Faculty Awards and Honors Rosowski and Weaver or Douglas Professorships
UNL announces Rosowski and Weaver or Douglas Professorships
Names have been attached to professorships established earlier this year to recognize faculty research excellence or outstanding teaching. These professorships honor individuals with associations to the university: a beloved English professor, a prominent alumnus and a pioneering botanist.
The Susan J. Rosowski Professorship will recognize faculty at the associate professor level who have achieved distinguished records of scholarship or creative activity and who show exceptional promise for future excellence.
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| A photo of Dr. Susan Roskowski reading in the Special Collections Section of Love Library. |
The Aaron Douglas or John E. Weaver Professorship for Teaching Excellence will be awarded to faculty holding the full professor rank who demonstrate sustained and extraordinary levels of teaching excellence and national visibility for instructional activities and/or practice.
The Rosowski Professorship is named in honor of the late Susan J. Rosowski (1942-2004), who at the time of her death was the Adele Hall Distinguished Professor of English at UNL. She established the (Willa) Cather Project, and was general editor for the scholarly edition of Cather's works published by the University of Nebraska Press, a multi-volume project. Rosowski is credited with igniting renewed regional, national and international interest in Willa Cather's works. Rosowski was an award-winning author and well-respected teacher and scholar. A Kansas native, Rosowski received her B.A. from Whittier College and her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Arizona. In 2004, she received the University of Nebraska's Outstanding Research and Creative Activity Award (ORCA).
This professorship is open only to associate professors who have no other named professorship. It is a five-year professorship and carries a $3,000 annual stipend.
The Aaron Douglas Professorship honors NU alumnus Douglas (1899-1979), who was the first African American to earn a degree in art from NU and is considered a pre-eminent artist of the Harlem Renaissance movement. A native of Topeka, Kan. Douglas earned a B.F.A. from the university in 1922.
| Aaron Douglas |
He founded the Department of Art at Fisk University, where he taught from 1937-1966. Douglas's art captured the zeitgeist of his era, helping to establish a new black aesthetic. He combined traditional African and African American images with the prevailing Cubist and Art Deco stylings, creating a distinctive and imaginative visual form. His work is considered seminal to the Harlem Renaissance and remains enduring and important. Douglas also earned a master's degree (1944) from Teachers College at Columbia College in New York. He received an honorary doctoral degree from Fisk.
Recently, the Sheldon Museum of Art acquired four Douglas works, a set of woodcuts on paper titled Emperor Jones.
Created in 1926, they are early examples of Douglas's oeuvre. The Sheldon also owns Window Cleaning,
a 1935 oil painting of an African American man.
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| John E. Weaver |
Applications and nominations should be forwarded to the Office of the Senior Vice Academic Affairs by Jan. 16, 2009. The committee on University Professorships will review nominations and applications. The chancellor will make final selections and the goal is to announce the recipients in late spring.
Details about application/nominations procedures can be found at http://www.unl.edu/svcaa/honors/internal.
Award Winners
- Full list of recent award winners
- (See Calls for Nominations for Professorships)
- Academy of Distinguished Teachers
- Annis Chaikin Sorensen Award: Distinguished Teaching Award in the Humanities
- College Distinguished Teaching Awards
- Harold & Esther Edgerton Junior Faculty Award
- Kelly Fund
- Othmer Chairs
- Outstanding Research & Creative Activity Award (ORCA)
- Outstanding Teaching & Instructional Creativity Award (OTICA)
- University Professorships
- University-wide Departmental Teaching Award (UDTA)



