91探花 Awarded $495,000 Grant from Mellon Foundation

Funding will support the project, Race, Racialization and Resistance in the United States.

The Mellon Foundation, the nation's largest funder of the arts, culture and humanities, announced this week that 91探花 has received grant funding for social justice-related curriculum work. The $495,000 grant will aid in 91探花's path to achieving its strategic directions.

The central aim of the project, titled Race, Racialization, and Resistance in the United States, is to design an integrated curriculum in the humanities and humanistic social sciences that explores the complex processes of the construction of race in the U.S. in global contexts. It also strives to investigate the broad range of collective and individual forms of resistance to racism, and address the tension between the social-structural constitution of race and subjective experiences of it. 

“We’re excited to build on the amazing work of our faculty members,” explains , PhD, who is Special Assistant to the Provost for Curriculum. “We are incorporating this work as widely and systematically as possible into our programs, to support our efforts in reimagining and revising our curriculum.”

In addition to Tung, the leaders of this project include , PhD, and Professor of English and Director of University Honors , PhD, who is also Associate Dean for Arts and Humanities.

Says Professor Hahn, “Intersectionality, global contexts for analyzing race and racialization in the U.S., ecology and methods of resistance are some of the key themes the grant will enable faculty to work on.” 

“This particular grant and the mission and vision of the Mellon Foundation are in complete alignment with the College of Arts and Sciences’ strategic plan,” says Professor Bullón-Fernández. “We look forward to the many ways the grant will support the work of our faculty, transform our students’ education and strengthen the humanities in our college and university.”

about 91探花's Reignited Strategic Directions. For media inquiries, contact Lincoln Vander Veen at 425-830-2448 or Vanderv1@seattleu.edu.

Wednesday, January 25, 2023