Les bourses de recherche du Fonds de l’Institut Français d’Amérique

Prochaine date limite de candidature: 1 janvier 2024

La Society for French Historical Studies attribue deux bourses de recherche dotées, en fonction des ressources disponibles, de jusqu’à 1500 dollars chacune, pour contribuer aux frais d’entretien lors de recherches menées en France sur une période d’un mois minimum. Les candidats et candidates doivent travailler à leur thèse de doctorat, ou avoir obtenu ce dernier dans les trois ans précédant la date limite de candidature. Ces bourses ne sont pas destinées à financer les allers-retours en France. Les champs de recherche peuvent couvrir tous les domaines d’études de l’histoire et de la culture françaises. Ces bourses de recherche sont financées par le Fonds de l’Institut Français d’Amérique de la SFHS.

Ces deux bourses prendront le nom en alternance, une année sur deux, de Bourse Gilbert Chinard ou Bourse  Harmon Chadbourn Rorison, pour la première, et de Bourse Edouard Morot-Sir ou Bourse Catherine Maley, pour la seconde. La Bourse Chinard/Rorison soutiendra la recherche dans tous les domaines d’études de l’histoire et de la culture françaises. La Bourse Morot-Sir/Maley privilégiera les jeunes chercheuses et chercheurs dont les travaux s’insèrent dans un vaste champ d’études couvrant l’histoire culturelle, l’histoire de l’art ou la littérature.

Les lauréats et lauréates seront annoncés lors de la conference annuelle de la Society for French Historical Studies. La bourse ne peut être partagée. Pour toute question, merci de bien vouloir vous adresser au président du comité.

Modalités de candidature: merci de bien vouloir adresser les documents suivants par mail, sous forme de fichiers joints (Word ou PDF), au président du comité.

1. Proposition de projet: en deux pages maximum (simple interligne), le candidat doit décrire la nature et la portée du projet, ainsi que les archives et bibliothèques devant être consultées;

2. Curriculum Vitae actualisé;

3. Une page de garde remplie, disponible ici.

4. Une lettre de recommandation confidentielle de 400 mots maximum. Nous demandons à la personne rédigeant la lettre de recommandation de ne pas se contenter de résumer le projet, mais de détailler, pour le comité, les aspects de la formation, des réalisations et des recherches du candidat ou de la candidate qui n’apparaissent pas forcément clairement dans sa proposition et son C.V. Les lettres de référence peuvent être adressées au président du comité par voie électronique, en vous assurant que la copie scannée est signée.

Cliquer ici pour en savoir plus sur l’histoire de l’Institut Français d’Amérique

Committee Members:

Rachel Gillett, chair (2024)

Department of History and Art History
Utrecht University
3512 BS Utrecht (NETHERLANDS)
r.a.gillett@uu.nl

Kathleen Wellman (2025)

Clements Department of History
Southern Methodist University
Dallas Hall
3225 University
Dallas, TX 75205 (USA)
kwellman@smu.edu

Allan Tulchin (2026)

Department of History and Philosophy
Shippensburg University
1871 Old Main Dr.
Shippensburg, PA 17257
aatulchin@ship.edu

Kelly Colvin (2026)

Department of History
UMass Boston
McCormack Hall
100 Morrissey Blvd.
Boston, MA 02125-3393
Kelly.Colvin@umb.edu

Contribuer aux bourses de l’IFA

En savoir plus sur les personnalités qui ont donné leur nom aux prix:


Past Winners:

2023:
Edouard Morot-Sir Fellowship:

Nicola Angeli, Yale University, “Sparks of Ink: Literature and Electricity in Fin-de-Siècle France.”

Gilbert Chinard Fellowship:
Patrick-William Travens, University of Wisconsin-Madison, “Imperial Jacobins: Colonialism, Revolution and Local Politics in France’s Atlantic Ports.”

2022:
Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Delanie Linden,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, “Other Colors: Chroma, Chemistry, and the Orient in Nineteenth-Century French Painting”

Catherine Maley Fellowship:
Danielle Canter,
University of Delaware, “The Singular Impression: Monotype in Nineteenth-Century France”

2021:
Bryna Cameron-Steinke,
Georgetown University, “Monks, Malaria and Marshlands: The Lived Landscape of Early Medieval Northwestern France”
Sarah K. Miles, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, “‘Un Seul et Même Combat’: Francophone Intellectuals, Global Solidarity, and Third Worldist Publishing from Paris to Algeria and Quebec, 1962-1981”

2020:
Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Ben Goff,
Florida State University, “An Economy of Life: Military Medicine and the French State, 1747-1815.”

Catherine Maley Fellowship:
Jordan B. Hillman,
University of Delaware, “Mediating Authority: Representations of the Police in Paris, 1881-1918.”

2019:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowship:
Jason Hong
, Yale University, “A Different Worldview: Francophone Literature, Monde, and the Resistance to the Universal.”

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship:
Darcy Benson, The Ohio State University, “Fighting in the Shadows: Communist Immigrant Communities and Resistance in France, 1930-1944.”

2018:
Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:

Anna Young, Vanderbilt University, “Manhood on Trial: Impotence, Masculinity, and Marriage in Early Modern France.”

Catherine Maley Fellowship:
Michaela Kleber, College of William & Mary, “Gendered Societies, Sexual Empires: Early French Colonization among the Illinois.”

2017:
Research grants were not awarded in 2017

2016:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowship:

Hanna Roman, Vanderbilt University, "Narrating Nature’s Story: Style and the Reinvention of Nature in Buffon’s Histoire naturelle."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship:
Catherine Viano, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, "Theater of Machines, Theater as Machine in Seventeenth-Century France."

2015:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowship:
Nicole BauerUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, "In the Kingdom of Shadows: Secrecy and Transparency in Pre-revolutionary France."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Research Fellowship:
Helen Dewar, University of Toronto, "Contested Delegations: Subjects, Sovereignty, and Law in the French Atlantic, 1598-1663."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship:
Shana Cooperstein, McGill Universitiy, "Training the Mind: Post-Academic Drawing Pedagogy in Nineteenth Century France."

2014:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowship:
Katherine GodwinUniversity of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, "Strategic Litigation: Legal Culture and Daily Life in Sixteenth-Century France."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Max Hantel, Rutgers University, "The Creolization of French Philosophy: Francophone Intellectuals in Paris, 1945-1965."

2013:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Stephanie McBride-Schreiner, Arizona State University, "Medicalizing Childhood: The Convergence of Medicine, Public Health, and Child Welfare in Nineteenth-Century France and Great Britain."
Christopher Tozzi, Johns Hopkins University, "'Savage’ Soldiers: Racial Miscegenation, Empire and French State-Building, 1668-1815."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Dr. Andrew Ross, Kenyon College, "The Pleasures of Paris: Sex and Urban Culture in the Nineteenth Century."

2012:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:

Dr. Julia OsmanMississippi State University, "The Citizen Army of Old Regime France."
Katie Jarvis, University of Wisconsin-Madison, "Politics in the Marketplace: The Popular Activism and Cultural Representation of the Dames des Halles during the French Revolution."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Katharine Wells, University of Southern California, "Tapestry and Tableau: Historical Revival, Medium Specificity, and the Marketing of Modernism."

2011:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Dr. Catherine Cangany, University of Notre Dame, "Frontier Seaport: Detroit’s Transformation into an Atlantic Entrepôt, 1701-1837."
Stephanie Tuerk, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, "L’Architecture Libre: The Institutional Formation of the Private Architect, 1863-1900."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Eliza Zingesser, Princeton University, "French Lyric, French Nation: Assimilating Occitan Literature in Northern France (1200-1400)."

2010:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Dr. Jennifer Palmer, The University of Chicago, "An Ocean between Them: Race, Gender, and the Family in France and its Colonies."
Kelly Summers, Stanford University, "The Great Return: Reintegrating Emigrés in Republican France, 1794-1804."

Edouard Morot-Sir Fellowship in Literature:
Dr. Laura J. Burch, Dominican University, "Matters of Conversation: The Material Book and the Articulation of Friendship in Madeleine de Scudery’s Conversations (1680-1692)."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Kathryn Marsden, University of California-Irvine, "Religion, Sexuality, and the Dechristianization: The Marriage of Nuns and Monks in the French Revolution."

2009:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowship:

Allison Fisher, Northwestern University, "Experimental Collectivity: Housing, Technology and Architectural Research in France, 1954-1978."

2008:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Natasha S. Naujoks, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, "French Patriotism and the Napoleonic Myth, 1814-1848."
Adrian O’Connor, University of Pennsylvania, "Republican Letters?: The ‘Education Question’ in Revolutionary France."

Edouard Morot-Sir Fellowship in Literature:
Virginie Pouzet-Duzer, Duke University, "Proust, Valéry, and Gracq’s Notebooks:  Finding Writer’s First Impressions."

2007
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:

Bethany S. KeenanUniversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, "Vietnam is Fighting for Us: French National Identity and the U.S.- Vietnam War, 1965-1973."
Jeannette E. Miller, Pennsylvania State University, "The French State’s Policies toward the Harkis from the End of the Algerian War to the Present: Shifts, Stagnations, and Contradictions."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Cecile AlduyStanford University, "Collecting Body Parts: A Critical Edition and Interpretive Study of the Blasons anatomiques du corps féminin (1536-1554)."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Leanne M. ZalewskiCity University of New York, "Crossing the Atlantic: The Careers of Bouguereau, Cabanel, Gérôme and Meissonier in Paris and New York."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Sally Sieloff Magnan, University of Wisconsin - Madison, "Enjeux et défis de l’enseignement du français langue étrangère en France et aux Etats-Unis."

2006:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Alicia C. Levin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Seducing Paris: Piano Virtuosos and Artistic Identity."
Victoria N. Meyer, University of Virginia, "Inoculation of Smallpox in 18th Century France: Efficacy and Ethics."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Claudia Gotea, Pennsylvania State University, "Cocteau entre deux guerres: Le Potomak, Les Eugenes de la guerre, et La Fin du Potomak."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Corinne Etienne, University of Massachusetts at Boston, and Kelly Sax, Indiana University, "Teaching Stylistic Variation through Film."

2005:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Ophelia Eglene, State University of New York at Albany, "Explaining the Two-Tier European Union: The Politics of the Economic and Monetary Union in Britain and France."
Elizabeth Lapina, John Hopkins University, "The First Crusade in Medieval Art: Mural Paintings in the Church of St. Julien in Ponce-sur-le-Loire."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Mechèle LeonUniversity of Kansas, "Moliere and the French Revolution."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Suzanne R. Pucci, University of Kentucky, "Tartuffe in Text and Performance 2000: A Blueprint for Collaboration."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Daniel HarkettColumbia University, "Exhibition Culture in Restoration Paris."

2004:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Scott M. Marr, Boston University, "Religious coexistence in the town of Saumur in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries."
Joel W. Revill, Duke University, "Taking France to the School of Sciences: Gaston Bachelard and the Epistemological Tradition."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Catherine Bredeson, Yale University, "The End of the Absurd: Protest and Performance of May ‘68."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Edwina Spodark, Hollins University, "Weaving the World Wide Web into Teaching the Culture of Québec."

2003:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Anoush Terjanian, Johns Hopkins University, "Doux commerce and its discontents: slavery, piracy and monopoly in eighteenth-century France."
Jennifer Farrell, City University of New York, "Buren before Buren: The Early Work of Daniel Buren."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowship:
Jennifer Wild, University of Iowa, "L’Imagination cinémentale: Cinematic Intervention in the French Avant-Garde, 1913-1929."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Tracy Adam, Columbia University, "Julien Gracq and the Symbolist Universe."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Bonnie Adair-Hauck and Richard Donato, University of Pittsburgh, "The PACE Model: A Story-Based Approach to Meaning and Form for Standards-Based Language Learning” and “The PACE Model: Actualizing the Standards through Storytelling: ‘Le Bras, la Jambe et le Ventre'."

2002:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:

Joshua M. Humphreys, New York University, "Servants of Social Progress: Democracy and Social Reform in France, 1914-1940."
Sharon E. Cline, University of Wisconsin-Madison, "Gender and French National Identity: 1945-2000."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Jennifer A. Boittin, Yale University, "Soleil Noir: Josephine Baker, Race and Gender in Interwar Paris."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Anne K. Kelley, Emory University, "Some Suggestions for Teaching Intermediate Composition."

2001:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
John Haines, Shorter College, "Reading the Troubadours and Trouvères: A Study in the Reception of  Medieval Music."
Andrew Jainchill, Univesity of California-Berkeley, "French Liberalism, 1794-1830."

Harmon Chadbourn Rorison Fellowships:
Susan Nelson, University of Wisconsin-Madison, "The Question of Female Nature: The Querelle des Femmes in Eighteenth-Century France."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship:
Ina PfitznerLouisiana State University, "Translating Exile in Panaït Istrati’s Mes départs, Samuel Beckett’s Fin de partie and Selected Poems by Paul Celan."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Alice McLean, University of Chicago, and Alan Savage, Wheaton College (Illinois), "Surveying the Survery Course: A Practical Guide."

2000:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:

Amelia Lyons, University of California-Irvine, "Invisible Immigrants: North Africans in France, 1962-1982."
Gregory Thomas, University of Carifornia-Berkeley, "Shell-Shocked Nation: Medical Manifestations of Psychological Trauma in Inter-War France."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship:
Dr. Paul DuttonNorthern Arizona University, "Doctors Versus Mutual Societies: The Transition to National Health Insurance in France 1928-1945."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Joan Grenier-Winther, Washington State University, "Real Issues in the Virtual Classroom."

1998:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowship:
Kevin Moore, Princeton University, "Making an Artist for the History of Photography."
Karol Weaver, Pennsylvania State University, "Disease in 18th Century Saint Domingue."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship:
Mita Choudhury, Vassar College, "School of Virtue, School of Vice: Convents and Nuns in French Thought and Culture, 1740-1794."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Carol Lally and Leona LeBlanc, Florida State University, "A Comparison of Instructor-Mediated versus Student Mediated Explicit Language Instruction in the Communicative Classroom."

1997:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Martha Easton, New York University, "The Body and the Construction of Gender in the Later Middle Ages: A Case Study of the Legenda aurea."
Eliza Earle Ferguson, Duke University, "Vengeance: Violence and the Politics of Gender in Fin-de-Siècle Paris."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship:
Masha Belenky, Columbia University, "The Poetics of Jealousy in the 19th Century French Novel."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Alfred Smith, Utah State University, "Using Video and Newspaper Texts to Provide Topic Schemata in the Composition Class."

1996:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:

Jonathan Coleman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, "Civility and Masculinity: Manners and Male Identity in Old Regime France, 1650-1789."
Julie Fette, New York University, "Xenophobia in the Professions in Interwar France."

Edouard Morot-Sir Research Fellowship in Literature:
Patricia Geesey, University of North Florida, "Integration and Islam in France."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Andrew Suozzo, DePaul University, "Dialogue and Immediacy in Cultural Instruction: The E-Mail Option."

1995:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Sarah Beam, University of California, Berkeley, "Satirical Performers and Authors in Early 17th Century Paris."
Ann Gardiner, New York University, "The Historical Case of Coppet and its Revival as Post-Maastricht Myth."
Elisabeth Fraser, University of South Florida, "Eugène Delacroix: Art and Public Decorum in the 1820s."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Marie-Angèle Kingué, "L’Afrique Francophone: Pédagogie et Méthode."

1994:
Gilbert Chinard Research Fellowships:
Lisa DeCaprio, Rutgers University, "Women and Social Welfare during the French Revolution: The Ateliers de Filature 1790-1795."
Kathryn A. Edwards, University of Southern Mississippi, "The social impact of the shifting frontier in the lands along the Franco-German border."
Julia Sagraves, Northwestern University, "Painting the Politics of Reconaissance: The Paris Salon during the First Empire."
Kate van Orden, University of Chicago, "Recueils de Poésie and the Performance of Chansons in Paris, 1570-1580."

Edouard Morot-Sir Pedagogical Prize:
Camille Kennedy Vande Berg, Western Michigan University, "Managing Learner Anxiety in Literature Courses."