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Sarah Lawrence College, in partnership with Bronx Community College, has been awarded a three-year, $1.5 million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to rethink the humanities through the lens of climate and environmental justice and to develop creative, collaborative pedagogies to address the climate crisis. The award is the largest programmatic grant in Sarah Lawrence history, a mark previously held by a $1.2 million Mellon Foundation grant to advance and support civic engagement, which the College received in 2019.
“We are incredibly grateful for this grant and for the continued support from the Mellon Foundation,” said Sarah Lawrence president Cristle Collins Judd. “It recognizes not only the urgency and need for action around the climate crisis and environmental justice, but also the value of and need for the humanities in all areas of our lives. And it’s a clear vote of confidence in the innovative work of our faculty and students.”
Sarah Lawrence is one of 12 liberal arts colleges to be selected from 50 applicants to the Mellon Foundation’s Humanities for All Times initiative, and the College’s $1.5 million award represents the highest amount an institution could receive. Humanities for All Times was created by the Mellon Foundation to “support newly developed curricula that both instruct students in methods of humanities practice and demonstrate those methods’ relevance to broader social justice pursuits.”
“The Humanities for All Times initiative underscores that it's not only critical to show students that the humanities improve the quality of their everyday lives, but also that they are a crucial tool in efforts to bring about meaningful progressive change in the world,” said Phillip Brian Harper, Mellon Foundation Higher Learning Program Director. “We are thrilled to support this work at liberal arts colleges across the country—given their unequivocal commitment to humanities-based knowledge, and their close ties to the local communities in which such knowledge can be put to immediate productive use, we know that these schools are perfectly positioned to take on this important work.”
Led by faculty members Heather Cleary (Spanish, Literature), Sarah Hamill (Art History), and Eric Leveau (French, Literature), this grant will support the Sarah Lawrence Interdisciplinary Collaborative on the Environment (SLICE) curricular program. From a nexus of interdisciplinary perspectives, SLICE poses the humanistic question of how to exist in ethical relation to each other and to the planet as we confront the human-induced climate crisis; it seeks to answer this question by developing the tools of interdisciplinarity, collaboration, permeable classrooms, and community engagement.
The SLICE program has its foundations in work that began during the 2020-21 academic year. A group of faculty in art history and literature joined colleagues in environmental science, biology, and economics in the Sarah Lawrence Interdisciplinary Collaborative on the Environment in response to a growing desire on campus for civic engagement around climate change and social justice. SLICE’s faculty, many of whom are early-career, came together to rethink pedagogies in response to the entwined crises of a global pandemic, systemic racism and the violence of white supremacy, and ecological disaster. In courses on topics such as art and ecology, environmental literary criticism, environmental data, and ecology of symbiosis, students analyzed, debated, and organized around issues of environmental justice and activism.
In reacting to news of the Mellon grant, Cleary, Hamill, and Leveau stated: “We’ve found that the humanities can model an alternative to a life cut off from each other and from our living environment by re-examining the complex relationships between humanity, animality, race, class, gender, sexuality, and the natural world. This generous grant will allow us to build on SLICE’s strong momentum to expand these conversations, and also will help us answer the call from colleagues in the sciences who have expressed an urgent need for the humanities to translate and communicate climate science for the public good.”
SLICE is a prime model of Sarah Lawrence’s method of education in how it enables students and faculty with vast and varied interests to connect through a shared passion. That connection will expand through collaboration with faculty and students at Bronx Community College, an active partner on this work to bridge the humanities and the sciences.
“I’m so pleased that this grant will foster further collaboration and an expanded partnership with the faculty and students of Bronx Community College,” said Judd. In March 2021, Sarah Lawrence established the Bridges Program, a transfer partnership with Bronx Community College and Westchester Community College to establish new pathways for talented students from community college to SLC.
Together through this funding, Sarah Lawrence and Bronx Community College will spend the three year grant period co-creating in several key areas: bringing students from both institutions together for new interdisciplinary curricula, project-based learning, and programming; building a SLICE event series and student symposium; launching an inter-institutional “Climate Justice and the Arts” exhibition, slated for Spring 2024; supporting students as they collaborate with local environmental organizations, including Sarah Lawrence’s own Center for the Urban River at Beczak (CURB), Groundwork Hudson Valley, and Untermyer Gardens; and implementing a robust digital humanities plan that will equip students with the digital literacy skills needed to reach a broad audience with their research in climate justice.
The SLICE program aims to become a model for a place-based, interdisciplinary, and collaborative pedagogical structure that can be replicated at different institutions, bringing students back to the humanities through a constellation of courses that introduce divergent perspectives on a single relevant question or urgent problem.
Drawing students to the humanities is at the heart of the Mellon Foundation’s Humanities for All Times initiative. As student interest in social justice issues increases, formal study of the humanities is on the decline. As described by the Mellon Foundation—the nation’s largest funder of the arts, culture, and humanities—the work done by institutions supported by the Humanities for All Times initiative “will make clear the power of the humanities in solving societal challenges through distinctive analytical projects that ensure students are skilled in diagnosing the cultural conditions that hinder our achieving a fully just and equitable society, and identifying the steps necessary to changing them.”