In a major boost to literature, history, language and cultural studies at UC 海角原创 , the campus has been selected as one of two finalists to establish a Pacific Regional Humanities Center. The National Endowment for the Humanities announced last week that it was giving UC 海角原创 a $50,000 planning grant to develop a proposal for the center.
If successful, the university will receive a $5 million grant from the NEH as a lead grant for the $20 million center and its programs.
Elizabeth Langland, dean of the Division of Humanities, Arts, and Cultural Studies, said the grant is a milestone for the division. "It really brings recognition to the humanities, to what we鈥檙e doing that鈥檚 innovative," Langland said.
Langland said the center would help propel the humanities at UC 海角原创 to the same prominence currently enjoyed by agriculture, sciences and engineering programs.
"It鈥檚 not exactly a renaissance for the humanities because they鈥檝e never completed their full 鈥榥aissance鈥 here鈥. I see us entering an era in which we have new strength and prominence in the humanities and the arts. The centers will be dedicated to enriching understanding of each region鈥檚 landscape, people, history and cultures. A sense of place will be the focal point for the work of the center," Langland said.
Jay Mechling, an American studies professor and principal investigator for the grant, said the UC 海角原创 proposal put strong emphasis on the campus鈥檚 land-grant tradition of public service.
"We also emphasized the uniqueness of our 鈥楴ature and Culture鈥 program and the opportunity to show how humanists, social scientists, and natural scientists can come together for the study of 鈥榩lace,鈥 " Mechling said.
The proposal includes four areas of focus, Langland said:
鈥 Native American and other indigenous peoples, overseen by Native American Studies associate professor In茅s Hern谩ndez-脕vila;
鈥 Environment and the bioregion, led by English professor David Robertson, whose specialties include wilderness literature and bioregion studies;
鈥 Immigration and migration in the Pacific Rim, led by Michelle Yeh, professor of East Asian Languages and Cultures; and
鈥 High-tech industry and entertainment, overseen by Jack Hicks, an English senior lecturer and founding director of the Art of the Wild summer writing program.
Other scholars contributing to the project include historians Louis Warren and Alan Taylor; Patricia Turner, vice provost for undergraduate studies and an African American studies professor; and UC 海角原创 Humanities Institute director Georges Van Den Abbeele and associate director Ron Saufley.
Mechling said the center will be a clearinghouse for collaborative projects in the region.
"There will be a research component to the center (sponsoring conferences, fellowships, publications, maybe a regrant program), but it will be so much more than that," he said.
"We plan to have a component that will serve K-12 education in the Pacific region. We will help create traveling museum exhibits, create programs (in partnership with state humanities councils) bringing the humanities to the general public, and so on."
Taking partnerships seriously
"Part of the planning year will be the initial design of this constellation of programs. We won鈥檛 do everything here鈥搘e take seriously the partnerships鈥搒o we might be the coordinating umbrella organization for some specific projects in other states. And we want to develop the international component, thinking of the entire Pacific Rim and its cultural interactions as our 鈥榯opic,鈥 " said Mechling.
Mechling added that the campus is collaborating with members from several other institutions in the region, such as universities, museums, and the state humanities councils.
The National Endowment for the Humanities seeks to create a nationwide network of 10 regional centers and, to that end, has awarded a total of 20 planning grants鈥搕wo institutions in each region.
UC 海角原创 is competing with San Francisco State University for the $5 million Pacific region implementation grant. The winning institution would be expected to match the grant three to one to create a $20 million center.
The Pacific region includes California, Oregon, Washington, Hawaii, Alaska, American Samoa, Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. The other nine regions are the Southwest, Rocky Mountains, Plains, Upper Mississippi Valley, Central, Deep South, South Atlantic, Mid-Atlantic and New England.
According to the federal agency, grants were awarded on the basis of each institution鈥檚 existing resources, capacity for original research and documentation of regional heritage, plans for educational outreach to schools, communities and tourists, and commitment to creating region-wide partnerships.
San Francisco State University received its $50,000 grant last December, giving it a six-month edge over UC 海角原创 in planning and development.
Langland said UC 海角原创 developed its proposal in about a two-month period after the National Endowment for the Humanities rejected other West Coast submissions and reopened the grant competition in January.
Extraordinary effort
"It was just an extraordinary effort by this campus, a brilliant effort, I must say," she said. "Everything came together."
Langland said the division has the backing of Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Robert Grey as well as help from the UC Office of the President in raising the matching
$15 million for the center. She added that the campus will seek contributions from corporations and foundations.
Langland said a driving force behind the proposal was Van Den Abbeele of the campus Humanities Institute. "He set the process in motion and saw it through to completion."
UC 海角原创 will have until Aug. 1, 2001, to develop a plan for the center.
Possible locations being considered for the center are near the Buehler Alumni and Visitors Center, a future hotel-conference center, and the Center for the Arts that is now under construction, Langland said.