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2022 NEH Summer Institute OpportunityWorlds in Collision:Nahua and Spanish Pictorial Histories and Annals in 16th-Century MexicoA National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institutefor 26 College Faculty participants to be held at Adelphi University June 9 to June 30, 2022 Download complete copy of this website in PDF format. Download this page only. Visiting Scholars |
Home Welcome Letter from Project Directors Institute Daily ScheduleInstitute Visiting Scholars Intellectual Grounding Lodging and Institute Stipend How to Apply Online Mexican Codices Participant Eligibility Principles of Civility Contact Us Project Co-Directors: Dr. Laraine Fletcher Adelphi University, Anthropology, emerita, fletcher@adelphi.edu Dr. George Scheper Senior Lecturer, Advanced Academic Programs, The Johns Hopkins University, gscheper@jhu.edu Project Manager: Mary Cortina Director, Office of Research and Sponsored Programs cortina@adelphi.edu |
Rolena Adorno (Sterling Professor of Spanish, Yale University) Frances F. Berdan (Professor emerita, Anthropology, California State University, San Bernardino); Amber Brian (Director of the Latin American Studies Program, University of Iowa); Lori Boornazian Diel (Professor of Art History, Texas Christian University); Jeanne L. Gillespie (Co-Director of the Center for American Indian Research and Study, University of Southern Mississippi); Dana Leibsohn (Alice Pratt Brown Professor of Art, Smith College); Barbara Mundy (Martha and Donald Robertson Chair in Latin American Art, Tulane University); Matthew Restall (Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of Colonial Latin American History & Anthropology, Penn State University); Kevin Terraciano (Professor of History and Director of the Latin American Institute & Co-Chair of the Latin American Studies Graduate Program, UCLA); Stephanie Wood (Director and Senior Research Associate of Wired Humanities Projects, Center for Equity Promotion, College of Education, University of Oregon). “Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.” |