Nichole Nelson, 2020 Mellon/ACLS Public Fellow, explains how her PhD in history and fellowship experience helped her build a career in housing justice.
ACLS Celebrates Recent Book Releases by Fellows and Grantees
ACLS is pleased to share a select list of books published in the first half of 2024 by ACLS fellows and grantees, many of which developed from ACLS-supported research. These publications represent just a sample of the distinguished works authored by past and current awardees. They reflect a wide array of topics, from the multidimensional relationship between Indigenous communities in Alaska and the US military during the Pacific War to a collaborative project on excavated documents that reveal the history of third-century South China.
- Kings in All but Name: The Lost History of Ouchi Rule in Japan, 1350-1569 by Thomas D. Conlan F’18 (Oxford University Press)
- The First Amerasians: Mixed Race Koreans from Camptowns to America by Yuri W. Doolan F’23 (Oxford University Press)
- A Politics of Melancholia: From Plato to Arendt by George Edmondson F’14 and Klaus Mladek F’14 (Princeton University Press)
- Myth and Menagerie: Seeing Lions in the Nineteenth Century by Katie Hornstein F’18, F’10, F’09 (Yale University Press)
- Disoriented Disciplines: China, Latin America, and the Shape of World Literature by Rosario Hubert F’17 (Northwestern University Press)
- State and Local Society in Third Century South China: Administrative Documents Excavated at Zoumalou, Hunan by Brian G. Lander F’20, F’18, G’16, Ling Wenchao, and Xin Wen F’21 (Brill)
- Love in the Time of Self-Publishing: How Romance Writers Changed the Rules of Writing and Success by Christine Larson F’21 (Princeton University Press)
- The Diné Hogan: A Modern History by Lillian Makeda F’21 (Routledge)
- Alaska Native Resilience: Voices from World War II by Holly Miowak Guise F’22 (University of Washington Press)
- Air Conditioning by Hsuan L. Hsu F’18, F’12 (Bloomsbury)
- Blacksound: Making Race and Popular Music in the United States by Matthew D. Morrison F’21 (University of California Press)
- The Last Human Job: The Work of Connecting in a Disconnected World by Allison J. Pugh F’16 (Princeton University Press)
- The Fox Spirit, the Stone Maiden, and Other Transgender Histories from Late Imperial China by Matthew H. Sommer F’06 (Columbia University Press)
ACLS is committed to funding research in the humanities and interpretive social sciences. We support scholars at every career stage, from dissertation development to creating opportunities for tenured scholars for new research projects.
Frederick M. Ranallo-Higgins F’22 shares his experience working as a Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Buddhism Public Scholar and Associate Editor at Tricycle: The Buddhist Review.
Jue Liang F’23, F’19, G’16 researches gender and Tibet Buddhism as a fellow of the Luce/ACLS Program in China Studies and The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Program in Buddhist Studies.
Kay Sohini, 2021 Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellow, discusses the process of creating her graphic dissertation and the importance of nontraditional approaches to scholarship.