John E. Sawyer Fellowship | National Humanities Center

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John E. Sawyer Fellowship

Named in honor of John E. “Jack” Sawyer, the former president of Williams College and pioneer in environmental studies, the John E. Sawyer fellowship has been awarded annually since 1999. As president at William, Sawyer revised the curriculum to include non-western studies, established the first center for environmental studies at the college level, increased the number of African American students, and expanded the recruitment of women and minorities for faculty and administration positions. Sawyer’s many honors included the National Academy of Sciences Public Welfare Medal, the Phi Beta Kappa Award for Distinguished Service to the Humanities, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Chairman’s Award among others.

The Sawyer fellowship was endowed by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, where Sawyer served as president from 1975 until his retirement in 1987. The Foundation believes that the arts and humanities are where we express our complex humanity, and through their grants, build communities enriched by meaning and empowered by critical thinking, where ideas and imagination can thrive.

1999–2000 Jonathan M. Hess University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Colonizing Diaspora: Debating Jewish Emancipation in Germany, 1781–1815
2000–2001 Carla Hesse University of California, Berkeley The Law of the Terror
2001–2002 Patrick P. O’Neill University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Irish Cultural Influences on Anglo-Saxon England, 635–735
2002–2003 Paula A. Sanders Rice University Making Cairo Medieval
2003–2004 Eric G. Wilson Wake Forest University The Occult Current: A Romantic Poetics of Electricity
2004–2005 Deborah Harkness University of Southern California The Social Foundations of the Scientific Revolution: Science, Medicine, and Technology in Elizabethan London
2005–2006 Robert S. C. Gordon University of Cambridge The Holocaust in Italian Culture, 1944–2001
2006–2007 Connie Rosati University of Arizona Personal Good
2007–2008 Mary Ellis Gibson University of North Carolina at Greensboro Poetry on the Margins: English Language Literary Culture in India, 1780–1912
2008–2009 Francisca de Haan Central European University Cold War in the International Women’s Movement
2009–2010 Robert N. Swanson University of Birmingham The Parish in Late Medieval England: c1300–c1535
2010–2011 Maria Georgopoulou American School of Classical Studies Arts, Industry, and Trade in the Medieval Mediterranean
2011–2012 Laurie Langbauer University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Child Authors and Juvenilia: The Tradition in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
2012–2013 Catherine Higgs University of Tennessee, Knoxville Sisters for Justice: Religion and Political Transformation in Apartheid South Africa
2013–2014 Cindy Hahamovitch College of William & Mary Guestworkers, Governments, and the Global History of Human Trafficking
2014–2015 Gordon Jeffrey Love Clemson University The Black Square: Alexandre Kojeve’s Challenge to Philosophy
2015–2016 Michelle O’Malley University of Sussex Marketing the Renaissance Workshop
2016–2017 Miguel A. La Serna University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The Last Revolution: Shining Path and the War of the End of the World
2017–2018 José d. Amador Miami University Transitioning in Brazil: Gender Policing, Trans Activism, and the Politics of Health
2018–2019 Meta DuEwa Jones University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Black Visionary Alchemy: How Poets & Artists Map Diaspora Memory
2019–2020 Shuang Shen Pennsylvania State University Cold War and Sinophone Literature at the Borders
2020–2021 Helmut Puff University of Michigan, Ann Arbor The Time of the Antechamber: A History of Waiting (1500–1800)
2021–2022 Jane F. Thrailkill University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The Agony of Empathy: A Health Humanities Intervention
2022–2023 Naomi Andre University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Writing Opera, Singing Blackness in the United States
2023–2024 Miriam Posner University of California, Los Angeles Seeing Like a Supply Chain: The Hidden Life of Logistics
2024–2025 Sarah M. Quesada Duke University The Untold South-South: Greater Mexico, African Decolonization, and Latin-African Solidarity (1956–2008)