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midWest

The 2025-2026 John W. Altman Program in the Humanities

The Midwest is often said to be the essence of the United States, and yet it is remarkably resistant to definition. Even its putative inhabitants, when surveyed, disagree about its nature and location. Everywhere and nowhere at once, the Midwest is frequently described less as a destination than a transit zone: “a gateway” to the West, a nexus of rivers, a collection of “flyover states” and “rustbelt cities”—as if time itself had passed through on the way to more exciting locales. And yet, like “the middle class,” “the Midwest” is the object of relentless political appeals and calculations. It is said to be “the heartland,” the “bread basket,” the “bellwether,” the “real America.” Commentators regularly invoke it as a key index of national trends. Just as often, the Midwest is stereotyped as a provincial backwater—a land of rural simplicity, racial homogeneity, old-fashioned values, and general ordinariness. Scholars, artists, cultural critics, community leaders, and journalists have relentlessly contested these stereotypes, pointing to the Midwest’s overlooked diversity, complex immigrant history, artistic productivity, and economic dynamism. Yet the need to keep debunking vague and totalizing notions of midwestern identity only testifies to their persistence.

How can a place so central to American identity be so elusive? Indeed, is there such a place—or is “the Midwest” a tenacious political fiction?  What are the cultural and political effects of this concept, now and previously? What representations—in literature, visual media, journalism, history, and public culture—have underpinned conceptions of the Midwest?  How do such representations relate to the complex demographic, social, economic, and experiential dimensions of life in this part of the United States?  

The humanities are central to the study of such questions. As the Midwest resurges in political salience and becomes a growing focus of scholarly inquiry and grant funding, Miami is ideally situated to lead a pathbreaking study of the subject. Miami was home to one of the first scholarly journals on the subject, The Old Northwest, and many of our faculty are currently engaged in projects about the Midwest. At a time of increasing pressure on public universities, Miami’s humanities community has an opportunity to bring new understanding of our region to other scholars, students, alumni, and the public.

The 2025-26 Altman Program invites faculty to join a collaborative investigation of the Midwest and analogous regions, current and past. We invite applications from scholars working directly on the Midwest or similar regions and from anyone else who feels they can contribute to and benefit from the program. The preceding Call for Applications should be understood not as a final program description but a provocation for assembling a team of humanities experts who will refine the program collaboratively this winter. We invite applicants to suggest approaches and topics not specified above and to suggest additional framing questions, visiting speakers, co-collaborators, and program elements.

Call for Geoffrion Family Fellowships and the Altman Graduate Fellowship

The Geoffrion Family Undergraduate Fellowship and the Altman Graduate Fellowship offer exceptional opportunities for students to engage deeply in interdisciplinary scholarship in the humanities at Miami University. These programs are designed to foster academic collaboration, advance research skills, and encourage public engagement.

Geoffrion Family Undergraduate Fellowship (GUF)

The Geoffrion Family Fellowship is the highest honor awarded by the Humanities Center to an undergraduate. Up to eight students are selected annually to work one-on-one with faculty, interact with distinguished visiting writers and intellectuals, and develop advanced research skills. Fellows join the Altman Program in the Humanities, a faculty research community that explores an issue of significance through seminars, public lectures, conferences, and more. Fellows also take a team-taught 400-level course in the fall and engage in a collaborative public humanities project.

Program Details:

Application Materials:
Applications are due by the date listed on the Student Opportunities page.
Submit your materials as a single PDF to
humanitiesgrants@miamioh.edu with "GUF APPLICATION" in the subject line.

Altman Graduate Fellowship

The Altman Graduate Fellowship provides graduate students an opportunity to join the Altman Program research group, collaborating with faculty and undergraduates on a significant humanities issue. The program includes an interdisciplinary faculty seminar and public events such as lectures and symposia. The Altman Graduate Fellow plays a key role in mentoring undergraduate fellows, providing guidance on research projects, and assisting with events.

Program Details:

Application Materials:
Applications are due by the date listed on the Student Opportunities page.
Submit your materials as a single PDF to
humanitiesgrants@miamioh.edu with "Altman Graduate Fellow Application" in the subject line.
For more information or if you have any questions please contact: humanitiescenter@miamioh.edu