Lapidus–OIEAHC Fellowship for Graduate Research in Early American Print Culture

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The Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture offers up to four $500 fellowships annually to support advanced graduate student research related to Early American and transatlantic print culture, including authorship, production, circulation, and reception.

Applicants should submit an electronic file with a 500-word description of their dissertation project, a c.v., and a one-paragraph research agenda for the calendar year by clicking here.

The application deadline is January 15, 2013. Fellowship recipients may expect to be notified of the award by early spring, and must provide a one-page report of their progress no more than twelve months later.

These fellowships are made possible through the generous support of Sid Lapidus and are prompted by his interest in investigating the anonymous authorship of the 1808 letter to Thomas Jefferson from “a Slave,” discussed by Thomas N. Baker in the January 2011 issue of the William and Mary Quarterly.

Screen shot of Thomas Jefferson's weather records book

The Association for Documentary Editing

The ADE brings historical documents to life by helping editors preserve, interpret, and share important records from the past with the public.

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