The Rethinking Place: Bard-on-Mahicantuck Undergraduate Summer Research Fellowship, supported by the Mellon Foundation “Humanities for All Times” initiative, invites applications for funding and research support for undergraduate students and faculty engaged in summer research during Summer 2024.
Projects proposed during Rethinking Place’s three-year sequence of articulated themes should respond to the corresponding year’s frame. This year (2024), the Rethinking Place Summer Research Fellowships Committee invites students and faculty sponsors to respond to the theme of “Food & Memory.”
Here, potential frameworks are questions of land and food as an avenue for social justice (in food sovereignty, rematriation, foodways revitalization), as a living archive (in cookbooks, works of food history, seed relations, writings and theory about naming and classifying our environments), or as kinetic, organic material for creation (in material or land-based projects), and includes exploration of both cultivated and and non-cultivated varietals.
Regardless of theme, however, the main emphasis for the summer research fellowships for the life of the grant will be on faculty and students innovating together in research, designing appropriate language to address history and memory, and engaging spatial design principles to highlight the multiple ways in which marginalized communities experience space, whether on campus or elsewhere.
Rethinking Place affirms Bard’s tangible commitments to the principles and ideals of the college’s 2020 land acknowledgment by recognizing the fundamental need to address historical erasure and make space for previously-marginalized epistemologies. With this call for student-faculty summer research proposals, we wish to build on the ample set of practices extant at Bard that encourage students to engage in “making meaning” through the bread-and-butter tools of humanistic pursuits: attentive and immersive reading, critical engagement with archives and primary sources—and the construction of those archives and sources, experimental performance, writing and revision, and collaboration among peers.
Residential Research Project Guidelines
The Rethinking Place Residential Research Grant can support a broad range of proposed research projects as long as such projects are rooted in humanities methods. Suggestions for what types of projects the grant could support include, but are not limited to: work in Bard-based or other local archives regarding marginalized histories at Bard or in the surrounding area; conducting interviews pertaining to institutional relationships regarding Native engagement; seed-saving and rematriation projects; mapping and/or re-mapping projects; projects that center archiving as restorative practice and/or which investigate how institutional resources may be used to recover and center different types of stories or which imagine alternative forms of archives.
Research projects that emerge from a current or past class are welcome, but projects do not necessarily need to be the result of coursework.
Grantees will commit to a presentation or workshop at the annual Rethinking Place Conference. (Details of which to be provided later upon receipt.)
The Rethinking Place Grant can offer $4800, awarded to an individual project being undertaken at Bard’s Annandale campus. The faculty member overseeing the non-residential summer research fellowship would receive compensation at the rate of $2000 for the full research period. If more than one faculty member participates, this compensation will be divided evenly between the advisors.
Eligibility
All current Bard students, excepting graduating seniors, may apply for research funds. The faculty advisor may be any faculty member with an appointment to teach during the 2024-2025 academic year at Bard Annandale.
Application Procedure
Interested students should submit a proposal of between 250 and 500 words describing the research project, include a list of possible participants, a proposed timeline, and an itemized budget. Please provide an email of support from the proposed faculty advisor; the email should show evidence of a working plan of how the student will be supported in their research endeavor. Students should also submit a resumé, a CV, or describe relevant skills and/or courses and connections in support of the proposal.
Non-Residential Research Project Guidelines
The Rethinking Place Residential Research Grant can support a broad range of proposed research projects as long as such projects are rooted in humanities methods. Suggestions for what types of projects the grant could support include, but are not limited to: locally-based community knowledge-keeping and knowledge production in students’ home communities; archival or visual culture research in different locations; studied engagement with and deep reading within the literature of place, of placemaking methods, or place-based arts around a particular topic engaging the grant themes; and beyond. Research projects that emerge from a current or past class are welcome, but projects do not necessarily need to be the result of coursework.
Grantees will commit to a presentation or workshop at the annual Rethinking Place Conference. (Details of which to be provided later upon receipt.)
The Rethinking Place Grant can offer $4000, which can be awarded to a single individual’s project or can be divided between a team research group, dependent on need. The faculty member overseeing the non-residential summer research fellowship would receive compensation at the rate of $1200 for the full research period. If more than one faculty member participates, this compensation will be divided evenly between the advisors.
Eligibility
All current Bard students, excepting graduating seniors, may apply for research funds. The faculty advisor may be any faculty member with an appointment to teach during the 2024-2025 academic year at Bard Annandale.
Application Procedure
Interested students should submit a proposal of between 250 and 500 words describing the research project, include a list of possible participants, a proposed timeline, and an itemized budget. For team projects, please describe the roles for each team member in the proposal. Please provide an email of support from the proposed faculty advisor; the email should show evidence of a working plan of how the student will be supported in their research endeavor. Students should also submit a resumé, a CV, or describe relevant skills/and or courses and connections in support of the proposal.