Up to 12, $3,000 stipends for graduate work at the dissertation level in the arts, humanities and social sciences are available for fall semester 2016.
The College of Arts and Sciences Dissertation Fellowships facilitate the transition from course work and accelerate the process of writing the dissertation by bringing together students for discussion of one another's work as well as questions of method and purpose raised by humanistic scholarship generally.
Daniel Goldmark, professor of music, and Martha Woodmansee, professor of English, will facilitate discussion among the fellows.
Requirements:
- By the beginning of fall semester, fellows are expected to have completed a chapter of the dissertation that will be suitable for circulation and discussion among seminar participants.
- During the fall semester, fellows will participate in an interdisciplinary seminar, which will meet for two hours each Wednesday evening.
- Fellows will present their work in progress once during the semester and will read and discuss the work of fellow participants as well as a moderate number of ancillary readings that raise larger questions about the aims and methods common to scholars doing humanistic research.