Call For Applications: Education in a Global Context

library imageEducation or “paideia,” “Bildung,” or the formation of an outlook and
way of life has been a central issue throughout the human history,
both East and West. For Plato, education was not simply to put
knowledge into people’s mind ‘like putting sight into blind eyes’ but
rather to free the entire soul for what was ‘brightest.’ For the
educator is to go to society, as with Socrates, this meant turning to
society to draw out its sense of truth, justice, courage and
moderation, thereby enabling people to be friends of wisdom.

However, the theory and hence the pressures of modern life have
associated knowledge with power which humans could use for their own
benefit, both personal and professional. Recently the purpose of
education has become further rationalized as a training process to
enhance human instrumental reasoning. With the rapid development of
science, technology, and industrialization, as well as of finance,
market economics, and commercialization, education was turned into a
means for learning skills and techniques. Thus, schools and
universities have come to serve only utilitarian purposes, namely, to
train students to learn skills or techniques to fit into the job
market, in order to be promoted, to gain high salaries, and so on. In
this sense, education is considered part of the commercial market
focusing on competition for profits and interest, which neglecting
such important dimensions of education as formation, cultivation and
moral education.

The value which the Catholic University of Vallendar would seek to
add is to open the meaning of an education and human striving to the
formation of an enriched sense of personhood. It seeks to relate
education, e.g.,

– to a life of caring with the means now provided by science and
technology in this explosive and fast developing age of information
and communication;
– to the meaning of this for life in a democratic society; and
– to promote intercultural dialogue in these ever more complex global
times.

In sum, education faces many challenges today: social, economic and
political. These emerge from modern technology, the sciences, and
globalization and entail rapid transformation of traditional ways of
life.

As these challenges tend to reduce education to job training they
will be addressed in a series of annual one week seminars about
education at the Catholic University of Vallendar, Germany. The
seminar will bring together experts from different disciplinary,
cultural, and religious backgrounds for a creative rethinking about
education.

Application

Applications for participation in this seminar should be sent by
email by February 1, 2014, toH.Zaborowski@pthv.de and
cua-rvp@cua.edu. Participants will cover their own travel costs. The
PTHV will provide simple room and board. The seminar will be held at
the Catholic University in Vallendar, Germany (www.pthv.de). The
participants will arrive on August 3 and depart on August 9. The
University is about 90 minutes away from Frankfurt International
Airport.

The application should include:
(1) a vita describing one’s education, professional positions and
activities;
(2) a list of the applicants’ publications;
(3) a letter stating your interest and involvement in this theme and
its relation to your past and future work in philosophy and
related studies; and
(4) an abstract of a study(s) you might present as an integral part
of the seminar.

Contact:

Prof. Dr. Dr. Holger Zaborowski
Lehrstuhl für Geschichte der Philosophie und philosophische Ethik
Philosophisch-Theologische Hochschule Vallendar
Pallottistr. 3
D-56179 Vallendar
Germany
Email: H.Zaborowski@pthv.de
Web: http://www.crvp.org/seminar/seminar_14-summer.htm

Call For Applications: Research Associate in Intersectionalities in Feminist Science and Technology Studies

book-stack-and-ereaderIntersectionalities in Feminist Science and Technology Studies

DEADLINE: JANUARY 15, 2014

Description: As part of a two-year thematic focus at the Five College Women’s Studies Research Center, we invite proposals for interdisciplinary projects that address current research, teaching, and public engagement informed by emerging intersectionalities in feminist science and technology studies. Possible subjects may include, but are not limited to: biopolitics and paradigms of embodiment, critical race theories, digital technologies and bodies, environmental justice and sustainability, environmental degradation and indigenous struggles, food production and scarcities,  gender-based scientific practices and theories,  graphic medicine and the humanities, legal studies and biogenetics, nanotechnologies, new materialisms, reproductive technologies, interspecies studies, technologies of surveillance,  and trans- or posthumanisms. Transnational perspectives are especially welcome.

Located in an area with one of the largest concentration of scholars dedicated to feminist scholarship and teaching in the world, the Center encourages engaged, critical feminist scholarship from diverse perspectives. During the period of appointment, all Associates are expected to be in residence in the Five College area, to attend weekly seminars, lead one public colloquium, and to collaborate with colleagues based at one or more of the Five College institutions. While at the Center, Associates are provided with an office at the Center and have access to Five College archival and other library resources. Travel, housing and living expenses are the responsibility of the Associate. Please note that Associates are expected to bring their own funding.

We welcome applications from colleagues worldwide for 2014-2015 Associateships in one of three categories:

Research Associateship: Colleagues with faculty status at institutions of higher learning are invited to apply.

Graduate Associateship in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies: Graduate students at the dissertation stage of their PhD with a research foci in Feminist Science and Technology Studies. This associateship provides opportunities to participate in Five College faculty seminars and workshops.

Alumnae Associateship: In the spirit of long-term collaboration between Research Associates and Five College Faculty, this Associateship is awarded to alumnae of the FCWSRC who propose 1) a joint research or teaching project with one or more colleagues located in the Five Colleges to be initiated in 2014-2015 or 2) the continuation of an established research or teaching project in 2014-2015 with one or more colleagues located in the Five Colleges.

Applicants should complete our online application which will also require a project proposal (up to three pages in length), curriculum vitae, and contact information for two professional references. Project proposals should include 1) statement about the contribution to and significance of the project or dissertation for research and teaching in gender studies, 2) a detailed description of the project or dissertation and timeline, 3) a statement about the contribution and significance of your project or dissertation for research and teaching in gender studies and 4) how a stay in the Five Colleges will advance the project or dissertation. Alumnae Associates will be asked to provide the name(s) of their faculty partner(s) in the Five Colleges.

For further information, contact the Center at fcwsrc@fivecolleges.edu or 413-538-2275. Applicants may also contact Karen Remmler, Center Director, at kremmler@mtholyoke.edu. For more information about the FCWSRC, please visit: www.fivecolleges.edu/fcwsrc

Southern History of Education Society (SHOES) Annual Meeting

Ipages-flipt’s that time of the year for our annual meeting call for proposals. The
2014 SHOES meeting will be held at the University of Alabama on Friday
and Saturday, March 21 and 22, 2014. Dr. Philo Hutcheson will be the lead  organizer from the University of Alabama. The 2013 meeting at the College  of Charleston was a great success thanks to the hard work of Dr. Jon Hale,
Dr. Katherine Chaddock of the University of South Carolina, and Kevin
Zayed of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

We hope to continue the strong SHOES tradition here in Tuscaloosa through
programming and meaningful dialogue.  On Friday, March 21, we will meet in
Bibb-Graves Hall on the University of Alabama campus, and on Saturday,
March 22, we will meet at the Hotel Capstone, the conference hotel. (The
University of Alabama will be on spring break as of March 22, which means
that parking will be easier on Friday, March 21, but then, we never know if
there will be repairs on the building’s heating and air conditioning
starting on Saturday, March 22, and either can be of considerable use in
mid-March in Tuscaloosa.)  As always, there is no SHOES conference
registration fee.

*Call for Proposals for the March 2014 Meeting*

Annual SHOES meetings provide opportunities for historians to share
research (from emerging to completed) in a variety of formats.  SHOES
encourages participation by graduate students and colleagues who have not
previously attended as well as those who are regulars.

The lengths of all sessions and time allotted for presentations will depend
on the number of proposals submitted. We encourage you to forward this call
for proposals to colleagues and anyone who might be interested at your
institution or elsewhere.

You are invited to submit a proposal *(two pages maximum)* in one of the
following categories:

1.    *Papers*.  The proposal should include the title, name and
affiliation of the author, and a brief (200-word) description or abstract.
The program committee will group several papers into a single session that
includes presentation and discussion time.

2.    *Panels*.  A panel of three to five members may be proposed to
explore a topic from a variety of perspectives. Please submit the title, a
brief (200-word) descriptive rationale and/or summary of the individual
presentations, and the names, titles, and institutional affiliations of the
participants.

3.    *Works in Progress*.  This type of presentation may include research
efforts at a stage prior to completion.  Scholarly discussion with members
of SHOES may enhance the research project.  Graduate students seeking
advice regarding their research are especially encouraged to submit a
proposal.  Provide a description or rationale (200 words) for the
presentation and your institutional affiliation.

*Proposal Submissions and Meeting Inquiries*

Submit proposals to arrive *no later than January 13, 2014*, to:

SHOES Conference c/o Philo A. Hutcheson
Chair, Educational Leadership, Policy, and Technology Studies Department
P.O. Box 870302
301 Graves Hall
College of Education
The University of Alabama
Tuscaloosa, AL   35487-0302

Electronic submissions are preferred. Email your attachment (in Microsoft
Word, please) with “SHOES Proposal” in the subject line to:
pahutcheson@bamaed.ua.edu

*Accommodations and Meeting Logistics:*

Tuscaloosa is a wonderful place to visit especially in March!  The program
committee will send the final SHOES program in late January 2014.  Specific
information about meeting rooms will be included in the program.

We will meet on Friday morning and afternoon, with precise starting times
to be determined when the paper and other proposals are all in.  Parking is
available on Friday, March 21 on campus; the top level of North ten Hoor
parking deck (close to Bibb-Graves Hall) for visitors costs five dollars,
or, if you leave after 5:00 pm, there is no charge. Just down the street
from our Friday meetings is The Strip, with a good selection of restaurants
ranging from burgers to sushi.  A reception will be held on Friday night.
We will end on Saturday around mid-day with a brief business meeting.

We have blocked rooms at the Hotel Capstone located next to the University
campus and within a 15 to 20 minute walking distance of our meeting
location on Friday. You can call to book a room at a reduced rate – just
mention you are with the SHOES conference being held at the University of
Alabama.

*Hotel Capstone:  **205-752-3200
*(group rate available until February 18, 2014)

Helpful links include:
The University of Alabama: http://www.ua.edu/
Hotel Capstone: http://www.hotelcapstone.com/

Boston Seminar on the History of Women and Gender

Amy Kesselman, SUNY at New Paltz
Women versus Connecticut: Insights from the Pre-Roe Abortion Battles
Comment: Linda Gordon, New York University

Thursday, December 12, 2013, at 5:30 p.m.
Location: Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston Street, Boston

In the early 1970s lawsuit Abele v. Markle, Women versus Connecticutpages-flip
coupled litigation with grassroots organizing in a strategy that stimulated public discussion of reproductive rights and brought women’s experiences of Connecticut’s abortion laws to bear on what went on in the courtroom. The story illustrates the role of the feminist reproductive rights movement in shaping Roe v. Wade.

RSVP so we know how many will attend. To respond, email
seminars@masshist.org or phone 617-646-0568.

As usual, there will be four programs in this series, two each at the
Schlesinger Library and the Massachusetts Historical Society.  The complete
schedule is available at
http://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/women-and-gender

Each seminar consists of a discussion of a pre-circulated paper provided to
our subscribers. (Papers will be available at the event for those who
choose not to subscribe.) Afterwards the host institution will provide a
light buffet supper. As in the past, we are making the essays available to
subscribers as .pdfs through the seminar’s webpage,
http://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/women-and-gender. Subscribe
to the 2013-2014 series via this page to receive the full series of papers.

Call For Papers for Undergraduates: On Our Terms

call-for-papersCall for Submissions: please forward to students
Due: December 15

Undergraduates and recent graduates are invited to submit their work to On
Our Terms, the online academic journal of the Athena Center for Leadership
Studies at Barnard College.  The journal will feature undergraduate
research across all disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and the
STEM fields, on the broad topic of women and leadership.

Now, more than ever, the theme of women and leadership is being discussed,
questioned, and explored — giving scholars and researchers new ways to
think about leadership as an emerging academic discourse.  On Our Terms
will capture and showcase these discussions through our peer-reviewed
process.  We are a journal created for students, by students, and our goal
is to provide a platform for student thought, debate, and voice.  As your
work is published and presented online, you will be connected to the
network of students from all over the world doing similar research and
engaged in related discussions.

We are looking for submissions – written articles or multimedia pieces –
that re-imagine and redefine the ideas pivotal to women and leadership.
Submissions that relate to any one of the follow themes are encouraged,
though we welcome your creativity!

• women in activism and social movements
• female change-makers in politics, literature or history
• progressive women thinkers and intellectuals
• capturing women’s leadership in fine arts, music, and dance
• women’s influence in a changing global economy

Our priority deadline is rolling until *November 15th*.  Our final deadline
is *December 15*.  We encourage papers in varying stages of completion.  If
you are submitting a piece that is not yet finished,  be sure to include an
abstract or outline of the paper you intend to submit.  To be
considered for our Spring 2013 issue, first submissions must be
completed papers.  Please note that we will need a final piece by our second
deadline, December 15th. Final submissions may be in the form of a research
article, a creative exploration, or an excerpt taken from a larger work.
In your email, please indicate the title of the piece, author(s), and an
abstract or description. All writing samples should be cited in the format
appropriate for the discipline of the paper.

To submit your work, or if you have any questions, please email
onourterms@barnard.edu

Call For Papers: United Methodist Women’s History – Voices Lost and Found

To celebrate the 150th anniversary of the United Methodist Women, Methodist Theological call-for-papersSchool in Ohio will host a conference on this historic organization on May 28-30, 2015. Papers that explore the history, significance, prominent persons, and defining issues in the development of UMW and its predecessor organizations are welcome. The anniversary year itself will be 2019.

The conference theme is United Methodist Women’s History: Voices Lost and Found. Proposals of 250-500 words for 30-minute presentations must be received by May 1, 2014. Please include a short academic profile. Submit proposals to: slancaster@mtso.edu. Presenters will be notified of their selection by September 15, 2014.

The conveners hope to publish a volume of selected essays from the conference. Presentation of a paper at the conference does not guarantee selection for the book. Papers selected for publication will need to be 7,000-8,000 words and must be submitted by May 1, 2016.

Call For Papers: Gender, Generation and the Body

Gender, Generation and the Body:
call-for-papers21st Annual Conference of the West of
England and
South Wales Women’s History Network

This conference will be held at Cardiff University on Saturday 21st June 2014. The conference will explore the relation of ideas and experiences of gender, generation and the body in a range of historical contexts. The keynote speaker is Dr. Garthine Walker (Cardiff University).

Potential topics for papers include:

– the interrelation of gender and age in historical representations and experiences of the body;
– the importance of different understandings and experiences of the gendered body in mediating inter-generational relationships, both within and beyond the family;
– the practical, emotional, and social dimensions of bodily care in past societies;
– the intersection of the biological and the social at differently gendered life stages (for example, ‘coming of age’ through menstruation or initiation into masculine adulthood through work);
– the role of subjective reassessments of gendered and bodily experience in life-writing through the ages.

We encourage participants to consider the relation of gender and the body to ‘generation’ in its many possible meanings: an expression of demographic fact; as shorthand for shared cultural characteristics (“the lost generation”); a description of age; and an act of origination, production, or procreation. We welcome the involvement of postgraduate researchers.

The West of England and South Wales Women’s History Network is able to offer a limited number of competitive bursaries to contribute towards attendance at the conference. For further details, see: http://humanities.uwe.ac.uk/swhisnet/grants-bursaries.html.
Abstracts of 200 words should be sent to Tracey Loughran (LoughranTL@cardiff.ac.uk) by April 18th 2014.

Call for Papers: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture and Social Justice

call-for-papersCall for Abstracts and Expressions of Interest for a Special Thematic Cluster of Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture and Social Justice

Belaboured Introductions: Critical Reflections on the Introductory Course in Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies

Co-editors: Melissa Autumn White, Rachel Alpha Johnston Hurst and Jennifer Musial

Criticism is an act of love, and like writing it is the response to what has come before, to what is coming into being even now.
–Paul Bové, reflecting on Edward Said.

The Hugo Schwyzer scandal has reignited longstanding debates within and beyond the interdisciplinary field of women’s, gender and sexuality studies (WGSS), centering on questions like the one posed by Tara Conley on the international email discussion forum WMST-L: “What qualifies one to teach topics related to women’s studies at the undergrad level?”, and in Colleen Flaherty’s journalistic coverage of the WMST-L debate for Inside Higher Ed, “Who Should Teach Women’s Studies?” (August 21, 2013). But more than questions of qualification, credentials and professional identity, the discussions that have emerged from the Schwyzer dust-up rather predictably call into question the institutional grounds and ambitions of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies. We contend that this is a crucial moment in which to redirect these discussions through a focused analysis of, and reflection on, the status of the introductory course as a vital institutional object and generative remainder in this interdisciplinary field. We therefore invite extended abstracts and expressions of interest for papers that critically engage the pedagogy, aspirations and economies of “WGSS 101.”

This special thematic cluster aims to open critical space for reflection on the epistemological, material, and institutional frameworks that differentially enable and/or constrain the introductory course; the conscious and unconscious desires at play in the work of crafting and teaching the introductory course; approaches to intersectionality, interdisciplinarity, transnationalism, decolonization, indigenization in the introductory course; and the stories and genealogies of the field crafted through specific introductory syllabi and assignments.

We are especially interested in papers that engage with (but are not limited to) the following questions:

– How/Is it possible to maintain a feminist, anti-racist, learner-centered pedagogy in a large enrollment introductory class? How might programs and/or departments move toward more intimate classes within fiscal and administrative contexts that threaten the survival and vitality of WGSS and other “pedagogies of minority difference” (Ferguson 2012)?

– What do we want our courses to do in the university and beyond? More specifically, what do we want our courses to do in the lives of our students? What political and psychic aspirations, investments, and affective economies come into play in the development of critical WGSS pedagogy? What is the place of the introductory course in those circulations and movements of desire?

– What role does the introductory course play in crafting stories and genealogies of the field? What stories do we tell ourselves, our curriculum committees, our Deans, and our students about the place and aims of the introductory course in and beyond the university? How do we get stuck in the stories we stick by about WGSS, and with what effect (cf. Hemmings 2011, Wiegman 2012)?

– (How) does the still relatively uncommon Ph.D. in gender, women’s, and sexuality studies shape the introductory course? What are the outcomes and issues in hiring someone with/out a Ph.D. in WGSS to teach the introductory course? How/does granting tenure in WGSS affect curriculum and program development, particularly as it relates to a sustainable, compelling and rigorous introductory course?

– What are the labor politics—racialized, sexualized, gendered, material, affective—of the introductory course? Who teaches the introductory course and why? What, if any, is the relationship between introductory enrollments, departmental budgets, and tenure lines? What role does the labour of the introductory course play in the vitality of institutional, intellectual and mentoring cultures in WGSS?

– How are austerity discourses and university budget cuts impacting the introductory WGSS course as a particular mode of social labor? What are the strategic and/or troubling implications of ascribing value to the introductory course institutionally by articulating it as meeting “social justice”, “sustainability”, “global citizenship”, “civic engagement”, and “diversity learning” outcomes? Might and should the introductory course change to suit emerging educational markets?

– What archives of knowledge are entrenched and/or challenged by the labor of the introductory course? To what extent do/should the analytic categories of “gender,” “women,” and “sexuality” remain central in the introductory course given the racialized spatial politics that transnational, decolonizing and indigenizing feminist approaches emphasize, along with the destabilizations of “the categories themselves” (Valentine 2004) through queer and trans- studies?

– Paying attention to the role of eros and desire in teaching and learning, what does it mean when students are “transformed” by the introductory class and in the process displace those feelings onto the (sexualized) professor? How do WGSS faculty and instructors navigate the fine line between “being charismatic” and “developing a following”? What is the role of seduction in critical pedagogy, especially in programs whose survival depends on cultivating majors and minors (cf. Takacs and Chambliss, 2014)?

We invite essays, reflections, interventions, strategic documents, and/or archives of institutional development, written by well-known WGSS scholars and commentators, new instructors of the introductory course, those who serve on curriculum and/or steering committees, chairs of WGSS programs, inter/disciplinarily-trained professors, those who could teach the class but avoid it, those (precariously) assigned to teach the course on a semester’s notice, and those who hold Ph.D.’s in the field and/or have served a role in developing the Ph.D. program.

At this time, the special thematic cluster editors invite expressions of interest, in the form of an extended abstract of 500-750 words, detailing central questions and modes of inquiry by December 15, 2013 to atlantisgws101@gmail.com. Please include a 100 – 150 word bio with affiliation.

Full paper submissions will open in March 2014 and close in June 2014 with a formal announcement on the Atlantis website: http://journals.msvu.ca/index.php/atlantis/announcement. Following a full peer-review process, the special thematic cluster will appear in Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture and Social Justice in December 2014.

Please contact the co-editors with any questions:atlantisgws101@gmail.com.

Co-editors’ Biographies

Melissa Autumn White is an Assistant Professor of Gender & Women’s Studies at the University of British Columbia, where the introductory course, “Gender, Race, Sexuality and Power,” is taught in two parts at the Okanagan campus, enrolling 200 and 60 students respectively. Under the working title “Ambivalent Belongings: Affective Governance and the Politics of Queer Migration in an Age of Global Apartheid,” her first book examines how queer migration and asylum politics dis/engage with the nation-state as a primary site of identification.

Rachel Alpha Johnston Hurst is an Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at St. Francis Xavier University. Her introductory class enrolls 55 students, and in 2014-15 will become a part of the StFX Social Justice Colloquium (http://sites.stfx.ca/sjc/). Her book manuscript, “Surface Imaginations: Cosmetic Surgery, Photography, and Skin” is presently under review, and she is co-editor of Skin, Culture, and Psychoanalysis with Angela Failler and Sheila Cavanagh (Palgrave 2013). Currently she is working on a decolonizing re-reading of colonial photographs in North America.

Jennifer Musial is a Visiting Assistant Professor in Women’s and Gender Studies at Dickinson College, where she teaches “Introduction to Women’s and Gender Studies” in a small class environment. Before arriving at Dickinson, she was at Northern Arizona University where she offered the introductory course, “Women, Gender Identity, and Ethnicity” to 105 students each semester. Her research centers on reproductive citizenship, grievability, and gendered racialization, and her first book, “Pregnant Pause: Reproduction, Death, and Media Culture,” is in progress. Her Ph.D. in Women’s Studies is from York University (Toronto).

(PDF of call for abstracts can be downloaded at: http://bit.ly/1e5dmSH. Please share!)

Call for Papers: Women’s Studies on the Edge

The Women’s Studies Program at Texas Tech University book-stack
proudly announces a call for proposals for the 30th Annual Conference on the Advancement of Women, “Women’s
Studies on the Edge”, which will take place on the campus,  April 17-19, 2014. We invite papers and panel proposals
that explore the manifold meanings of movement and change as connected to, created by, and/or caught up in the presence of women’s, gender, and identity issues, in both contemporary
and historical frameworks. Interdisciplinary proposals, as well as those from disciplines and specialty subject areas are also encouraged to submit. Send a 250-word abstract including
the proposal title, name, affiliation and contact information for  all author(s) to patricia.a.earl@ttu.edu before February 28, 2014.

Fellowship: History of Women in Medicine

The FOUNDATION FOR THE HISTORY OF WOMEN IN MEDICINE
will provide library imageone $5000 grant to support travel, lodging, and incidental expenses for a flexible research period between  JULY 1ST 2014 – JUNE
30TH 2015. Foundation Fellowships are offered for research related to
the history of women to be conducted at the CENTER FOR THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Boston,
Massachusetts. Preference will be given to projects that deal specifically with women physicians or other health workers or medical scientists, but proposals dealing with the history of women’s health issues may also be considered.

Manuscript collections which may be of special interest include the
recently-opened MARY ELLEN AVERY PAPERS, the LEONA BAUMGARTNER
PAPERS, and the GRETE BIBRING PAPERS (find out more about our
collections at WWW.COUNTWAY.HARVARD.EDU/AWM). Preference will be
given to those who are using collections from the Center’s Archives
for Women in Medicine (see the full list of collections HERE), but
research on the topic of women in medicine using other material from
the Countway Library will be considered. Preference will also be given
to applicants who live beyond commuting distance of the Countway, but
all are encouraged to apply, including graduate students.

APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS

Applicants should submit a proposal (no more than two pages)
outlining the subject and objectives of the research project, length
of residence, historical materials to be used, and a project budget
(including travel, lodging, and research expenses), along with a
curriculum vitae and two letters of recommendation by MARCH 15TH,
2014. The fellowship proposal should demonstrate that the Countway
Library has resources central to the research topic.

Applications should be sent to: Women in Medicine Fellowships,
Archives for Women in Medicine, Francis A. Countway Library of
Medicine, 10 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA 02115. Electronic submissions
of applications and supporting materials and any questions may be
directed to CHM@HMS.HARVARD.EDU.

The fellowship appointment will be announced in April 2014.
Countway Library
10 Shattuck St.
Boston, MA 02115
United States