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Grant program: Humanities Discussions
Date range: 2020-2024

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Award Number Grant ProgramAward RecipientProject TitleAward PeriodApproved Award Total
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 19 items in 1 pages
GG-269696-20Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsVideo Veracity, IncFree For All: Public Library Discussions Initiative6/1/2020 - 5/31/2022$310,000.00DawnC.Logsdon   Video Veracity, IncNew OrleansLA70118-2059USA2020Public HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs310000000

Implementation of a national discussion program centered around the film Free For All: Inside the Public Library.

The Free For All: Public Library Discussions Initiative, led by Video Veracity and Serendipity Films in partnership with the American Library Association, other library groups, and the Kitchen Sisters podcasters, will spark face-to-face public engagement around the humanities themes in the NEH-funded documentary Free For All, which explores the history, culture, and significance of the American public library and the free library movement that created it. Set to launch July 4th weekend, the program celebrates the upcoming 250th anniversary of our democracy and encourages civic education through scholar-led discussions and “Story Hours” in regional libraries across the nation, inviting the public to reflect on our national values of democracy, community, literacy, and plurality. Working closely with our partners, we will extend learning through in-person and digital experiences for discussion participants and through the creation of a robust multimedia Toolkit.

GG-271459-20Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsNewberry Library¡Vivan las Revoluciones!: Forming More Perfect Unions Across the Americas9/1/2020 - 6/30/2022$150,000.00Karen Christianson   Newberry LibraryChicagoIL60610-3305USA2020U.S. HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs15000001473370

A series of public programs celebrating the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States and its role in similar events in Latin American nations.

The Newberry Library seeks an NEH Humanities Discussions grant to support “¡Vivan las Revoluciones!: Forming More Perfect Unions Across the Americas.” In a series of twelve public programs, scholars, writers, artists, and community members will explore the complex histories and ongoing legacies of the Age of Revolutions across the Americas, inaugurated by the revolution of 1776. The confluence of the approaching 250th anniversary of the United States’ founding with the bicentennial commemorations in the early 2020s of independence for many Latin American nations provides a perfect opportunity to reflect on and reevaluate the vibrant, complex shared histories of the freedom struggles of the peoples of the Americas.

GG-271516-20Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsNational Indian Education AssociationWarrior Spirit Project9/1/2020 - 8/31/2022$250,000.00HermanJ.Viola   National Indian Education AssociationWashingtonDC20005-2075USA2020Native American StudiesHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs25000002500000

Implementation of an online archive, educational materials, and oral history exhibition that collects, interprets, and chronicles the contribution of Native American veterans to the United States.

The goal of the Warrior Spirit Project is broadly educate the American people about the dedication, contributions, and sacrifices made by Native Americans in military service to our country.

GG-278256-21Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsALALet’s Talk About It: Women’s Suffrage6/1/2021 - 6/30/2023$249,999.00Samantha Oakley   ALAChicagoIL60611-2729USA2021U.S. HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs24999902499990

Resources and training for a nationwide reading and discussion program focused on the history of suffrage and its aftermath.

The American Library Association requests a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Public Humanities Projects grant in the amount of $249,999 to implement a Let’s Talk About It (LTAI): Women’s Suffrage humanities discussion project corresponding to NEH’s “A More Perfect Union” special initiative. On August 18, 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, which prohibited the government from denying a citizen the right to vote on the basis of sex. As the country celebrates the 100th anniversary of this landmark amendment, it is surprising how many Americans know very little about this milestone in the nation’s history. It is important that we highlight the decades of struggle, resistance, and demonstration by the women’s suffrage movement leading up to the ratification so communities may better appreciate and understand the lasting impact it has had on the nation. This project will engage communities across the nation in critical reflection and discussion on the movement.

GG-278279-21Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsAquila Theatre Company Inc.Warrior Chorus: American Democracy5/1/2021 - 6/30/2023$399,980.00Peter Meineck   Aquila Theatre Company Inc.New YorkNY10003-6671USA2021ClassicsHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs39998002477300

Public programs led by veterans and scholars based on classical Greek and American historical texts to address the meaning of democracy.

The Warrior Chorus: American Democracy – is a major national humanities program about the meaning of democracy by the men and women we asked to fight for it. It will present a public engagement series led by veterans and scholars based around classical Greek and American historical texts to address the meaning of democracy. American Democracy will train veterans and scholars in three regional centers to lead, staged readings, audience discussion, participatory workshops and public talks in 23 locations throughout America, connected with Aquila Theatre’s staging of Paul Woodruff’s translation of Sophocles’ Antigone. This will be coupled with a dynamic use of social media and a specially developed app. American Democracy uses classic texts to inspire people from all backgrounds to reflect on the connections between the works of the ancient Greeks and the issues they reflect in their own lives.

GG-280428-21Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsUniversity of ScrantonScranton's Story, Our Nation's Story9/1/2021 - 12/31/2023$152,791.00Julie Cohen   University of ScrantonScrantonPA18510-2429USA2021Public HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs15279101527910

Implementation of a public discussion series addressing Scranton and U.S. history as they relate to questions of national identity and citizenship.

“Scranton’s Story, Our Nation’s Story” explores the aspirational journey to fulfill our national ideals through the lens of Scranton, Pennsylvania, an iconic American city that has experienced many of the key elements of our nation’s experience: industrial era growth and decline, waves of immigration past and present, and Black and Indigenous experiences. Programs in a variety of scholarly and participatory formats, and across eight themes related to history, philosophy, English/literature, and religious studies, will engage a diverse group of Scrantonians in humanities-based conversations and story-sharing about founding debates, local and national identity, and our role as citizens in a democracy.

GG-280499-21Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsPEN American Center, Inc.Flashpoints: Free Speech in American History, Culture & Society10/1/2021 - 9/30/2023$150,000.00Jonathan Friedman   PEN American Center, Inc.New YorkNY10012-5258USA2021American StudiesHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs15000001497000

Implementation of ten public discussion events addressing the history and value of free speech in the United States.

Flashpoints: Free Speech in American History, Culture & Society will present the fascinating and complex history of free speech in American democracy to public audiences in cities across the country. The series will examine how free speech has evolved, illuminate past debates over who has the right to speak, and shed light on present debates about free speech in the context of protest, dissent, and the quest for social change. The historical flashpoints in this series highlight pivotal moments in which artists, activists, writers, filmmakers, and intellectuals tested the limits of free speech, challenging the public to redefine “freedom” and realize it anew for populations and causes that were at risk of having their liberties denied. Timed to mark both PEN America’s 100th anniversary in 2022 and the lead up to the U.S. semiquincentennial, the event series will run for two years from 2021-2023, and the digital resources will be available to educators and the public for years to come.

GG-280534-21Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsCENTERThe Democratic Lens: Photography and Civic Engagement9/1/2021 - 4/30/2024$162,500.00LauraE.Wzorek Pressley   CENTERSanta FeNM87505-0352USA2021Art History and CriticismHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs16250001625000

Implementation of a lecture series examining the historical and contemporary role of photography in civic participation.

The Democratic Lens: Photography and Civic Engagement is a lecture series examining the historical and contemporary role of photography in civic participation and its contribution to the national narrative. The program includes six scholar lectures, one panel discussion, six commissioned essays, nine podcasts and a printed program guide.

GG-285435-22Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsMaine Humanities CouncilWhat If ...?: Afrofuturism and the Quest for a Just, Inclusive, and Sustainable Society5/1/2022 - 4/30/2024$250,000.00Samaa Abdurraqib   Maine Humanities CouncilPortlandME04102-1012USA2022American LiteratureHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs25000002500000

Implementation of a twenty-four-month initiative that would introduce Afrofuturism to residents of Maine through reading and discussion programs, speakers’ bureau events, and statewide community engagement events.

This 24-month initiative will provide text-based humanities experiences and other unique opportunities for Mainers to read, reflect, and connect with one another and envision a future that is more just, inclusive, and sustainable. The initiative focuses on Afrofuturism and will use a variety of Afrofuturist texts to ground and propel conversation. Program activities are designed to create connections, foster a deepened sense of individual and community agency, and inspire increased civic engagement. Themes within the initiative will include: (1) Racial justice, (2) Climate justice, (3) Food justice, (4) Religion and Spirituality, and (5) Democracy and its possibilities. Our collective pursuit of the enduring shared goals of life, liberty, happiness requires ongoing imaginative community work to build a more perfect union rooted in the ideal of human equality. Community discussion of Afrofuturist texts will provide the framework and a set of conceptual and narrative tools for this work.

GG-285480-22Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsALAThe Great Stories Club: Reading and Discussion for At-Risk Youth11/1/2022 - 8/31/2024$213,546.00Brian Russell   ALAChicagoIL60611-2729USA2022Literature, OtherHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs21354602135460

Implementation of a nationwide program to support reading and discussion groups for at-risk teens at small local libraries.

The Great Stories Club is a thematic reading and discussion program developed to connect librarians with at-risk youth in their communities through literature-based outreach.

GG-287552-22Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsDyckman Farmhouse Museum AllianceDyckman Discussions: A More Perfect Union in Inwood9/1/2022 - 8/31/2024$160,000.00Melissa Kiewiet   Dyckman Farmhouse Museum AllianceNew YorkNY10034-3101USA2022African American HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs16000001600000

Humanities discussions exploring the history of New York City’s Inwood neighborhood from the colonial era through the nineteenth century.

The proposed project, Dyckman Discussions: A More Perfect Union in Inwood, is a two year in-person discussion series that will begin by exploring topics in New York history, such as forced removal of indigenous people, Dutch colonization, enslaved labor, and immigration. These panel discussions will lay a foundation for a three-part series of community dialogues in the second year. The community dialogues will build on the humanities-focused discussions from the previous year, and tackle the histories that lay the groundwork for and are relevant to today’s social and political climate. By centering our discussions around New York City and Inwood, staff at the museum aim to inspire our neighborhood to see commonalities - a ‘more perfect union’ - between themselves and their neighbors, creating a more unified community.

GG-287616-22Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsLibrary of America400 Years of Latino Poetry5/1/2023 - 4/30/2025$849,449.00Max Rudin   Library of AmericaNew YorkNY10022-1006USA2022Latin American LiteratureHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs84944908494490

A national series of public programs tied to the release of an anthology of Latino poetry.

Library of America, in partnership with the National Association of Latino Arts and Cultures, plans 400 YEARS OF LATINO POETRY, a national public humanities initiative comprising a groundbreaking published anthology; public programs and conversations with literary scholars, poets, and historians; and a website featuring a permanent digital archive of teaching and learning resources.

GG-290712-23Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsBrevard Music Center, Inc.Music Unwound8/1/2023 - 3/31/2025$398,946.00JosephI.Horowitz   Brevard Music Center, Inc.BrevardNC28712-0312USA2023Music History and CriticismHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs39894603957130

Implementation of a series of public programs bringing historical and cultural context to performances of early twentieth-century classical music.

This application requests a $398,946 Humanities Discussions grant for “Music Unwound,” a consortium of orchestras, music festivals, and institutions of higher education determined to prioritize humanities-infusion as a strategy of audience growth and engagement. The grant would fund 9 cross-disciplinary festivals in 6 states. The centerpiece of each festival is a scripted concert with a continuous visual track. The music is placed in a cultural/historical context via multimedia components including actors, photographs, film, and scholarly commentary. Each festival includes additional ancillary events. Each deals with a topic in American music – and uses that as a springboard to explore present-day concerns. The audiences are exceptionally diverse. All events prioritize audience discussions. The applicant organizations include 3 orchestras, a music festival, and 2 schools of music. The application also includes 3 NPR documentaries.

GG-290742-23Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsMuseum Association of New YorkA New Agora for New York: Museums as Spaces for Democracy10/1/2023 - 3/31/2026$499,988.00Megan Eves   Museum Association of New YorkTroyNY12180-3215USA2023U.S. HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs49998804942840

Implementation of a discussion and public program series exploring democracy in America to be conducted at twelve museums across New York.

"A New Agora for New York: Museums as Spaces for Democracy” is a humanities discussion program series produced in partnership with Humanities New York. The series will use the Smithsonian Institution’s Museum on Main Street Exhibition, "Voices and Votes: Democracy in America" as a launching point to support the work of twelve museums and their communities to explore, reflect on, and tell the story of their role in the evolution of American Democracy and envision the future of our nation as we approach the semiquincentennial. Programs will include two planning symposia, development and installation of an exhibition from the museum’s collection that tells the story of their community’s relationship with democracy, a lecture by a project scholar, an oral history gathering project, a Virtual Agora, Community Conversation discussion programs, and workshops for local teachers. The project will produce 36 public programs and reach 50,000 people.

GG-290757-23Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsUnity Productions FoundationAmerican Muslim Pathways8/1/2023 - 1/31/2025$400,000.00Daniel Tutt   Unity Productions FoundationSilver SpringMD20910-4450USA2023Arts, OtherHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs40000003998910

Implementation of lectures, public discussions, a website, and educational materials about the history and culture of Muslims in America.

American Muslim Pathways is a series of lectures by humanities scholars, followed by community discussions held at PBS stations across the country, organized in conjunction with adjacent cultural and university venues. An interactive website, including learning lessons and extensive video content, will serve as an additional didactic tool for the public, helping the general audience as well as high school and college teachers to become more acquainted with the history of the Muslim community in America. Combining lectures, discussions and the online-learning platform, American Muslim Pathways brings the long, often-forgotten history of Muslims in America to light, by focusing on their recorded experiences from the 16th Century to the present day.

GG-293111-23Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsAmerican Musicological Society, Inc.“Many Musics of America”: Interpreting What Music Means to America’s Peoples11/1/2023 - 10/31/2025$337,620.00Danielle Fosler-Lussier   American Musicological Society, Inc.New YorkNY10012-1502USA2023Music History and CriticismHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs33762003341400

A two-year humanities discussion program exploring the history and evolution of American music.

The American Musicological Society requests funding for a Humanities Discussions implementation grant to support an innovative public program of twenty events exploring the role of music in the history and evolution of the United States and its people. Called the "Many Musics of America," the series will offer engaging public programs that convey humanistic knowledge about a variety of American musical traditions. Held all over the country and online, the proposed series builds on a pilot program launched in 2022 and will explore how Americans have understood and expressed themselves through music since the country's founding. Particular attention will be paid to exploring the music of several underserved communities, including communities of Native Americans, African-Americans and diverse groups living in Appalachia.

GG-293134-23Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsRutgers, The State University of New Jersey, NewarkClimates of Inequality Discussions9/1/2023 - 8/31/2025$498,599.00Liz Sevcenko   Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, NewarkNewarkNJ07104-3010USA2023Public HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs49859904985990

Implementation of a discussion series on the history and impact of climate change in underserved communities across the United States.

Climates of Inequality Discussions will bring together scholars, students, and diverse publics in 8 communities across the country for humanities conversations centering “frontline” communities -- those living in areas historically impacted by environmental destruction, now disproportionately vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Discussions will explore how local histories of environmental inequality can help us understand the global shape of climate impacts to come; and how local communities who have struggled with environmental degradation over generations have developed resilience strategies from which we all can learn. Grounded in HAL's national public memory project, Climates of Inequality: Stories of Environmental Justice, COI Discussions bring history to the climate fight in two ways: increasing communities’ knowledge of histories that help guide a path through the climate crisis, and building skills to practice public history as a resiliency strategy.

GG-293183-23Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsDuke UniversitySNCC and Grassroots Organizing: Building a More Perfect Union9/1/2023 - 8/31/2025$349,991.00Wesley HoganJennifer LawsonDuke UniversityDurhamNC27705-4677USA2023African American HistoryHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs34999103499910

Implementation of a discussion series at HBCUs and museums on the history of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

The Movement History Initiative in collaboration with six historically black colleges and universities plans "SNCC and Grassroots Organizing: Building a More Perfect Union," a public discussion series examining central themes in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee's (SNCC) grassroots organizing--the organizing tradition, voting rights, Black Power, women and gender, freedom teaching, and art and culture in movement building--and their contemporary relevance to the ongoing project of building a more perfect union. The series includes multi-day community gatherings at HBCUs, workshops at civil rights/African American museums, and virtual community conversations where humanities scholars and movement veterans engage a broad public audience in rich humanities resources. New developed Interpretive Booklets and Learning Toolkits with primary source materials, analysis, and questions will provide further opportunities to engage.

GG-293337-23Public Programs: Humanities DiscussionsHouston Grand Opera Association, Inc.Singing Our Shared Story10/1/2023 - 9/30/2025$385,000.00Jennifer Bowman   Houston Grand Opera Association, Inc.HoustonTX77002-1504USA2023Interdisciplinary Studies, GeneralHumanities DiscussionsPublic Programs38500003850000

A two-year humanities discussion program and educational outreach that uses opera to explore Houston’s shared history.

Houston Grand Opera seeks to invite community discussion around topics in the humanities with the goal of identifying, celebrating, and preserving Houston’s shared history, using its season of operatic productions and new works – which embody the practice of storytelling told through words and music – as a starting point for discovery. By examining themes in a set of HGO opera productions and by inviting the Houston community to directly participate in the development of a set of new operatic works, the multi-disciplinary, humanities-rich artform of opera will serve as the medium for discussions and activities for a broad, non-expert audience, in-person of approximately 115,000 community members of all ages and backgrounds.