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| Dr. Kurtis Schaeffer |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Dr. Kurtis Schaeffer, an assistant professor
of Asian religious studies at The University of Alabama and a scholar
of Tibetan Buddhism, recently was chosen as one of 15 recipients
in the inaugural national competition for the Charles A. Ryskamp
Research Fellowship.
Schaeffer was awarded $75,833 for one year of study, and he will
use these funds during 2003. Schaeffers research will center
on the relationships among religion, medicine and textual scholarship
in pre-modern Tibet. He will travel to various universities in the
Northeast as well as to Tibet, Nepal and India for primary research.
This research will be used for Schaeffers second book.
Although only in his second year as a tenure-track professor
here at UA, Professor Schaeffer has already demonstrated that he
has a growing national reputation, said Dr. Russell McCutcheon,
chair of the department of religious
studies within UAs College
of Arts and Sciences. This year alone Harvard, Princeton,
the University of Virginia and UCLA have invited him to give talks
on their campuses. His first book is already out, his second is
in the works, and proposals for two more are not far behind. His
Ryskamp Fellowship is therefore well deserved.
The Ryskamp Fellowship is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation,
in honor of Charles A. Ryskamp, and is administered by the American
Council of Learned Societies. Awarding peer-reviewed fellowships
is at the core of the ACLS activity. The fellowship supports assistant
professors in the humanities and related social sciences whose scholarly
contributions have advanced their fields and who have well designed
and carefully developed plans for new research.
The program is open to tenure-track assistant professors who have
successfully completed their institutions review for reappointment
-- or the equivalent -- but have not yet been reviewed for tenure.
Applicants must be employed at U.S. institutions and must remain
employed for the duration of the fellowship. The awards seek to
provide the time and resources these faculty members need to conduct
their research under optimal conditions, free of administrative
and teaching responsibilities.
Schaeffer earned his doctorate in Tibetan and South Asian religions
from Harvard University in 2000 and holds additional degrees from
the University of Washington, The Evergreen State College and Lewis
and Clark College. He began teaching in the religious studies department
at UA in August 2000. More information on the fellowship may be
found at: www.acls.org/rysguide.htm.
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