Gerard Aching, Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese and Director of Graduate Studies, New York University: Black socialist thought and literature in the Caribbean, 1925–1945.
Emily Apter, Professor of French and Comparative Literature, New York University: The political and cultural significance of translation.
Judith F. Baca, artist, Venice, California; Professor of World Arts and Culture, Cesar Chavez Center, University of California, Los Angeles; Founding Artistic Director, Social and Public Art Resource Center (SPARC), Venice: Visual art.
Zainab Bahrani, Edith Porada Associate Professor of Art History and Archaeology, Columbia University: The body and violence in Assyrian art.
April Bernard, poet, New Haven, Connecticut; Professor of Literature and Member of the MFA Core Faculty, Bennington College: Poetry.
David A. Bradt, Member of the Faculty, Center for International Emergency, Disaster & Refugee Studies, Johns Hopkins University; Member of the Faculty of Emergency Medicine, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Victoria, Australia: The ethnographic study of the Badui tribe of Java.
Nicole Cattell, Film Maker, New York City; Director and producer, Swim Pictures and El Sueño Productions, New York City: Film making.
Siu-Wai Chan, Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Columbia University: New methods of preparing grain-boundary junctions of high temperature superconductors.
Jeffrey A. Cina, Professor of Chemistry and Member, Oregon Center for Optics, University of Oregon: Studies in ultrafast electronic energy transfer.
Michel C. Delfour, Professor of Mathematics and Statistics, Center of Mathematics Research, University of Montreal: Intrinsic theory of thin and asymptotic shells.
Devin DeWeese, Associate Professor of Central Eurasian Studies and director, Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies, Indiana University Bloomington: A history of the Yasavi Sufi tradition of Central Asia.
Heather Dubrow, Tighe-Evans Professor and John Bascom Professor of English, University of Wisconsin–Madison: The lyric in early modern England.
Paul N. Edwards, Associate Professor of History and Politics of Technology and director, Science, Technology & Society Program, University of Michigan: The technopolitics of information infrastructure in South Africa.
Martin B. Einhorn, Professor of Physics, University of Michigan: Quantum field theory in curved spacetime.
György Gergely, Professor and Department Head of Developmental Research, Institute for Psychological Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest: The development of understanding other minds and intentionality in infancy.
Joseph Michael Hunt, Bank Advisor on Health, Nutrition, and Early Childhood Development, Asian Development Bank, Manila, Philippines: Nutrition security of poor women and children in Asia.
Susan C. Karant-Nunn, Professor of History and director, Division of Late Medieval and Reformation Studies, University of Arizona: The molding of religious fervor in the German reformations.
David Scott Kastan, Old Dominion Foundation Professor in the Humanities, Columbia University: Interactions between authors and publishers in early modern England.
Sean Dorrance Kelly, assistant professor of philosophy, assistant professor in Neuroscience Program, and Jonathan Edwards Bicentennial Preceptor, Princeton University: Phenomenology, consciousness, and embodiment.
Dane Kennedy, Elmer Louis Kayser Professor of History and International Affairs, George Washington University: Richard Burton and the Victorian world of difference.
Justin Kimball, photographer, Florence, Massachusetts; Visiting Assistant Professor of Art and Photography, Amherst College: Photography.
Harold Meltzer, composer, New York City; Artistic Director, Sequitur Music Ensemble, New York City: Music composition.
Christopher L. Miller, Frederick Clifford Ford Professor of African American Studies and French, Yale University: Literatures and cultures of the French-Atlantic slave trade.
Jennifer Nelson, artist, Santa Monica, California; Artist-in-Residence, Siftung Laurenz Haus, Basel Switzerland: Visual art.
David Nicholas, Kathryn and Calhoun Lemon Professor of History, Clemson University: The regional identity of Germanic Europe, 1270–1500.
Jan Nijman, Professor of Geography and Regional Studies, University of Miami: Miami as a laboratory of urban living.
Isidore Okpewho, Professor of Africana Studies, English, and Comparative Literature, Binghamton University, State University of New York: African mythology in the new world.
Marie Ponsot, poet, New York City; Professor Emerita of English, Queens College, City University of New York: Poetry.
Yopie Prins, Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Michigan: Translations of Greek tragedy by Victorian women.
Robert N. Proctor, Walter L. and Helen Ferree Professor of the History of Science and co-Director, Science, Medicine and Technology in Culture Initiative, Pennsylvania State University: Acheulean handaxes and human origins.
Matthew Restall, Associate Professor of Latin American History, Anthropology, and Women's Studies, Pennsylvania State University: Slavery, society, and African-Mayan relations in colonial Yucatán.
Sophiline Cheam Shapiro, Choreographer, Long Beach, California; Artistic Director and Director of Programs, Khmer Arts Academy, Long Beach: Choreography.
Alvin Singleton, composer, Atlanta, Georgia: Music composition.
Jimmy Slyde, Choreographer and Dancer, Hanson, Massachusetts: Choreography.
Lynn Staley, Harrington and Shirley Drake Professor of the Humanities in the Department of English, Colgate University: Chaucer, Richard II, and the languages of power in 14th-century England.
David Levi Strauss, Writer; High Falls, New York; Visiting Critic, Center for Curatorial Studies and The Graduate School of the Arts, Bard College: Photography and belief.
Edward J. Sullivan, Professor of Fine Arts, New York University: The language of objects in Latin America.
Thomas A. Woolsey, Professor of Experimental Neurosurgery and George H. and Ethel R. Bishop Scholar in Neurological Surgery, of Experimental Neurology and George H. and Ethel R. Bishop Scholar in Neurology, of Biomedical Engineering, of Anatomy and Neurobiology, and of Physiology, Washington University School of Medicine: Knowledge of the nervous system derived from the whisker-barrel system.
Robert Wuthnow, Gerhard R. Andlinger '52 Professor of Sociology, Princeton University: America's historic self-identity and the challenges of religious and cultural pluralism.
Merle Collins, Professor of Comparative Literature and English, University of Maryland at College Park: Slavery and emancipation in Grenada and Carriacou.
Ana Belén Elgoyhen, Adjunct Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): Nicotinic receptors of cochlear hair cells.
Célia Regina DaSilva García, Professor of Physiology, University of São Paulo, Brazil: Molecular mechanisms for melatonin modulation of the cell cycle of the malaria parasite.
Germán Leopoldo García, Director of Education, Descartes Foundation, Buenos Aires, Argentina: The presence of psychiatry in Argentine cultural debates.
Antonio García de León, Research Professor, National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), Morelos, Mexico: Colonial Veracruz and its Sotavento Coast, 1519–1821.
Daniel García Helder, poet, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Coordinator, House of Poetry of Buenos Aires: Poetry.
Adrián Gorelik, Professor of Urban Cultural History, National University of Quilmes, Buenos Aires: The cycle of invention and critique of the "Latin American City".
Silvina Gvirtz, director, School of Education, University of San Andrés, Buenos Aires; Associate Research Professor, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): A comparison of models of school governance in Argentina, Brazil, and Nicaragua.
Carlos Huneeus, Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile: Patricio Aylwin and the reestablishment of democracy in Chile.
Ana Lía Kornblit, Principal Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET); Professor of Social Psychology, University of Buenos Aires: Attitudes, beliefs, and risky sexual behaviors of Buenos Aires youths.
Jorge Mario Liderman, composer, Richmond, California; Professor of Music, University of California, Berkeley: Music composition.
Gerardo Litvak, Choreographer, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Contemporary Dance Instructor, Ricardo Rojas Cultural Center, University of Buenos Aires: Choreography.
Luis Marone, Scientific Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina, (CONICET); Free Professor, National University of Cuyo: Ecology and epistemology.
Ursula M. Molter, Associate Professor of Mathematics, University of Buenos Aires; Independent Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): Harmonic analysis and applications.
Julio F. Navarro, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, University of Victoria, Canada: The small scale structure of cold dark matter.
María Novaro, Film Maker, Mexico City; Instructor in Film, Center for Cinematography Training, National Center for the Arts, Mexico City: Film making.
Horacio Armando Paglione, Research Professor, University of Buenos Aires; Director, Center for Documentation and Research of the Leftist Culture in Argentina (CiDInCI): Biographical dictionary of the Argentine left.
Alexandre A. Peixoto, Associate Researcher, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro: Molecular analysis of clock genes in disease vectors.
Adriana Piscitelli, Senior Researcher and Associate Coordinator and professor, Center for Gender Studies, State University of Campinas, Brazil: Brazilian women and former sex tourists in Europe.
Gustavo Gabriel Politis, Principal Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET); Professor of Archaeology, National University of La Plata and National University of the Center of the Province of Buenos Aires: Archaeological research on hunter-gatherer societies of South America.
Esteban Roulet, Independent Researcher, National Research Council of Argentina (CONICET): The origin and nature of the highest energy cosmic rays.
Luis Enrique Sam Colop, Writer and lawyer, Guatemala City: A Spanish translation of Popol Wuj.
Lygia Sigaud, Professor of Social Anthropology, National Museum, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro: The social origins of inequality in agrarian reform settlements of Northeastern Brazil.
Alberto Ure, Professor of Acting, Buenos Aires: Essays on Argentine theater.
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