Three Dartmouth faculty members have been awarded fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundationâputting Dartmouth among the top 10 colleges and universities with multiple Guggenheim recipients this year.
, an assistant professor of English and creative writing and African and African American studies; , an associate professor of English and creative writing; and , a professor and chair of Middle Eastern studies, join a cohort of 184 writers, scholars, artists, and scientists from around the country, selected from nearly 3,000 applicants.
The fellowship is awarded to âexceptional individuals in pursuit of scholarship in any field of knowledge and creation in any art form, under the freest possible conditions,â according the foundationâs website.
âThese three writers, scholars, and teachers exemplify a fundamental strength of the liberal artsâcombining rigorous inquiry with creative expression to help us see the world with new eyes,â says , himself a 1992 Guggenheim fellow who has been a member of the foundationâs education board since 2016. âOn behalf of the Dartmouth community, I congratulate them for this well-deserved recognition of their tremendous literary accomplishments.â
Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences praises Bennett, Chee, and El-Ariss for their dedication to their students and their craft. âThese are colleagues who consistently model how to pursue their own intellectual and creative curiosity while opening doors for others,â she says. âI am thrilled that this door has opened for them.â
Joshua Bennett
âI write and teach about the relationship between African American literature and the life-worlds of plants and animals, and about how Black writers have historically theorized the relationship between education and human freedom,â says Joshua Bennett, whose book Being Property Once Myself: Blackness and the End of Man is a critical exploration of the boundaries of the human and nonhuman in the literary imaginations of Black writers from Zora Neal Hurston to Jesmyn Ward.
In addition to being a scholar of African American literature, Bennett is an award-winning poet. His first book, The Sobbing School, won the National Poetry Series in 2015; The New Yorker praised his second, Owed, as a ârhapsodic, rigorous poetry collection, which pays homage to everyday Black experience in the U.S.â
âMuch of my poetry focuses on kinship and structural violence, how historically marginalized peoples have survived in the face of unthinkable odds, and what language they have used to describe that persistent striving, that meditative tenacity,â Bennett says.
After earning a masterâs in theater and performance studies from the University of Warwick as a Marshall Scholar, Bennett completed his doctorate in English at Princeton. He has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ford Foundation, MIT, and the Society of Fellows at Harvard University.
Bennett came to Dartmouth in 2018. âThe students here are truly remarkableâas writers, as readers, as human beings,â he says. âEvery time I teach a new course, Iâm reminded anew of what brought me to this profession in the first place.â
He credits his Dartmouth faculty colleagues with supporting him âthroughout the process of stepping into my first job, publishing my debut work of literary criticism, and most recently, becoming a father during a global pandemic. They have looked out for me from the beginning. They have helped to preserve my heart and mind.â
Bennett plans to use the Guggenheim to complete two book projects: a work of narrative nonfiction, Spoken Word: A Cultural History, forthcoming from Knopf; and a new collection of poems, The Study of Human Life, forthcoming from Penguin Books.
âThis award would not have been possible without the love and support of my wife, Pam, as well as the shining constellation of family and friends who checked in on us over the past year,â Bennett says. âThis was a community effort. I donât know where I would be without the thoughtfulness and care of my people.â
With the fellowship, he also looks forward to having more time at home with his 5-month-old son, August Galileo. âHeâs the reason I applied in the first place, and it means a great deal to be able to celebrate this moment with him,â Bennett says. âItâs like something out of a dream.â
Alexander Chee
âI am honored to be a part of this distinguished cohort and legacy,â says novelist Alexander Chee, who notes that, like many of those who ultimately receive a Guggenheim, he has applied for it several times.
âYou just donât know what will make the difference. I am overwhelmed with gratitude for this support for my work to come,â he says.
Chee is the award-winning author of three booksâthe novels Edinburgh and Queen of the Night and the essay collection How to Write an Autobiographical Novelâand the recipient of a 2021 USA Fellowship from United States Artists. He joined the Dartmouth faculty in 2017.
âWhen I think about my Dartmouth colleagues in this cohortâJoshua Bennett and Tarek El-Arissâand I think about how much I appreciate and love their work, I know Iâm in a good place if thatâs who I work with,â he says. âI am always discovering new possibilities for my work, scholarship, and art here.â
With the support of both the Guggenheim and the USA Fellowship, Chee plans to pursue archival research in Boston, New York, and Seoul and Goheung, South Korea. âAnd Iâll be able to take some time just to writeâthe sweetest prize there is,â he says.
âAmericaâs relationship to Korea reshaped it in ways we are still all reckoning with,â Chee says of his current research and writing projects. âGiven what is happening in our country right now, I welcome the chance to make work based on Koreaâs colonial history, the history of Koreaâs pursuit of independence, and unity as well, and the relationship the United States has to all of this.â
Of the Guggenheim, he says, âSo many of my artistic heroes have won this award.â He cites especially novelist Younghill Kang, who used his 1933 fellowship to write East Goes West, which is considered the first Korean American novel.
âI try to live up to his example,â Chee says.
Tarek El-Ariss
âIâm thrilled and humbled by this great honor,â says Tarek El-Ariss. âI feel itâs a recognition of the interdisciplinary work and dialogue Iâve been engaged in. Itâs also a recognition of Arabic and Middle Eastern studies as integral parts of the humanities.â
El-Ariss is the author of two books: Trials of Arab Modernity: Literary Affects and the New Political and Leaks, Hacks, and Scandals: Arab Culture in the Digital Age. He is also the editor of the MLA anthology The Arab Renaissance: A Bilingual Anthology of the Nahda.
As a child growing up in Lebanon, El-Ariss says that âmeaning-making and interpretation became vital when the social and political order collapsed as a result of warââand the desire to find meaning ultimately led him to study philosophy and literary theory.
âHowever, in the literary and cultural criticism I practiced, the âIâ had no place,â he says. âWith time, I have come to make room for that âIâ and its peripatetic wanderings across languages, cities, and conflicts. The need to fix meaning gave way to a reconciliation with those moments of vulnerability that allow associations to appear and texts to connect. Itâs from this state of vulnerability, which lies at the intersection of the personal and the literary, that my new book emerges.â
The new book, which the Guggenheim will allow him to complete, is titled Water on Fire: The Making of a Literary Scholarâa collection of essays that combine autobiography, literary criticism, and history to âtell the story of the Middle East with all its conflicts and displacements while offering a framework for a literary critical practice that is simultaneously theoretical and narrative, empathetic, and politically engaged,â El-Ariss says.
The projectâwhich explores what he calls âthe genealogy of wonderââis a direct response to the events of the past year, including the COVID-19 pandemic and âthe catastrophic explosion in Beirut on Aug. 4, 2020, that damaged my home and destroyed the city,â he says.
âThis book is meant to bridge worlds and to reveal and revel in their interconnections: between the Middle East and the U.S.; ancient tales and contemporary ones; inner life and outer, personal life and academic,â he says.
âI wouldnât have been able to obtain this fellowship without the incredible support of colleagues and the administration at Dartmouth,â El-Ariss says. âI feel so lucky to be part of this incredible community.â
ĚěĂŔ´ŤĂ˝ the Guggenheim Fellowship
Faculty in all disciplines interested in applying for external funding opportunities such as the Guggenheim Fellowship have access to resources through Dartmouthâs , which is led by Director Charlotte Bacon.
Recent Dartmouth recipients of the Guggenheim include Frank J. Reagan â09 Chair of Policy Studies Frank Magilligan, Professor of Earth Sciences Mukul Sharma, Associate Professor of Music Ash Fure, Professor of English and Creative Writing Emerita Cynthia Huntington, and Mary Brinsmead Wheelock Professor of History Darrin McMahon.
Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.

