User:HC401RI/sandbox/URI Center for the Humanities

=The URI Center for the Humanities=

The University of Rhode Island's Center for the Humanities was established by Faculty Senate legislation in 1994 and is designed to foster intellectual exchange and independent inquiry, analysis, and interpretation of the Humanities in research, teaching, and learning. It is affiliated with the University of Rhode Island's College of Arts and Sciences, the Dean of which is Winifred Brownell. The Center's activities include a speaker series, research grants for faculty and graduate students, and an annual Humanities Festival. The center also showcases the work of faculty who are teaching and doing research in the Humanities across the University.

=The Board=

Peter Covino is an Associate Professor of Creative Writing, Avant-garde and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics; Italian American, Translation, and Ethnic Studies. Naomi Mandel is a Professor of English and Comparative Literature in the University of Rhode Island English Department. Her current work focuses on the relationship between violence, reality, and truth in contemporary fiction.

Karen Markin is the director of the University of Rhode Island's Office of Research Development.

Annu Palakunnathu Matthew is currently the director of the Center for the Humanities. She is a Professor of Art (Photography) in the University of Rhode Island's Department of Art and Art History. Matthew’s photo-based work draws for her experience of having lived between cultures and about being an immigrant in the USA.

Ian Reyes is an Associate Professor of Communication Studies for the Harrington School of Communication and Media at URI

Catherine Sama is a Professor of Italian in the University of Rhode Island's Department of Modern and Classical Languages and Literature. She specializes in Italian dramatic cinema from Neorealism to the present; genocide in Italian literature & film; Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron; and Venetian women writers, including Veronica Franco (1546-91), Moderata Fonte (1555-92), Luisa Bergalli Gozzi (1703-79) and Elisabetta Caminer Turra (1751-96).

Evelyn Sterne is an Associate Professor of History and director of Graduate Studies for the History Department at the University of Rhode Island.

Alan Verskin is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Rhode Island.

=Previous Keynotes= Keynotes of CFH sponsored events include historian Dr. Peniel Joseph of Tufts University in 2015, author and historian Dr. Denise Spellberg in 2014, Jim Leach, chairman for the National Endowment for the Humanities, in 2013.

=Notable Award Winners= The URI Center for the Humanies has granted over 150 awards to support the research and publication of scholarship in the Humanities. Notable recipients include:


 * Annu Palakunnathu Matthew
 * Galen Johnson
 * Andrea Rusnock
 * Mary Cappello
 * Nicolai N. Petro

=Awards=

Faculty Research Grant
Faculty Research Grants are designed "to assist faculty and lectures in the humanities who expect to incur specific research costs, such as costs associated with travel to archives, the purchase of technology, payment for translations, and obtaining documents for study." Proposals for these grants are accepted twice each academic year: once in the Fall and once in the Spring. The primary criteria by which the executive board evaluates the proposals include: "The significance of the project to knowledge in the applicant's specific field, the significance of the project to knowledge of the humanities in general, the quality of the project, including its originality, independence, initiative, and clarity, and the feasibility of the proposal and the likelihood of timely completion."

Faculty Subvention Grant
The Faculty Subvention Grant is meant "to assist in the publication and exhibition of faculty research in the Humanities who are working with a scholarly press, an article in a peer reviewed journal or exhibitor that requires the author to share in the cost of translation, publication, or exhibition. Subvention grants are awarded for amounts up to a maximum of $1,000 per faculty member per project to assist with such costs as obtaining permissions, reproducing photographs, indexing books, and framing artwork." Proposals for these grants are accepted twice each academic year: once in the Fall and once in the Spring. The primary criteria by which the executive board evaluates the proposals include: "The significance of the publication to knowledge in the specific field; the significance of the publication to knowledge of the humanities in general; the quality of the publication, including its originality, independence, and clarity."

Visiting Scholar Grant
Visiting Scholar Grants are designed to encourage and support Humanities scholars to speak at the University of Rhode Island campus. All of the events sponsored by this grant are free and open to the public, and preference is given to events which engage the student body by inviting one or more classes. Winners are awarded up $500. The board has a rolling admissions for this grant throughout the academic year. The criteria upon which they base their decision to fund the visit of a particular scholar include: "the value of the event for enhancing the humanities at URI and its surrounding community, the number of students/courses involved with the event, the importance of the visiting scholar to course content (if applicable),the availability of funding, the clarity of the proposal."

Graduate Research Grants
Graduate Research Grants are designed to the support students working toward the completion of a Master's Theses or Doctoral Dissertation within the traditional Humanities disciplines. Grants may also be awarded to students studying outside the traditional Humanities if their research is clearly grounded in the Humanities. Winners are awarded up to $1000. Applicants are accepted twice an academic year, once during the Spring, and once during the Fall. The primary criteria by which the board evaluates applications include: "the significance of the project to knowledge in the specific field, the significance of the project to knowledge of the humanities in general, the quality of the project, including its originality, independence, initiative, and clarity, the feasibility of the proposal and the likelihood of timely completion of the project."

Student Excellence Awards
As part of the annual Humanities Festival each Spring, the Center for Humanities acknowledges two students who have demonstrated excellence in Humanities related study throughout their academic careers at the University of Rhode Island. Students are nominated by faculty members who recognize the high quality of the student’s academic rigor and passion for the Humanities. Such excellence can be interpreted in terms of high grade point average in Humanities courses, an exceptional research or artistic prevention, the student’s professional promise in a Humanities related career, or any combination thereof. Winners are awarded $500.