Fall 2021 Faculty Grant Awardees
Hollie Adams (English),
“Morley Callaghan and Canadian Literary Modernism”
Hollie Adams’s research on Morley Callaghan, one of Canada鈥檚 best-known modernist fiction writers, will comprise part of her larger study of Canadian literary modernism. Adams will travel to York University in Toronto, to research in the, and while in Toronto she will also conduct research at the听 at Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University).
Joseph Arel (Philosophy)
“Philosophy in Maine”
Joseph Arel was awarded a grant听in support of his 鈥淧hilosophy in Maine鈥 project. “Philosophy in Maine” will produce an online magazine of philosophical writing aimed at a general (public) readership. This project is “devoted to developing and sharing philosophical ideas that are applied specifically to the state of Maine.” Arel, who previously directed a public philosophy program at Northern Arizona University, is the founder and General Editor of , a nonprofit public philosophy organization that focuses on engaging philosophers and philosophical thinking within particular听communities.
Margaret (Mimi) Killinger (Honors, Rezendes Preceptor for the Arts)
鈥淛oanna Paul: The Otago Years, 1977-1983鈥
Margaret Killinger, associate professor of Honors and Rezendes Preceptor for the Arts, will apply her McGillicuddy Humanities Center Faculty听award towards travel and research for her 鈥淛oanna Paul: The Otago Years, 1977-1983鈥 project. Killinger’s immediate research will focus on the years听 spent as artist and poet in Dunedin, New Zealand, from 1977 to 1983. Paul is remembered in New Zealand as “one of our most original (and most unsung) poets, a painter who鈥檇 never really received her due, an artist in the fullest sense of the term,” and Killinger’s work听will investigate Paul鈥檚 coming of age as a public artist and an intriguing figure within the New Zealand women鈥檚 art movement.
“Addressing Homelessness and Building Community in the Greater Bangor Area”
Guerilla Opera Residency
