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HomeCommentaryBRIEF: Whitworth professor receives grant to conduct research in China

BRIEF: Whitworth professor receives grant to conduct research in China

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Professor Anthony E. Clark will travel to China as one of seven scholars selected for the National Endowment for the Humanities/American Council of Learned Societies Grant
Professor Anthony E. Clark will travel to China as one of seven scholars selected for the National Endowment for the Humanities/American Council of Learned Societies Grant

Anthony E. Clark, an associate professor of history at Whitworth University, has been selected as one of seven scholars worldwide to receive the 2012-13 National Endowment for the Humanities/American Council of Learned Societies Grant, according to a news release.

“I am honored and grateful to have received this support so I can consult important archives in northern China and complete my current book project on Sino-missionary relations in Shanxi,” says Clark.

Through the grant, he will conduct research at the famous Sino-Western Library at The Beijing Center, located at the University of International Business and Economics. While there he will consult Chinese archives to help finish a draft of his monograph, “Friars, Fairies, and the War of Immortals: China’s Heavenly Battle on the Earthly Plains of Shanxi.” According to a news release the book brings to light the personal lives of several European Franciscan and Chinese women at Shanxi on the eve of the July 9, 1900, “Taiyuan Incident.”

In addition to allowing Clark to conduct research, the grant will fund his travel to other areas in China, where he will gather information about missionary activities during the late-Qing dynasty, at the end of the 19th century. He will also give invited lectures on his work at scholarly meetings in the cities of Hangzhou and Hong Kong.

Clark, who joined the Whitworth faculty in 2009, holds a Ph.D. from the University of Oregon, where he also earned his bachelor's degree. He has also pursued language, historical literature and cultural studies at the Central University for Nationalities, in Beijing; the Alliance Française, in Paris; and the National Taiwan Normal University and the Taipei Language Institute, both in Taipei, Taiwan.

 

Tracy Simmons
Tracy Simmons
Tracy Simmons is an award-winning journalist specializing in religion reporting and digital entrepreneurship. In her approximate 20 years on the religion beat, Simmons has tucked a notepad in her pocket and found some of her favorite stories aboard cargo ships in New Jersey, on a police chase in Albuquerque, in dusty Texas church bell towers, on the streets of New York and in tent cities in Haiti. Simmons has worked as a multimedia journalist for newspapers across New Mexico, Texas, Connecticut and Washington. She is the executive director of FāVS.News, a digital journalism start-up covering religion news and commentary in Spokane, Washington. She also writes for The Spokesman-Review and national publications. She is a Scholarly Associate Professor of Journalism at Washington State University.

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