Southern Register Summer 08
8/3/08
10:20 AM
Page 1
the THE NEWSLETTER OF THE
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF SOUTHERN CULTURE • SUMMER 2008
THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI
Bercaw Awarded Two National Fellowships
N
ancy Bercaw, associate professor of history and Southern Studies at the University, has been awarded national fellowships from the Huntington Library and the Smithsonian Institution to conduct research for her next book, titled Science and Citizenship: African American and American Indian Bodies in Post-Emancipation America. The study focuses on African American and American Indian remains collected and studied by the federal government following the Civil War. It also deals with the scientists, military men, anthropologists, and government bureaucrats who collected the “racial artifacts.” The artifacts Bercaw is studying include American Indian skulls, which illustrated racial differences, and African American organs, considered representative of the universal man. “It’s pretty rare for historians to get a fellowship to help support a book, but it is extraordinary to have consecutive fellowships,” said Ted Ownby, interim director of Center for the Study of Southern Culture and professor of history and Southern Studies. “This gives Professor Bercaw the freedom to concentrate virtually all of her energy on research and writing.” “I can’t believe I’ve been awarded both of these grants, because both are really such critical locations for doing my research,” Bercaw said. “It’s such a tremendous gift.” The National Endowment for the Humanities Huntington Library Long-Term Fellowship permits Bercaw and her family to spend the upcoming academic year in California, where she will study the personal papers of many of the collectors. “Because this project cuts across disciplines, I need access to a library that is strong in biology, medicine, race, the West, ethnology, and anthropology,” she said. “The Huntington’s rare book and library collections are deep in most of these areas.” As part of the Smithsonian Institution Senior Fellowship, Bercaw plans to work in the institution’s archives during the summer and fall of 2009. She will return from Washington to resume teaching history and Southern Studies in January 2010. Bercaw said she developed the idea for the book when she realized there were no African American skulls on display in
Nancy Bercaw
the U.S. Army Medical Museum, where the collections are located. She said her interdisciplinary work in Southern Studies, her classroom experience, and her membership with the Global South Working Group—a project that focuses on
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