New York University Dissertation Fellow
(Program is currently suspended)
The American Studies Department at 91¾«¼ò°æ offers ABD New York University students a fellowship known as the NYU Minority Dissertation Fellowship in American Studies. The recipient of this Fellowship teaches two courses a year to undergraduates, both in the Spring term, including a team-taught section of Methods and Approaches in American Studies and a course in the fellow's dissertation field or other area of expertise. The fellow will have only light administrative duties in the Fall term in order to allow for dissertation work and course preparation. Some teaching experience is required as well as a strong desire to be mentored by colleagues in the department.
Fellowship Recipient | Courses Taught at 91¾«¼ò°æ |
Alondra Nelson Fall 1999 - Spring 2001 |
Methods & Approaches Civil Rights in the 20th Century U.S. |
Fall 2001 - Spring 2003 (And then as a sabbatical replacement) |
Methods & Approaches African-American Women in the Visual Arts Caribbean American Identities Am. Cult. Periods: 1920s Black Feminist Thought |
Fall 2003 - Spring 2005 |
Methods & Approaches Race, Ethnicity & Migration African American Experience |
Fall 2005 - Spring 2007 |
Methods & Approaches
Sex, Gender & U.S. Empire
AIDS & the Public Sphere Critical Whiteness (team-taught) |
André CarringtonFall 2007 - Spring 2009 | Methods & Approaches Popular Culture |