Guggenheim fellowships awarded to four UC Berkeley faculty
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2021.04.29 2:27
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Four UC Berkeley faculty are among this year’s 184 John Simon
Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellows. The prestigious awards recognize
scholars with impressive achievements in fields ranging from the
natural sciences to the creative arts.
Guggenheim fellowship winners receive one-time grants of varying
amounts that allow recipients the time and creative freedom to complete
their research, books or other projects. The program was established in
1925 by U.S. Sen. Simon Guggenheim and his wife in memory of their son
John Simon Guggenheim, who died at age 17 in 1922.
Christopher J. Chang
is the Class of 1942 Chair Professor of Chemistry. Chang’s research
focuses on metals in biology and energy. He has pursued new concepts in
sensing and catalysis that draw from core disciplines of inorganic,
organic and biological chemistry. His laboratory team has developed
activity-based sensing as a general technology platform for biological
applications such as diagnostics, proteomics and drug discovery. The
fellowship will support Chang’s current project, The Inorganic Foundations of Life: From Metals to Metal Medicines.
Raúl Coronado,
is an associate professor of ethnic studies and an expert in
Chicanx/Latinx studies and comparative ethnic studies. His research
interests delve into Latinx literary and intellectual history from the
colonial period to the 1940s, a topic that
“indeed, forces us to rethink the literature of the Americas in a
transnational, hemispheric framework.” He was awarded the Ritchie
Distinguished Fellowship in Early American History from the Huntington
Library where he’ll be in residence this year. The Guggenheim grant will
support Coronado’s current book project: The Emergence of the Latina/o Self, 1780-1870: Reason, Rights, Publics, Presence.
Ken Light,
is the Reva and David Logan Professor of Photojournalism and curator of
the Center for Photography at UC Berkeley’s Graduate School of
Journalism. He is an award-winning photojournalist who has worked as a
documentary photographer for over 45 years,
focusing on social issues in America. Light’s work has been published
in various books, newspapers, magazines, exhibitions and anthologies.
His most recent book,Picturing Resistance: Moments and Movements of Social Change from the 1950s to Today, is a photo compilation — of his work and that of other photographers— of historical moments of American protest.
Debarati Sanyal,
is a professor of French affiliated with several research-based UC
Berkeley programs including the Institute of European Studies, the
Program in Critical Theory and the Center for Race and Gender. In 2012,
she received the Distinguished Teaching Award, UC Berkeley’s highest
recognition for teaching. Sanyal’s research interests include 19th to
21st century French and Francophone literature, Occupation and Holocaust
studies, and critical human rights and refugee studies. She is
currently completing a book on migrant testimony, aesthetics and
resistance in the current European refugee crisis.