The Rifkind Center Fellowship gives recipients the opportunity to have a full semester free of teaching in order to work on a research or creative project.

Rifkind Fellowship recipients

2024 - 25 Kedon Willis (English) & Harold Veeser (English)
2023 - 24  Lale Can (History) & Hajoe Moderegger  (Art)
2022 - 23 Robert Higney (English) & Abby Kornfeld (Art History) 
2021 - 22  Elise Crull (Philosophy) & Lyn Di Iorio (English)
2020 - 21 Molly Aitken (Art) & Craig Daigle (History)
2019 - 20 Elik Elhanan (FLL) & Barbara Nadeo (History)
2018 - 19 Harriet Senie (Art)
2017 - 18 Amr Kamal (FLL)
2016 - 17 Andreas Killen (History)
2015 - 16 Andrea Weiss (Film)

Examples of work supported by the fellowship

2024 - 2025

Harold Aram Veeser
Professor of English
Manorexia: The First Memoir of a Male Anorexic/Bulimic

The gap between zero male anorectic memoirs and hundreds (and growing) of female anorectic memoirs is an intellectual/sociological puzzle. This gender-determined silence is an injustice as well as an opportunity. My own memoir, Manorexia, will be the first autobiographical account written by a male sufferer … researchers are just now studying how eating disorders change men’s and women’s bodies differently and how an eating disorder may affect a man throughout life. My book will be an important intervention alongside these medical studies. 


2023 - 2024

Lale Can
Associate Professor of History
Empire of Exile: Forced Labor and Banishment in Late Ottoman History

Empire of Exile sets out to examine how one of the world's most important empires—the Ottoman (1299-1922)—used forced labor and banishment to punish criminals and dissidents, creating what I term a culture of exile. In contrast to scholarship focusing on modern institutions such as prisons and elites in exile, this project highlights the capacious nature of these interconnected forms of criminal punishment and their impact on wide cross-sections of Ottoman society. By decentering institutional mimesis of the West and examining a range of carceral practices that involved violent forced mobility, this study allows us to see the messy, hybrid practices that shaped the lives of people who challenged the social and political order in the last century of Ottoman rule.


Hajoe Moderegger
Program Director, Digital & Interdisciplinary Art Practice [DIAP] MFA Professor, Art Department
Our Non-Understanding of Everything

Video still from ‘Our Non-Understanding of Everything’

Video still from ‘Our Non-Understanding of Everything’

Our Non-Understanding of Everything, which consists of scientific research, artistic creation and experiments with different forms of presentation and audience engagement. The 1st segment of the work has just been exhibited at “Current Plans” a gallery in Hong Kong, a 2nd segment is scheduled to open on March 25th for an exhibition at “PS 122” gallery in New York.


Examples of Fellowship applications

For those interested in applying for the Rifkind Fellowship, here are some sample applications


Willis-Rifkind-Fellowship-Proposal-2024.pdf

Moderegger-Rifkind-Fellowship-Proposal-2023.pdf

Crull-Rifkind-Fellowship-Proposal-2021.pdf