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Awards
24 April 2002
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John Heilbron Heilbron created the History of Science and Technology Program at the Bancroft, as well as the campus’s Office for the History of Science and Technology. The two organizations have collaborated for 30 years to sponsor exhibits, colloquia and publications. His support of the Bancroft helped develop its Rare Books Collection, in which he conducted the scholarly research for much of his writing, including his 1979 book, “Electricity in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries.” As faculty member and administrator (Heilbron served as chair of the Academic Senate and as vice chancellor), he also championed the acquisition of historical manuscripts, books and oral histories of the American West. Harrison Fraker Garrison Sposito The Weber lecture is an endowed honor established in 2000 to bring to the Michigan campus “the world’s foremost experts in environmental engineering and science to share the results of their work and their vision for the future.” Martin Wachs Two campus scholars awarded Guggenheims Sam Davis, professor of architecture and associate dean of the College of Environmental Design, and Michael Lucey, associate professor of French and comparative literature, are among 184 scholars, artists and scientists nationally who will receive a total of $6.7 million in fellowships, the Guggenheim Foundation announced last week. Guggenheim fellows are appointed on the basis of distinguished achievement and exceptional promise. In addition to teaching, Davis is a partner in Davis and Joyce Architects in Berkeley. His work focuses on affordable housing and housing for special needs. Recent projects include a 100-bed homeless shelter in Contra Costa County, and San Fran-cisco’s Larkin Street Youth Cen-ter, the first housing in the country specifically for homeless youth with HIV and AIDS. Through clients such as non-profit emergency housing and service providers, Davis said, he has come to appreciate what even a modest amount of design can do. Increasingly, design is seen as a means of establishing trust between the service provider and the homeless and is a way to create a sense of belonging for those with little or no social connection, he said. “It is within the difficult and often tragic arena that architecture serves its highest purpose,” Davis said. “A visit to a major museum can be a powerful and moving experience. Public buildings are a reflection of our culture. But if we believe that architecture serves a society as well as reflects its values, then we must use it to provide for those with the most need and the fewest options.” Michael Lucey specializes in French literature and culture of the 19th and 20th centuries. He teaches social and literary theory, sexuality studies, 19th- and 20th-century British literature and culture, and 20th-century American literature and culture. He also directs the campus’s new Center for the Study of Sexual Culture. Lucey has written a study of André Gide’s writings from the 1920s and 1930s, and just finished a book about the role of sexuality in author Honoré de Balzac’s understanding of the social world. He will be on sabbatical for 2002-03 and with the support of the Guggenheim award will spend the first half of next year in Paris researching a new book. “The tradition of first-person writing about same-sex sexuality in 20th-century France is a robust one, filled with distinguished and high-profile authors ranging from Colette, Proust and Gide near the beginning of the century to Angot, Dustan and Guibert near the end,” Lucey said. “I am very eager to be working in Paris, with easy access to all the relevant documents, and also to be working with sociologists who can help me with practical and methodological information about how to think about and research social movements and their collective acts of representation,” Lucey said.
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