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William J. Bouwsma Fellowship
Eminent American William J. Bouwsma was a leading scholar of the European Renaissance and a past president of the American Historical Association. A recipient of Fulbright, Guggenheim, and National Humanities Center fellowships (1983–84; 1984–85), Bouwsma also served on the Center’s board of trustees from 1988 to 2000.
The fellowship was named in Bouwsma’s honor by fellow NHC trustee emeritus, Peter A. Benoliel. It has been awarded annually since 2001. Benoliel is chairman of the board of directors for IPSoft, an American technology firm focused on autonomic computing and artificial intelligence, and is chairman emeritus of Quaker Chemical Corporation, where he served as chief executive officer from 1966 until 1992 and as non-executive chairman of the board until 1997. He has served as a trustee and helped lead numerous cultural and philanthropic organizations including as president of the United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania, chairman of the Philadelphia Orchestra Association, chairman of Settlement Music School, and chairman of the Free Library of Philadelphia Foundation. As of 2019, when he was elected an emeritus trustee, Benoliel was the longest serving trustee of the National Humanities Center.
2001–2002 | Luca Boschetto | Independent scholar | Economy, Politics, and Law in Renaissance Florence: The Court of the Mercanzia, 1394–1577 |
2002–2003 | Tom Beghin | University of California, Los Angeles | Performing Rhetoric: Joseph Haydn’s Keyboard Sonatas as Muscial Orations |
2003–2004 | Wye J. Allanbrook | University of California, Berkeley | Happy Endings: Comic Musical Theater from Lully to Sondheim |
2004–2005 | Robin D. Moore | Temple University | Music and Revolution: Cultural Change in Socialist Cuba |
2005–2006 | Philip Rupprecht | Brooklyn College, City University of New York | Avant-Garde Nation: British Musical Modernism Since 1960 |
2006–2007 | Theodore Buehrer | Kenyon College | Mary’s Idea: Mary Lou Willliams’ Development as a Big Band Composer |
2007–2008 | R. Larry Todd | Duke University | Becoming Fanny Hensel: The Life and Music of Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel |
2008–2009 | Christian Thorau | University of Music and Performing Arts, Frankfurt | Guided Listening and the Touristic Gaze–The Emergence of ‘Musical Baedekers’ |
2009–2010 | Katherine Preston | College of William & Mary | Against the Grain: Women Managers and English Opera in Late Nineteenth-Century America |
2010–2011 | Suzannah Clark | Harvard University | Quirks in Tonality: Aspects in the History of Tonal Space |
2011–2012 | John Monfasani | University at Albany, State University of New York | A Three-Volume Study of the Plato-Aristotle Controversy of the 15th Century |
2012–2013 | Pamela O. Long | Independent scholar | Rome Restored: Knowledge, Power, and Engineering, 1557–1590 |
2013–2014 | Claire Sponsler | University of Iowa | Reading the Beauchamp Pageant |
2014–2015 | Bettye Collier-Thomas | Temple University | “She is a Politician”: African American Women and Politics |
2015–2016 | Daniel Nolan | Australian National University | Theoretical Values |
2016–2017 | Tamara Sears | Rutgers University | Wilderness Urbanisms: Architecture, Landscape, and Travel in Southern Asia |
2017–2018 | Pavlos Kontos | University of Patras | Spectators of Moral Matters in Aristotle |
2018–2019 | Peter Villella | University of North Carolina at Greensboro | Of Ruin and Rebirth: The Construction of Aztec History, 1531–1625 |
2019–2020 | Alexia Yates | University of Manchester, U.K. | Rise of the Rentier: France and the Making of Financial Modernity, 1830–1930 |
2020–2021 | Lester Tomé | Smith College | The Avant-garde Imagination: Transatlantic Visions of Ballet |
2021–2022 | Samantha Pinto | The University of Texas at Austin | Under the Skin |
2022–2023 | Umrao Sethi | Brandeis University | Sensibilia: An Account of Sensory Perception and its Objects |
2023–2024 | Elanor Taylor | Johns Hopkins University | The Foundations of Social Metaphysics |
2024–2025 | Sarah Scott | Manhattan College | The Moral Philosophy of Frances Power Cobbe: Forgotten Anglo-Irish Philosopher and Women’s Rights and Animal Welfare Activist |