The Berlin Prize is a residential fellowship at the Hans Arnhold Center, awarded by the American Academy in Berlin to scholars and artists. Each year, about 20 fellows are selected.
4-610: The stated mission of the program is to improve the transatlantic dialogue in the arts, humanities, and public policy through the development and communication of projects of the highest scholarly merit. The program is privately funded through donations, with the Kellen-Arnhold family as Academy's primary source of financial support. The creation of the Academy and the program was driven by Richard C. Holbrooke , an American diplomat who served as U.S. Ambassador to Germany towards
8-755: The Psychology of Women and Men Kindness: A Novel Origins of Print: How Medieval Culture Ushered in the First Media Revolution Bryher: Female Husband of Modernism America Before the Code Geontologies: Indigenous Worlds in the New Media and Late Liberalism New Poems Europe's Twelfth-Century "Turn", Narrative of Medieval History Richard C. Holbrooke Too Many Requests If you report this error to
12-826: The United States, though are not required to be U.S. citizens. American expatriates are explicitly stated to not be eligible. Academic candidates are expected to have completed a doctorate at the time of application, whereas applicants working in fields such as journalism, filmmaking, or public policy must have equivalent professional degrees or experience. Writers must have published at least one book. The Jurisprudence of Hannah Arendt Wörterstürmerei im Namen der Schönheit, or World and Work in Samuel Beckett Human Terrain: When War Becomes Academic The Evolutionary Origins of
16-669: The waning days of the Cold War. As the last of the American troops were leaving Berlin , Holbrooke proposed the academy as a way of maintaining U.S-German ties. The academy was created in 1994 and the first class of fellows were brought in September 1998. Recipients come from a wide range of academic fields and have included anthropologists, art historians, historians, philosophers, musicologists, sociologists, legal scholars, and economists, among others. Fellows must based permanently in
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