MLA Members Receive 2022 NEH Grants

Congratulations to the twenty-one MLA members who are among the winners of the National Endowment for the Humanities grants announced in April 2022. Their projects include a curriculum integrating humanities and data science through experiential learning; research and writing leading to a book about the literary and cultural legacy of Bartolina Sisa, an Indigenous revolutionary woman in colonial Bolivia; a three-year project incorporating humanities content into preprofessional courses; and much more.

Elizabeth Alsop, City University of New York

Project Title: The Cinema of American Director Elaine May

Project Description: Writing leading to a book about film director Elaine May (1932–) and her four feature films, A New Leaf (1971), The Heartbreak Kid (1972), Mikey and Nicky (1976), and Ishtar (1987).

Sari Altschuler, Northeastern University

Project Title: Humanities and the Digital Future of Health and Healthcare

Project Description: A three-year project to implement a half major in digital health humanities.

Brooke Conti, Cleveland State University

Project Title: Religious Nostalgia from Shakespeare to Milton

Project Description: Research and writing leading to a book on religious nostalgia in English literature of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Tara Daly, Marquette University

Project Title: Back to the Future: Bartolina Sisa (d. 1782) and Living Indigenous Archives in Modern Day Bolivia

Project Description: Research and writing leading to a book about the literary and cultural legacy of Bartolina Sisa, an Indigenous revolutionary woman in colonial Bolivia.

Shannon Draucker, Siena College

Project Title: How Musical Science Shaped Representations of Gender and Sexuality in British Literature, 1850–1914

Project Description: Research and writing towards a book on Victorian authors’ understanding of music and musical science, 1850–1914.

Matylda Figlerowicz, Harvard University

Project Title: Becoming Lady Light: The Revolutions of Nahua Intellectual and Model Luz Jiménez

Project Description: Research leading to an intellectual biography of Luz Jiménez (1897–1965), an Indigenous model to artists and informant to anthropologists working in post-Revolutionary Mexico.

Jane Garrity, University of Colorado, Boulder

Project Title: Integrating Humanities and Data Science

Project Description: The development of eight new courses integrating humanities and data science through experiential learning.

Amanda Golden, New York Institute of Technology

Project Title: Editing the Poems of Sylvia Plath

Project Description: Research and writing an expanded, annotated edition of the collected poems of American author Sylvia Plath (1932–1963).

Lisa Hager, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee 

Project Title: Transgender Victorians: Reconceptualizing Gender Identities in Nineteenth-Century British Literary Culture

Project Description: Research and writing leading to a book theorizing Victorian gender identities through literature and authorial biography.

Molly Hiro, University of Portland 

Project Title: Core Humanities: Integration through Curriculum, Campus, and Community

Project Description: Planning for the creation of new interdisciplinary Core courses and for a humanities hub to serve as the home of the new curriculum.

Ashton Lazarus, University of Utah

Project Title: Sensation and Renunciation in The Tale of Genji

Project Description: Research and writing leading to a book on the Japanese literary classic The Tale of Genji (c. 1011), focusing on the tension between the allure of sensory experience and Buddhist distrust of the senses.

Joseph Mansky, University of Oklahoma

Project Title: Plays, Libels, and the Public Sphere in Shakespeare’s England

Project Description: Research and writing towards a book on the use of libels on the English stage in the 1590s.

Shaun Myers, University of Pittsburgh

Project Title: Black Anaesthetics: African American Narrative beyond Man

Project Description: Research and writing of one chapter of a book on Black women writers and the techniques they used to obscure blackness in the 1970s and 1980s.

Sarah Noonan, Saint Mary’s College, IN

Project Title: Launching a Digital and Public Humanities Minor

Project Description: The development of an interdisciplinary minor in digital and public humanities.

Jessica Richard, Wake Forest University

Project Title: Maria Edgeworth Letters

Project Description: Planning for the creation of a fully searchable corpus of Maria Edgeworth’s letters through crowdsourced transcription, expert annotation, and TEI encoding. Her letters are held at twenty-six libraries across the United States and United Kingdom, and this would be the first effort to unite them digitally.

Andrew Rusnak, Community College of Baltimore County, Essex

Project Title: Contextualizing Humanities Education for All 

Project Description: A three-year project incorporating humanities content into preprofessional courses.

Emily Rutter, Ball State University

Project Title: White Allyship in Contemporary Black Media 

Project Description: Research and writing of a book about the ways in which directors and screenwriters centralize complex Black protagonists while also training the gaze on would-be white allies.

Alexandra Valint, University of Southern Mississippi

Project Title: Wheelchairs, Crutches, and Disability in Victorian Literature 

Project Description: Research and writing leading to a book on prosthetics and mobility aids in Victorian literature.

Leslie Werden, Sioux City Morningside University

Project Title: Rooted: Integrated Humanities and Agriculture 

Project Description: A three-year project to implement an agricultural humanities minor.

Ashley Williard, University of South Carolina, Columbia

Project Title: Disruptive Minds: Madness in the Early French Atlantic

Project Description: Research and writing leading to a book exploring seventeenth- and eighteenth-century conceptions of madness in France and its Atlantic colonies.

Adrian Wisnicki, University of Nebraska, Lincoln

Project Title: COVE: Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education

Project Description: Development of the Collaborative Organization for Virtual Education (COVE) with three areas of focus: implementation of more robust data standards for long-term use; expansion of content with over eighty titles concentrating especially on noncanonical and global literatures; and enhancements of the COVE website to facilitate pedagogically focused digital humanities work with literary texts.