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List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 2000. ==U.S. and Canadian Fellows== * Robert H. Abzug, Professor of History and American Studies, University of Texas at Austin: Rollo May and the transformation of American culture. * Richard D. Alba, Professor of Sociology and Public Policy, State University of New York at Albany: Second generations in immigrant societies. * April Alliston, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature, Princeton University: Character, plausibility, and gender in French and English historical narratives, 1650-1850. * Hilton Als, Writer, New York City; Staff Writer, The New Yorker: Creative writing. * Douglas Anderson, Professor of English, University of Georgia: William Bradford and the Anglo-European republic of letters. * James Arthur, University Professor, University of Toronto: Representations of classical groups. * David Auburn, Playwright, Brooklyn, New York: Play writing. * David Baker, Poet, Granville, Ohio; Professor of English and Thomas B. Fordham Professor of Creative Writing, Denison University; Poetry Editor, The Kenyon Review: Poetry. * Joan Banach, Artist, New York City: Painting. * Abhijit V. Banerjee, Professor of Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: The new economics of poverty. * Jill Banfield, Professor of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wisconsin–Madison: Microbe-mineral interactions of environmental importance. * Ernesto Bazan, Photographer, Brooklyn, New York: Photography. * Howard C. Berg, Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology and of Physics, Harvard University: The motile behavior of bacteria. * Jane A. Bernstein, Austin Fletcher Professor of Music, Tufts University: Music and print culture in Renaissance Rome. * William Betz, Professor of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver: The optical detection of synaptic function. * Rabi Bhattacharya, Professor of Mathematics, Indiana University Bloomington: Studies in Markov processes. * Tom Bills, Artist, Brooklyn, New York; Associate Professor of Art, Brandeis University: Sculpture. * Lisa M. Bitel, Associate Professor of History and Women's Studies and Director of Women's Studies, University of Kansas: Landscape, gender, and Christianization in Gaul and Ireland. * Stuart Blackburn, Senior Lecturer in Tamil and South Indian Studies and Chairman, Centre of South Asian Studies, University of London: The role of folklore in colonial south India. * Isidro Blasco, Artist, New York City: Sculpture and installation art. * Anne Bogart, Associate Professor of Theatre Arts, Columbia University; Artistic Director, The Saratoga International Theatre Institute (SITI), New York City: Essays on the theatre. * Lloyd Bonfield, Professor of Law, Tulane University: Litigants, lawyers, and the law in English probate courts, 1660-1700. * Nina Bovasso, Artist, New York City: Painting and drawing. * John M. Bowers, Professor of English, University of Nevada, Las Vegas: The antagonistic tradition of Chaucer and Langland. * Michael E. Bratman, Howard H. and Jessie T. Watkins University Professor of Philosophy, Stanford University: Self-determination and planning agency. * Martin Brody, Composer, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Catherine Mills Davis Professor of Music, Wellesley College: Music composition. * Ronald K. Brown, Choreographer, Brooklyn, New York; Artistic Director, Evidence, New York City: Choreography. * William Craft Brumfield, Professor of Slavic Studies, Tulane University: The architecture of the Russian North. * Michael Camille, Mary J. Block Professor of Art History, University of Chicago: Sculpture, signs, and street life in medieval France. * Vicki Caron, Thomas and Diann Mann Professor of Modern Jewish Studies, Cornell University: Catholic-Jewish relations in France since 1871. * Shih-Hui Chen, Composer, Malden, Massachusetts: Music composition. * Patricia Cheng, Professor of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles: A psychological theory of causal discovery. * Alice L. Conklin, Associate Professor of History, University of Rochester: Ethnographic liberalism in France, 1920-1945. * Diana Cooper, Artist, Brooklyn, New York; Adjunct Professor of Art, New York University: Painting and installation art. * Kevin R. Cox, Professor of Geography, The Ohio State University: The Americal politics of local economic development. * Christopher J. Cramer, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Chemical Physics, and Scientific Computation, University of Minnesota: The structure and reactivity of chemical and biological systems. * Hai-Lung Dai, Professor of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania: Chemical-reaction control. * Kathryn Davis, Writer, East Calais, Vermont; Professor of English, Skidmore College: Fiction. * Veronica Day, Photographer, Brooklyn, New York: Photography. * Peter Dear, Professor of History and of Science and Technology Studies, Cornell University: Making sense in science. * Donald J. DePaolo, Class of 1951 Professor of Geochemistry, University of California, Berkeley: The geochemical effects of magma generation and transport. * Robert Desjarlais, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Sarah Lawrence College: Sensory biographies among Nepal's Yolmo Buddhists. * Jessica Diamond, Artist, Brooklyn, New York: Painting. * Arthur Dong, Film Maker, Los Angeles; Producer and Director, DeepFocus Productions: Film making. * Tom Drury, Writer, Litchfield, Connecticut: Fiction. * Thomas Dublin, Professor of History, State University of New York at Binghamton: Economic decline in the Pennsylvania anthracite region, 1920-1990. * Robert S. DuPlessis, Isaac H. Clothier Professor of History and International Relations, Swarthmore College: A history of consumption in the early modern Atlantic world. * Lauren B. Edelman, Professor of Law and Sociology, University of California, Berkeley: The formation of civil-rights law in the workplace. * Anthony Feinstein, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, University of Toronto: Trauma-related mental health issues in post-apartheid Namibia. * Alexei V. Filippenko, Professor of Astronomy, University of California, Berkeley: The expansion of the universe. * Marc R. Forster, Associate Professor of History, Connecticut College: The emergence of German Catholic identity. * Howard Gardner, John H. and Elisabeth A. Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education, Harvard University: The origins and development of good work. * Jonathon Glassman, Associate Professor of History, Northwestern University: Racial thought in colonial Zanzibar. * Jill Godmilow, Video Artist, South Bend, Indiana; Professor of Film, Television and Theatre, University of Notre Dame: Video. * Susan Goldin-Meadow, Professor of Psychology, University of Chicago: Gesture and the mind. * Rigoberto González, Poet, New York City; Literacy Teacher, Coalition for Hispanic Family Services, Brooklyn: Poetry. * Francisco Gonzalez-Crussi, Professor of Pathology, Northwestern University Medical School; Head of Laboratories, Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago: Essays on human generation. * Paul D. Grannis, Distinguished Professor of Physics, State University of New York at Stony Brook: Studies of broken symmetry in nature. * Milford Graves, Composer, Jamaica, New York; Member of the Core Faculty in Music, Bennington College: Music composition. * Richard L. Greaves, Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor of History, Florida State University: John Bunyan in historical perspective. * Vanalyne Green, Video Artist, Chicago; Associate Professor of Video Art, School of the Art Institute of Chicago: Video. * Linda Gregerson, Poet, Ann Arbor, Michigan; Associate Professor of English, University of Michigan: Poetry. * Craig R. Groves, Director, Conservation Planning, The Nature Conservancy, Boise, Idaho: The conservation of biological diversity. * Robert J. Hamers, Evan P. Helfaer Professor of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin–Madison: Studies in molecular electronics. * Brooks Haxton, Poet, Syracuse, New York; Director of Creative Writing, Syracuse University: Poetry. * Wick Haxton, Professor of Physics and Director, Institute for Nuclear Theory, University of Washington, Seattle: Studies in neutrino-induced nucleosynthesis. * Thomas Head, Professor of History, Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York: Saints, relics, and patronage in Western Christendom, 200-1215. * Gerry Hemingway, Composer and Percussionist, Plainsboro, New Jersey: Music composition. * Amy Hempel, Writer, Bridgehampton, New York; Member of the Core Faculty in Writing, Bennington College: Fiction. * Alicia Henry, Artist, Nashville, Tennessee; Assistant Professor of Art, Fisk University: Painting and drawing. * Nancy A. Hewitt, Professor of History, Rutgers University: American women's activism, 1840-1965. * Tony Hoagland, Poet, Las Cruces, New Mexico; Assistant Professor of English, New Mexico State University: Poetry. * Jennifer L. Hochschild, William Stewart Tod Professor of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University: The prospects for democratic pluralism in the United States. * Lillian Hoddeson, Associate Professor of History and Senior Research Physicist, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Historian, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, Illinois: The life and science of John Bardeen. * Manuela Hoelterhoff, Writer, New York City: Germaine Lubin and Bayreuth in 1939. * Michael B. Holden, Artist, Santa Rosa, California: Painting. * Peter Jeffery, Professor of Music, Princeton University: The earliest manuscript of the Roman chant tradition. * Sajeev John, Professor of Physics, University of Toronto: Photonic-band gap materials. * Claudia L. Johnson, Professor of English, Princeton University: Jane Austen's status as a legend. * Amelia Jones, Professor of Art History, University of California, Riverside: New York Dada, 1915-1922. * Lawrence Joseph, Professor of Law, St. John's University: Essays on Catholicism. * Deborah Anne Kapchan, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director, Center for Intercultural Studies in Folklore and Ethnomusicology, University of Texas at Austin: Self and nation in Moroccan oral poetry. * Larry Karush, Composer, Los Angeles: Music composition. * Dovid Katz, Writer, County Conway, Wales; Professor of Yiddish Language, Literature and Culture, and Director, Center for Stateless Cultures, Vilnius University, Lithuania: Fiction in Yiddish. * Steve Keister, Artist, New York City; Instructor in Art, School of Visual Arts; Instructor in Art, Maryland Institute College of Art; Instructor in Art, Hofstra University: Sculpture. * Evelyn Fox Keller, Professor of History and Philosophy of Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Explanation in developmental biology. * Joel Kingsolver, Professor of Zoology, University of Washington, Seattle: The topography of adaptive landscapes. * George Knox, Professor Emeritus of Art History, University of British Columbia: Tiepolo's New Testament drawings. * Dorothy Ko, Associate Professor of History and Women's Studies, Rutgers University: The history and culture of footbinding. * Ewa Lajer-Burcharth, Harris K. Weston Associate Professor of the Humanities, Harvard University: The idea of the self in 18th-century art. * Chang-rae Lee, Writer, Ridgewood, New Jersey; Professor of English, Hunter College, City University of New York: Fiction. * Laura L. Letinsky, Photographer, Chicago; Assistant Professor of Photography, University of Chicago: Photography. * Jill Levine, Artist, New York City; Instructor in Studio Art, Sarah J. Hale High School, Brooklyn: Painting and sculpture. * Bernth Lindfors, Professor of English and African Literatures, University of Texas at Austin: Ira Aldridge's theatrical career in Europe. * John T. Lis, Professor of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University: Protein templating in the propagation of gene activity. * Jennie Livingston, Film Maker, Brooklyn, New York; Writer, Director, and Producer, Off White (OW!) Productions, Brooklyn: Film making. * Susanne Lohmann, Professor of Political Science and of Policy Studies and Director, Center for Comparative Political Economy, University of California, Los Angeles: Administrative rationality in the research university. * Lev Loseff, Professor of Russian, Dartmouth College: An annotated bilingual edition of Joseph Brodsky's poetry. * Scott P. Mainwaring, Eugene Conley Professor of Government and Director, Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame: The durability of Latin America's post-1978 elected governments. * Thomas Mallon, Writer, Westport, Connecticut: Fiction. * Sara Shelton Mann, Choreographer, San Francisco: Choreography. * Jaime Manrique, Writer, New York City; Member of the Part-time Faculty, Eugene Lang College, New School University: A memoir. * Emer Martin, Writer, Kilcloone, County Meath, Ireland; Contributing Editor, ''BlackBook'' magazine, New York City: Fiction. * James Matheson, Composer, Tampa, Florida; Lecturer in Music, Ithaca College, New York: Music composition. * Katharine Eisaman Maus, Professor of English, University of Virginia: A history of English literature, 1603-1660. * Colleen McDannell, Professor of History and Sterling M. McMurrin Professor of Religious Studies, University of Utah: Religious America in government photography, 1935-1943. * Andrew Rimvydas Miksys, Photographer, Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Seattle, Washington; Instructor in Photography, Louisiana State University: Photography. * Donka Minkova, Professor of English, University of California, Los Angeles: Verse form and linguistic reconstruction in English. * Rick Moody, Writer, Fishers Island, New York; Member of the Core Faculty in Writing, Bennington College: A family memoir. * Philip D. Morgan, Professor of History and Editor, ''William & Mary Quarterly'', Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, College of William & Mary: White and black in 18th-century Jamaica. * Bill Morrison, Film Maker, New York City: Film making. * Stephen Mueller, Artist, New York City: Painting. * Madhusree Mukerjee, Writer, Jackson Heights, New York; Editor, Scientific American, New York City: The Andaman Islanders. * Lawrence Nees, Professor of Art History, University of Delaware: Frankish illuminated manuscripts. * Antonya Nelson, Writer, Las Cruces, New Mexico; Associate Professor of English, New Mexico State University: Fiction. * Barbara Newman, Professor of English and Religion, Northwestern University: Vision, poetry, and belief in the Middle Ages. * Andrea Wilson Nightingale, Associate Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature, Stanford University: The conception of wisdom in 4th-century Athens. * Stephen Orgel, Jackson Eli Reynolds Professor in the Humanities, Stanford University: The history of the relation between Shakespearean texts and productions. * H. Allen Orr, Associate Professor of Biology, University of Rochester: The genetic origin of species. * Robert A. Orsi, Professor of Religious Studies, Indiana University Bloomington: American Catholics' recollections of their childhoods in the Church. * Ed Osborn, Artist, Oakland, California: Sound installation. * Eric Pankey, Poet, Fairfax, Virginia; Professor of English, George Mason University: Poetry. * Joseph Parisi, Editor, Poetry, Chicago; Executive Director, Modern Poetry Association: A documentary history of Poetry magazine. * Suzan-Lori Parks, Playwright, Brooklyn, New York: Play writing. * Ed Paschke, Artist, Chicago; Professor of Art, Northwestern University: Painting. * Mary Sponberg Pedley, Teacher, Ann Arbor Public Schools; Adjunct Assistant Curator of Maps, William L. Clements Library, University of Michigan: Printed maps and popular taste in 18th-century France and England. * Louis A. Pérez, Jr., J. Carlyle Sitterson Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Suicide and exemplary death in Cuba. * Donna J. Peuquet, Professor of Geography, Pennsylvania State University: A cognitive approach to representing geographic knowledge. * Mark Phillips, Professor of History, University of British Columbia: A short history of distance. * Suzan Pitt, Film Animator, Los Angeles; Member of the Faculty in Experimental Animation, California Institute of the Arts: Film animation. * Vicente L. Rafael, Associate Professor of Communication, University of California, San Diego: Language and the origins of nationalism in the Philippines. * Jahan Ramazani, Professor of English, University of Virginia: Postcolonial poetry in English. * Thomas W. Reps, Professor of Computer Science, University of Wisconsin–Madison: A new compressed representation of Boolean functions. * David Riker, Film Maker, New York City: Film making. * John Storm Roberts, Independent Scholar, Tivoli, New York: Latin dance in the United States. * Roxana Robinson, Writer, New York City: Fiction. * Larry Rohrschneider, Member, Division of Basic Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and Affiliate Professor of Pathology, University of Washington, Seattle: Molecular mechanisms for regulating the growth of blood cells. * Daniel S. Rokhsar, Professor of Physics and Head, Computational and Theoretical Biology, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley: Studies in computational and theoretical biology. * James Rolfe, Composer, Toronto: Music composition. * Dennis Romano, Professor of History, Syracuse University: Doge Francesco Foscari and the crisis of Venetian republicanism. * Marian Roth, Photographer, Provincetown, Massachusetts: Photography. * Ingrid D. Rowland, Associate Professor of Art History, University of Chicago: A life of Giordano Bruno. * Roswell Rudd, Composer and Jazz Trombonist, Kerhonkson, New York: Music composition. * John Russell, Writer, New York City; Art Critic, The New York Times: A memoir. * Richard Ryan, Artist, Millers Falls, Massachusetts; Adjunct Senior Critic in Art, Brandeis University: Painting. * Jacqueline Saccoccio, Artist, New York City: Painting. * Mark Salzman, Writer, Glendale, California: Nonfiction. * Tamar Schlick, Professor of Mathematics, Chemistry, and Computer Science, Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences and Associate Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, New York University: Modeling studies of protein-DNA complexes. * Glen Seator, Artist, Brooklyn, New York: Sculpture and installation art. * James J. Sheehan, Dickason Professor in the Humanities and Professor of History, Stanford University: A history of sovereignty in 20th-century Europe. * S. Murray Sherman, Leading Professor of Neurobiology and Behavior, State University of New York at Stony Brook: The thalamic relay of visual signals to the cortex. * Jocelyn Penny Small, Professor of Art History and the Library, Rutgers University: Narrative in classical art. * Bruce Smith, Poet, Tuscaloosa, Alabama; Associate Professor of English, University of Alabama: Poetry. * Rebecca Solnit, Writer, San Francisco: Photography and the invention of the present. * John Stembridge, Professor of Mathematics, University of Michigan: Combinatorial aspects of root systems and Weyl characters. * Judy Stevens, Artist, New York City: Sculpture. * Frank H. Stewart, Professor of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, Hebrew University of Jerusalem: The customary law of the Sinai Bedouin. * Robert Blair St. George, Associate Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania: Spoken language and oral poetics in early New England. * Kristine Stiles, Associate Professor of Art and Art History, Duke University: Documentary photography of the nuclear age. * Gwen Strahle, Artist, Dayville, Connecticut; Member of the Adjunct Faculty in Art, Rhode Island School of Design: Painting. * Z. S. Strother, Assistant Professor of Art History and Archaeology, Columbia University: The relationship of art to power in central Africa. * Richard Talbert, William Rand Kenan, Jr., Professor of History and Adjunct Professor of Classics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Cartography and world-view in ancient Rome. * Julie Taylor, Professor of Anthropology, Rice University: Argentine tango and the aesthetic of violence. * Maria Todorova, Professor of History, University of Florida: Nationalism and hero worship in the Balkans. * Stephen Tourlentes, Photographer, Somerville, Massachusetts; Visiting Associate Professor of Photography, Massachusetts College of Art: Photography. * Robert Trivers, Professor of Anthropology and Biological Sciences, Rutgers University: Genetic conflict within the individual. * Amanda Vaill, Writer, New York City: A biography of Jerome Robbins. * David J. Vayo, Composer, Bloomington, Illinois; Associate Professor of Composition and Theory and Coordinator, New Music Activities, Illinois Wesleyan University: Music composition. * Elizabeth Vierling, Professor of Biochemistry and of Molecular and Cellular Biology, and of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona: Gene-mapping for agricultural productivity at high temperatures. * Darla Villani, Choreographer, Brooklyn, New York: Choreography. * Mike Wallace, Professor of History, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York: A history of New York City since 1898. * Wen I. Wang, Thayer Lindsley Professor of Electrical Engineering, Columbia University: Semiconductor heterostructures for information technologies. * Brenda Way, Choreographer, Oakland, California; Artistic Director, ODC/San Francisco: Choreography. * Joan Weiner, Professor of Philosophy, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee: Frege's lessons for our understanding of language. * Rainer Weiss, Professor of Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Gravitational waves of astrophysical origin. * Jennifer Widom, Associate Professor of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, Stanford University: New query and search techniques for the Internet. * Jennette Williams, Photographer, New York City; Instructor in Photography, School of Visual Arts: Photography. * Rhodri Windsor-Liscombe, Professor of Fine Arts, University of British Columbia: Modernist architectural theory and practice in the British Empire and Commonwealth. * Shira Wolosky, Professor of English and American Literature, Hebrew University of Jerusalem: Meaning without metaphysics in Hebraic tradition. * Stephen S.-T. Yau, Professor of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science and Director, Control and Information Laboratory, University of Illinois at Chicago: Studies in complex and combinatorial geometry. * Marilyn B. Young, Professor of History, New York University: The postwar war in Korea. * Xumu Zhang, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University: Man-made catalysts for manufacturing. 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 2000」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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