麻豆视频

Grants available to fund rural humanities projects

Faculty and students who have projects focused on the rural humanities can apply for grants through Cornell鈥檚 Society for the Humanities in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频.

Cornell faculty from any discipline can  of public-facing research humanities projects and/or engaged community humanities initiatives on rural New York State issues.  And faculty, graduate students and undergraduate students can also apply for rural humanities  of up to $1,000. A public-facing or engaged component is an essential part of a successful application. The funding comes from a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Applications are accepted on a rolling basis through spring 2025. Information on how to apply is available on the Rural Humanities .

The uses humanities tools to approach, learn from, make visible and support the realities of rural America, particularly in Central-Western New York.

鈥淥ver the past four years, we have been proud to support impactful faculty and student collaborations with indigenous communities and Black farmers, gay campsites and our Latinx neighbors, the St. James AME Zion Church and community colleges, rural poetry initiatives and much more,鈥 said , the Taylor Family Director, Society for the Humanities, and the L. Sanford and Jo Mills Reis Professor of Humanities in the departments of comparative literature and German studies (A&S).

The initiative has supported faculty initiatives ranging from a project to design indigenous seed storage; a documentary on rural LGBT life; and the development of architectural designs for a new elderly center for the Onondaga Nation.

"I could not have made the short documentary 鈥楥ampfire鈥 without the funding from the Rural Humanities," said , associate professor of performing and media arts (A&S). "It encouraged me to look closer at our often-overlooked region, listen to untold stories of the people that live here and reflect them as powerfully as possible." The Rural Humanities grant even sponsored a screening event at Cinemapolis of three of Bunn's short documentaries about local LGBT life, called "Out Here."

Supporting student work

Students projects last year included storytelling in a local elementary school, a digital exhibition featuring illustrations of indigenous people in Ithaca鈥檚 gorges, an architectural model/artifact storage unit to explain and a theatrical wildflower garden.

鈥淥f all my projects at Cornell, this was the most joyous, intimate, and rewarding outlet for personal expression,鈥 Adam Shulman 鈥23 said of the project he completed with help from a rural humanities microgrant.

person speaking while people sitting in front of him outside
Anson Wigner Adam Shulman '23 leads his performance "Nature's Play" in the Palmer Woods area on Cornell's North Campus in April 2023.

Shulman鈥檚 鈥済arden-theatre鈥 was part of his honors thesis in performing and media arts. He worked with Cornell Botanic Gardens to find an area in Palmer Woods near Cornell鈥檚 North Campus and set to work, sculpting shelters from uprooted non-native plants and planting several saplings of pollinator friendly and berry-bearing native trees and wildflowers. He used the microgrant to buy seeds, saplings, protective fencing, solar powered lights and other materials.

鈥淪everal times a week, I hiked up the hill to aggressively uproot species with a weed wrench, clippers and saw borrowed from the Botanic Gardens,鈥 Shulman said. 鈥淎t times, the act of plant removal felt like waging a war against an oppressive colonial tumor: yet it was impossible not to feel guilty ripping out plants by hand that had simply followed their inherited instincts to grow.鈥

As he transformed the space physically, he also was inspired by the wandering plants to devise actions and dances that became part of a series of public performances in the space in April 2023.

鈥淭he most gratifying reward was when visitors hung around long after the planned performance concluded, enjoying the outdoors until darkness fell,鈥 he said. 鈥淭o make art that gets people outside allows the ultimate sensory freedom.鈥

two people with model of church
Provided Architecture graduate students Zachary Sherrod M.S. 鈥23 and Chi-Chia Tsao M.S. 鈥23 created an exhibition model of St. James AME Zion Church with funding from a Rural Humanities Grant.

Architecture graduate students Zachary Sherrod M.S. 鈥23 and Chi-Chia Tsao M.S. 鈥23 also received a Rural Humanities microgrant for their project, which culminated in an exhibition model of St. James AME Zion Church that they presented in the spring.

The project is in support of the Underground Railroad Research Project, an initiative led by Professor Emeritus Gerard Aching (A&S). One focus of that project was archeological digs at the church in 2021 and 2022, which included a multidisciplinary team of Cornell students and faculty and local schoolchildren. The groups uncovered artifacts and shed light on the church鈥檚 history and role in the Underground Railroad.

Tsao鈥檚 and Sherrod鈥檚 model, a replica of the historic church, was made of maple plywood and basswood and includes drawers in the sides that hold artifacts from the archaeological dig and important documents.

鈥淥ur proposal sought to integrate findings from the archaeological digs and the ever-growing historical archive of St. James into an educational medium that could support the storytelling capacity of Pastor Rev. Terrance King and the St. James Congregation,鈥 Tsao said. 鈥淲e tried to integrate all the artifacts and stories we learned about into the model and sought to relate them to the real parts of the church. For example, the removable covers next to the model of the church represent the real excavation sites.鈥

The model was created in pieces so that it can be easily transported and shared, Sherrod said, and it鈥檚 has been used by the church on numerous occasions.

鈥淚t served as a focal point for (the church historian鈥檚) tours of the church during the Juneteenth celebration at St. James,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd in October, the model was transported to Hotel Ithaca to be put on prominent display at the 190th Anniversary Gala for St. James. We've since heard that the model initiated discussions and raised people鈥檚 interests. I believe that鈥檚 the essence of this project.鈥

Find more information on faculty and student projects on the

More News from A&S

people dancing in red jumpsuits outside
Anson Wigner Dancers who were part of the "Nature's Play" performance in April 2023.