Damiano Benvegn霉 and Elizabeth Lhost Win ACLS Fellowships

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The prestigious awards provide the scholars a year of research time.

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Damiano Benvegn霉 and Elizabeth Lhost
Damiano Benvegn霉, left, a senior lecturer of Italian, and Elizabeth Lhost, a lecturer in history. (Photo by Julia Levine 鈥23)
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, a senior lecturer of Italian, and , a lecturer in history and a postdoctoral fellow in the , have received fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies. They join a cohort of 60 early-career scholars in the humanities and social sciences to receive the prestigious award this year, selected from nearly 1,000 applicants.

The fellowships, which provide $30,000 to $60,000 for six months to a year of research and writing, support 鈥渙utstanding scholarship in the humanities and interpretive social sciences,鈥 according to the ACLS website.

Damiano Benvegn霉: Seeing the Political Forest for the Trees

In the late 1930s, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini ordered 20,000 fir trees planted on a hillside to commemorate the construction of a new aqueduct. Mussolini鈥檚 regime fell in 1943, but his forest鈥攚hich spells out D-U-X, his Latin title鈥攔emains.

鈥淭his forest is a unique case of political landscape that survived the political circumstances in which it was created,鈥 says Benvegn霉, who is using his ACLS fellowship to study the cultural, political, and environmental ramifications of this living monument to Italian fascism. 鈥淵ou can travel to central Italy today and see these three giant letters on the side of a mountain from 100 kilometers away鈥攆rom Rome, in fact.鈥

In addition to exploring archival records, Benvegn霉, who holds doctoral degrees in Italian studies from La Sapienza University of Rome and in comparative literature from the University of Notre Dame, will conduct ethnographic interviews with local community members and plans to team up with ecologists to better understand how the forest has affected its environment. The research will contribute to Benvegn霉鈥檚 second book.

Benvegn霉 is part of a growing interdisciplinary field known as environmental humanities, which seeks to explore 鈥渢he peculiar cultural component that is inevitably embedded in every kind of ecological concern,鈥 he says.

鈥淚 go back to the root of the word 鈥榚cology,鈥 from the Greek oikos, which means 鈥榙welling.鈥 Every environmental concern is not just a matter of the physical sciences but is really about how we dwell as a human community with other, nonhuman communities on this planet.鈥

While conducting research as a fellow at the University of Cambridge, Benvegn霉 became interested in critical animal studies鈥斺渉ow we treat nonhuman animals, but even more deeply, how we define ourselves as human often in opposition to what is nonhuman, and how this definition is not just biological, but deeply cultural and political,鈥 he says.

That research became his first book, Animals and Animality in Primo Levi鈥檚 Work, which explores how Levi鈥攁 Holocaust survivor鈥攊ncorporated animal imagery into his writing. 鈥淒uring the Nazi genocide, the Nazis made a distinction between what was human and what was not, and categories of humanization, or even animalization, were applied to certain human groups,鈥 Benvegn霉 says.

Of receiving the ACLS fellowship, Benvegn霉 says, 鈥淎s a nontenure track scholar at 线上赌场, I don鈥檛 have a lot of opportunity to focus exclusively on research. So I鈥檓 incredibly grateful that the fellowship will give me the opportunity for one year to do exactly that.鈥

Elizabeth Lhost: At the Intersection of Religion and Modern Finance

A historian of South Asian law and religion, Lhost plans to use her ACLS fellowship to explore what happened when colonized 19th- and early 20th-century societies were forced to adopt European and American financial vehicles such as insurance and the legal trappings around them.

The invention of insurance鈥攁 structured hedge against future losses鈥攚as one of the drivers of the global maritime trade that helped spur industrialized capitalism, turning uncertainty itself into a commodity that could be bought and sold.

鈥淲e think about insurance as pretty straightforward, but for some of the Muslim figures I鈥檝e studied, the question of what insurance is protecting against raised issues about whether it was permissible according to Islamic understandings of risk,鈥 she says.

Lhost, who earned her PhD at the University of Chicago, became interested in these differing conceptions while researching her first book, Everyday Islamic Law and the Making of Modern South Asia, which was published this summer.

鈥淚 started wondering what was going on when global trade that was largely dominated by European and American firms encountered other approaches to managing risk, to funding business ventures, to engaging in cooperative and collaborative business undertakings.鈥

The project is taking her to archives throughout the Indian Ocean region, from British Burma鈥攏ow Myanmar鈥攖o Mauritius, investigating colonial legal proceedings and corporate records as well as documents 鈥渇rom civic associations like credit cooperative societies and Islamic organizations that were trying to provide alternatives, to see what the other side of the conversation looked like,鈥 she says.

鈥淥ne of the things I鈥檓 investigating is how the law worked to support the individualized financial instruments that were popular among European and American traders and to de-legitimate other forms, pushing individuals away from the community-based forms of mitigating risk that people had relied on in the past.鈥

The ACLS fellowship gives her the freedom to follow threads in her research wherever they lead, Lhost says.

鈥淎 fellowship like ACLS offers time to think. I have a clear sense of what I want to accomplish, but I know I鈥檓 going to find things in the archival sources that take me in other directions. Working through that requires patience and the understanding that it鈥檚 OK if the research doesn鈥檛 unfold as originally planned.鈥

About GrantGPS

Lhost and Benvegn霉 credit 线上赌场鈥檚 , known as GrantGPS, with helping them navigate the application process for the ACLS fellowship.

Led by Director Charlotte Bacon and Associate Director Allan Bieber, GrantGPS helps faculty in all disciplines identify funding opportunities, develop competitive proposals, and connect with colleagues who share similar interests.

鈥淭he team is so useful in helping communicate ideas,鈥 says Lhost. 鈥淭hey helped me clarify the core kernel of this project and frame it in a way that resonates with people outside of my field.鈥

Benvegn霉, an assistant director for interdisplinary studies at GrantGPS, encourages faculty interested in external funding to take advantage of the initiative. 鈥淓ven if in the end your application isn鈥檛 ready, going through the process is incredibly valuable,鈥 he says.

Hannah Silverstein