Tulane University
- Center For Global Development
- Center For Global Education
- Center For Inter-american Policy And Research
- Central America
- Child Health
- Children's Literature
- Cuba Abroad
- Cuba Embargo
- Cuba-us Relations
- Cuban & Caribbean S
- Cuban & Caribbean Studies
- Cuban Ambassador
- Cuban And Caribbean Studies Institute
- Cuban Artists
- Cuban Film
- Cuban Heritage Collection
- Cuban Theater
- Cuban-american
- Day Of The Dead
- Declining Inequality
- Declining Inequality In Latin America
- Delgado
- Democracy
- Development
- Diaspora
- Disaster Relief
- Disaster Resilience Leadership Academy
- Diversity
- Dominican Republic
- Doris Stone Librarian And Director
- General Latin America
- Glick Fellowship
- Global Development
- Globalization
- Graduate Conference
- Graduate Research
- Graduate Student Conference
- Graduate Students
- Gran Fiesta
- Grants & Fellowships
- Greenleaf
- Greenleaf Fellow
- Indigenous Latin American Languages
- Inequality
- Inter-american Relations
- International Health & Development
- International Programs
- International Relations
- Lasa
- Lasa 2010
- Latin America
- Latin American Library
- Latin American Studies
- Latin Americanist Graduate Association
- Mexican Cultural Institute
- Mexico
- Mexico-u.s. Border
- Miami
- Middle America
- Middle American Research Institute
- Natural Disasters
- Neoliberalism
- New Oreleans
- New Orleans
- New Orleans Center For The Gulf South
- New Orleans Film Festival
- Santiago De Cuba
- School Of Architecture
- School Of Law
- School Of Liberal Arts
- School Of Public Health & Tropical Medicine
- School Of Public Health And Tropical Medicine
- School Of Science & Engineering
- School Of Social Work
- Semester Abroad
- Sexuality
- Slave Rebellion
- Slave Trade
- Staff
- State-society Relations
- Stone Center
- Stone Center For Latin American Studies
- Stone Center Summer Abroad
- Student Funding
- (120) Cuba
- (62) Caribbean
- (46) General Latin America
- (42) Haiti
- (30) Cuban & Caribbean Studies
- (29) New Wave
- (14) Art
- (14) Future Of Cuba
- (14) Music
- (13) Cuba-us Relations
- (13) Stone Center For Latin American Studies
- (12) Study Abroad
- (12) South America
- (12) Literature
- (11) Latin America
- (11) Core Faculty
- (10) Community
- (10) Puerto Rico
- (6) Slavery
- (6) School Of Public Health And Tropical Medicine
- (6) Immigration
- (6) Spanish & Portuguese
- (6) Jamaica
- (6) Art History
- (6) North America
- (5) Hispanic Heritage Month
- (5) African Diaspora
- (5) Social Justice
- (5) Venezuela
- (5) Environment
- (5) Public Health In Cuba
- (5) Social Policy
- (5) Architecture
- (5) Greenleaf Fellows
- (4) Colombia
- (4) Events
- (4) Center For Inter-american Policy And Research
- (4) Social Work
- (4) Political Science
- (4) Tulane
- (4) Socialism
- (4) Food And Culture
- (4) Graduate Conference
- (4) Summer Study Abroad
- (4) Law
- (3) Photo Competition
- (3) Political Economy
- (3) Environmental Studies
- (3) Identity
- (3) Spanish
- (3) Coffee
- (3) Performance
- (3) Performing Arts
- (3) A.b. Freedman School Of Business
- (3) Language
- (3) Slave Trade
- (3) Graduate Students
- (3) Honduras
- (3) Immigrants
- (3) Politics Of Migration
- (3) Africana Studies
- (3) Revolution
- (3) School Of Social Work
- (3) Pebbles Center
- (3) Mesoamerica
- (3) Louisiana
- (3) Book Talk
- (3) Exhibitions
- (3) Reading Project
- (3) Film Studies
- (3) Symposium
- (3) Community Events
- (2) Social Movements
- (2) Archive
- (2) New Orleans Film Festival
- (2) Graduate Research
- (2) Diversity
- (2) Cuban Artists
- (2) Haitian Revolution
- (2) Lasa
- (2) Foreign Policy
- (2) Urban History
- (2) Urban Planning
- (2) Middle American Research Institute
- (2) Us-mexico Border
- (2) Study In Latin America
- (2) Student Funding
- (2) Spanish America
- (2) Linguistics
- (2) Afro-caribbean Religion
- (2) Language And Culture
- (2) Museum
- (2) Hurricane
- (2) Critical Race Theory
- (2) Black History Month
- (2) Cuban And Caribbean Studies Institute
- (2) Lasa 2010
- (2) Newcomb
- (2) Celebración Latina
- (2) International Programs
- (2) Poetry
- (2) Festivals
- (2) Affiliated Faculty
- (2) Caribbean Literature
- (2) West Indies
- (2) Exhibition
- (2) France
- (2) Inter-american Relations
- (2) Teacher Workshop
- (2) Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
- (2) Postcolonial Studies
- (2) Curriculum Unit
- (2) Travel
- (2) Greenleaf
- (2) Jazz
- (2) Undergraduate Conference
- (2) Human Development
- (2) Film Series
- (2) Staff
- (2) Celebracion Latina
- (1) Social Conflict
- (1) Social Studies
- (1) Non-profit
- (1) Indigenous Latin American Languages
- (1) Hurricane Katrina
- (1) Environmental Governance
- (1) Southern Cone
- (1) K-12 Cuba Teacher Institute
- (1) Commitment To Equity
- (1) French
- (1) Lgbtqa+
- (1) Fundraising
- (1) Office Of Multicultural Affairs
- (1) Contemporary Arts Center
- (1) International Students
- (1) Chile
- (1) K-12 Teacher Workshop
- (1) Audubon Zoo
- (1) Oliver Houck
- (1) Afro Latinos
- (1) Foodways
- (1) Social Inclusion
- (1) Cuban & Caribbean S
- (1) Trauma Institute
- (1) Graduate Student Conference
- (1) City
- (1) Maya Symposium
- (1) Belize
- (1) Disaster Resilience Leadership Academy
- (1) Afro-brazilian
- (1) Lago Conference
- (1) U.s.-cuban Relations
- (1) Children's Literature
- (1) Migrant
- (1) Declining Inequality
- (1) Declining Inequality In Latin America
- (1) Immigrant
- (1) Day Of The Dead
- (1) Mexico-u.s. Border
- (1) Colonialism
- (1) Latin Americanist Graduate Association
- (1) Colonial Era
- (1) Undergraduate
- (1) Teacher Workshop; Outreach
- (1) Mexican Consulate
- (1) Police Violence
- (1) Mexican Cultural Institute
- (1) Globalization
- (1) Greenleaf Fellow
- (1) Global Development
- (1) Social Equity
- (1) New Orleans Center For The Gulf South
- (1) Africa
- (1) Cimafunk
- (1) Writing
- (1) Carnaval
- (1) New Orleans Jazz Museum
- (1) Stone Center Summer Abroad
- (1) Language Learning
- (1) Gran Fiesta
- (1) Festival
- (1) Centenarios
- (1) Reception
- (1) Stone Center
- (1) Greenleaf Fellowship Program
- (1) Nola
- (1) Christian Science Monitor
- (1) Grants & Fellowships
- (1) Peru
- (1) Natural Disasters
- (1) Hip Hop
- (1) Guitar
- (1) School Of Law
- (1) Trinidad & Tobago
- (1) Bahamas
- (1) Asia
- (1) Vietnam
- (1) School Of Public Health & Tropical Medicine
- (1) International Health & Development
- (1) The Latin American Library
- (1) Doris Stone Librarian And Director
- (1) School Of Architecture
- (1) Emeritus Faculty
- (1) French & Italian
- (1) Tulanian
- (1) Associate Professor
- (1) Europe
- (1) School Of Science & Engineering
- (1) Theatre & Dance
- (1) Haitian Creole
- (1) Tropical Medicine
- (1) Neoliberalism
- (1) Job Opportunity
- (1) Title Vi
- (1) Maternal Health
- (1) Santiago De Cuba
- (1) Payson Center
- (1) Trade
- (1) Social Entrepreneurship
- (1) Child Health
- (1) Researcher
- (1) Indigenous Languages
- (1) Miami
- (1) Cuban Heritage Collection
- (1) Cipr Post-doctoral Fellowship
- (1) Glick Fellowship
- (1) U.s.
- (1) President Obama
From the Tulane School of Liberal Arts Newsletter: Art History Professor Adrian Anagnost Awarded ACLS Fellowship
May 9th, 2019
This story originally appeared on the Tulane University School of Liberal Arts newsletter entitled Art History Professor Adrian Anagnost Awarded ACLS Fellowship, on May 8, 2019. Story by Emily Wilkerson.
“How can we historicize and globalize contemporary debates about architectural sustainability and ethical placemaking?” asks Adrian Anagnost, a professor of art history in Tulane’s Newcomb Art Department. Anagnost’s ongoing research on socially engaged work by contemporary artists has led to new questions about projects that aspire to democratic ideals through the use of vernacular architecture‘“architecture specific to a particular place and time, created by people who are not recognized as architects by professional organizations. “We think of vernacular architecture as rooted in a particular place. It is responsive to its physical environment and to local cultural traditions. In the mid-twentieth century, though, vernacular architecture lay at the heart of global architectural debates,” Anagnost continued. This spring, Anagnost was awarded a prestigious fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) to continue this investigation, focusing on networks of architects and critics spanning Brazil and Italy.
During her fellowship, Anagnost will begin research for a second book, expanding upon earlier research centered on ways that Brazilian artists and architects of the 1930s to the 1960s created works that critiqued, upheld, or intervened in urban Brazil‘s socio-spatial inequalities. While conducting research for her first book project, Anagnost was drawn to the international circulation of architecture magazines and architecture exhibitions, and particularly noted parallels between Brazil and Italy.
“I’m thrilled to spend the next year researching and focusing on my new book project. It‘s incredibly exciting to be building on the first book, but thinking across different geographic areas,” Anagnost said. “I’m also honored to have support from ACLS, an organization that encourages a broad, humanistic approach across various disciplines.”
Anagnost teaches the history of art, architecture, and photography at Tulane. Though the ACLS fellowship will support travel to see buildings and sites in Italy, the majority of Anagnost’s research will be archival, focusing on the photography of architecture in greater depth. “There’s this interesting gap between being in a space and feeling it, and then learning about different architectures by looking at photographs,” explains Anagnost. “This will be a focal point for this book, and it also allows me to consider pedagogical approaches to how I teach the history of photography.”
ACLS is a nonprofit federation of 75 scholarly organizations. The ACLS fellowship supports humanities and social sciences research, reinforcing the organization’s belief that knowledge is public good. This year, 81 fellows were chosen to spend a semester or year on research and writing out of more than 1,100 applicants.
Brazil + People
Daniel Sharp

Copyright © 2023 Roger Thayer Stone Center For Latin American Studies All Rights Reserved.
Tulane University, 100 Jones Hall, New Orleans, LA 70118 (504) 865-5164 rtsclas@tulane.edu