Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life (IA), the national Syracuse University-based consortium of more than 80 colleges and universities committed to public scholarship in the arts, humanities and design, has announced new local grant recipients. These grants will support new courses emphasizing public scholarship and practice; benefit some component of the community and SU students; demonstrate the likelihood of becoming sustainable; incorporate the arts, humanities or design; and serve a democratic purpose.
The 2008 Imagining America grant recipients are:
Two additional courses were funded as a joint project of Imagining America and Enitiative, the Syracuse Campus-Community Entrepreneurship Initiative. William Kelleher, associate professor of anthropology in the Maxwell School, received funding for "The Ethnography of the University: Studying Scholarship in Action," and Joan Bryant, associate professor of African American studies, for "Black Syracuse: Organizing and Interpreting `Hidden' Research Collections." Enitiative is funded by a grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, focusing on entrepreneurship in the arts, technology and our neighborhoods.
A committee of four faculty and staff members assessed the proposals; committee members were: Lori Brown, assistant professor of architecture; Jan Cohen-Cruz, director of Imagining America and University Professor; Pamela Heintz, director of the Mary Ann Shaw Center for Public & Community Service; and Louise Wetherbee Phelps, professor in the Writing Program in The College of Arts and Sciences.