| , 2003 -- The Obert C. and Grace A. Tanner Humanities
Center, in conjunction with the College of Humanities, is pleased
to announce the three-year appointment of Terry Tempest Williams
as the Annie Clark Tanner Fellow in Environmental Studies.
Ms. Williams, a Utah native, is nationally recognized as a writer,
naturalist and environmental activist. She brings to the Tanner
Humanities Center – and the broader University of Utah community
– a rich experiential understanding of both the land and
communities of Utah. "I am thrilled and deeply honored to
be invited to join such a dynamic team as those in the College
of Humanities and the Tanner Humanities Center. Their commitment
to social change through the world of powerful ideas and ethical
action helps students to develop both a conscience and consciousness
of the fragile and beautiful world around them.”
Ms. Williams has served on the Governing Council for the Wilderness
Society and as a member of the Presidents Council for Sustainable
Development. She is currently on the Advisory Board of the National
Parks and Conservation Association, the Nature Conservancy and
the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance. An award winning and powerful
writer, Ms. Williams has published numerous books, including perhaps
her best-known, Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and
Place. Her work has been widely anthologized and has appeared
in publications such as The New Yorker, The Nation,
Outside, Audubon and The New England Review.
Robert Newman, Dean of the College of Humanities, notes “It
is a delight and an honor to have Terry Tempest Williams join
us as the first Annie Clark Tanner Fellow. Her acceptance of this
appointment marks a significant step forward in the development
of a center for the study of Humanities and the Environment.”
The fellowship, which begins in the Fall of 2004, is intended
to ensure significant contributions to a humanities-based interpretation
of environmental issues. As the first Annie Clark Tanner Fellow,
Ms. Williams will be actively involved in the intellectual life
of the Tanner Humanities Center as well as facilitating a series
of naturalist lectures, much like Ralph Waldo Emerson’s
19th century Lyceum Lectures. “In fact, “ notes Dean
Newman, “we’re tentatively referring to this lecture
series as ‘Lyceum II’, and anticipate that academic
and community interest will be tremendous.” Ms. Williams
will give the inaugural lecture in this series March 25, 2004
at the Salt Lake Public Library. She also will teach a course
in nature and writing in Red Rock country each June.
The Humanities and the Environment program represents a multidisciplinary
approach that includes both academic studies and community outreach
through partnerships with the Swaner Nature Reserve in Park City,
UT and others. “The humanities bring substantive critical
perspectives on issues of environmental degradation and their
consequences in human dispossession,” states Dean Newman.
“Through the environmental studies program, we’re
seeking to integrate our academic, teaching and service missions
in ways that will have long-term influence on how we perceive
our relationship to and responsibility for the web of life on
our planet.”
Students within the program will explore ethical, health and
policy concerns through historical, cultural and creative perspectives.
“To be part of the development of an environmental studies
program at the University of Utah,” states Williams, “is
to help create the curriculum I was looking for as a student at
the U of U, but could not find. I was hungry for a program that
focused on the integration of both science and the humanities,
one that could create a bridge between landscape and language,
a way to create fresh stories that bind us together in the place
we call home. My priority now, as a writer and resident of this
state, is to be able to work with students here in Utah, to inspire,
expose, and educate the next generation as to the importance of
an ethics of place. I believe it is only through education that
we can begin to heal the wounds of polarized thinking that threaten
to divide this country."
For more information about Terry Tempest Williams, the Humanities
and the Environment Studies or the College of Humanities, contact
the Dean’s Office, College of Humanities (801) 581-6214.
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