Applications due Feb. 20
Vanderbilt University may submit one application to The Mellon Foundation’s 2023 Sawyer Seminars.
Purpose: The Mellon Foundation’s Sawyer Seminars program was established in 1994 to provide support for comparative research on the historical and cultural sources of contemporary developments. The seminars, named in honor of the foundation’s long-serving third president, John E. Sawyer, bring together faculty, foreign visitors, postdoctoral fellows and graduate students from a variety of fields, mainly, but not exclusively, in the arts, humanities and interpretive social sciences, for intensive study of subjects chosen by the participants. This program aims to engage productive scholars in comparative inquiry that would in ordinary university circumstances be difficult to pursue while at the same time avoiding the institutionalization of such work in new centers, departments or programs. Sawyer Seminars are, in effect, temporary research centers.
The Mellon Foundation is now fundamentally interested in the themes of social and racial justice. In terms of scholarly projects such as the Sawyer Seminars, the foundation will look for a strong focus on race and ethnicity and related intersectional analyses as well as those that focus on filling in the gaps left by more traditional narratives about the history and culture of the Americas. It is permissible for Sawyer Seminars to address topics that are international in scope provided that such internationalism takes the form of a comparative project that incorporates consideration of contexts in the Americas.
Proposals are judged by the foundation on the significance of the subject of inquiry, the aptness of plans for seminar meetings, the opportunities they present for comparative study, the rationale for the comparisons, and the scholarly accomplishments of the participants.
Program activities: To date, 228 seminars have been funded. Their subjects, which have ranged widely, can be viewed on the program website.
Each seminar normally meets for one year, though some have continued for longer periods. To allow for planning, seminars need not be scheduled for the coming academic year. Faculty participants largely come from the humanities and social sciences, although faculty members in the arts and from professional schools also have been key participants in a number of seminars. Seminar leaders are encouraged to invite participants from nearby institutions, such as community colleges, liberal arts colleges, museums, research institutes, etc. As the foundation reviews proposals, preference will be given to those that include concrete plans for engaging participants with diverse institutional and disciplinary affiliations.
Sawyer Seminar awards provide support for one postdoctoral fellow to be recruited through a national competition, and for the dissertation research of two graduate students. It is expected that the graduate students will be active participants in the intellectual life of the seminar. The seminars’ contribution to graduate education in the humanities and social sciences will be carefully considered even though they are not intended to be organized as official credit-bearing courses.
Seminars are not expected to produce a written product, though many do.
Budget: Funding requests should not exceed $225,000. The budget must provide for a postdoctoral fellowship to be awarded for the year the seminar meets, and two graduate student dissertation fellowships to be awarded for the seminar year or the year that follows. To acknowledge the sustained intellectual involvement of these graduate students in the seminar, tuition support or, for those funded by existing fellowships, supplementary support such as research and travel funds may be included. Travel and living expenses for short stays by visiting scholars and the costs of coordinating the seminar, including those incurred for speakers and their travel, may also be included. Funds may not cover released time for regular faculty participants or indirect costs.
See the program page for more information.
Internal submission instructions
Interested faculty should visit https://vanderbilt.infoready4.com/#competitionDetail/1893482 to submit an application for the internal LSO competition and to find additional information about the opportunity. The deadline for the internal competition is Feb. 20, 2023.
Selected candidates will submit their nominations to the sponsor by the external deadline of April 14, 2023.
Any questions about this opportunity or the LSO process may be directed to VU-LSO@vanderbilt.edu.