The John B. Hurford ’60 Humanities Center seeks to enhance the intellectual
and cultural life at Haverford by fostering challenging exchange among faculty,
students, and diverse communities of writers, artists, performers, thinkers,
activists, and innovators. The Center sponsors programs that promote relationships
between classic humanistic study and contemporary intellectual, artistic,
and ethical currents in the wider public world.
The Center’s initiatives are organized under four intersecting domains
—scholarship; teaching; arts; and public forums — which offer
a range and depth of innovative programming for both faculty and students
that is well -integrated into the academic program. The general public is
invited and welcome to attend the public forums and arts events as our guests.
Details about our various initiatives may be found throughout this website
and in the Center’s Annual Reports: 2004-2005,
2005-2006,
2006-2007.
Who we are:
Staff
Kim Benston, Director, kbenston@haverford.edu
Matthew Callinan, Exhibitions Coordinator, mcallina@haverford.edu
Emily Carey Cronin, Associate Director, ecronin@haverford.edu
Kerry Nelson, Administrative Assistant, knelson@haverford.edu
James Weissinger ’06, Post-Bac Fellow, jweissin@haverford.edu
Steering Committee
Hank Glassman (East Asian Studies)
Laurie Hart (Anthropology)
Darin Hayton (History)
Hee Sook Kim (Fine Arts)
Casey Londergan (Chemistry)
John Mosteller (Institutional Advancement)
Mellon Post- Doc Fellows
Michael Booth (English), 2006-08
John Muse (Fne Arts), 2007-09
HHC History
While the Center’s influence on the academic program has been felt since
2000 through various nascent initiatives, its launching was made possible
with gifts from generous donors the Haverford College’s successful capital
campaign that began in 2001 under the leadership of Board Chair, John
B. Hurford ’60. By the end of the campaign, three years later, the
Humanities Center was fully funded and had been named to honor the memory
of John Hurford. Haverford’s academic centers - The Hurford Humanities
Center, The Center for Peace and Global Citizenship, and the Koshland Integrated
Natural Sciences Center - were established to encourage integrated learning
that crosses disciplines, avoids fragmentation of knowledge, and enhances
the College’s strong curriculum.
2004-05 was its first full year of programming supported by a professional
staff. In January 2005, the Center moved to dedicated offices and meeting
rooms in Stokes Hall, which is when it arrived in a physical sense, and is
poised to foster challenging exchange among faculty and students here on campus,
as well as encounters with diverse communities of innovators, artists, writers
and thinkers beyond the confines of Haverford.
Funding for the Humanities Center comes from income from its endowment, grants,
and restricted gifts.
Established by grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation in 1998, the Mellon
Fellows Program is a dedicated part of the Hurford Humanities Center’s
program that brings recent humanities Ph.Ds to campus—to work with faculty
(in their first year, the Faculty Humanities Seminar), with students (with
two courses each year), and with the wider community (in a public symposium
mounted during each Fellow’s second year). In the Fall of 2005, the
Mellon Foundation invited Haverford to apply for a grant to endow the Mellon
Post-Doctoral Fellowships. In December, the $1.5 million Mellon challenge
grant was matched within days by a generous Haverford donor and alumnus, and
the Mellon Fellowship program has permanent funding.
The Center’s annual Performance Arts Series is anchored by a generous
grant from The Leaves of Grass Foundation. Funds from Leaves of Grass support
visits from distinguished artists, filmmakers, public intellectuals, musicians,
dancers, and others who not only offer significant presentations to the public
but also lead smaller groups of faculty, students, and community members in
sustained reflection on the meaning and significance of what they do.
The Keissinger Family Fund for Asian Performing Arts supports Humanities Center
performances and residencies dedicated to the rich artistic heritage of South
Asia, East Asia, and Indonesia, and was started by former Haverford President
Tom Keissinger and his wife, Varyam.
Archival Links:
Past Directors and Steering Committee
Members
Past Mellon Fellows
Past Faculty Seminars
Past Student Seminars
