The AAS-NEH Long-Term Fellowships are tenable for four to twelve months each year. These fellowships offer splendid opportunities for collegiality with and mentoring from the staff, other visiting fellows, and the academic community in and near Worcester, Massachusetts.
AAS-NEH fellows are expected to be in regular and continuous residence at the Society. They must devote full time to their study and may not accept teaching assignments or undertake any other major activities during the tenure of their award. Fellows may hold other major fellowships or grants during fellowship tenure, in addition to sabbaticals and supplemental grants from their own institutions. Other NEH-funded grants may be held serially, but not concurrently.
Eligibility
AAS-NEH fellowships are for persons who have already completed their formal professional training. Degree candidates and persons seeking support for work in pursuit of a degree are not eligible to hold AAS-NEH fellowships. Candidates for advanced degrees must have completed all requirements, except for the actual conferral of the degree, by the application deadline for the fellowship. This includes the dissertation defense. Foreign nationals who have been residents in the United States for at least three years immediately preceding the application deadline for the fellowship are eligible. Mid-career scholars are encouraged to apply.
Length of Term
Four to twelve months during the period June 1 to May 31.
Stipend
The stipend for AAS-NEH Fellowships is $5,000 per month.
Criteria
Fellows are selected on the basis of the applicant's scholarly qualifications, the scholarly significance or importance of the project, and the appropriateness of the proposed study to the Society's collections. Preference will be given to individuals who have not held long-term fellowships during the three years preceding the period for which the application is being made.
Accommodations
For fellows who reside on campus in the Society’s scholars’ housing, located next to the main library building, the stipend will have the room fee deducted from the stipend. (Room fees range from $600 to $1,000 per month.) Although fellows have priority, renting from the Society is not a requirement of those holding fellowships. When requested, the staff will do their best to suggest alternative accommodations in Worcester or environs.
To apply, complete an application form online.
You will be asked to attach a single PDF document containing the elements listed below:
- A CV of no more than three (3) pages
- A proposal of no more than six (6) double-spaced pages describing the project, its current status, and its significance for scholarship. Be sure to provide an overview of the narrative and argument, locate the project in the relevant literature.
- A selective bibliography of not more than one page providing, for purposes of context, a list of secondary sources relevant to the proposed project
- A statement of previous support that you have received for this project, as well as a statement indicating whether you currently hold or expect to hold an academic appointment or equivalent during the fellowship year. If so, please indicate whether you expect to receive support from your institution during the tenure of the fellowship, and the terms of such support.
- We have eliminated reference letters from the fellowship application process. While we ask you to supply names and contact information for two references, these references should not submit letters.
Fellows
Date | Name | Affiliation | Position | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017-18 | Reeve Huston | Duke University | Associate Professor of History | Reforging American Democracy | |
2017-18 | Adrian Chastain Weimer | Providence College | Associate Professor of History | Godly Petitions: Puritanism and the Crisis of the Restoration in America | |
2017-18 | Sarah Schuetze | University of Wisconsin, Green Bay | Assistant Professor of English | Calamity Howl: Fear of Illness in Early American Writing | |
2017-18 | Katherine Alysia Grandjean | Wellesley College | Assistant Professor of History | The Harpe Murders and the Legacies of the American Revolution | |
2017-18 | Juliana Chow | Saint Louis University | Associate Professor of English | Lacunae: Vital Language and the Casualties of Natural History | |
2016-17 | Susanna Blumenthal | University of Minnesota | Professor of Law and Associate Professor of History | Humbug: A Legal History | |
2016-17 | Abigail Cooper | Brandeis University | Assistant Professor of History | ‘Lord, Until I Reach My Home’: Inside the Refugee Camps of the American Civil War | |
2016-17 | Tara Bynum | Rutgers University | Postdoctoral Fellow in English | Reading Pleasures | |
2016-17 | Ezra Greenspan | Southern Methodist University | Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Chair in Humanities and Professor of English | The Lives and Times of Frederick Douglass and His Family: A Composite Biography | |
2015-16 | Christen Mucher | Smith College | Assistant Professor | Before American History |