale A. Olsen, Distinguished Research Professor of Ethnomusicology, Florida State University: Popular music, memory politics, and willed amnesia in Vietnam.
  • William Olsen, Poet, Kalamazoo, Michigan; Professor of Creative Writing, Western Michigan University: Poetry.
  • Han Ong, Writer, New York City: Fiction.
  • Christine Osinski, Photographer, Ridgefield, Connecticut; Professor of Art, Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art: Photography.
  • Susan Ossman, Visiting Associate Professor of Anthropology, Rice University: Arab serial migrants in a global world.
  • Jonathan T. Overpeck, Director, Institute for the Study of Planet Earth and Professor of Geosciences, University of Arizona: Paleoclimatic perspectives for society and the future.

P

R

  • Donald J. Raleigh, Jay Richard Judson Distinguished Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Soviet baby boomers.
  • Spencer Reece, Poet, Juno Beach, Florida: Poetry.
  • Lynne Regan, Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry and Professor of Chemistry, Yale University: Studies of novel anti-cancer reagents.
  • Elaine Reichek, Artist, New York City: Conceptual art.
  • Bruce L. Rhoads, Professor of Geography, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign: Fluvial dynamics of river confluences.
  • Ruth Rogaski, Associate Professor of History, Vanderbilt University: Nature, science, and empire in Manchuria, 1700-2000.
  • Louis Rosen, Composer, Brooklyn, New York; Distinguished Lecturer in Music Theory, History, and Appreciation Studies, 92nd Street YM-YWHA School of Music, New York City: Music composition.

S

  • Gary R. Saxonhouse, Professor of Economics, University of Michigan: The evolution of labor standards in Japan.
  • Judith Schaechter, Artist, Philadelphia; Adjunct Professor of Art, University of the Arts: Stained-glass art.
  • Julia Scher, Video Artist, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Visiting Artist, Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art: Video installation art.
  • Philip Schultz, Poet, East Hampton, New York; Founding Director, The Writers Studio, New York City: Poetry.
  • Jim Shepard, Writer, Williamstown, Massachusetts; J. Leland Miller Professor of English, Williams College: Fiction.
  • Katherine Sherwood, Artist, Rodeo, California; Professor of Art Practice, University of California, Berkeley: Painting.
  • David Shields, Professor of English, University of Washington, Seattle: A meditation on the brute fact of human mortality.
  • Christopher Shinn, Playwright, New York City; Instructor in Play Writing, Actors Studio, New School University: Play writing.
  • Paul Sietsema, Artist, Los Angeles: Sculpture.
  • Shelly Silver, Video Artist, New York City; Member of the Adjunct Faculty, School of Visual Arts and Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art: Video.
  • Mark Slouka, Writer, New York City; Associate Professor of Creative Writing, Columbia University: Fiction.
  • D. Vance Smith, Associate Professor of English and Director, Program in Medieval Studies, Princeton University: The relation between language and death in Middle English literature.
  • Valerie Smith, Woodrow Wilson Professor of Literature and Director, Program in African American Studies, Princeton University: The civil-rights movement in cultural memory.
  • Christopher D. Sogge, Professor of Mathematics, Johns Hopkins University: Solutions of wave equations on Riemannian manifolds.
  • David Sorkin, Frances and Laurence Weinstein Professor of Jewish Studies and Director, Institute for Research in the Humanities, University of Wisconsin–Madison: Six faces of the religious Enlightenment, 1689-1789.
  • Natasha Staller, Associate Professor of Fine Arts, Amherst College: Goya's Black Paintings and the culture of the monstrous in Spain.
  • Glenn D. Starkman, Armington Professor, Professor of Physics, and Professor of Astronomy, Case Western Reserve University: The universe on the largest scales.
  • Ned Sublette, Musicologist, New Orleans; Tulane Rockefeller Humanities Fellow, Tulane University: Cuba and its music, 1952-2002.
  • Madhu Sudan, Fujitsu Professor of Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Algebraic methods in error-correction.
  • Thomas J. Sugrue, Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Professor of History and Sociology, University of Pennsylvania: The unfinished struggle for racial equality in the North.

T

  • Kimi Takesue, Film Maker, New York City: Film making.
  • Diana Taylor, Professor of Performance Studies and Spanish, New York University: Political spectatorship in the Americas.
  • Diana Thater, Artist, Los Angeles; Professor, Graduate Studies in Fine Art, Art Center College of Design: Installation art.
  • Margaret A. Tolbert, Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado Boulder: Studies of clouds on early Earth.
  • John C. Tully, Arthur T. Kemp Professor of Chemistry and Professor of Physics and Applied Physics, Yale University: Chemical dynamics at metal surfaces.
  • Peter Turchi, Writer, Asheville, North Carolina; Director, Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers: Writing as a way of seeing.

V

W

  • Meenakshi Wadhwa, Curator of Meteoritics, Field Museum, Chicago: Analysis of solar wind returned by the Genesis spacecraft.
  • Andrew Waggoner, Composer and Musician, New York City; Composer-in-Residence and Associate Professor, Setnor School of Music, Syracuse University: Music composition.
  • Eugene Y. Wang, Gardner Cowles Associate Professor of History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University: Ninth-century Chinese mandalas and reliquaries from the underground.
  • Lai-Sheng Wang, Professor of Physics, Washington State University: Studies in atomic clusters and multiply charged anions.
  • Bruce Western, Professor of Sociology, Princeton University: The growth and consequences of American inequality.
  • Martin J. Wiener, Mary Gibbs Jones Professor of History, Rice University: Violence, race, and authority in the British Empire.
  • Christopher Williams, Artist, Los Angeles; Adjunct Professor, Graduate Studies in Fine Art, Art Center College of Design: Installation art.[1]
  • Deborah Willis, Professor of Photography and Imaging and of Africana Studies, New York University: A cultural history of photographs of African-American women, 1900-1930.
  • Mark Wingate, Composer, Tallahassee, Florida; Assistant Professor of Composition and Director of Electroacoustic Music, Florida State University: Music composition.
  • William Wylie, Photographer, Charlottesville. Virginia; Assistant Professor of Art, University of Virginia: Photography.

X

  • J. M. (Jimmy) Xu, Kravis University Professor of Engineering and Physics, Brown University: The feasibility and mechanisms of all-silicon lasers.

Latin American and Caribbean Fellows

  • Gonzalo Moisés Aguilar, Assistant Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): The guerrillero and intellectual culture in Argentina and Brazil, 1967-1976.
  • Manlio Argueta, Writer, San Salvador; Director, National Library of El Salvador: Fiction.
  • Josep M. Barnadas, Senior Researcher, Center for Advanced Bolivian Studies, Cochabamba, Bolivia: The printed culture of Charcas, Bolivia, 1535-1825.
  • Cecilia Bouzat, Independent Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET); Professor of Pharmacology, National University of the South, Bahia Blanca: Studies in molecular pharmacology.
  • Andrés E. Carrasco, Professor, School of Medicine, University of Buenos Aires; Independent Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): Specification of the embryonic dorsal midline fates in Xenopus.
  • Gino Casassa, Senior Researcher, Center for Scientific Studies, Valdivia, Chile: Climate variability along a transect from West to East Antarctica.
  • Gerardo Ceballos, Professor and Head of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Laboratory, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM): Global patterns of mammalian extinction and endangerment.
  • Brian Connaughton, Research Professor, Metropolitan Autonomous University, Iztapalapa, Mexico City: Civil society, religiosity, and identity in 19th-century Mexico.
  • Jocy de Oliveira, Composer, Director, and Multi-Media Artist, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Music composition.
  • Lucía A. Golluscio, Associate Professor of Ethnolinguistics, University of Buenos Aires; Senior Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): The grammar and texts of the endangered Argentine indigenous language Vilela.
  • Todd Gulick, Managing Director and Executive Producer, The Callaloo Company, Chaguaramas, Trinidad and Tobago and Miami, Florida: Peter Minshall and the Carnival of Trinidad, 1974-2003.
  • Karen Hallberg, Independent Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET), Centro Atomico Bariloche (CNEA); Assistant Professor of Physics, Balseiro Institute, Bariloche, Argentina: Real-time simulations of nanoscopic systems.
  • Arturo Herrera, Installation Artist, Berlin, Germany: Installation art.
  • Jaime Luis Huenún, Editor, Mapuche Kimun de Temuco, Sociedad Periodistica Mapuche, Temuco, Chile: The cultural narratives of fifteen Mapuche elders.
  • Andrea Juan, Visual Artist, Buenos Aires; Professor of Art, National University of "Tres de Febrero," Buenos Aires: Visual art.
  • Lorenzo Lamattina, Principal Investigator, National Research Counncil of Argentina (CONICET); Professor of Plant Biology, National University of Mar del Plata: Studies of nitric oxide-mediated processes in plants.
  • Cristóbal Lehyt, Installation Artist, New York City: Installation art.
  • Florian Luca, Associate Professor of Mathematics, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM): Diophantine equations and analytic number theory.
  • Marisa Malvestitti, Associate Professor of Grammar and Sociolinguistics and Professor of Language and Literature, National University of La Pampa: The Mapuche texts in the Lehmann-Nitsche bequest.
  • Luisa Margolies, Medical Anthropologist, Caracas, Venezuela; Director, Ediciones Venezolanas de Antropología, Caracas: Missionaries, evangelism, and indigenous cultural change in Venezuela.
  • Martín Matalon, Composer, Paris, France: Music composition.
  • Daniel Mato, Professor, Program on Communication, Culture, and Social Transformation, Central University of Venezuela: The role of "think tanks" in the transnational production and dissemination of liberal ideas in Latin America, 1980-2005.
  • René Antonio Mayorga, Senior Researcher, Bolivian Center for Multi-Disciplinary Studies (CEBEM), La Paz; Craig M. Cogut Visiting Professor, Brown University: Weak states and institutional reforms in the Andes region.
  • Carlos Frederico Martins Menck, Professor of Microbiology, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, University of Sao Paulo: Studies of cell responses to DNA damage.
  • Dante Minniti, Associate Professor of Astronomy, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile: Stellar populations of nearby galaxies.
  • Pablo Andrés Neumeyer, Professor of Economics, Torcuato Di Tella University, Buenos Aires: Sovereign risk and business cycles.
  • Hugo Padeletti, Poet, Buenos Aires, Argentina: Poetry.
  • Wilfredo Prieto, Installation Artist, Valencia, Spain: Installation art.
  • Roberto Raschella, Writer and Translator, Buenos Aires, Argentina: Fiction.
  • Luis Alberto Romero, Professor of History, University of Buenos Aires; Principal Investigator, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): The Catholic Church and political culture in Buenos Aires, 1900-1955.
  • Raul R. Romero, Associate Professor and Director, Center for Andean Ethnomusicology, Greater National University of San Marcos: Nationalism in 20th-century Peruvian music.
  • Jorge Schvarzer, Research Director, Faculty of Economics, University of Buenos Aires: Entrepreneurial groups and political power in Argentina, 1955-2000.
  • Eliseo Subiela, Film Maker, Buenos Aires, Argentina: Film making.
  • Mauro M. Teixeira, Associate Professor of Biochemistry and Immunology, Institute of Biological Sciences, Federal University of Minas Gerais: The role of the intestinal microbiota in controlling inflammatory responses.
  • José Manuel Valenzuela Arce, Research Professor of Cultural Studies, College of the North Frontier, Chula Vista, California: Art, culture, and representations of the Mexican-U.S. frontier.
  • Rodolfo Darío Vázquez Cardozo, Professor of Law, Autonomous Technical Institute of Mexico, Mexico City: Theories, principles and judicial regulation in bioethics.
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References

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