Search Criteria

 






Key Word Search by:









Organization Type


State or Jurisdiction


Congressional District





help

Division or Office
help

Grants to:


Date Range Start


Date Range End


  • Special Searches




    Product Type


    Media Coverage Type








 


Search Results

Keywords: double crossed (ALL of these words -- matching substrings)

Permalink for this Search

1
Page size:
 4 items in 1 pages
Award Number Grant ProgramAward RecipientProject TitleAward PeriodApproved Award Total
1
Page size:
 4 items in 1 pages
CH-50421-07Challenge Programs: Challenge GrantsAmerican Musicological Society, Inc.Publishing Musicologal Research in the 21st Century12/1/2005 - 7/31/2011$240,000.00AnneW.Robertson   American Musicological Society, Inc.New YorkNY10012-1502USA2006Music History and CriticismChallenge GrantsChallenge Programs02400000240000

Endowment for publication subventions and an award program in musicology as well as fund-raising costs.

The American Musicological Society seeks an NEH challenge grant of $240,000, which with a 4:1 match will yield $1,200,000. These funds will endow four publication-related initiatives of the Society. The bulk of the funds ($900,000) will create a new subvention supporting the publication of first books by young scholars, whose work often represents the cutting edge of scholarly research, but whose careers are often at their most fragile or challenging point. The remainder will go primarily to existing publication subvention programs, supporting musicological books more generally ($125,000) as well as a monograph series sponsored by the Society ($100,000). These subventions aim to optimize the quality of the best scholarly books on music while keeping their prices affordable. Finally, we propose a new award for books on music in American culture ($50,000), a vital area of musical research that appeals to the broadest literary and musical public.

FT-54309-06Research Programs: Summer StipendsAlma GottliebAfricanizing Europe: Cape Verdean Perspectives on Race, Class, Gender and Identity in a Globalizing Portugal7/1/2006 - 8/31/2006$5,000.00Alma Gottlieb   Board of Trustees of the University of IllinoisChampaignIL61801-3620USA2006AnthropologySummer StipendsResearch Programs5000050000

In summer '06, I will inaugurate a humanistically oriented fieldwork project on the Cape Verdean diaspora. During this initial phase of a long-term project, I will focus on how Cape Verdeans in Lisbon experience their transplanted/transcultural existence. Paying attention to generation within both family and community, and privileging the voices of individuals to give texture to their experiences, I will explore how race, class and gender shape the situated identity of Cape Verdean adults, youths and children in the Portuguese diaspora. In later phases of this project, I will focus on specific issues that may arise from this initial phase, and I will expand the project to Cape Verdeans living elsewhere in Europe and New England.

FZ-250439-17Research Programs: Public ScholarsMatthew Avery SuttonDouble Crossed: The Missionaries Who Spied for the United States During the Second World War8/1/2017 - 7/31/2018$50,400.00MatthewAverySutton   Washington State UniversityPullmanWA99164-0001USA2016U.S. HistoryPublic ScholarsResearch Programs504000504000

A book on religious activists and missionaries who served as US spies in China, Germany, Italy, and North Africa during World War II.  Sutton's work tells the stories of John Birch in China; Felix Morlion, a Belgian Catholic who spied for the OSS in the Vatican; William Eddy, a missionary's son who organized intelligence in Northern Africa; and Moe Berg, a Jewish professional baseball player sent behind the lines to interrupt work by German scientists. 

FDR drafted ten million people to serve in World War II. And he drafted God. Or at least some of God’s most valuable earthly agents. During the war the US government sent a small but influential group of missionaries and religious activists around the globe to work in covert operations and espionage. Their stories have remained hidden—until now. This analysis of religion and espionage is significant for the following reasons. (1) It illustrates how religious activists’ entwining of faith and patriotic duty made them some of the nation’s best spies, willing to sacrifice everything to execute their missions. (2) It highlights the little-known role that religion played in World War II. FDR pushed Americans to see global religious freedom as fundamental to American security for the first time. (3) It reveals how the government and the work of religious activists facilitated the rise of a new religious nationalism ostensibly grounded in the championing of global freedom of religion.

RA-50142-14Research Programs: Fellowship Programs at Independent Research InstitutionsConsortium for the History of Science, Technology and MedicineLong-Term Research Fellowships at the Philadelphia Area Center for History of Science1/1/2015 - 6/30/2018$121,800.00Babak Ashrafi   Consortium for the History of Science, Technology and MedicinePhiladelphiaPA19106-2426USA2014History of ScienceFellowship Programs at Independent Research InstitutionsResearch Programs1218000113753.380

8 months of fellowship stipends (1 fellowship) per year for three years and a contribution to defray costs associated with the selection of fellows.

The Philadelphia Area Center for History of Science seeks support for fellowships in the humanities over a three year period for advanced study and research in the history of science, medicine and technology. Specifically, the Center requests funding for two long-term fellowships of nine months each per year, for a total of 18 months per year.