Month: October 2020

GC Fellowship Opportunity in Applied/Public History (deadline: 11/6/2020)

The Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society at the CUNY Graduate Center is offering up to

eight $1,250 fellowships for participants in a History course for Spring, 2021 entitled “Twentieth

Century American Foundations.” An excellent opportunity for all students interested in Public History and institutional history, this course is being developed in collaboration with the Rockefeller Archive Center [RAC] in Pocantico Hills, New York, one of the country’s major historical archives for U.S. grantmaking institutions and philanthropy.

Contact Barbara Leopold for more information: bleopold@gc.cuny.edu

Bonnie D. Oglensky – Ambivalence in Mentorship: An Exploration of Emotional Complexities

Bonnie D. Oglensky (alum) published Ambivalence in Mentorship: An Exploration of Emotional Complexities (Routledge, 2018)

Ambivalence in Mentorship is based on research of scores of mentors and protégés in longstanding relationships representing a range of career fields. Using vivid case narratives, the book takes a nuanced look at the emotional complexities of their mentorships—the intense passions and hopes that get stirred up in these professional, yet intimate connections as well as the turmoil created by disappointment, betrayal, competition, and the mere readiness to move on and separate from these relationships.

Framing the psychodynamics of mentorship dialectically, the book unpacks the relational struggles in mentorship to trace how these emerge from strong emotional bonds. This is accomplished by delineating and illustrating three modes of the ambivalent attachment between mentor and protégé: idealization, loyalty, and generativity. Pushing at the boundaries of research on the topic, Ambivalence in Mentorship locates this relationship at the crosshairs of authority and love—highlighting the interplay of intrapsychic, interpersonal, cultural, and historical forces that drive this relationship to be at once vital and risky. Professionals in the social sciences, business, and management fields will find that the book offers a fresh perspective and authentic voice to the very real joys and complicated feelings that attend mentorship.

Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships (deadline: 10/28/2020)

ACLS invites applications for Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellowships, which support a year of research and writing to help advanced graduate students in the humanities and related social sciences in the last year of PhD dissertation writing. The program encourages timely completion of the PhD and is open to scholars pursuing humanistic research on topics grounded in any time period, world region, or methodology. Applicants must be prepared to complete their dissertations within the period of their fellowship tenure and no later than August 31, 2022. A grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation supports this program.

https://acls.org/Competitions-and-Deadlines/Mellon-ACLS-Dissertation-Completion-Fellowships