Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Foundation Fellowship | National Humanities Center

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Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Foundation Fellowship

Named in honor of American banker and curbstone broker, Carl Pforzheimer, and his wife Lily, the Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Foundation fellowship has been awarded annually since 2001. Born in New York City, Carl H. Pforzheimer was a founder of the American Stock Exchange and later established his own firm, Carl H. Pforzheimer & Co., which focused on the oil and gas industry. An avid collector of rare books, Pforzheimer acquired thousands of manuscripts and books during his lifetime, including a Gutenberg Bible and writings of Percy Bysshe Shelley. In 1986, his son and grandson donated the “Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle” to the New York Public Library.

The fellowship was endowed by the Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Foundation, Inc., which gives nationally to libraries and organizations focused on the arts and performing arts, higher education, and public administration.

2001–2002 John Plotz Johns Hopkins University Portable Properties: The Circulation of Objects in Nineteenth-Century Britain
2002–2003 David Lewis Porter University of Michigan, Ann Arbor China and the Invention of British Aesthetic Culture
2003–2004 John S. Carson University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Mental Ability and Medical Jurisprudence in Nineteenth-Century England and America
2004–2005 Maura Nolan University of Notre Dame English Fortune: The Early History of a Literary Idea
2005–2006 Stuart Semmel University of Delaware “An Anthropology of Ourselves”: A Cultural and Intellectual History of Mass Observation
2006–2007 Sean Keilen University of Pennsylvania The Influence of Friends: Authority and Tradition in Renaissance Poetry
2007–2008 John L. Wilkinson University of Notre Dame Rickett’s Blue
2008–2009 Douglas Olson University of Minnesota A New Loeb Edition of Athenaeus’ “Learned Banqueters”
2009–2010 Patricia Curd Purdue University Divinity, Intelligibility, and Human Understanding in Presocratic Thought
2010–2011 Eliza Richards University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Correspondent Lines: Poetry and Journalism in the U.S. Civil War
2011–2012 Kellie Robertson University of Wisconsin-Madison Love and Physics: Chaucer and Aristotelian Natural Philosophy
2012–2013 Ruth Morse Université Paris-Diderot, Sorbonne Imagined Histories: Fictions of the Past from Bede to Shakespeare
2013–2014 Holly Smith Rutgers University Making Morality Work
2014–2015 Colin D. H. Jones Queen Mary University of London Thermidor: Twenty-Four Hours of Parisian Revolution, 27 July 1794
2015–2016 Béatrice Longuenesse  New York University Self-Consciousness and the First Person
2016–2017 Shellen Wu University of Tennessee, Knoxville Global Frontiers and the Geopolitical Making of Modern China
2017–2018 Valia Allori Northern Illinois University Quantum Mechanics and its Metaphysics: Primitive Ontology, Metaphysical Neutrality, and the Role of the Wave Function in Quantum Theories
2018–2019 Richard K. Wolf Harvard University The Nightingale’s Despair: Music and Moral Being in Greater Central Asia
2019–2020 Sonja Drimmer University of Massachusetts Amherst Art and Political Visuality in Late Medieval England
2020–2021 Joan Neuberger University of Texas at Austin Global Eisenstein: Immersion in Nature, Art, and the World
2021–2022 Jacob M. Baum Texas Tech University The Deaf Shoemaker: Ability, Disability, and Daily Life in the Sixteenth Century
2022–2023 Andrew McClellan Tufts University Rivals on the Fenway: Isabella Stewart Gardner, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Destiny of the American Art Museum
2023–2024 Yohei Igarashi University of Connecticut Word Count: Literary Study and Data Analysis, 1875–1965
2024–2025 Isabel C. Gómez University of Massachusetts Boston Divest from English: Eco-Translation and Translingual Repair