Author Archive

Why Canceling Fulbright-Hays Matters

May 22, 2011

The first responses to the announcement that the Fulbright-Hays program is cancelled have come from “area studies” scholars who have benefited–or hoped to benefit–from the program. This is understandable, since American researchers who need to work abroad are the most directly affected. But all scholars–and US residents–have a stake in this decision.

According to a post on H-Asia, the Ohio State University is collecting statements from faculty that will be passed on through the University’s government affairs office. In private emails and on Facebook, established scholars and grad students have acknowledged the utility of the DDRA program, and lamented its sudden departure for this year. But so far I haven’t seen much public comment, beyond this post, and an eloquent post on China Beat, in which Maura Cunningham makes the point that we can ill afford to lose area studies specialists at this geopolitical moment.

“By not providing the funding necessary to support this year’s crop of applicants, the government is implying that such work isn’t important, that we can exist in a global community but don’t need to understand it.”

This year’s cancellation is devastating to the research plans of a particular cohort of graduate students. Cruel as it is, the loss of one year of research will not cripple a field. But if the program is suspended for several years, or indefinitely, then scholarship that requires specific language training and long in-country research will be restricted to private universities with endowments to support such research.

I trained at a public university, and benefited from the Fulbright-Hays DDRA program for a year of work split between South Africa and the Netherlands, a trajectory I could not have self-financed, and that would not have been possible only with the support of the African Studies Center at UCLA. My research—and more importantly, my teaching of hundreds of undergraduates a year at a public university—would not be possible without the foundation I received in a year of overseas research as a graduate student.

While it is unlikely we can affect the decision to suspend the Fulbright-Hays program for 2011, concerned scholars need to let decision-makers in Washington know that this funding is crucial for what we do now as teachers and researchers, for how we can educate graduate students, and how we can effectively teach undergrads—who deserve to learn about places outside the US from people with a deep first-hand understanding of other cultures. Without ongoing new research, the significant body of knowledge created from the rich history of Fulbright-Hays grants will soon be out of date, and we will have no way to know it.

Urge your university to make a response. Contact your campus Fulbright-Hays coordinator and ask him or her to object (and to contact this year’s applicants so they don’t hear this news through the grapevine first). Write to your congressional representative and senators, letting them know there is a constituency for informed study and teaching about the world beyond America’s shores.

The global financial crisis is real, and its consequences grave. It should not, however, be reason for the US government to retreat from global engagement.

Narratives, World History, and the Books that Keep Us Coming Back for More

July 2, 2010

You know you’re in the right line of work when going to an academic conference feels like a being a kid in a candy store. What fun: smart, well-read people gathered together for two and a half days to share their questions, reflections, and reading suggestions. And publishers who bring some of those books along, so we can browse, caress, and take some home at a discount! (Of course it helps a lot when the conference is not tied to the academic job market.)

ErnestTurpinCandy

Image from Wikimedia Commons

I’ve just come home from the World History Association annual meeting—this time working on a suggestion for keeping some of the engaged, informal appeal of a summertime conference going well after the last of the book exhibit has been taken down. (Thanks to all the publishers who came—and shipped many of their wares. I think this was the most robust book exhibit yet at the WHA.) (more…)

Playing with new technologies

April 10, 2010

There’s some small irony in the fact that I bought a new I-Pad on the same day that the AHA sent out a survey about technology adoption in research and teaching. One of the underlying themes of the survey was the issue of early adoption: at what point do historians climb on a technology band wagon?

Will this change how historians research or communicate? Until we play with it, we'll never know

It’s telling that there weren’t any questions in the survey that directly addressed technology innovation: the survey didn’t ask what  AHA members are doing to try to drive the bus. Of course there’s space in the comments section for individual users to address that issue, but the AHA didn’t think to actively solicit that information. (more…)

research AND writing | method AND narrative

February 4, 2010

It’s no particular anniversary; I just got curious to look back at the HCE posts since we launched the blog last November. No great surprise: elements of “digital humanities” feature prominently. But “digital humanities” is a pretty big umbrella and in this case it occludes more than it describes. Experiments with technology permeate everything we do as readers, writers, teachers, scholars.

The technology changes rapidly, so we’re all figuring this out together, finding new tools, working out how to use them, and when. For a historian, these changes might mean access to archival sources without traveling, as the result of many digitization projects; or access to information that is searchable and sortable as data; or new ways of collaborating; or new ways of disseminating our finished work. (These changes also mean alternative ways to inform, provoke and assess our students, an arena that is certainly being explored widely in the academy, but hasn’t yet received attention from the HCE collective.)

As dramatic as these changes in research process and communication/distribution are, I wonder about how fundamentally technology is changing the discipline of history, and whether or not we want it to. (more…)

Susan Ferber’s Publishing Tips

January 18, 2010

As if writing a dissertation didn’t produce challenges enough of its own, before you’re done people will start to ask questions about your intentions to publish the work as a book. Graduate students at UC Irvine were fortunate to have Susan Ferber, the New-York based history editor at Oxford University Press offer a generous and demystifying introduction to the process of scholarly publishing.

Ms. Ferber’s straightforward and humorous approach kept her audience in their seats; her willingness to entertain questions meant the event exceeded its scheduled  time. In an academic landscape with ever increasing demands on our time, the practical mechanics of publishing too often are overlooked. But even with late afternoon Southern California traffic looming, a lively conversation kept people engaged. (more…)


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