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List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1999. ==U.S. and Canadian Fellows== * Chris Aiken, Choreographer and Dancer, Minneapolis; Teaching Specialist in Theatre Arts and Dance, University of Minnesota: Choreography. * Jonathan Ames, Writer, New York City: Fiction. * Barbara Watson Andaya, Professor of Asian Studies, University of Hawaii: A gendered history of early modern Southeast Asia. * C. Edson Armi, Professor of History of Art, University of California, Santa Barbara: The first Romanesque architecture. * Jon Robin Baitz, Playwright, New York City; Co-Director, Dramatic Writing Program, Juilliard School: Play writing. * Peter Balakian, Professor of English, Colgate University: A family memoir. * Lillian Ball, Artist, New York City: Visual art. * Mary C. Beckerle, Professor of Biology, University of Utah: The molecular mechanism of cell movement. * Robin Behn, Poet, Tuscaloosa, Alabama; Associate Professor of English, University of Alabama: Poetry. * Andrea Belag, Artist, New York City; Instructor in Drawing, School of Visual Arts: Painting. * David N. Beratan, Professor of Chemistry, University of Pittsburgh: Energy transduction schemes in biology. * Janet Catherine Berlo, Susan B. Anthony Professor of Gender and Women's Studies and Professor of Art History, University of Rochester: Graphic arts of the 19th-century Plains Indians. * Derek Bermel, Composer, Brooklyn, New York: Music composition. * Ben S. Bernanke, Howard Harrison and Gabrielle Snyder Beck Professor of Economics and Public Affairs, Princeton University: Economic policy and the Great Depression. * David Biale, Koret Professor of Jewish History and Director, Richard S. Dinner Center for Jewish Studies, Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, California: Blood as a symbol and a substance in Western culture. * Roger Bilham, Professor of Geological Sciences and Associate Director, Cooperative Institute for Research in the Environmental Sciences(CIRES), University of Colorado, Boulder: Global urbanization and seismic risk. * Sheila S. Blair, Independent Scholar, Richmond, New Hampshire: A survey of Islamic calligraphy. * Caroline H. Bledsoe, Professor of Anthropology, Northwestern University: Body contingency and linearity in the history of Western obstetrics. * Andrea Blum, Artist, New York City; Associate Professor of Art, Hunter College, City University of New York: Sculpture and public art. * David Bottoms, Poet, Marietta, Georgia; Professor of English, Georgia State University: Poetry. * Rogers Brubaker, Professor of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles: Ethnicity and nationalism in a Transylvanian town. * Stephen G. Brush, Distinguished University Professor of the History of Science, University of Maryland, College Park: A comparative study of theory evaluation in different sciences. * Steven M. Burke, Composer, Hopewell Junction, New York: Music composition. * Jacqueline Carey, Writer, Missoula, Montana: Fiction. * Susan Carey, Professor of Psychology, New York University: The origin of concepts. * George Chaconas, Professor of Biochemistry and MRC Distinguished Scientist, University of Western Ontario: Molecular biological studies of the Lyme disease spirochete. * Gordon H. Chang, Associate Professor of History, Stanford University: America's relationship with Asia. * Jay Clayton, Professor of English and Director of Graduate Studies, Vanderbilt University: Contemporary culture and the 19th-century heritage. * Daniel A. Cohen, Associate Professor of History, Florida International University: Rebecca Reed and the burning of the Charlestown convent. * Bernard Cooper, Writer, Los Angeles; Member of the Core Faculty in Fiction and Creative Non-Fiction, Antioch University: A memoir. * Leda Cosmides, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara: Reason and the evolution of the imagination (in collaboration with John Tooby). * James Cracraft, Professor of History and University Scholar, University of Illinois at Chicago: The Petrine revolution in Russian culture. * Blondell Cummings, Choreographer and Performer, New York City: Choreography. * Andrew Cyrille, Composer, Montclair, New Jersey; Member of the Faculty in Music, New School for Social Research: Music composition. * Frederick T. Davies, Jr., Professor of Horticulture and of Molecular and Environmental Plant Sciences, Texas A&M University: Mycorrhizal fungi as biofertilizers in Peruvian potato farming systems. * Dick Davis, Professor of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, The Ohio State University: Translation and literary hybridity. * Robert C. Davis, Associate Professor of History, The Ohio State University: Italian responses to enslavement by Barbary Coast corsairs, 1500-1800. * Victoria de Grazia, Professor of History, Columbia University: American market culture in 20th-century Europe. * Percy Alec Deift, Professor of Mathematics, Courant Institute, New York University: Riemann-Hilbert problems in pure and applied mathematics. * Paul DeMarinis, Artist, San Francisco; Lecturer in Sound Art, San Francisco Art Institute: Sound installation. * Junot Díaz, Writer, New York City; Assistant Professor of Creative Writing, Syracuse University: Fiction. * Patsy S. Dickinson, Professor of Biology, Bowdoin College: Long-term control of neural networks and neuronal properties. * Tamar Diesendruck, Composer, Somerville, Massachusetts; Fellow, Bunting Institute, Radcliffe College: Music composition. * Marita Dingus, Artist, Auburn, Washington: Sculpture. * Emmanuel Dongala, Writer, Great Barrington, Massachusetts; Member of the Faculty in Literature and Chemistry, Simon's Rock College of Bard College: Fiction. * Christopher B. Donnan, Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles: Ceramic portraits of ancient Peru. * Linda Dowling, Independent Scholar, Princeton, New Jersey: Charles Eliot Norton and the art of civil life. * Laura Lee Downs, Associate Professor of History, University of Michigan: French children's summer camps, 1880-1960. * Ellen Carol DuBois, Professor of History, University of California, Los Angeles: Women's enfranchisement worldwide. * Alessandro Duranti, Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles: Walter Capps' campaign for the United States Congress. * Barry Eichengreen, John L. Simpson Professor of Economics and Professor of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley: The European economy since 1945. * G. Barney Ellison, Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder: Atmospheric processing of organic aerosols. * Nader Engheta, Professor of Electrical Engineering, University of Pennsylvania: Fractional paradigm of classical electrodynamics. * Will Eno, Playwright, Brooklyn, New York: Play writing. * Eve Ensler, Playwright, New York City: Play writing. * Kathleen M. Erndle, Associate Professor of Religion, Florida State University: Women, goddess possession, and power in Kangra Hinduism. * Jason Eskenazi, Photographer, Bayside, New York: Photography. * Andrew G. Ewing, Professor of Chemistry, J. Lloyd Huck Professor in Natural Sciences, and Adjunct Professor of Neuroscience and Anatomy, Pennsylvania State University: Single-cell membrane structure following exocytosis. * Carole Fabricant, Professor of English, University of California, Riverside: Anglo-Irish representations of colonial Ireland. * B. H. Fairchild, Poet, Claremont, California; Professor of English, California State University, San Bernardino: Poetry. * Aaron L. Fogelson, Professor of Mathematics, University of Utah: The processes of platelet aggregation and coagulation. * John Foran, Professor of Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara: The origins of Third World social revolutions. * David Frick, Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of California, Berkeley: Peoples, confessions, and languages in 17th-century Vilnius. * Peter Fritzsche, Professor of History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: Nostalgia and memory. * Kit Galloway, Video Artist, Santa Monica, California; Co-Director, Electronic Cafe International, Santa Monica: Video (in collaboration with Sherrie Rabinowitz). * Andrew Garrison, Film Maker, Louisville, Kentucky; Visiting Lecturer in Film, University of Texas at Austin: Film making. * Daniel Gilbert, Professor of Psychology, Harvard University: The psychology of affective forecasting. * Scott F. Gilbert, Professor of Biology, Swarthmore College: The development and evolution of turtle shells. * Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore, Associate Professor of History, Yale University: Americans and race from World War I to the Brown decision. * Warren Ginsberg, Professor of English, University at Albany, State University of New York: Chaucer's Italian tradition. * Robb W. Glenny, Associate Professor of Medicine and of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington School of Medicine: Efficient pulmonary gas exchange. * Lydia Goehr, Professor of Philosophy, Columbia University: The concept of musicality in modernist opera. * David Goldes, Photographer, Minneapolis; Professor of Media Arts, Minneapolis College of Art and Design: Photography. * Cameron Gordon, Sid W. Richardson Foundation Regents Professor of Mathematics, University of Texas at Austin: Studies in three-dimensional manifolds. * Kenneth R. Graves, Photographer, State College, Pennsylvania; Professor of Art, Pennsylvania State University: Photography. * James E. Haber, Professor of Biology, Brandeis University: The mechanisms of recombination and DNA repair. * Matt Harle, Artist, Brooklyn, New York: Sculpture. * Neil Harris, Preston and Sterling Morton Professor of History, University of Chicago: A history of the American urban newspaper building. * Jeffrey W. Harrison, Poet, Andover, Massachusetts; Roger Murray Writer-in-Residence, Phillips Academy, Andover: Poetry. * Regina Harrison, Professor of Comparative Literature and Spanish and Director, Comparative Literature Program, University of Maryland, College Park: Cultural translation in colonial Spanish-Quechua literature. * Kathryn Hellerstein, Lecturer in Yiddish Language and Literature, University of Pennsylvania: Women poets in Yiddish. * Paul Hendrickson, Staff Writer, The Washington Post; Visiting Lecturer in English, University of Pennsylvania: The legacy of racism in Mississippi sheriffs' families. * Michael Herzfeld, Professor of Anthropology, Harvard University: Past and present in modern Rome. * Julia Heyward, Multi-media Artist, New York City; Visiting Instructor in Video Production, Pratt Institute: Multi-media art. * Tin-Lun Ho, Professor of Physics, The Ohio State University: The new physics of quantum gases of alkali atoms. * Robert Hooper, Artist, Kildeer, Illinois: Painting. * Jean E. Howard, Professor of English and Director, Institute for Research on Women and Gender, Columbia University: The social role of the London commercial theater in the early 17th century. * Terence T. L. Hwa, Associate Professor of Physics, University of California, San Diego: Statistical mechanics of biopolymer association. * Tina L. Ingraham, Artist, Brunswick, Maine: Painting. * Mikhail Iossel, Writer, Schenectady, New York; Writer-in-Residence, Union College: Fiction. * Robert Grant Irving, Independent Scholar, West Hartford, Connecticut; Associate Fellow, Berkeley College, Yale University: A life of Sir Herbert Baker, architect. * Peter Iverson, Professor of History, Arizona State University: A history of the Navajos. * David Jablonski, Professor of Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago: A synthetic study of macroevolution. * Ron Jenkins, Professor of Performing Arts, Emerson College: The theatrical artistry of Dario Fo. * Ha Jin, Writer, Lawrenceville, Georgia; Associate Professor of English, Emory University: Fiction. * Caroline A. Jones, Associate Professor of Art History, Boston University: Clement Greenberg and American art. * William E. Jones, Film Maker, Los Angeles; Member of the Faculty, California Institute of the Arts: Film making. * Shirley Kaneda, Artist, New York City: Painting. * Leo Katz, Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School: The perverse logic of law and morality. * Carol Keller, Artist, Boston, Massachusetts; Assistant Professor of Art, Boston University: Visual art. * Jeffrey Knapp, Associate Professor of English, University of California, Berkeley: Church, nation, and theater in Renaissance England. * Paul Koonce, Composer, Princeton, New Jersey; Assistant Professor of Music, Princeton University: Music composition. * Carol Lansing, Professor of History, University of California, Santa Barbara: The popolo minuto in medieval Bologna. * Liz Larner, Artist, Los Angeles; Member of the MFA Faculty, Art Center College of Design, Pasadena: Sculpture. * James M. Lattimer, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, State University of New York at Stony Brook: The equation of state and neutrino opacities in dense matter. * Tanya Leullieux (La Tania), Choreographer, Willits, California; Artistic Director, Choreographer, and Dancer, La Tania Flamenco Music and Dance: Choreography. * Yanguang Li, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Missouri; American Mathematical Society Centennial Fellow, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton: Chaos in partial differential equations. * Ken Lum, Artist, Vancouver, Canada; Professor of Fine Arts, University of British Columbia: Visual art. * Joseph H. Lynch, Professor of History, The Ohio State University: Deathbed conversion to the monastic life, 850-1250. * Sabine G. MacCormack, Mary Ann and Charles R. Walgreen, Jr., Professor for the Study of Human Understanding, Professor of Classical Studies, and Professor of History, University of Michigan: Historical writing in Spain and Peru, 1500-1650. * Ivan G. Marcus, Frederick P. Rose Professor of Jewish History, Professor of History, and of Religious Studies, Yale University: The relationship of medieval Jews and Christians. * Ingram Marshall, Composer, Hamden, Connecticut: Music composition. * Emily Martin, Professor of Anthropology, Princeton University: A cultural analysis of mental terrain in the United States. * Lisa L. Martin, Professor of Government, Harvard University: Institutional effects on state behavior. * John Mason, Director, Yoruba Theological Archministry, Brooklyn, New York: Memorial wall-paintings for misspent inner city youth. * Sara F. Matthews Grieco, Professor of History and Coordinator, Women's and Gender Studies, Syracuse University in Florence, Italy: Printed pictures and the construction of identity in Italy, 1450-1650. * Peter I. Mészáros, Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Pennsylvania State University: Gamma-ray bursts and their afterglows. * Linne R. Mooney, Associate Professor of English, University of Maine: Professional scribes in medieval England. * Ketan Mulmuley, Professor of Computer Science, University of Chicago: Studies in geometric complexity theory. * Robert S. Nelson, Professor of Art History, University of Chicago: Hagia Sophia as medieval church and modern monument. * Richard G. Newhauser, Professor of English and Medieval Studies, Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas: The sin of avarice in medieval and Renaissance thought. * William Royall Newman, Professor of History and Philosophy of Science, Indiana University: Daniel Sennert and early modern matter-theory. * Josip Novakovich, Writer, Cincinnati, Ohio; Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature, University of Cincinnati: Fiction. * Stephen Nowicki, Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Associate Professor of Zoology, Duke University: Nutrition and song-learning in birds. * Geoffrey O'Brien, Writer, New York City; Editor-in-Chief, Library of America, New York City: Popular music in 20th-century American life. * Alex O'Neal, Artist, Brooklyn, New York: Painting. * Steve Orlen, Poet, Tucson, Arizona; Professor of English, University of Arizona; Member of the Faculty, Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers: Poetry. * Katharine Park, Samuel Zemurray, Jr., and Doris Zemurray Stone Radcliffe Professor of the History of Science and Women's Studies, Harvard University: The early history of human dissection. * Robert ParkeHarrison, Photographer, Worcester, Massachusetts; Assistant Professor of Art, College of the Holy Cross: Photography. * Pat Passlof, Artist, New York City; Professor of Art, College of Staten Island, City University of New York: Painting. * Leighton Pierce, Film Maker, Iowa City; Professor of Film and Video Production, University of Iowa: Film making. * Claudia Roth Pierpont, Writer, New York City; Contributor, The New Yorker: A biography of Lincoln Kirstein. * David J. Pine, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Professor of Materials, University of California, Santa Barbara: The dynamics of mesoscopic glassy materials. * Russell Pinkston, Composer, Austin, Texas; Associate Professor of Composition and Director, Electronic Music Studios, University of Texas at Austin: Music composition. * Melissa Ann Pinney, Photographer, Evanston, Illinois; Adjunct Instructor in Photography, Columbia College Chicago: Photography. * Robert A. Pollak, Hernreich Distinguished Professor of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences and the John M. Olin School of Business, Washington University in St. Louis: Family bargaining. * Sherrie Rabinowitz, Video Artist, Santa Monica, California; Co-Director, Electronic Cafe International, Santa Monica: Video (in collaboration with Kit Galloway). * Peter Railton, Professor of Philosophy, University of Michigan: Objectivity and value. * Archie Rand, Artist, Brooklyn, New York; Professor of Visual Arts and Director of Painting and Drawing, Columbia University: Painting. * Susan Rethorst, Choreographer, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Instructor in Choreography, Amsterdam School of the Arts: Choreography. * Michael Riordan, Assistant to the Director, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, California; Adjunct Professor of Physics, University of California, Santa Cruz: The rise and fall of the Superconducting Super Collider. * Tyson R. Roberts, Research Associate, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute(STRI), Panama, and Biodiversity Research and Training Program(BRTP), National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, Bangkok, Thailand: Freshwater fishes of tropical Asia. * Hanneline G. Rogeberg, Artist, Hoboken, New Jersey; Assistant Professor of Painting, Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University: Painting. * Peter A. Rogerson, Professor of Geography, University at Buffalo, State University of New York: Statistical methods for the surveillance of geographic patterns. * Kurt Rohde, Composer, San Francisco; Artistic Director, Chamber Music Partnership, San Francisco: Music composition. * Pam Ronald, Associate Professor of Plant Pathology, University of California, Davis: Bacterial factors affecting plant host signal transduction. * Kristin Ross, Professor of Comparative Literature, New York University: French cultural memory and the May 1968 upheavals. * Ira Sadoff, Poet, Hallowell, Maine; Dana Professor of Poetry, Colby College: Poetry. * Roberto H. Schonmann, Professor of Mathematics, University of California, Los Angeles: Percolation and related processes on graphs. * Seth Schwartz, Associate Professor of History, Jewish Theological Seminary: Imperialism and Jewish society, 200 BCE - 634 CE. * Carol Shields, Writer, Winnipeg, Canada; Chancellor, University of Winnipeg; Professor of English, University of Manitoba: Fiction. * Uri Shulevitz, Artist and Writer, New York City: Sephardic folktales for young readers. * Montgomery Slatkin, Professor of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley: Population genetics of human genetic diseases. * Steven B. Smith, Photographer, Providence, Rhode Island; Adjunct Professor of Photography, Rhode Island School of Design: Photography. * C. Christopher Soufas, Jr., Professor of Spanish, Tulane University: Spanish literature in modernist Europe. * Joel Spruck, Professor of Mathematics, The Johns Hopkins University: Nonlinear problems in geometry. * Richard Stamelman, Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures, Williams College: The literature and culture of perfume. * Duncan G. Steel, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and Professor of Physics, University of Michigan: Semiconductor nanostructures for quantum information. * Christopher Sullivan, Film Animator, Chicago; Associate Professor of Film Making, School of the Art Institute of Chicago: Film animation. * Katherine H. Tachau, Professor of History, University of Iowa: The creation of the Bibles moralisées in 13th-century Paris. * Éva Tardos, Professor of Computer Science, Cornell University: Approximation-algorithms for network problems. * Maria Tatar, Professor of German, Harvard University: "Bluebeard" in folklore, fiction, and film noir. * Roger Tibbetts, Artist, Dayville, Connecticut; Associate Professor of Painting, Massachusetts College of Art: Painting and sculpture. * John Tooby, Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara: Reason and the evolution of the imagination (in collaboration with Leda Cosmides). * Alan M. Wald, Professor of English and American Culture, University of Michigan: The American literary left in the mid-20th century. * Mack Walker, Professor of History, The Johns Hopkins University: The Halle enlightenment, 1685-1725. * Alice Wexler, Research Scholar, Center for the Study of Women, University of California, Los Angeles: Chorea and community in East Hampton, New York. * Susan Wheeler, Poet, New York City; Member of the MFA Faculty in Creative Writing, New School for Social Research: Poetry. * Brian White, Professor of Mathematics, Stanford University: Minimal surfaces and mean-curvature flow. * Bruce Winstein, Samuel K. Allison Distinguished Service Professor of Physics, University of Chicago: Polarization measurement of cosmic microwave background radiation. * Brian Wood, Photographer and Artist, New York City; Lecturer in Photography, Yale University: Photography and graphic art. * Martha Woodmansee, Professor of English, Case Western Reserve University: Germany's contribution to the Western concept of intellectual property. * Randall Woolf, Composer, Brooklyn, New York: Music composition. * James D. Wuest, Professor of Chemistry, University of Montreal: Molecular tectonics. * Wu Hung, Harrie A. Vanderstappen Distinguished Service Professor of Art History, University of Chicago: Ruins in Chinese visual culture. * Andrei Y. Yakovlev, Professor and Director of Biostatistics, Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah: Oligodendrocyte development in cell culture. * Reginald Yates, Choreographer, Tampa, Florida; Artist-in-Residence, Juilliard School: Choreography. * Eric Zencey, Writer, East Calais, Vermont: The Wollemi pines. * Xin Zhou, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Duke University: Oscillatory Riemann-Hilbert problems. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1999」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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