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The year in review from the Institute for the Arts and Humanities at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill.

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Page 1: 2011 Annual Highlights

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j o i n t h e c o n v e r s a t i o n

2011

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Page 3: 2011 Annual Highlights

This page: Hyde Hall (left) has flourished since it

was built in 2002 (above).

Front cover: The spring 2011 Faculty Fellows look

on as Brian Hogan, Chapman Family Faculty Fellow,

explains his project. Photo by: Justin Cook

Page 4: 2011 Annual Highlights

Join the Conversation

f r o m t h e d i r e c t o r

Italy seems like a dream to me now…Italy seems like a dream to me now… Yes, I did spend the first five months of 2011 as a visiting scholar at the University of Trento. And, yes, it was wonderful in countless ways, even as I discovered that I would rather teach in an American university.

But it took about three days to shake the Italian dust off my feet upon returning to Chapel Hill. The Institute for the Arts and Humanities, under the able leadership of Interim Director Bill Balthrop (thanks, Bill!), hardly stood still in my absence.

The Reckford and Weil lectures drew large crowds and spurred a number of campus conversations. At the heart of each lecture was an examination of issues — pluralism, debate, tolerance, conflict—central to both European and American politics. Our new IAH Innovation Fund for projects in the arts and humanities was launched; we funded five faculty-led teams in this inaugural round. A strategic planning process, involving all of our boards and an outside consultant for our development activities, provided the material for a retreat this spring that will culminate in a final document this fall.

And IAH Board member Nelson Schwab, who also served as the chair of UNC’s Board of Trustees, announced his intention to endow our Chairs Say Yes program with a gift of $1 million. This remarkable gift will enable department chairs to support their faculty’s work as teachers and scholars while also building intellectual community.

In light of our accomplishments this past year, perhaps the best thing I have ever done for the Institute was to leave it for a year! Certainly, it will take some doing to make 2011-2012 as exciting and productive as last year. But we have an added incentive to make this year special: it is the 25th anniversary of the Institute, established in 1987.

What have we done in 25 years? Provided more than 500 Faculty Fellowships and 89 Academic Leadership Fellowships to UNC faculty. Built Hyde Hall, which serves as the intellectual crossroads of campus. Created programs that span the campus and community and celebrate Carolina’s grand liberal arts tradition. The IAH has a lot of accomplishments to celebrate this year—and a strong sense of the work that remains to be done.

I am pleased to welcome Julia Sprunt Grumbles as our new Board chair this fall, with thanks to John O’Hara, who is stepping down after five years of outstanding service. Julia has been particularly involved with the Innovation initiative—especially in advising us as we develop a unique model at Carolina for supporting our chosen projects. This venture model provides not just money, but also expertise and networking. I look forward to working with Julia even more closely in the coming years.

I am also pleased that Ruel Tyson has taken up residence in Hyde Hall, with an office right next to my own on the second floor. We’re happy to welcome him back to the home that he helped build.

Please come by and say hello to both me and Ruel, and to all of us in Hyde Hall.

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o u r v i s i o n

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The Institute for the Arts and Humanities: who we are and what we do

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“The IAH Faculty Fellowships pay enormous dividends in developing research,

energizing teaching, and building and maintaining loyalty to the University”— Michael lienesch, chapMan FaMily Faculty Fellow (Fall 2010),

DepartMent oF political science

page 3

pages 4–5

pages 6–11

pages 18–19

pages 20–21

The mission of the Institute for the Arts and Humanities (IAH) is to foster

intellectual community and faculty development at Carolina by supporting

innovative teaching and research, especially in the arts and humanities.

the iah’s two signature programs, the Faculty Fellowship Program and the

Academic Leadership Program, build collegial relationships among faculty

through seminars that address teaching methods and goals, research interests and

leadership responsibilities.

the iah offers several funding opportunities to help faculty find necessary

resources to create and disseminate new knowledge.

the iah assists in the recruitment and retention of a world-class faculty at UNC

by supporting the work of our best professors while also developing campus leaders from

among the faculty.

in addition to celebrating our Fellows, the iah serves as the “big tent” on

campus by hosting conversations on challenging topics.

We support research that reaches both on- and off-campus audiences, including

Carolina alumni, communicating the spirit of the liberal arts to unc’s many publics.

to fulfill our mission of supporting carolina faculty, the iah must attend to our future,

even as we celebrate our first 25 years.

we rely on our advisory boards and staff to shape and fulfill the iah’s mission.

we rely on philanthropic support from donors and foundations to

make all our programs and events possible. thank you to all our board members and donors

for your generous support.

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o u r p r o g r a m s

Faculty Fellows ProgramFaculty Fellowships provide on-campus semester leaves that offer faculty much-needed time to refresh through pursuit of new or continued research projects, redesign of course offerings, and work on scholarly or creative projects.Each semester’s Fellows meet weekly for a wide-

ranging conversation that covers the research and pedagogical interests of the Fellows as well as more general issues facing the University.

• IAH Faculty Fellowships help faculty members from the College of Arts and Sciences pursue research projects for publication, exhibition, composition and performance. Tenured and tenure-track faculty in the arts and humanities are eligible.

• Faculty Arts Fellowships are offered in conjunction with the Office of the Executive Director for the Arts. Up to two Arts Fellows are named each year. Tenured, tenure-track faculty and fixed-term faculty with projects related to the arts are eligible.

For a listing of this year’s Faculty Fellows, turn to page 6.

Julia T. Wood, the Lineberger Distinguished Professor of Humanities and the Thomas S. and Caroline H. Royster Distinguished Professor of Graduate Education, has led the Faculty Fellows Program as an IAH associate director since 2002. Julia is now leaving the IAH to take on a new position as the Director of the Royster Society of Fellows in UNC’s Graduate School. She will be missed in Hyde Hall, but at least she is not going far away. Thank you, Julia, for everything you

have done, and continue to do, for the IAH and Carolina.Our Interim Associate Director for fall 2011 will be Jane Thrailkill,

professor of English and comparative literature. Laurie Maffly-Kipp, professor of religious studies, will assume the role of the associate director of the program in spring 2012.

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Did you know?it costs about $27,000 to fund one

faculty fellowship for one semester.

the college of arts and sciences

applies those funds toward the faculty

member’s home department to hire a

replacement teacher for the semester.

carolina has no sabbatical system in

place for faculty, so iah Fellowships

are a critical component in helping the

college recruit, retain and refresh top

faculty. at the iah, we know that a great

education starts with an energized

teacher. For information on endowing

or supporting a fellowship, contact

Mary Flanagan at (919) 962-2528.

our core Programs The Institute for the Arts and Humanities helps Carolina recruit, develop and retain a world-class

faculty by providing research support, facilitating innovative teaching and scholarship, fostering

faculty leaders, and building intellectual community.

Julia t. wood photo by: chris carmichael

anthropologist patricia Mcanany makes a point while owen goslin,

department of classics, looks on during a spring 2011 Fellows seminar.

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o u r p r o g r a m s

The Ruel W. Tyson Jr. Leadership ProgramAcademic leadership extends to all facets of University life — and even beyond. UNC has a strong tradition of faculty governance. The Tyson Leadership Program identifies, develops and supports the faculty who assume vital leadership roles on and off campus. The program is funded by Hyde Family Foundations.

The Academic Leadership ProgramThe Academic Leadership Program (ALP) provides an arena for honest discussion and cultivates leadership skills through an intensive yearlong program that helps leaders identify their strengths, evaluate their leadership goals and build a peer network across UNC. Eight faculty members participate in the ALP yearly. Each group of Fellows, or forum, continues to meet regularly and supports each other after their fellowship semester at the Institute.Activities for ALP participants include weekend retreats, weekly

meetings in Hyde Hall and off-site leadership development workshops, including a five-day intensive leadership development training experience at the Center for Creative Leadership in Greensboro. The ALP is open to faculty from across the University.IAH Associate Director Kim Strom-Gottfried; Rob Kramer, founder of

Kramer Leadership; and Jeanine Simmons, IAH Coordinator for Faculty Programs, lead the ALP. For a listing of this year’s Leadership Fellows, turn to page 6.

The Chairs Leadership ProgramThe Chairs Leadership Program (CLP) is entering its fifth year of supporting newly appointed and reappointed department, program and curricular chairs in the College of Arts and Sciences. Chairs meet monthly to confidentially discuss issues commonly encountered in the role of chair, including recruiting, mentoring, retaining and evaluating faculty; strategic leadership and departmental goal setting; dealing with difficult situations and faculty members; managing instructional and operating budgets; and improving the quality of teaching. The mix of returning and newly appointed chairs fosters a built-in

mentoring aspect to the CLP. New chairs benefit from the knowledge of their more experienced colleagues, and returning chairs are able to share in the development of future leaders while discussing their own challenges and opportunities.IAH Associate Director Bill Balthrop, professor of communication

studies, and Leadership Coordinator David Kiel from the Center for Faculty Excellence have served as co-facilitators of the program since its beginning. For a listing of this year’s Chairs, turn to page 7.

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setting the stanDarD

The Chairs Leadership Program was profiled at a national meeting of the Education Advisory Board in June 2011. At the Provost Roundtable meeting, the CLP’s innovative approach to supporting chairs and encouraging leadership development was highlighted as an example of best practice and presented to an audience of senior academic administrators from across the nation.

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alp Fellow Jay swaminathan, an associate dean and distinguished

professor at Kenan-Flagler Business school, participates in a

conversation with Deloitte executive Jim wall (see page 13).

Karen gil (center), dean of the college of arts and sciences,

attends an event in hyde hall.

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o u r p r o g r a m s

Funding opportunities In addition to fellowships, the IAH provides a number of funding

opportunities geared toward faculty in the fine arts, humanities and

qualitative social sciences.

IAH Innovation FundThe Institute partnered this year with the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research to create a $100,000 Innovation Fund that supports innovative artistic and humanistic work by UNC faculty.Derived from a model developed by New York’s Creative Capital, a

venture fund for artists, the IAH Innovation Fund provides hands-on advice in addition to funding for the selected projects. Over a three year period, successful entrepreneurs will help those awarded innovation funds to create an implementation plan, identify and meet benchmarks, and create marketing and fundraising strategies. After an initial grant of $5,000, the IAH may allocate up to $50,000 to each project, dependent on the project’s progress and needs.The five projects chosen in the 2011 competition are:Sustained Participatory Action Research Collaborations (SPARCs):

A New Model of Community/University Innovation — This project establishes a pilot program for a collaborative model in which teachers, researchers and community partners serve as an “R&D department for the community.” Project Team Leader: Dorothy Holland, Department of Anthropology.New Models of Music Pedagogy and Entrepreneurship through

Public-Private Partnerships — A new set of courses, workshops, performances and events will encourage non-traditional music making

in beat-based forms of music by bringing together faculty, local artists and the Scratch DJ Academy in Los Angeles. Project Team Leader: Mark Katz, Department of Music.Community Chorus Project — The goal is to develop choral singing

as a community-building activity and to create a public-private relationship that incorporates music pedagogy with the development of chorus programs in low-income neighborhoods. Project Team Leader: Terry Rhodes, Department of Music.Reimagining Gaming: Program in Alternative Games and

Digital Innovation — This project seeks to establish a collaborative, multidisciplinary research and artistic environment for faculty, artists, students, researchers and information technologists to create and analyze nontraditional or “alternative” digital games. Project Team Leader: Joyce Rudinsky, Department of Communication Studies.Servant of Two Masters: Debut of a RoboThespian — Art and science

merge as a human actor and a fully programmable humanoid robot, “RoboThespian,” guided using motion-capture and 3-D animation, perform the Commedia dell’Arte play, Servant of Two Masters. Project Team Leader: Francesca Talenti, Department of Communication Studies.

To learn more about these projects, visit iah.unc.edu.

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participants in the community chorus project, led by iah Fellow terry rhodes, rehearse in a recording studio.

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Support for Research and Creative ActivityThis year for the first time, the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research recommended that the IAH vet proposals for its $30,000 fund to support research and creative activities in the arts and humanities. We received 44 proposals for this fund and were able to fund eight. Visit iah.unc.edu/news for a list of funded projects.

Faculty Working GroupsUsing funds from the Schwab Opportunity Fund and the Friends of the Institute annual fund, the IAH supports collaborative, interdisciplinary working groups that involve two or more IAH Fellows. Working groups are interdisciplinary gatherings of faculty and graduate students who are investigating a scholarly topic, designing new curricular offerings, planning intellectual events or developing grant proposals.The IAH currently supports 10 working groups, including a public

film series hosted at the Varsity Theater on Franklin Street with a guided discussion after the show, and a group of students and faculty working with an African-American community in Chapel Hill to develop a public history site.

The full list is available on our website.

Faculty Grants ProgramThe Institute’s Faculty Grants Program aims to help faculty in the arts and humanities attract more research funding, particularly on the national level. The program relies on three main components:Grants Mentoring Workshops — Faculty preparing proposals for

such funding agencies as the National Endowment for the Humanities and American Council of Learned Societies, as well as IAH Faculty Fellowships, work with peers who have successfully applied for funds in the past. Small groups collaborate to provide feedback and suggestions to help strengthen each proposal. A follow-up workshop is available for those interested in further feedback after participants have had time to revise their proposals.Successful Proposal Database — The IAH is working with UNC’s

Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research to identify successful arts and humanities proposals to major granting agencies. Select proposals will be available online to model the key elements of a successful grant proposal. This component is planned to go live in the 2011–2012 academic year.Program Officer Visits — The IAH is working with the Office

of Federal Affairs at Carolina to bring program officers from federal funding agencies to the Triangle region to meet with faculty from UNC, N.C. State and N.C. Central. Such visits —two of which will happen this academic year — will demonstrate the regional commitment to research while also providing faculty an opportunity to directly interact with those responsible for awarding funds.

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Kate torrey, director of unc press, attends an iah event.

a talk on innovation with unc trustee phillip clay, chancellor at Mit,

drew a large crowd. see page 14 for more information.

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o u r f e l l o w s

Meet the iah Fellows for 2010–2011.

Faculty FellowsDorit Bar-On, Duke Exchange Fellow Professor, Department of Philosophy

John Bowles, Wilmer Kuck Borden Fellow Associate Professor, Department of Art “New Negro on the Pacific Rim: Sargent Johnson’s Afro-Asian Sculptures and the Cultural Politics of the Harlem Renaissance”

Inger Brodey, Chapman Family Faculty Fellow Associate Professor, Departments of English and Comparative Literature, Asian Studies “Revenge, Law and Nation-Making in the Western and Samurai Film”

E. Jane Burns, Nelson Schwab III Fellow Professor, Department of Women’s Studies “Beauty and the Beast: Gender, Hybridity and Dynastic Expansion”

Connie Eble, IAH Advisory Board Fellow Professor, Department of English and Comparative Literature “Family Papers and American Linguistic History”

Owen Goslin, Valinda Hill Dubose Fellow Assistant Professor, Department of Classics “Euripides’ Suppliant Women and the Politics of Pity”

Glenn Hinson, T. Winfield Blackwell Jr. Fellow Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology/ American Studies; Folklore Program “Hidden Histories of Rhyme: Exploring African-American Oral Poetry”

Brian Hogan, Chapman Family Faculty Fellow Research Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry “The Magic of Nature”

Gorham (Hap) Kindem, Faculty Arts Fellow Professor, Department of Communication Studies “Blind Victory”

Marc Lange, D. Earl Pardue Fellow Professor, Department of Philosophy “Explanation in Mathematics”

Michael Lienesch, Chapman Family Faculty Fellow Professor, Department of Political Science “Postsecular Political Theory”

Jodi Magness, Chapman Family Faculty Fellow Professor, Department of Religious Studies “The Archaeology of the Holy Land (586 B.C.E. – 640 C.E.)”

Patricia McAnany, T. Winfield Blackwell Jr. Fellow Professor, Department of Anthropology “Twisted Histories: Maya Heritage Rights, Archaeology, Nation-Building and Tourism”

Katherine Roberts, John W. Burress III Fellow Assistant Professor, Department of American Studies “Land, Work and Local Power in Appalachia”

Graeme Robertson, Taylor Family Fellow Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science “Elections, Revolution and Democracy in the Post Cold War Era”

Yaron Shemer, J. Scott and Nancy Cramer Fellow Assistant Professor, Department of Asian Studies “Neighboring Identities: The Jew in Arab Cinema”

James Thompson, D. Earl Pardue Fellow Professor, Department of English and Comparative Literature “Jane Austen’s World”

Michael Tsin, Hyde Family Foundation Fellow Associate Professor, Department of History “Identity and Difference in Twentieth-Century China”

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Leadership FellowsElizabeth “Claire” Dees, Ruel W. Tyson Fellow School of Medicine, Hematology-Oncology

Jonathan Hartlyn, John L. Turner Family Fellow College of Arts and Sciences, Political Science

Gail Henderson, William C. Friday Fellow School of Medicine, Social Medicine

Patricia Parker, John L. Turner Family Fellow College of Arts and Sciences, Communication Studies

Matt Redinbo, William C. Friday Fellow College of Arts and Sciences, Chemistry

Terry Rhodes, Marjorie M. Schwab Fellow College of Arts and Sciences, Music

Pamela Rowsey, Marjorie M. Schwab Fellow School of Nursing

Thomas Thornburg, Marjorie M. Schwab Fellow School of Government

the spring 2011 Faculty Fellows

the fall 2010 Faculty Fellows

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Andrew PerrinAndrew Perrin, professor of sociology, teaches students about the social and cultural elements of democracy — as he puts it, “what people need to do, say and be to be good citizens.” One could argue that participation is a key element, and one that Perrin exemplifies.A Faculty Fellow in fall 2007

and an Academic Leadership Fellow in 2010, Perrin has continued to remain involved in the Institute as a member of our Faculty Advisory Board. And, this year, Perrin both served as a member of our Weil Lecturer Selection Committee and put together a panel on civil discourse leading up to Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf ’s visit to campus in March 2011. You may have seen Perrin in the New York Times this year, too,

where he sounded off on grade inflation on college campuses. (Did you realize that grade inflation has ties to the Vietnam War and the draft? Read Perrin’s profile at iah.unc.edu/fellows to learn more about it.)Perrin identifies the Institute for the Arts and Humanities as

a primary place on campus where “the life of the mind actually happens”— where thoughtful and critical conversations produce a synergy of ideas that is more than the sum of its parts.

o u r f e l l o w s

Chairs Leadership Program ParticipantsMcKay Coble Department of Dramatic Art

Kevin Guskiewicz Department of Exercise & Sports Science

James N. Hirschfield Department of Art

Michael Kosorok Department of Biostatistics

Lloyd Kramer Department of History

Paul Leslie Department of Anthropology

Peter Mucha Department of Mathematics

Dennis Mumby Department of Communication Studies

Michael Salemi Department of Economics

June Stevens Department of Epidemiology

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“The Institute for the Arts and Humanities is where the University nurtures big ideas that can’t be constrained by disciplines or corralled into a given research project — but that really deserve to be given strong consideration and careful thought.”

— anDrew perrin, proFessor oF sociologyFaculty Fellow (Fall 2007) anD leaDership Fellow (2010)

Allen AndersonAllen Anderson, IAH Fellow (Fall 2000) and associate professor of music, took the inaugural CHAT Festival, a digital arts and humanities festival hosted by the IAH in February 2010, as an opportunity to collaborate with his undergraduate students.Composition is notoriously a solo process, but Anderson and his

students teamed to compose “Cicadas in the Clouds,” which was performed during the festival by U.N.C.L.E., an acronym for the

University of North Carolina Laptop Ensemble.Anderson’s inspiration for

the collaborative model arose from a seminar he attended in fall 2008 in Hyde Hall led by Katherine Hayles, postmodern literary critic and literature professor at Duke University.“I came away from the

lecture with the sense that education could be very

much like what happens in a business, where many people, and that includes the students themselves, contribute to working toward a goal,” Anderson said.In the end, he said, “The experience of putting it together was

meaningful to us.”

Profiled Fellows

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h o n o r s & a w a r d s

every year, IAH Faculty Fellows and Leadership Fellows garner an extraordinary number

of honors, awards and funding from the University and beyond. Our Fellows are award-winning

writers, researchers and teachers, and many of them hold leadership posts within their fields.

Here, we’re publishing a list of honors and awards submitted to us by our Fellows, knowing

that there are many other triumphs and successes that we have yet to discover. We celebrate

our Fellows and congratulate them. Please enjoy this impressive array of awards and honors

by IAH Fellows in 2010–2011.

Barbara Ambros, Department of Religious Studies Faculty Fellow Fall 2008Awarded a grant by the Northeast Asia Council for a research trip to Japan to support a book on women in Japanese religions.

Lucia Binotti, Department of Romance Languages / Faculty Fellow Summer 1991, Fall 1992, Spring 1996 and Spring 2003Awarded a Digital Humanities Start-Up grant for $50,000 from the National Endowment for the Humanities for “Gnovis: Flowing Through the Galaxy of Knowledge.”

Judith Blau, Department of Sociology Faculty Fellow Spring 1992 and Spring 1994Received five grants for the Human Rights Center, of which she is the director, and was elected president of Sociologists without Borders and acting president of the Thematic Group on Human Rights and Global Justice of the International Sociological Association.

John Bowles, Department of Art Faculty Fellow Fall 2010Received a Chris and George Benter Fellowship at the Huntington Library for his project “New Negro on the Pacific Rim: Sargent Johnson’s Afro-Asian Sculptures.”

Jane Brown, School of Journalism and Mass Communication Faculty Fellow Fall 1997, Leadership Fellow Spring 2002Presented with the C. Knox Massey Distinguished Service Award for meritorious service to UNC.

W. Fitz Brundage, Department of History Faculty Fellow Fall 2004, Leadership Fellow Spring 2006Received a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, an LSTA grant for $150,000 from the State Library of North Carolina and a fall 2011 UNC Reynolds Competitive Research Leave; in addition, named a Rogers Distinguished Fellow in 19th-Century American History at the Huntington Library.

Dino S. Cervigni, Department of Romance Languages Faculty Fellow Spring 2000Honored with the Board of Governors’ Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2010–2011.

Michael Chitwood, Department of English and Comparative Literature / Faculty Fellow Spring 2010 (Chapman Fellow)Named a finalist for ForeWord Magazine’s Best Books of the Year for Poor-Mouth Jubilee; also nominated for the Chaffin Award for Appalachian Writing, the Library of Virginia Award and the Roanoke-Chowan Award of the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association, and had a poem selected to appear in Garrison Keillor’s upcoming anthology American Places.

Cori E. Dauber, Department of Communication Studies Faculty Fellow Fall 1993 and Fall 2005 (Chapman Fellow)Awarded a visiting research professorship in 2011–2012 in the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College in Carlisle, Pa.

Jean DeSaix, Department of Biology Faculty Fellow Spring 2005 (Chapman Fellow)Named a National Academies Education Fellow in the Life Sciences by the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine, which is awarded by the National Research Council as part of an Institute on Scientific Teaching supported by the National Research Council and Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Jo Anne Earp, Department of Health Behavior & Education / Leadership Fellow Spring 2006Serving as principal investigator on a long-term research study, the N.C. Breast Cancer Screening Program, which was designated a Research-tested Intervention Program by

the National Cancer Institute.

Carl W. Ernst, Department of Religious Studies Faculty Fellow Spring 2001, Leadership Fellow Spring 2009Elected to the Board of Directors of the Middle East Studies Association.

Annegret Fauser, Department of Music Faculty Fellow Spring 2004Received the American Musicological Society’s Ruth A. Solie Award for her book Music, Theater, and Cultural Transfer: Paris, 1830–1914 (University of Chicago Press, 2009).

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h o n o r s & a w a r d s

Gregory Flaxman, Department of English and Comparative Literature / Faculty Fellow Fall 2007 (Chapman Fellow)Honored with the Australian Research Council Award for the Study of Film and Philosophy and a visiting professorship at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia; also received a Tanner Award for Post-Baccalaureate Teaching and Mentoring and the Department of English and Comparative Literature Dissertation Mentoring Award.

Allen F. Glazner, Department of Geological Sciences Faculty Fellow Fall 2007 (Chapman Fellow)Presented with the J. Carlyle Sitterson Freshman Teaching Award for 2011 and received a grant from the National Science Foundation for the project “Pilot Study: Effect of Temperature Cycling on Crystal Size and Alignment in Magmas.”

Pika Gosh, Department of Art / Faculty Fellow Spring 2004Received a special mention from the College Art Association for the Alfred H. Barr Prize for Museum Scholarship for “From Rags to Riches: Valuing Kanthas in Bengali Households” in Kantha: The Embroidered Quilts of Bengal from the Jill and Sheldon Bonowitz Collection and the Stella Kramrisch Collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2009).

Kevin Guskiewicz, Department of Exercise & Sports Science Leadership Fellow Spring 2008Named a MacArthur Fellow, one of 22 “geniuses” nationally who will receive $500,000 over the next five years.

Karen Hagemann, Department of History / Faculty Fellow Fall 2008Named a 2011–2012 fellow at the National Humanities Center and a fall 2010 fellow at The American Academy in Berlin; received a curriculum development grant from the UNC Center for Global Initiatives for a Burch Field Research Seminar entitled “The Janus Face of European Modernity: German History, Culture and Politics (Berlin, Hamburg, Potsdam and Strasbourg).”

Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, Department of History Faculty Fellow Spring 1998 and Fall 2004Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; as director of the Southern Oral History Program in the Center for the Study of the American South, she is serving

as co-principal investigator on “Publishing the Long Civil Rights Movement, Phase II,” which received a $500,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and also on “Civil Rights History Project,” funded by an act of Congress and administered by the Library of Congress and the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Gail Henderson, School of Medicine / Leadership Fellow Spring 2011Awarded two grants from the National Institutes of Health, totaling more than $800,000, for “From Specimen to Biobank: Using an Organizational Perspective to Study ELSI Issues” and “Enhancing Biobank Capacities Across CTSAs.” Also became an editor for the

Genetics in Medicine Journal and hosted an international conference on ethical, legal and social implications of genomics, funded by a $220,000 supplement to the NIH National Human Genome Research Institute’s Center for Genomics and Society at UNC.

Jonathan Hess, Department of Germanic Languages Faculty Fellow Fall 2000 and Spring 2007Authored Middlebrow Literature and the Making of German-Jewish Identity (Stanford University Press, 2010), which was selected by Choice magazine as an outstanding academic title for 2010.

James Hirschfield, Department of Art / Faculty Fellow Summer 1990, Spring 1993 and Fall 2001, Leadership Fellow Spring 2012Named a Kenan Distinguished Professor and appointed chair of the Department of Art.

Evelyne Huber, Department of Political Science Leadership Fellow Spring 2007Received an honorary doctorate in Social Science from the University of Bern, Switzerland.

Christopher Jones, Department of Mathematics Leadership Fellow Spring 2005Received a grant from the National Sciences Foundation, which appointed him the director of the Mathematics and Climate Research Network, and was also selected as a Society of Industrial and Applied Mathematics Fellow.

Mark Katz, Department of Music / Faculty Fellow Spring 2012Received a 2011 Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Prize for artistic and scholarly achievement by young faculty.

Hap Kindem, Department of Communication Studies Faculty Fellow Summer 1989, Fall 1994 and Spring 2004Documentary entitled “More Than Meets the Eye” won Best Film at the International Symposium on Adapted Physical Activity in Paris; the film is also being shown in Brazil for three months as part of Assim Vivemos, Brazil’s 5th International Film Festival.

Charles Kurzman, Department of Sociology Faculty Fellow Spring 2001Elected to the American Society for the Study of Religion.

Laurie Langbauer, Department of English and Comparative Literature / Faculty Fellow Spring 2005Awarded a 2011–2012 John E. Sawyer Fellowship at the National Humanities Center to conduct research on child authors and juvenilia.

Marc Lange, Department of Philosophy / Faculty Fellow Spring 2011Appointed chair of the Department of Philosophy and authored “A Tale of Two Vectors,” which was selected by The Philosopher’s Annual as one of the ten best articles published in philosophy in 2009.

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Christopher Lee, Department of History Faculty Fellow Spring 2010Received a six month Kluge Fellowship at the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress and also received the 2010 Ali Sastroamidjojo Prize from the Asia-Africa Academy in Jarkarta, Indonesia, for his edited volume Making a World After Empire: The Bandung Moment and its Political Afterlives (Ohio University Press, 2010).

Jim Leloudis, Department of History Faculty Fellow Spring 1997 and Spring 1992, Leadership Fellow Spring 2003Honored with the 2010 North Caroliniana Society Book Award for To Right These Wrongs: The North Carolina Fund and the Battle to End Poverty and Inequality in 1960s America.

Lauren Leve, Department of Religious Studies Faculty Fellow Fall 2007Elected to the executive board of the Society for the Anthropology of Religion; appointed an associate professor and awarded a grant from the Carolina Asia Center to develop a course called “Religion and Globalization in Southeast Asia.”

Laurie Maffly-Kipp, Department of Religious Studies / Faculty Fellow Spring 1998, Summer 1990 and Spring 2008, Leadership Fellow Spring 2002Serving as president-elect of the American Society of Church History.

Gary Marks, Department of Political Science Faculty Fellow Fall 1989Awarded a Humboldt Prize in 2011, given by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to internationally renowned scientists and scholars.

Patricia A. McAnany, Department of Anthropology Faculty Fellow Spring 2011Appointed an external faculty member at the Santa Fe Institute in Santa Fe, N.M.

Michael McFee, Department of English and Comparative Literature Faculty Fellow Fall 1995 (Chapman Fellow) and Spring 2008Received the R. Hunt Parker Memorial Award for Literary Achievement, given by the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association for contributions to the cultural, historical, literary and musical life of North Carolina; received WCHL Radio’s Village Pride “Hometown Hero” Award; secured a publications grant from the University Research Council to support an upcoming book of poems entitled That Was Oasis (2012).

Laurie McNeil, Department of Physics / Leadership Fellow Spring 2003, Faculty Fellow Fall 2004 (Chapman Fellow) Presented with the 2011 William F. Little Distinguished Service Award by the College of Arts and Sciences; awarded a grant by the National Science Foundation for “High-conductivity Binary Organic Single

Crystals for Electronic Applications,” a collaborative project with researchers from Georgia Tech, Wake Forest University and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore; also serving as the chair of the Southeastern Section of the American Physical Society.

Layna Mosley, Department of Political Science Faculty Fellow Fall 2008Appointed program chair for the International Studies Association meeting to be held in April 2012.

Dennis Mumby, Department of Communication Studies Leadership Fellow Spring 2010Honored with the National Communication Association’s Charles H. Woolbert Research Award for “Modernism, Postmodernism, and Communication Studies: A Rereading of an Ongoing Debate.” (Communication Theory 7, 1997); also received the NCA’s Distinguished Scholar Award, recognizing a lifetime of scholarly achievement in the study of human communication.

Jocelyn R. Neal, Department of Music / Faculty Fellow Spring 2008Won an ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for Songs of Jimmie Rodgers: A Legacy in Country Music (Indiana University Press).

Donald M. Nonini, Department of Anthropology Faculty Fellow Spring 1991, Fall 1998 and Spring 2007Serving as president of the Society for Urban National and Transnational Anthropology, a unit of the American Anthropological Association.

Krista M. Perreira, Department of Public Policy Faculty Fellow Spring 2008Presented with the Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Award for Artistic and Scholarly Achievement; serving as principal investigator on “Hispanic Community Children’s Health: Study of Latino Youth,” funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.

John Pickles, Department of Geography Leadership Fellow Spring 2007Received a research award from the National Science Foundation for “Neighbors and the New Geographies of Europe: Non-Accession Integration and the Changing Exercise of Sovereignty in the Euro-Med Region” for 2010–2014; named an honorary lifetime member of the Bulgarian Geographical Society; appointed to the scientific board of the International Geographical Union Commission on the International Year of Geographical Understanding as well as a scientific review panel of the European Science Foundation; appointed to the Social Science Research Council’s international dissertation research fellowship review panel.

Jan Prins, Department of Computer Science Leadership Fellow Spring 2007Named a fall 2010 Research Fellow at the Renaissance Computing Institute.

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h o n o r s & a w a r d s

Barbara K. Rimer, School of Public Health Leadership Fellow Spring 2005Awarded extensions on two grants for the UNC Public Health Traineeship Program; serving as a member of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation National Advisory Board for Health Policy and the National Cancer Advisory Board Ad Hoc Working Group to Create a Strategic Vision for the National Cancer Program and Review of the National Cancer Institute; was a panelist for “Promising Practices Assessment of the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program” and the NIH State-of-the-Science Conference; gave the welcome address at the 2011 N.C. State Health Director’s Conference and also serves on the editorial advisory board for the Translational Behavioral Medicine Journal.

Steve Rosefielde, Department of Economics Faculty Fellow Fall 2000 and Spring 2007Received a grant from the Taiwan government to study Taiwanese democracy in support of Democracy as Icon and Mirage (Cambridge University Press, 2012); awarded an extension of a grant from the Japan Foundation Center for Global Policy for research on the effects of the global financial crisis on Asia; received a grant from the Ackland Museum to prepare a handbook on Asian art for an Asian economics course.

Geoffrey Sayre-McCord, Department of Philosophy Faculty Fellow Summer 1988 and Spring 1990Won a Tanner Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching; also delivered the UNC December 2010 Commencement address.

Lillie L. Searles, Department of Biology Leadership Fellow Spring 2004Honored with a 2011 University Award for the Advancement of Women at UNC.

Bland Simpson, Department of English and Comparative Literature Faculty Fellow Fall 1998 (Chapman Fellow) and Fall 2006 (Chapman Fellow)Named a Kenan Distinguished Professor, received the Hardee-Rives Award for Dramatic Arts from the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association, and was an honoree at the 2010 North Carolina Writers Conference.

Lynda Stone, School of Education / Faculty Fellow Fall 1996Finished term as president of the John Dewey Society and serving as vice president of the American Educational Studies Association.

John Sweet, Department of History Faculty Fellow Spring 2007Awarded a fellowship from the National Humanities

Center and named a fellow by the National Endowment for the Humanities for 2011–2012 in support of a book project entitled The Captive’s Tale: Venture Smith and the Root of the American Republic.

Francesca Talenti, Department of Communication Studies Faculty Fellow Fall 2003, Kauffman Fellow Spring 2006The Contemporary Art Center of Thessaloniki, Greece, screened Daphne 2.0; the film also won the Experimental Grit Award at the Indie Grits Film Festival in Columbia, S.C.

Milada Vachudova, Department of Political Science Faculty Fellow Spring 2005Awarded two grants to support research on democratization, political contestation and external leverage in post-communist states; received a fellowship as part of the 2011–2012 Individual Advanced Research Opportunities Program of the International Research and Exchanges Board; awarded a grant for 2012–2013 in the National Research Competition of the National Council for Eurasian and East European Research.

Joe Viscomi, Department of English Faculty Fellow Fall 1988 and Spring 2001The William Blake Archive, of which he is the director and co-editor, received a 2011 Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching Award and is entering the second year of a three year Scholarly Edition and Translations grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Brett Whalen, Department of History Faculty Fellow Fall 2008Received a 2011 Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Prize for artistic and scholarly achievement by young faculty.

Margaret Wiener, Department of Anthropology Faculty Fellow Fall 1996, Spring 2002 and Spring 2007Awarded a W.R. Kenan Jr. Leave from UNC for spring 2012 and serving as president of the Society for the Anthropology of Religion.

visit iah.unc.eDu/PrograMs to learn about our FellowshiP, leaDershiP anD grants PrograMs

“Professors who have the benefit of a semester of intellectual stimulation at the IAH return to their classes fortified with new research information and a renewed sense of the love of learning that likely sent them into the profession

in the first place.”— e. Jane Burns, nelson schwaB iii

Faculty Fellow (Fall 2010), DepartMent oF woMen’s stuDies

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each year, the institute for the arts and humanities sponsors and co-

sponsors events that celebrate our Fellows and their accomplishments; create opportunities

for challenging conversations that make us the “Big Tent” on campus; support research and

collaboration at the University; and engage with Carolina alumni by bringing faculty at the

cutting edge of research into the community.

Celebrates our Fellows

our annual “welcome back” reception, held during the first week of classes in august,

provides an opportunity for faculty to reconnect at the start of the academic year through

conversation and libation. open to all faculty in the college of arts and sciences, the

reception not only reunites our Fellows, but also introduces new faculty to the iah and to

hyde hall. pictured: iah Fellow Kevin stewart, department of geological sciences.

Fellows, faculty and staff enjoy a reception

celebrating new publications, compositions,

exhibitions and performances by iah Fellows at

our annual iah Fellows recognition and holiday

party. this year, nearly 30 Fellows had works on

display. pictured: Bill Balthrop (left), iah interim

director in 2011, and Barbara entwisle, unc’s vice

chancellor for research.

Julia t. wood (pictured, left, with iah

executive Director Megan granda) was

honored with the george h. Johnson prize

for Distinguished achievement by an iah

Fellow; she is a professor of communication

studies and caroline h. and thomas s.

royster Distinguished professor for graduate

education and has served as the associate

director for the Faculty Fellows program for

nearly a decade. the award is given every

two years as a lifetime achievement award

that honors both the Fellow and the award’s

namesake, longtime iah friend and supporter

george Johnson of atlanta, ga.

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The IAH…

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Serves as the “Big Tent” on campus

the iah met with ruby

lerner (pictured, right, with

iah advisory Board chair

John c. o’hara), unc

alumna and founder of

creative capital, a national

nonprofit organization that

treats project funding like a

venture capital investment,

providing integrated

financial and advisory

support to artists. as a result

of this meeting, the iah

has applied some of ruby’s

great ideas to our own iah

innovations Fund.

the iah marked the publication of Engines of Innovation:

The Entrepreneurial University in the Twenty-First Century,

a book co-authored by chancellor holden thorp (pictured,

above) and Buck goldstein, unc’s entrepreneur in

residence, with an innovations symposium in october.

lloyd Kramer, iah Fellow and chair of the history

department, led the effort to plan a two-day symposium

that kicked off with a lecture by the chancellor, “Beyond

the sciences: why the world’s problems need the whole university.” the following day, we hosted a symposium open to all

unc faculty to further explore how the chancellor’s vision will impact unc, looking at what entrepreneurship means for faculty

research, teaching and service, and for deans at unc. one thing was clear: at the end of the day, the arts and humanities will

play a critical role in this initiative. also pictured: iah Fellow Jim peacock, distinguished professor of anthropology, asks the

chancellor a question following his talk.

Jim wall (pictured, left), the global managing director,

talent, and chief diversity officer at Deloitte, shared his

experiences and expertise with tyson leadership program

participants this fall. Jim’s insights fostered spirited

conversations, new perspectives and novel ideas, and we

are indebted to iah leadership advisory Board member

sandy cockrell for facilitating the relationship with Jim.

the institute hosted the first “Design Jam” in the region this spring.

Based on an initiative of Mozilla labs, a design jam is a one-day

technology design session that sets challenges for web and

graphic designers, information architects, or other technology and

design fields. at this event (pictured, above), student, faculty and

professional designers and technologists collaborated to address

real-world design problems.

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The IAH…

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Mit chancellor and unc trustee phillip clay (pictured, left, with Judith cone, special

assistant to the chancellor for innovation and entrepreneurship) spoke in hyde hall in

January, presenting “a strategy for unc: what Makes us Different from Mit and how to

Make the Most of it.” clay proposed that carolina must play to its strengths, identifying our

assets and utilizing the talents of our students and faculty while providing opportunities

for collaboration and interdisciplinary work.

laurie Maffly-Kipp, professor and chair

of religious studies and adjunct faculty

in american studies; timothy Marr, an

associate professor of american studies;

and carl w. ernst, distinguished professor

of religious studies, explored different

notions of religious tolerance, ultimately

agreeing that the goal should be pluralism,

or the celebration of different ideologies.

pictured: Marr, Maffly-Kipp and ernst.

panelists andrew perrin, associate professor of

sociology; Ferrell guillory, lecturer in the school of

Journalism and Mass communication and founder of

the program on public life; and Frank hill, director

of the institute for public trust in charlotte, n.c.,

debated the merits of civility in a conversation about

civil discourse moderated by elizabeth Mccain, a

student leader of the campus y and the three cups

of tea community Dialogue. pictured: hill, guillory,

perrin and Mccain.

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“The Faculty Fellowships help cultivate everything that is good about this institution… if you believe as I do that interdisciplinary work is essential to our intellectual wellbeing, then the Institute is the place where this happens, where humanists and

social scientists learn and respect each others’ ways of knowing.”— JaMes thoMpson, D. earl parDue Faculty Fellow (Fall 2010),

DepartMent oF english anD coMparative literature

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imam Feisal abdul rauf (pictured, right) engaged in

conversation with unc professor hodding carter

during this year’s weil lecture.

unc student Body president hogan Medlin (’11)

opened the Q&a, asking abdul rauf what he thought

college students could do to protect and enhance

american ideals of freedom and equality.

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The Weil Lecture was founded in 1915 by brothers Henry and Solomon Weil of Goldsboro and has been hosted by the IAH since 2000. We are grateful for the support of David (’57) and Emily Weil of Goldsboro and other members of the Weil Family.Past speakers in the lecture

series include presidents Taft and Carter; U.S. Senators J. William Fulbright, Nancy Kassebaum and John Kerry; Eleanor Roosevelt and the late Daniel Schorr, a CBS and National Public Radio correspondent.

Since its inception in 1915, the Weil Lecture on American Citizenship has sought to broaden public discourse on topics that explore what it means to be an American citizen. What qualities exemplify American ideals? Who qualifies as an American citizen? How is our modern society living out the ideals framed in the Constitution by our Founding Fathers? Past speakers, including U.S. presidents and senators, diplomats, political commentators and renowned scholars, have addressed such topics throughout the lecture’s history.This year, an ad hoc faculty committee selected Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf to deliver the 2011 Weil Lecture

on March 16. Abdul Rauf for many years has been a leader in American Islam, working with the U.S. State Department to improve trust and communication between the United States and Muslims worldwide.Abdul Rauf elected to participate in a conversational format with Hodding Carter, UNC professor of

leadership and public policy and former State Department spokesman for President Jimmy Carter. In the course of the conversation, Abdul Rauf proposed that Muslim values are, in fact, closely aligned with American values, that we all share more in common than we might realize.“All of Islamic law is to further and protect five, and some say six, objectives: Life, dignity—which I map to

liberty, property, family, the intellect and religion,” Abdul Rauf said, drawing parallels to the values instilled in the American constitution by our Founding Fathers.To read a summary of the talk, visit iah.unc.edu/news/newsarchive/2011/feisal. To view a video of the full

lecture, visit vimeo.com/iah.

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the 2011 weil lecture on american citizenship

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each year, the iah hosts the Mary stevens reckford Memorial

lecture in european studies, a lecture open to and meant to

engage the general public. in addition to the lecture, the iah hosts

a graduate seminar with the invited lecturer to further explore the

lecturer’s research. this year, Belgian political theorist chantal

Mouffe (pictured, above) participated in a workshop with more

than 40 graduate students, co-sponsored by the Department of

communication studies and the university program in cultural

studies. “space, hegemony and radical critique” further explored

Mouffe’s research and writings in a theoretical context.

Supports research

Belgian political theorist Chantal Mouffe (pictured, above) delivered the Mary Stevens Reckford Lecture in European Studies Feb. 10, the 17th hosted by the Institute for the Arts and Humanities since retired UNC Classics Professor Kenneth J. Reckford established the lecture series to honor his late wife, Mary Stevens Reckford.In “An Agonistic Approach to the Future of Europe,” Mouffe,

who is a professor of political theory at the University of Westminster, London, reflected on the problems that confront the European Union today. While its members are legally and financially bound as never before, Europe is beset by a resurgence of nationalism, sectarianism and racism.In her talk, Mouffe argued that the future of Europe rests on

the collective capacity to confront antagonism in the spirit of an “agonism” that celebrates discussion, debate and negotiation.For more information on the talk, visit iah.unc.edu/news/

newsarchive/2011/mouffe.

Mary Stevens ReckfordA graduate of Lesley College in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Mary Reckford took graduate courses at UNC through the Evening College for five years, studying such topics as Renaissance intellectual history, St. Augustine, sixteenth-century English literature, Arthurian literature, the Mediterranean world in the sixteenth century, and the history of science from the late-medieval period through the eighteenth century. She was mother to the Reckford’s five children, Rachel, Joseph, Jonathan, Sam and Sarah.

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charles hirschkind,

professor of social cultural

anthropology at the

university of california,

Berkeley, examined the

role of social media in the

uprisings in egypt in his talk,

“From the Blogosphere to

the street: social Media and

revolution in egypt.” the

event was co-sponsored by

the iah, islamic graduate

student association, the

carolina center for the study of the Middle east and

Muslim civilizations, and the departments of religious

studies and anthropology.

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our annual grants mentoring workshop offered

participants an opportunity to hone their arts and

humanities funding proposals in small groups. this

year, we added a follow-up workshop three weeks later

to allow participants a second round of review and

feedback, which has now become a permanent part of

the program. (photo by Justin cook)

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iah advisory Board member caroline williamson

and her husband robert hosted at their new york

home a timely, relevant conversation for unc alumni

living in the city on the proposed community center

branded as the “ground Zero Mosque.” to guide the

conversation and provide an academic perspective,

we invited participation from two unc faculty and

iah Fellows: carl w. ernst (pictured), distinguished

professor of religious studies, and randall styers,

associate professor of religious studies and faculty

coordinator for the Difficult Dialogues initiative at

unc, funded by the Ford Foundation. in the grand

tradition of the iah, guests enjoyed a thought-

provoking conversation over a shared meal.

iah Friend Memrie lewis (far

left) generously opened her

home in greenwich, conn., to

the institute and fellow carolina

alumni in april, hosting a

conversation on innovation with

Judith cone, special assistant

to the chancellor for innovation

and entrepreneurship and

member of the iah leadership

advisory Board. pictured:

lewis with unc alumnus Julian

robertson; iah executive

Director Megan granda; and

Judith cone.

Engages with alumni

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“The Faculty Fellowship Program gives permission to faculty members to enjoy learning for the sake of learning, to discover sympathetic and stimulating fellow travelers, to try to put into words glimmers of ideas that are not ready for peer scrutiny, to see connections between disciplinary questions and issues, to reflect

on what it means to teach, and to prepare students for the twenty-first century.”— connie eBle, iah aDvisory BoarD Faculty Fellow (spring 2011), DepartMent oF english anD

coMparative literature

The IAH…

carl w. ernst

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Funding innovation

Planning for the next 25 Years

The IAH Innovation Fund, described in detail on page 4, creates a three-year partnership with funded project teams. What makes this funding model unique is the fact that the monetary award represents just a fraction of the support we provide funded innovation teams. In addition to funding each project with up to $50,000, we are connecting team members with successful entrepreneurs who mentor the team in writing effective work plans, setting project goals, developing detailed budgets and creating marketing plans.Throughout the coming year, the IAH will continue to support both

funded teams and teams that submitted proposals but were not funded this year. For example, this fall the IAH will invite all teams with similar goals to deliver five-minute “micro talks” on their projects. Through these collegial conversations, teams may network with colleagues and with campus service providers who can help them realize their visions.The IAH Innovation Fund will also accept proposals this spring to

fund additional projects. This initiative is supported by funds from Hyde Family Foundations.

A major focus for the IAH this past spring was drafting a strategic plan for the next five years at the Institute. With the help of the various constituencies we serve — faculty, alumni and university administration — we are defining a set of priorities to effectively realize our mission of supporting Carolina’s faculty at every stage of their careers. In addition to strengthening our core Faculty Fellows and Ruel W. Tyson Jr.

Leadership programs, the IAH aspires to be light on its feet, alert to innovative ideas and practices, and responsive to opportunities that further the work of the arts and humanities as understood and practiced by UNC faculty. We will finalize the plan this fall and look forward to sharing our vision with you in

the coming year.

celebrating 25 Years

2011–2012 marks the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Institute and the 10th anniversary of Hyde Hall. We will celebrate throughout the year, beginning with our opening reception in August and culminating this spring with a convocation and dinner.Our early days as a program, our years in West House and our dreams

of something larger led us to where we are today: An established institute dedicated to recruiting, retaining and refreshing faculty to make Carolina one of the best universities in the nation.

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a conversation led by phillip clay on innovation (see page 14) drew an engaged crowd of faculty, students and alumni.

Former iah Board memberJennifer lloyd halsey

raises a question at an innovations event while fellow

board members Julia sprunt grumbles and steven

aldrich look on.

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engaging with the communityEach year, the IAH hosts a number of events open to the public. We invite you to save the date and plan to join us for the following:

annual iah Fellows recognition and holiday party — Dec. 7, 2011 from 4 to 6 p.m.Celebrate new publications, performances and compositions by IAH Fellows in 2011,

on Wednesday, Dec. 7, in Hyde Hall. Share in conversation and libation with faculty

authors and artists. New publications will be for sale at a special holiday discount, and

authors will be available to autograph their works.

the Mary stevens reckford Memorial lecture in european studies — Feb. 16, 2012This year’s Reckford Lecturer is historian and writer Mark Mazower, director of the

Center for International History at Columbia University. Mazower, who specializes in

modern Greece, 20th century Europe and international history, is the author of several

books, most recently No Enchanted Palace: the End of Empire (Princeton UP, 2009) and

Hitler’s Empire: Nazi Rule in Occupied Europe (Allen Lane, 2008), which won the LA

Times Book Prize for History.

We will publish more information about the lecture at iah.unc.edu this fall.

conference: Bernard william’s antiquity — april 13-15, 2011The IAH is co-sponsoring and hosting this conference in Hyde Hall with the classics

and philosophy departments at UNC. Williams was an influential British philosopher

who revolutionized the field in the late twentieth century. Speakers will include: Robert

Pippin, distinguished professor of social thought and philosophy at the University of

Chicago; Richard Eldridge, professor of philosophy at Swarthmore; and Raymond

Geuss, professor of philosophy at the University of Cambridge.

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enhancing the conversationIn 2011–2012, the IAH will launch a redesigned website at iah.unc.edu. Our new website will help us better tell our stories and make it easier for you to find the information you need. Expect fresh content, and more often.At the same time, we’re expanding our social media presence, so you’ll have more

opportunities to join the conversation:

For IAH and UNC news and events, visit Facebook — facebook.com/iah.unc

For links on higher ed topics and IAH updates, visit Twitter — twitter.com/iah_unc

For IAH videos, visit Vimeo — vimeo.com/iah

And, of course, we invite you to subscribe to our e-newsletter, published in August, May and January, by writing to [email protected].

iah conferences and symposia often draw

attendance from students as well as faculty.

the 2010 reckford lecture drew a large

audience.

english faculty member ruth salvaggio

attended the 2010 holiday party.

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25 Years

In 2011–2012, the Institute for the Arts and Humanities celebrates our 25th anniversary. In 25 years, we have accomplished a tremendous amount, thanks to our generous supporters who share our belief that providing support to faculty helps Carolina recruit, refresh and retain outstanding teachers, leaders and researchers who make this one of the best universities in the nation.

To date, we have supported:• 526 Faculty Fellowships representing more than 31 departments within the College

• 89 Academic Leadership Fellowships representing 10 schools, two centers and 26 departments within the College

• 47 Chairs Leadership Program Participants representing 35 departments

Over the years, we’ve hit some major

milestones. Some of them are listed here:

1987 Ruel W. Tyson Jr., professor of Religious Studies, and Gillian T. Cell, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, establish the Program for the Arts and Humanities. Its early mission: to nurture liberal arts learning and to support faculty excellence. Provost Samuel Williamson designates

West House (778 square feet), built by the Tanner Family in 1935, as the Program’s first home.

The Program for the Arts and Humanities sponsors the first Autumn Saturday, a colloquium open to the University and the public (1987–1999).

1988 The Institute conducts the first Fellows Seminar in the summer.

1989 Under the leadership of Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III, The Program for the Arts and Humanities becomes the Institute for the Arts and Humanities, approved by the Board of Governors in July. Ruel W. Tyson Jr. is appointed director. He is re-appointed in 1991, 1994, 1997 and 2002.

1990 The first IAH endowed fellowship is funded by David E. Pardue Jr. to honor his father.

The IAH Advisory Board is formed with Buck Goldstein as its chair.

Celebrating1991 Professor Kenneth Reckford endows the Institute’s first annual lectureship, the Mary Stevens Reckford Memorial Lecture in European Studies.

Max C. Chapman Jr. establishes the Chapman Family Faculty Fellowships in the IAH.

1992 The Institute establishes a core group of IAH annual supporters, Friends of the Institute.

1994 Lloyd Kramer of the history department accepts an appointment as the first associate

director of the Institute and serves as acting director while Ruel Tyson is on leave.

1995 The Institute sponsors its first biennial Chapman Fellows Conferences on Teaching. The IAH surpasses its $4 million fundraising goal for the University Bicentennial by $500,000 ($4.5 million total).

1996 Mary Flanagan becomes the first full-time director of development.

The Institute names Cooper, Robertson & Partners of New York City as architects for new building, and the University Board of Trustees approves a campus site on McCorkle Place for a new building.

The Institute initiates a Traveling Fellows program as an outreach initiative. Fellows participate in evenings of conversation in homes of Friends of the IAH throughout North Carolina and the United States.

1999 The Institute assumes responsibility for presenting the annual Weil Lecture on American Citizenship, established by the Weil family of Goldsboro in 1915.

2000 The groundbreaking ceremony is held for our new building on March 31. Sherwood H. Smith is elected IAH Advisory Board Chair.

an autumn saturday on

Mccorkle place.

the iah spent its first 15 years

in west house.

among those celebrating the hyde hall

groundbreaking were Darryl gless, ruel tyson,

Barbara hyde, Janie armfield, Dee schwab

and Becky pardue.

an architectural rendering of hyde hall.

Max chapman

has funded

the chapman

Fellowships

since 1991.

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2001 The Institute inaugurates its Academic Leadership Program for UNC faculty.

2002 The construction of Hyde Hall is completed, financed solely with private donations. The dedication is held on University Day, Oct. 12. A black tie gala accompanies the celebration.

2003 Jane Brown, former Chair of the Faculty and James L. Knight Professor of Journalism and Mass Communication, signs on to lead the ALP.

2004 The IAH successfully completes the Kenan Challenge, a $1 million endowment focusing on faculty retention in the College of Arts and Sciences. Barbara Hyde is elected chair of the IAH Advisory Board.

2006 Ruel Tyson, founding director of IAH, steps down after nearly 20 years at the helm. John McGowan, professor of English, is named director of the Institute. The Ruel Tyson Legacy Fund surpasses the $3.5 million mark.

Barbara and Pitt Hyde pledge $5 million to endow the Academic Leadership Program and name it for Tyson. It is the largest gift ever to the IAH and one of the largest to the College of Arts and Sciences.

2007 The Institute establishes the Johnson Prize for Distinguished Achievement by an IAH Fellow to honor the generosity and leadership of George H. Johnson ‘58. The prize will be awarded biannually to a senior IAH Fellow.

Megan Granda is named executive director of the Institute. Kim Strom-Gottfried, distinguished professor in the School of Social Work,

succeeds Jane Brown as director of the Academic Leadership Program.The Academic Leadership Program adds a new component, the Chairs Leadership Program, directed by Bill Balthrop, professor of communication studies.

John O’Hara, Chapel Hill, succeeds Barbara Hyde as chair of the IAH Advisory Board.

2008 The IAH launches a digital arts and humanities initiative led by Joyce Rudinsky, professor of communication studies.

2010 The Institute hosts the inaugural CHAT Festival, a regional digital arts and humanities festival celebrating Collaborations: Humanities, Arts & Technology, in February 2010. Supported by funds from The William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust, the festival attracts nearly 500 participants.

A generous gift from Max C. Chapman Jr. enables the IAH to partner with the Provost’s office to offer the Chapman Family Fellowship as a University Teaching Award and doubles the award’s stipend to $10,000.

2011 In partnership with the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and with support from the Hyde Family Foundations, the IAH establishes the IAH Innovation Fund to foster innovative projects in the arts and humanities by providing funds and logistical support.Julia Sprunt Grumbles, Chapel Hill, succeeds John O’Hara as chair of the IAH Advisory Board.

Jane Brown led the

alp from 2003 to

2007.

Kim strom-gottfried

has led the alp

since 2007.

ruel tyson passed the

torch to John Mcgowan

in 2006.

the inaugural george

h. Johnson prize

was awarded in 2007.

pictured: past iah Board

members John o’hara,

Johnson and Jennifer

lloyd halsey.

the chat

Festival

merged

technology

with the fine

arts and

humanities.

Bill Balthrop

has led the clp

since 2007.

Julia sprunt grumbles

is the new iah

advisory Board chair.

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oto

by

: ga

ry K

urt

z

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: eile

en

Mig

no

ni

Barbara hyde assumed

the role of advisory

Board chair in 2004.

Page 26: 2011 Annual Highlights

- pag e 22 -

b o a r d s & s t a f f

Institute Advisory Board 2010–2011steven P. aldrichceo, outright, inc.san Francisco

victoria tucker bordenrepresentative, portraits southgreensboro

Kristin l. breuss theology student, st. paul’s theological centerlondon

Dr. j. Mcneely Dubosepresident, Meadowmont Farms Durham

Duvall Fuquacommunity volunteeratlanta

julia sprunt grumbles, Vice Chair, iah advisory Board corporate vice president (retired), turner Broadcastingchapel hill

robert hackney senior Managing Director, First eagle investment Managementnew york city

barbara rosser hydepresident, hyde Family FoundationsMemphis

g. allen ives iiipresident, turnpike properties, inc.rocky Mount

thomas s. Kenan iiitrustee, william r. Kenan Jr. charitable trustchapel hill

Michael D. Kennedypartner, Korn Ferry internationalatlanta

charles craft lucas iiigeneral counsel,elevation llccharlotte

lane Morris McDonaldcredit suisse alternative investmentsnew york city

Peter c. MoisterManaging Member, corbin investment holdings llcatlanta

john c. o’hara jr., Chair, iah advisory Board Managing Director, rockefeller Financialnew york city

richard j. richardsonFormer provost, unc-chapel hillpittsboro

nelson schwab iiichairman, carousel capitalcharlotte

Professor ruel w. tysonFounding Director, institute for the arts and humanitieschapel hill

john F. whitepresident, JFw propertiesraleigh

nancy hanes whitecommunity volunteer raleigh

caroline c. williamsoncommunity volunteernew york city

robert w. winston iiiceo, winston hospitalityraleigh

carol Payne Youngrealtor, harry norman realtorsatlanta

Faculty Advisory Board 2010–2011carole blairDepartment of communication studies

e. jane burnsDepartment of women’s studies

Marianne gingherDepartment of english and

comparative literature

randall hendrickDepartment of linguistics

james KetchDepartment of Music

andrew PerrinDepartment of sociology

Keith simmonsDepartment of philosophy

elin slavickDepartment of art

randall styersDepartment of religious studies

julia t. wood, Faculty Advisory Board ChairDepartment of communication studies

photos by: chris carmichael

Page 27: 2011 Annual Highlights

- pag e 2 3 -

b o a r d s & s t a f f

Leadership Advisory Board 2010–2011gail agrawalDean and professor, the university of iowa school of lawiowa city

gerald bell, Ph.D.Founder and ceo, Bell leadership institutechapel hill

christopher boganceo, Best practices, llcchapel hill

Phaedra boinodirisgaming and interactive Marketing Manager, iBMresearch triangle park

Kristin l. breusstheology student, st. paul’s theological centerlondon

jane brownJames l. Knight Distinguished professor, unc school of Journalism and Mass communicationchapel hill

sanford a. cockrell iiinational Managing partner, cFo programDeloitte llpnew york city

judith conespecial assistant to the chancellor for innovation & entrepreneurship, the university of north carolinachapel hill

william c. Fridaypresident emeritus, the university of north carolinachapel hill

barbara rosser hydepresident, hyde Family FoundationsMemphis

richard h. Kohnprofessor of history and peace, war, and Defense, the university of north carolinachapel hill

james Moeserchancellor emeritus, the university of north carolinasenior Fellow for special initiatives, institute for the arts and humanitieschapel hill

alan sanders neely, sr.senior client partner and global leader of communications (retired), Korn Ferry internationalatlanta

Patricia Parkerassociate professor of communication studies, the university of north carolinachapel hill

john r. ryanpresident, center for creative leadershipgreensboro

Staff 2010–2011bill balthropinterim Director, 2010–2011associate Director, chairs leadership programprofessor, Department of communication studies

Kirsten beattieassistant Director of Development & communications

jean chandlerBusiness assistant

Meredith Daughtridgeevents and Facilities coordinator

elaine erteschikevents and Marketing coordinator

Mary FlanaganDirector of Development

Megan grandaexecutive Directoradjunct assistant professor, Department of art

john McgowanDirectorthe ruel w. tyson Jr. Distinguished professor of humanitiesDepartment of english and comparative literature

christopher Meinecke Business Manager

james Moeserchancellor emeritussenior Fellow for special

initiativesprofessor, Department of Music

joyce rudinskyassociate Director, Digital arts and humanitiesvisual artist, associate professor, Department of communication studies

jeanine simmonsiah coordinator for Faculty programs

Kim strom-gottfriedassociate Director, academic leadership program

smith p. theimann Jr. Distinguished professor of ethics & professional practiceschool of social work

julia t. woodassociate Director, Faculty Fellows programlineberger Distinguished professor of humanitiesthomas s. and caroline h. royster Distinguished professor of graduate education Department of communication studies

Far left: attendees at an iah symposium included iah Board

member Kristin Breuss (second from right).

left, middle: chancellor thorp and John Mcgowan converse

about innovation in the arts and humanities at an iah Board

meeting event in october.

left: Fellows converse around the table in the hyde hall

Fellows room.

Page 28: 2011 Annual Highlights

- pag e 24 -

h o n o r r o l l o f d o n o r s

the 2011 honor roll recognizes

donors who gave to the Institute for the Arts and Humanities

between July 1, 2010, and June 30, 2011. It omits the names of

seven donors who wish to remain anonymous.

The Institute for the Arts and Humanities gratefully thanks

those who generously supported our faculty and programs in

fiscal year 2011. Private gifts from alumni and Friends of the

Institute for the Arts and Humanities have a profound effect on

the lives of Carolina faculty, which in turn enriches the lives of

students and strengthens teaching and research at Carolina.

Help us extend the benefits to more faculty members at UNC

by making a contribution to the Institute and becoming a Friend

of the Institute.

For more information or to report an error in this list, please call

Mary Flanagan at (919) 962-2528 or visit www.iah.unc.edu/invest.

Steven and Allison AldrichLex and Ann AlexanderNathan and Kara AndrewsPete AndrewsWilliam AndrewsWilliam Joseph Austin, Jr.Michael C. BarefootKatherine Vansant BatesMargaret BattsKirsten M. BeattieErin BeckerDaniel L. BernsteinRobert H. BilbroStephen BirdsallJennifer Willis BockEdwin Brownrigg Borden, Jr.Victoria Tucker Borden and Robert Hanes BordenKristin Breuss and Geoff BurgessJane D. BrownChristopher R. BrowningKathryn J. BurnsJohn and Mary Louise BurressMax C. Chapman, Jr.Sande ChurchillSanford A. Cockrell IIIDonald and Eunice CollinsBob and Carolyn ConnorBrian P. CooperPhilip G. CurleyJohn M. Darden IIIRebecca Wesson Darwin and Cress DarwinJames L. Davis and Jean L. DavisElizabeth Stetson DowdLee and Tharon DunnJo Anne L. EarpConnie Clare EbleJohn Gray Blount Ellison, Jr.Kristen EnwrightWilliam Wright EspySteven and Nora Esthimer

Lucinda S. FinkMary F. FlanaganMary Floyd-WilsonDiane FrazierPamela Joyner FreemanWilliam C. FridayManuel E. GarciaJames S. Gilliland, Jr.Robert Charles GimpelBuck and Kay GoldsteinLuke GoodwinLaura Pearlman GoulianWilliam A. and Barbara S. GrahamMegan GrandaJulia Sprunt GrumblesMinrose C. GwinHerbert Nelson HackneyRobert Hackney and Shauna HolimanFrank Borden Hanes, Jr.Barbara and Paul HardinSarah F. HarrisAnna Ragland HayesJohn Miles HeadleyJames N. HirschfieldDr. Gerald Hladik and Dr. Angela Gail EllisCharles HodgesDorothy C. HollandElizabeth Myatt HolstenW. Slocum Howland, Jr.Emily Owings HutsonBarbara and Pitt HydeJames E.S. HynesAllen and Lynn IvesJordynn JackPeter B. JanesGary Chase JohnsonGeorge and Janet JohnsonChristopher JonesPhilip M. JonesAndrew KanterBert and Ellen Kaplan

Betty KenanThomas S. Kenan IIIDavid KesslerGorham A. KindemRobert and Elizabeth KingHarvey and Marsha KoenigLynne and Dick KohnLloyd S. KramerH. R. KurrieHarold KyriaziDavid Elliott LabellMartin Leon LagodTom and Donna LambethKenneth Burdette LeeTheodore H. LeinbaughDiane R. LeonardRuby M. LernerMichael F. LieneschDr. Walker Anderson LongDr. Perry Downington LuckettJodi MagnessGerald Michael Malmo IIIRobert and Vivian ManekinD. G. Martin, Jr.Knox and Mary Ann MasseyWilliam P. MasseyLane Morris McDonaldMorris McDonald, Jr.Frank Samuel McGaughey IIIJohn P. McGowanSallie Armfield McMillionJames Allen MedfordChristopher G. MeineckeBeau Mills IVJames and Susan MoeserPeter C. MoisterSandra and Bill MooreRuth M. MooseMary Nunn MorrowAlan S. Neely, Sr.Severine Neff

Page 29: 2011 Annual Highlights

- pag e 25 -

Philip and Georgia NelsonAnna NeumanKurt Douglas NewmanCharles E. Noell IIIDonald M. NoniniPatrick and Mary Norris OglesbyJohn and Cynthia O’HaraNell Wall OttoDavid and Rebecca ParduePatricia S. ParkerJosie Ward PattonJames L. PeacockAndrew and Eliana PerrinHeidi Perov and C. David Perry, Jr.Gerald J. PostemaAnne PowellPatricia J. PukkilaAlfred L. Purrington IIIWilliam H. RaceDonald J. RaleighWilliam Goodyear RandKenneth J. Reckford and Charlotte OrthPeter W. RedfieldCharlene B. RegesterTerry Ellen RhodesDavid L. RobertDr. Surry Parker RobertsElizabeth RogersonPeter RummellBarry F. SaundersBetsy Ivey SawyerChristopher Glenn SawyerJ. Henry and Augusta ScattergoodMarjorie Moses SchwabNelson Schwab IIIJohn and Susie SherrillShuchen ShiehAlfred Emory Smith, Jr.

Donna Marie SorgiRobert W. and Patricia H. SpearmanSteven James SquiresVin SteponaitisKevin StewartW. Gene StoryKim Strom-GottfriedEdward M. Strong and Laurel Durst StrongRandall StyersKathleen P. Tanner and Robert M. Kennedy, Jr.Michael S. and Lynne S. TannerBeverly W. TaylorJohn A. TaylorC. Edward Teague IIIMonet Uzzell ThomsonGraham R. ToddMartin P. TrimbleMichael TsinEvelyn and John L. TurnerDavid and Treva TysonRuel W. Tyson, Jr.Ann Alexander UrquhartMilada VachudovaCristina Gabriela VillasmilSusan Burress WallMary Ann WaltonJames Creekmore Wann, Jr.Kay and Van WeatherspoonJennifer WeissNan S. WeissJohn R. Wester and Campbell L. WesterJohn F. White IIILen and Judy WhiteNancy Hanes WhiteJames G. WhittonRobert and Caroline WilliamsonGlenn and Helen WilsonJean Jones Wilson and Charles T. Wilson, Jr.

Charlie and Flo WinstonJulia Turbiville WoodJames C. YoderCarol Payne Young and J. Blake Young, Jr.Gang Yue

FoundationsChapman Family FundCommunity Foundation of Greater MemphisDowd FoundationE. Craig Wall, Sr. FoundationFidelity Charitable Gift FundGeorges Lurcy Charitable & Educational TrustHyde Family FoundationsJewish Community Foundation of Durham & Chapel HillJulia Sprunt Grumbles Charitable Lead Annuity TrustOcean Reef FoundationRenaissance Charitable FoundationSchwab Fund for Charitable GivingTriangle Community FoundationW. Trent Ragland Jr. FoundationThe William C. Friday FundWinston-Salem Foundation

Italics denote a member of the UNC faculty

To consult the happiness of a rising generation, and endeavour to fit them for an honourable discharge of the social duties of life, by paying strictest attention to their education

— University Charter, 11 December 1789

h o n o r r o l l o f d o n o r s

visit iah.unc.eDu/invest to becoMe a FrienD oF the institute.

Page 30: 2011 Annual Highlights

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s p e c i a l f r i e n d s o f t h e i n s t i t u t e

giving opportunities

The Institute for the Arts and Humanities relies on private funding to run most of our programs.

Two gift opportunities we encourage you to consider are:

every gift countsGifts of all levels help strengthen IAH programs and help us to fulfill our mission of supporting and honoring outstanding UNC faculty. We appreciate every gift we receive.

To that end, the Institute recognizes gifts to all IAH funds received on or after July 1, 2011, at the following levels:

• McCorkle Place Friends — For gifts of $1 to $249

• Hyde Hall Friends — For gifts of $250 to $999

• Fellows Terrace Friends — For gifts of $1,000 to $9,999

• IAH Fellowship Society — For gifts of $10,000 and up

Friends of the Institute Annual Fund — Gifts to our annual fund (designation 7266) allow us to fill vital gaps in funding. Annual fund gifts may be used to help fund fellowships, co-sponsor faculty symposia or support faculty working groups, as well as cultivate the conversations that are our hallmark.

IAH Innovation Fund — Today’s faculty are increasingly called upon to explore new models of teaching and research that are collaborative, interdisciplinary, translatable and scalable, and that impact the wider community. The Chancellor’s innovation initiative is a practical response to such demands. The IAH innovation fund, intended to foster creative activity in the arts and humanities, provides tools and resources in addition to funding to encourage faculty to take risks and attempt innovative practices (see page 4). The IAH looks to raise $750,000 in expendable funds to support innovation in the arts and humanities over the next three years.

recognition

sustained giving — the 1987 society

The Institute’s 1987 Society, named for the year we were established, recognizes donors who have given to the Institute for at least three consecutive years. We cannot thank enough those who faithfully give to us each year to show their continuing commitment to our mission of serving Carolina faculty. We will recognize 1987 Society members beginning in July 2012.

All donors who do not wish to remain anonymous are recognized within their giving levels in this annual magazine, published each fall. The publication is sent to all Friends, Fellows, UNC community members, and subscribers. It is also made available as a PDF at iah.unc.edu.

In addition, annual gifts of $1,500 or more qualify donors for membership in the Dean’s Circle of the College of Arts and Sciences. Gifts of $2,000 or more qualify donors for membership in the Chancellor’s Club as well as the Dean’s Circle.

Please see giving.unc.edu for more information on University recognition societies.

You may make your gift online from iah.unc.edu/invest, or use the gift envelope enclosed in this magazine. We also encourage you to consider including the Institute in your will or estate plan. For more information on making a gift to the IAH, please contact Mary Flanagan, director of development, at (919) 962-2528 or [email protected].

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on

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ou

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gifts to the Friends of the institute enable the iah to co-sponsor

events such as a talk on innovation earlier this year by phillip

clay, unc trustee and chancellor of Mit, co-sponsored with the

Minor in entrepreneurship.

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s p e c i a l f r i e n d s o f t h e i n s t i t u t e

nelson schwab iii has a history of giving back to carolina. Schwab, a successful business executive who earned his bachelor of arts in English at Carolina in 1967, has filled many leadership roles at the University, including his current service as a member of the Institute’s Advisory Board.

A member of the University’s Board of Trustees from 2001 to 2009, he led the board as chair from 2005 to 2007. In recent years, he also has served on the Boards of Visitors both for the University and UNC’s Kenan-Flagler Business School. Schwab also was a member of the Carolina First campaign steering committee.

This year, Schwab generously gave a $1 million gift to establish the “Nelson Schwab ‘Say Yes’ Fund” in the IAH. The fund will provide up to $50,000 a year to benefit faculty in fine arts, humanities and humanistic social sciences departments within the College of Arts and Sciences, allowing departmental chairs to “say yes” to requests from their faculty and fill vital gaps in their budgets.

“In my long association with the IAH, I have come to understand the critical role department chairs play in retaining good faculty and maintaining the overall quality of the University,” says Schwab.

“In these difficult financial times their resources have been stretched very thin. The ‘Say Yes’ Fund has proved that with some strategically placed funds, even in smaller amounts, good things can happen. So I am delighted to help endow this effort so that department chairs will have access to discretionary funds that can be used for academic excellence.”

Departmental chairs will be able to submit proposals for up to $25,000 starting in fall 2011 for funds to support teaching and scholarly activities, build morale, enable strategic planning or realize other goals or initiatives envisioned by chairs to improve their departments.

“This gift is typical of Nelson’s leadership on critical issues,” says UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Holden Thorp. “His many years of service to Carolina have given him a deep understanding of what it takes to maintain excellent people and programs. We are a better institution because of his devotion and friendship.”

Schwab is a managing partner and co-founder of merchant banking firm Carousel Capital in Charlotte. He has a master of business administration from The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

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tra

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rd

“say yes” funds will enhance teaching

and scholarship on the departmental

level. here, John Mcgowan leads

a reading group conversation with

faculty and students.

Page 32: 2011 Annual Highlights

The Institute for the Arts and Humanities The College of Arts and Sciences

The University of North Carolina at Chapel HillCampus Box 3322, Hyde HallChapel Hill, NC 27599-3322

nonprofit org

us postage

P a i D

chapel hill, nc

permit no. 177

the institute For the arts anD huManitiessupports UNC faculty at every career stage, funding individual and

collaborative research, showcasing faculty work, developing faculty

leaders and teachers and facilitating the formation of collaborative,

interdisciplinary communities that promote intellectual exchange.

this report is printed on 100% Fsc-certified postconsumer waste paper