Three UC Professors Awarded Prestigious Fellowships
The University of Cincinnatis McMicken College of Arts and Sciences distinguished itself as a leader in the field of research after three of its professors were each awarded $40,000 National Endowment for Humanities (NEH) fellowships.
UC History Professor Ann Twinam and Classics Professors Kathryn Gutzwiller and Brian Rose will use the grants to continue research during the 2004-2005 academic year.
Receiving the NEH is such an honor because its extremely competitive, Twinam said. Im working on a huge project that could take five or six years to complete. It was critical to get the year off for research.
Twinams project, entitled, Sexuality, Illegitimacy, and Family in the Hispanic World: 1476-1800, will systematically explore gender relations, sexual mores and illegitimacy from the late Middle Ages through the Enlightenment.
The project will act as a follow-up to her award-winning book, Public Lives, Private Secrets: Gender, Honor, Sexuality, and Illegitimacy in Colonial Spanish America.
Since 1998, Twinam has amassed a wealth of peninsular legal petitions and decrees during trips to Spain. The largely unexplored documents will form the core of her research. The proposed project will address three themes: the long-term change in Spanish patterns relating to sexual mores, illegitimacy and marriage practices; Spanish trends within Mediterranean, European, and American societies; and a trans-Atlantic contrast between empire and colony, the old world and the new.
Gutzwiller will also look to the past as the focus for her upcoming project entitled The Poetics of Anthology: An Edition and Commentary for the Epigrams of Meleager.
Specializing in the Hellenistic period of ancient Greek and Roman poetry, she will examine in detail the most important figure in the history of Hellenistic epigram, Meleager of Gadara. According to Guztwiller, epigrams were originally verse inscriptions placed on tombstones as dedications, but in the third century B.C., poets began to cultivate the form in a more literary manner. The project will more narrowly focus on content from her most recent book entitled Poetic Garlands: Hellenistic Epigrams in Context.
My project, a critical edition, translation and commentary for the epigrams of
Meleager, is designed as the first step toward remedying past neglect of this important poet, she explained. In addition, current interest in the phenomenon of being Greek under Rome has created a need for the type of edition/commentary that I am undertaking, in which a thorough reevaluation of the text is combined with a new focus on the cultural context of the poems.
Rose will use the NEH funding to continue his studies of 15-year excavations at the city of Troy. The project, The Archaeology of Troy in the Greek, Roman and Byzantine Periods, will compile all of the information obtained so far and provide the first reconstruction of life at Troy from around 1200 B.C. through 1300 A.D.
NEH has been especially good to the UC Classics Department our faculty members have received 14 NEH grants in the last decade, Rose said. Much of our department's success in classics and archaeology has been dependent on them.
Some of the highlights of his fieldwork include the discovery of a well-preserved, ancient sarcophagus, a cache of gold jewelry hidden for 2,500 years and a headline-grabbing statue of Roman Emperor Hadrian. His work also revealed the fact that Troy existed as a major city in the ancient world for much longer than previously believed.
The NEH grant will make it possible for me to finish my book on Greek and Roman Troy, which will contain a synthesis of the last 15 years of excavation there, he said. This is really a dream come true.
Related Stories
UC’s spring Visiting Writers Series promises robust, diverse...
December 20, 2024
Lovers of literature, poetry and the written word can look forward to a rich series of visiting writer presentations, offered through UC’s College of Arts and Sciences department of English, coming this spring.
Should voters have more say in Ohio's Legislature?
December 19, 2024
UC Professor David Niven talks to WVXU about gerrymandering in Ohio.
How tadpoles make the leap to frogs
December 18, 2024
In his biology lab, UC Professor Daniel Buchholz and his students are using a National Science Foundation grant to study the hormones that trigger metamorphosis in frogs.