Bourse de voyage et de recherche
Prochaine date limite de candidature: 1 janvier 2024
La Society for French Historical Studies et la Western Society for French History offrent une bourse annuelle de 2000 dollars pour des recherches menées hors d’Amérique du Nord et portant sur tout aspect de l’histoire de la France. Ce prix est attribué à une éminente chercheuse ou à un éminent chercheur américain ou canadien ayant obtenu son doctorat d’histoire au cours des cinq années précédant l’attribution de la bourse (depuis janvier 2017 pour la bourse de 2022). La bourse doit impérativement être utilisée dans l’année qui suit sa remise.
Le lauréat ou la lauréate sera proclamé lors de la conférence annuelle de la Society for French Historical Studies. La bourse ne peut être partagée. Pour tout renseignement, veuillez 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.
Les lettres de recommandation ne sont pas nécessaires pour cette bourse.
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, WSFH representative)
Department of History
UMass Boston
McCormack Hall
100 Morrissey Blvd.
Boston, MA 02125-3393
Kelly.Colvin@umb.edu
Past Winners:
2022:
Sarah Runcie, Muhlenberg College, “Doctors with Borders: Decolonization and International Health in Cameroon.”
2021:
Kelly Presutti, Cornell University, “‘Agglomerations’: Accretive History in New Caledonia.”
2020:
Megan Brown, Swarthmore College, “Racing Against Decolonization: The Rallye Méditerranée-Le Cap and the Infrastructures of Empire.”
2019:
Ian W. Merkel, Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Turin, “Terms of Exchange: Brazilian Intellectuals and the Rethinking of the French Social Sciences.”
2018:
Miranda Sachs, Yale University, "Child’s Work: Welfare, Family, and Work in Third Republic France."
2017:
Nimisha Barton, Princeton University, "Reproductive Citizens: Gender, Immigration, and the State in Modern France."
2016:
Bronwen McShea, Columbia University, "Patroness of Empire: Duchesse Marie d’Aiguillon and French-Catholic Expansion in 17th-Century Asia, America, and Africa."
2015:
Laurie M. Wood, Florida State University, "Archipelago of Justice: Law in France’s Early Modern Empire."
2014:
Burleigh Hendrickson, Northeastern University, "Imperial Fragments and Transnational Activism: 1968(s) in Tunisia, France, and Senegal."
2013:
Elena Napolitano, University of Toronto, "Prospects of Statecraft: Diplomacy, Territoriality, and the Vision of French Nationhood in Rome, 1660-1700."
2012:
Alexia Yates, Harvard University, "Selling Paris: Real Estate and Commercial Culture in the Fin-de-siècle Metropolis."
2011:
Christina Firpo, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, "'Abandoned Children': The Crises of Racial Patriarchy and the Forcible Removal of Mixed-Race Children in Colonial Indochina, 1890-1956."
2010:
Jennifer Palmer, University of Chicago, "An Ocean between Them: Race, Gender and the Family in France and Its Colonies."
2009:
Jonathyne Briggs, Indiana University Northwest, "Anarchie en France: Hypermodernity and French Popular Music, 1958-1981."
2008:
Claire Salinas, Colorado College,"Settling Society in France and Algeria: Emigration, Colonization, and Liberal Politics, 1830-1870."
2007:
Junko Tankeda, Syracuse University, "Between France and the Mediterranean: Absolutism and Commercial Humanism in Marseille, 1660-1720."
2006:
Rebecca Pulju, Kent State University, "The Woman's Paradise: Gender and Consumer Culture in France, 1944-1965."
2005:
Sara Beam, University of Victoria, "The Body of the Criminal in Europe, 1500 - 1750."
2004:
Richard Keyser, Western Kentucky University, "From Gift to Contract: The Transformation of Medieval Property Dealings, Champagne 1100-1350."
2003:
Richard C. Keller, University of Wisconsin-Madison, "Developing Madness: The Psychiatrist's Civilizing Mission in French North Africa, 1900-1962."
2002:
Sean Kennedy, University of New Brunswick, "The Croix de Feu and the Parti Social Français in Algeria."
2001:
Nancy Locklin, Maryville College, "Women in Early Modern Brittany: Rethinking Work and Identity in a Traditional Economy."
2000:
Patrick R. Young, Fordham University, "The Consumer as National Subject: Bourgeois Tourism in the French Third Republic, 1880-1914."
1999:
Michael Lynn, Agnes Scott College, "Popular Science in the French Enlightenment: The Dissemination of Natural Philosophy and the Creation of an Urban Scientific Culture."
1998:
Nancy Edwards, Bowdoin College, "Regendering the Nation: the Role of the Housewife in French Indentity Formation from 1918 to Vichy."
1997:
Mathew S. Kuefler, Rice University, "A Study of the Manuscripts of the Vita Sancti Geraldi Aureliancensis."