GSLIS to serve as key partner in 'Humanities without Walls'

GSLIS will serve as a key intellectual and infrastructural partner for a new grant awarded to the Illinois Program for Research in the Humanities (IPRH) by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The $3 million grant will fund the first two years of an extensive consortium of fifteen humanities institutes. IPRH, a division of the University of Illinois College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, provides fellowships and hosts conferences, lectures, films, art exhibitions, and reading groups.

Titled "Humanities Without Walls," the funded initiative is led by Dianne Harris, director of IPRH and professor of landscape architecture, architecture, art history, and history. The grant will fund cross-institutional teams focused on "The Global Midwest," research that rethinks or reveals the Midwest as a key site shaping global economies and cultures. The grant also will fund summer workshops for pre-doctoral humanities students pursuing careers outside the academy beginning in 2015.

Besides the University of Illinois, the consortium will include the following institutions: Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Nebraska, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue, University of Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago, and Wisconsin. In addition to GSLIS, the Chicago Humanities Festival will serve as a key partner for the consortium.

Listen to an interview with Dianne Harris on WILL-AM radio for more information about the grant.

Tags:
Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Nominations invited for 2024 Downs Intellectual Freedom Award

The School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign seeks nominations for the 2024 Robert B. Downs Intellectual Freedom Award. The deadline for nominations is March 15, 2025. The award is cosponsored by Sage Publishing.

CCB contributes to new Books to Parks site on Lyddie

The Center for Children's Books (CCB) collaborated with the National Park Service (NPS) to launch a new Books to Parks website on Lyddie, a 1991 novel by Katherine Paterson that highlights the experiences of young women working in textile mills in nineteenth-century Lowell, Massachusetts. 

Lyddie book

Layne-Worthey edits book on digital humanities and LIS

Glen Layne-Worthey, associate director for research support services for the HathiTrust Research Center (HTRC), and Isabel Galina, researcher at the Institute for Bibliographic Studies at the National University of Mexico, have edited a new book, The Routledge Companion to Libraries, Archives, and the Digital Humanities, which was recently released by Routledge.

Glen Layne-Worthey

Library Trends honors Mary Niles Maack

The School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign is pleased to announce the publication of Library Trends 72 (3). This issue, "Feminist and Global Perspectives on an Evolving Profession: Papers Honoring Mary Niles Maack," celebrates Maack’s life and career as well as her scholarship’s influence around the globe. Maack’s colleagues, Michèle V. Cloonan and Suzanne M. Stauffer, served as guest editors.

Library Trends 72 (3) front cover

iSchool represented at Charleston Conference

iSchool adjunct and affiliate faculty will participate in virtual and in-person sessions of the 2024 Charleston Conference. The conference is an annual gathering that draws librarians, publishers, vendors, and others to discuss issues relating to the acquisition and publication of books and serials.