List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1971
Encyclopedia

United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

 and Canadian fellows

  • Gar Alperovitz
    Gar Alperovitz
    Gar Alperovitz is Lionel R. Bauman Professor of Political Economy at the University of Maryland, College Park Department of Government and Politics. He is a former Fellow of King's College, Cambridge; a founding Fellow of Harvard’s Institute of Politics; a Fellow at the Institute for Policy...

    , Lionel R. Bauman Professor of Political Economy, University of Maryland.
  • Norman Birnbaum
    Norman Birnbaum
    Norman Birnbaum is an American sociologist. He is an emeritus professor at the Georgetown University Law Center, and a member of the editorial board of The Nation. He was educated in New York City's public schools, at Williams College, and has a doctorate in sociology from Harvard University...

    , University Professor, Georgetown University Law Center.
  • Julie Bovasso
    Julie Bovasso
    Julie Bovasso was an American actress of stage, screen and television. She was born in Brooklyn, New York to an Italian-American family.-Career:Bovasso appeared in many films, including Saturday Night Fever and...

    , Deceased. Drama.
  • Leo Braudy
    Leo Braudy
    Leo Braudy is University Professor and Bing Professor of English at the University of Southern California, where he teaches 17th- and 18th-century English literature, film history and criticism, and American culture. He has previously taught at Yale, Columbia, and Johns Hopkins University...

    , University Professor and Bing Professor of English, University of Southern California
    University of Southern California
    The University of Southern California is a private, not-for-profit, nonsectarian, research university located in Los Angeles, California, United States. USC was founded in 1880, making it California's oldest private research university...

    .
  • Ed Bullins
    Ed Bullins
    Ed Bullins is an African American playwright. He was also the Minister of Culture for the Black Panthers. In addition, he has won numerous awards, including the New York Drama Critics' Circle Award and several Obies. He is one of the best known playwrights to come from the Black Arts Movement...

    , Playwright, Berkeley, California.
  • Mario A. Bunge, Frothingham Professor of Logic and Metaphysics, McGill University.
  • Robbins Burling
    Robbins Burling
    Robbins Burling is an American professor of anthropology and linguistics.-Education and career:Burling received his undergraduate degree from Yale University in 1950 and his Ph.D in Anthropology from Harvard University in 1958...

    , Emeritus Professor of Anthropology and Linguistics, University of Michigan.
  • Noam Chomsky
    Noam Chomsky
    Avram Noam Chomsky is an American linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist, and activist. He is an Institute Professor and Professor in the Department of Linguistics & Philosophy at MIT, where he has worked for over 50 years. Chomsky has been described as the "father of modern linguistics" and...

    , Institute Professor, Department of Linguistics, M.I.T.
  • John Desmond Clark, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley.
  • Tom Clark
    Tom Clark (poet)
    Tom Clark is an American poet, editor and biographer. Clark was born on the Near West Side of Chicago and educated at the University of Michigan where he received a Hopwood Award for poetry. On March 22, 1968, he married Angelica Heinegg, at St. Mark’s Church, New York City...

    , Poet, Berkeley, California.
  • Henry Steele Commager
    Henry Steele Commager
    Henry Steele Commager was an American historian who helped define Modern liberalism in the United States for two generations through his forty books and 700 essays and reviews...

    , Deceased. Classics.
  • Robert Coover
    Robert Coover
    Robert Lowell Coover is an American author and professor in the Literary Arts program at Brown University. He is generally considered a writer of fabulation and metafiction.-Life and works:...

    , T. B. Stowell University Professor, Brown University.
  • Arlene Croce
    Arlene Croce
    Arlene Croce founded Ballet Review magazine in 1965. She was a dance critic for The New Yorker magazine from 1973 to 1998. Prior to her long career as a dance writer, she also wrote film criticism for Film Culture and other magazines. The keynote of her criticism can be grasped from her ability to...

    , Dance Critic, Brooklyn, New York.
  • Stillman Drake
    Stillman Drake
    Stillman Drake was a Canadian historian of science best known for his work on Galileo Galilei . Drake published over 131 books, articles, and book chapters on Galileo. Drake received his first academic appointment in 1967 as full professor at the University of Toronto after a career as a...

    , Deceased. History of Science.
  • Troy Duster
    Troy Duster
    Troy Duster is a sociologist with research interests in the sociology of science, public policy, race and ethnicity and deviance. He is a Chancellor’s Professor of Sociology at UC Berkeley and professor of sociology and director of the Institute for the History of the Production of Knowledge at...

    , Associate Professor of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley.
  • Alfred S. Eichner, Deceased. Economics.
  • Dale Eldred
    Dale Eldred
    Dale Eldred was an internationally acclaimed sculptor renowned for large-scale sculptures that emphasized both natural and generated light.-Biography:...

    , Sculptor, Kansas City Missouri.
  • Charles Fried
    Charles Fried
    Charles Fried is a prominent American jurist and lawyer. He served as United States Solicitor General from 1985 to 1989. He is currently a professor at Harvard Law School.-Early life and education:...

    , Beneficial Professor of Law, Harvard University.
  • Murray Gell-Mann
    Murray Gell-Mann
    Murray Gell-Mann is an American physicist and linguist who received the 1969 Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the theory of elementary particles...

    , Robert Andrews Millikan Professor Emeritus of Theoretical Physics, California Institute of Technology.
  • Sam Gilliam
    Sam Gilliam
    Sam Gilliam is internationally recognized as one of America's foremost Color Field Painter and Lyrical Abstractionist artists....

    , Artist, Washington, D.C.
  • Grant Gilmore
    Grant Gilmore
    Grant Gilmore was an American law professor who taught at Yale Law School, University of Chicago Law School, Moritz College of Law at Ohio State University, and Vermont Law School...

    , Deceased. Law.
  • Nathanael Greene
    Nathanael Greene
    Nathanael Greene was a major general of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War. When the war began, Greene was a militia private, the lowest rank possible; he emerged from the war with a reputation as George Washington's most gifted and dependable officer. Many places in the United...

    , Professor of History, Wesleyan University.
  • Vartan Gregorian
    Vartan Gregorian
    Vartan Gregorian is an Armenian-American academic, serving as the president of Carnegie Corporation of New York. He is an ethnic Armenian, born in Iran....

    , President, Carnegie Corporation.
  • John J. Gumperz
    John J. Gumperz
    John Joseph Gumperz is an American linguist and academic. Gumperz was, for most of his career, a professor at the University of California in Berkeley. He is currently affiliated with the University of California, Santa Barbara...

    , Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley.
  • Thom Gunn
    Thom Gunn
    Thom Gunn, born Thomson William Gunn , was an Anglo-American poet who was praised both for his early verses in England, where he was associated with The Movement and his later poetry in America, even after moving toward a looser, free-verse style...

    , Poet; Retired Senior Lecturer, University of California, Berkeley, San Francisco.
  • Heisuke Hironaka
    Heisuke Hironaka
    is a Japanese mathematician. After completing his undergraduate studies at Kyoto University, he received his Ph.D. from Harvard while under the direction of Oscar Zariski. He won the Fields Medal in 1970....

    , Professor of Mathematics, Harvard University.
  • Nathan Irvin Huggins, Deceased. U.S. History.
  • George Izenour
    George Izenour
    George Charles Izenour , MPhys, AIEEE was an author, educator, designer and leading innovator in the field of theatrical design and technology...

    , Deceased. Professor Emeritus of Theatre Design and Technology, Director Emeritus of the Electro-mechanical Laboratory, Yale University
    Yale University
    Yale University is a private, Ivy League university located in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701 in the Colony of Connecticut, the university is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States...

  • Aravind Joshi
    Aravind Joshi
    Aravind Krishna Joshi is the Henry Salvatori Professor of Computer and Cognitive Science in the computer science department of the University of Pennsylvania...

    , Henry Salvatori Professor of Computer and Cognitive Science, University of Pennsylvania
    University of Pennsylvania
    The University of Pennsylvania is a private, Ivy League university located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Penn is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States,Penn is the fourth-oldest using the founding dates claimed by each institution...

    .
  • Barbara Kolb
    Barbara Kolb
    Barbara Kolb is an American composer. Her music uses sound masses and often creates vertical structures through simultaneous rhythmic or melodic units . She was the first American woman composer to win the Prix de Rome. She received her B.M. and M.M...

    , Composer, New York City.
  • Leonard Kriegel
    Leonard Kriegel
    Leonard Kriegel is an American author and self-proclaimed "cripple."Kriegel was born in the Bronx and contracted polio at the age of 11, leaving him confined to steel braces and crutches shortly after. His first book was The Long Walk Home...

    , Professor Emeritus of English, City College, City University of New York.
  • Seymour Martin Lipset
    Seymour Martin Lipset
    Seymour Martin Lipset was an American political sociologist, senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, and the Hazel Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University. His major work was in the fields of political sociology, trade union organization, social stratification, public opinion, and...

    , Hazel Professor of Public Policy, George Mason University.
  • Charles Ludlam
    Charles Ludlam
    Charles Braun Ludlam was an American actor, director, and playwright.-Early life:Ludlam was born in Floral Park, New York, the son of Marjorie and Joseph William Ludlam. He was raised in Greenlawn, New York, on Long Island, and attended Harborfields High School. The fact that he was gay was not a...

    , Deceased. Drama.
  • Ralph Manheim
    Ralph Manheim
    Ralph Frederick Manheim was an American translator of German and French literature, as well as occasional works from Dutch, Polish and Hungarian...

    , Deceased. German Literature and Translation.
  • William Hardy McNeill, Robert A. Millikan Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of History, University of Chicago.
  • Ved Mehta
    Ved Mehta
    Ved Parkash Mehta is a writer who was born in Lahore, British India to a Hindu family. He lost his sight at the age of four as the result of an attack of cerebrospinal meningitis...

    , Writer, New York City.
  • Ilhan Mimaroglu
    Ilhan Mimaroglu
    İlhan Mimaroğlu is a musician and composer. He was born in Istanbul, Turkey on March 11, 1926, the son of the famous architect Mimar Kemaleddin Bey depicted on the Turkish lira banknotes, denomination 20 lira, of the 2009 E-9 emission. He graduated from Galatasaray High School in 1945 and the...

    , Composer, New York City.
  • Charles Mingus
    Charles Mingus
    Charles Mingus Jr. was an American jazz musician, composer, bandleader, and civil rights activist.Mingus's compositions retained the hot and soulful feel of hard bop and drew heavily from black gospel music while sometimes drawing on elements of Third stream, free jazz, and classical music...

    , Music Composition.
  • Robert A. Mundell, Professor of Economics, Columbia University.
  • Mark Musa
    Mark Musa
    Mark Musa is a graduate of Rutgers University , the University of Florence , and the Johns Hopkins University . He is a former Guggenheim fellow and the author of a number of books and articles...

    , Professor of Italian, Indiana University.
  • Yoichiro Nambu
    Yoichiro Nambu
    is a Japanese-born American physicist, currently a professor at the University of Chicago. Known for his contributions to the field of theoretical physics, he was awarded a one-half share of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2008 for the discovery of the mechanism of spontaneous broken symmetry in...

    , Harry Pratt Judson Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Physics, University of Chicago.
  • Larry Neal
    Larry Neal
    Larry Neal or Lawerence Neal was a scholar of African-American theatre. He is well known for his contributions to the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and 1970s.-Biography:...

    , Deceased. American Literature.
  • Stephen B. Oates
    Stephen B. Oates
    Stephen B. Oates is a former professor of history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He is an expert in 19th-century United States history....

    , Professor of History, University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
  • Philip Pearlstein
    Philip Pearlstein
    Philip Pearlstein is an American painter, and part of the contemporary Realist school.-Biography:Pearlstein was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He studied at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and received his Masters in art history at New York University. He was a friend of Andy Warhol from...

    , Artist; Professor of Art, Brooklyn College, City University of New York.
  • Hanna Pitkin, Emeritus Professor of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley.
  • Alvin Carl Plantinga, John A. O'Brien Professor of Philosophy, Calvin College.
  • Theodore Roszak
    Theodore Roszak (scholar)
    Theodore Roszak was professor emeritus of history at California State University, East Bay. He is best known for his 1969 text, The Making of a Counter Culture.-Background:...

    , Professor of History, California State University, Hayward.
  • Edward Ruscha
    Edward Ruscha
    Edward Joseph Ruscha IV is an American artist associated with the Pop art movement. He has worked in the media of painting, printmaking, drawing, photography, and film. Ruscha lives and works in Culver City, California...

    , Artist, Los Angeles.
  • Loren Rush
    Loren Rush
    Loren Rush is a U.S. composer. His works include the drone piece Hard Music for three amplified pianos. The piece features no melodic figuration but rather clouds created by only one note, the low D above cello C, repeated quickly enough by each player to be heard as nearly continuous...

    , Composer, Woodside, California.
  • George Beals Schaller, Director for Science, Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx Park, New York.
  • Richard Serra
    Richard Serra
    Richard Serra is an American minimalist sculptor and video artist known for working with large-scale assemblies of sheet metal. Serra was involved in the Process Art Movement.-Early life and education:...

    , Artist, New York City.
  • Wilfrid Sheed
    Wilfrid Sheed
    Wilfrid John Joseph Sheed was an English-born American novelist and essayist.Sheed was born in London to Francis "Frank" Sheed and Mary "Maisie" Ward, prominent Roman Catholic publishers in the United Kingdom and the United States during the mid-20th century...

    , Writer, Sag Harbor, New York.
  • Nathan Sivin
    Nathan Sivin
    Nathan Sivin , also known as Xiwen is an American author, scholar, sinologist, historian, essayist, and currently professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania...

    , Professor of Chinese Culture and of the History of Science, University of Pennsylvania.
  • Elliott P. Skinner, Franz Boas Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University.
  • William Stanton
    William Stanton
    William A. "Bill" Stanton , a United States career diplomat, is the current Director of the American Institute in Taiwan, Taipei Office. His tenure began on August 28, 2009. The position that serves as de facto U.S...

    , Retired Professor of History, University of Pittsburgh: 1971.
  • Ruth Stone
    Ruth Stone
    Ruth Stone was an American poet, author, and teacher.-Life and career:In 1959, after her husband, professor Walter Stone, committed suicide, she was forced to raise three daughters alone...

    , Poet; Professor of English, SUNY Binghamton: 1971, 1975.
  • Patrick Suppes
    Patrick Suppes
    Patrick Colonel Suppes is an American philosopher who has made significant contributions to philosophy of science, the theory of measurement, the foundations of quantum mechanics, decision theory, psychology, and educational technology...

    , Lucie Stern Professor of Philosophy, Stanford University: 1971.
  • Richard E. Taylor
    Richard E. Taylor
    Richard Edward Taylor, is a Canadian-American professor at Stanford University. In 1990, he shared the Nobel Prize in Physics with Jerome Friedman and Henry Kendall "for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have...

    , Physicist, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford University: 1971.
  • Twyla Tharp
    Twyla Tharp
    Twyla Tharp is an American dancer and choreographer, who lives and works in New York City.-Early years:Tharp was born in 1941 on a farm in Portland, Indiana, and was named after Twila Thornburg, the "Pig Princess" of the 89th Annual Muncie Fair in Indiana.she spend hours working on it to help her...

    , Choreographer, New York City.
  • Gareth Thomas
    Gareth Thomas
    Gareth Thomas may refer to:*Gareth Thomas , Welsh actor*Gareth Thomas , rugby league and former rugby union player...

    , Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Berkeley: 1971.
  • Gerhard L. Weinberg, William Rand Kenan, Jr. Professor Emeritus of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Henry Wessel, Jr.
    Henry Wessel, Jr.
    Henry Wessel, Jr. is an American photographer noted for his descriptive, yet poetic photographs of the human environment.- Photography career :...

    , Photographer; Instructor in Photography, San Francisco Art Institute.
  • Ralph K. Winter, Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
  • Neal Wood
    Neal Wood
    A Marxist scholar of the history of political thought, Neal Wood located political ideas within social relations, property forms, and popular struggles, writing on topics as variant as the British Communist Party, John Locke, Aristotle, Edmund Burke, and St...

    , Emeritus Professor of Political Science and Political Thought, York University, Canada.

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