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List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1952

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One hundred and ninety-one Guggenheim Fellowships were awarded in 1952.

1952 U.S. and Canadian Fellows

Category Field of Study Fellow Notes Ref
Creative Arts Fiction Hortense Calisher Also won in 1955
André Giroux
William Goyen Also won in 1951
Vladimir Nabokov Also won in 1943
Byron Herbert Reece Also won in 1957
Wallace Stegner Also won in 1949, 1959
Fine Arts Saul Baizerman
Wilfred Roloff Beny
Morris Atkinson Blackburn
Stuart Davis
Worden Day Also won in 1961
Ynez Johnston
William R. Kenan, Jr.
Misch Kohn Also won in 1953
Eugene Mondt Powell
Janet E. Turner
Music Composition Bryan Dority Also won in 1953
Lou Silver Harrison Also won in 1954
Lockrem Harold Johnson
Robert Kurka Also won in 1951
Charles M. Mills
Robert Moffat Palmer Also won in 1960
Howard Swanson
Ben Brian Weber Also won in 1950
Photography Roy Rudolph DeCarava
Poetry Robert Stuart Fitzgerald Also won in 1971
Adrienne C. Rich Also won in 1959
Richard Purdy Wilbur Also won in 1963
Humanities American Literature Gay Wilson Allen Also won in 1959
James Franklin Beard, Jr. Also won in 1958
Everett Carter Also won in 1961
Architecture, Planning and Design William Jordy
Elizabeth R. Sunderland
Bibliography Allen Tracy Hazen
Biography John Berryman Won for poetry in 1966
Classics Lionel Casson Also won in 1959
Solomon Katz
James Anastasios Notopoulos
Brooks Otis Also won in 1973
Carl Angus Roebuck
Lily Ross Taylor Also won in 1959
Leon Edward Wright
East Asian Studies Ferdinand Diederich Lessing (de) Also won in 1955
Education Robert King Hall Also won in 1945, 1949
English Literature F. Michael Krouse
Frederick A. Pottle Also won in 1945
James Kester Svendsen
Aline Mackenzie Taylor
Fine Arts Research Louise H. Burchfield
Julius S. Held Also won in 1966
George Kubler Also won in 1943, 1956
Phyllis Williams Lehmann
Ralph Mayer
Marvin Chauncey Ross Also won in 1938, 1939, 1948
Libby Tannenbaum
Folklore and Popular Culture Arthur Leon Campa
Wayland D. Hand Also won in 1960
French History George P. Cuttino Also won in 1944
Richard Wilder Emery Also won in 1959
Franklin Lewis Ford
J. Russell Major Also won in 1967
French Literature Imbrie Buffum
Donald Murdoch Frame
General Nonfiction John Edward Pfeiffer Also won in 1954
Roderick Seidenberg
German and East European History William Clarence Askew
German and Scandinavian Literature Henry C. Hatfield
History of Science and Technology Charles Donald O'Malley
Italian History Felix Gilbert
Latin American History Charles Gibson
Linguistics Giuliano Ugo Bonfante
Literary Criticism Frederick Wilcox Dupee
Renato Poggioli
René Wellek Also won in 1951, 1956, 1966
Medieval Literature George R. Coffman
Kathrine Koller Diez
Francis Lee Utley Also won in 1946, 1947
Alice Sperduti Wilson
Music Research Donald Jay Grout Also won in 1951
Philosophy Rudolf Carnap
Roderick Firth
Glenn Raymond Morrow Also won in 1956
Religion Leonard J. Trinterud
Spanish and Portuguese Literature Bruce Wear Wardropper (es) Also won in 1959
United States History Maynard Geiger
Carl Parcher Russell Also won in 1953
Francis Butler Simkins
Kenneth Milton Stampp Also won in 1967
Natural Sciences Applied Math Ivan S. Sokolnikoff Also won in 1959
Astronomy and Astrophysics Samuel Herrick Also won in 1945
Chemistry William Andrew Bonner
George Edward Boyd
Herbert Philip Broida
Alan Frank Clifford Also won in 1951
Jerry Donohue
William Dulaney Gwinn
Ralph Stanley Halford
Kenneth W. Hedberg
Terrell Leslie Hill
Nathan Kornblum
John D. Roberts Also won in 1954
Karel Wiesner Appointed as Charles Wiesner
Earth Science Perry Byerly Also won in 1928
Jeffery Earl Dawson
Konrad Bates Krauskopf
Engineering Howard Wilson Emmons
Geography and Environmental Studies Dan Stanislawski (nl) Also won in 1967
Mathematics Chieh-Chien Chang
Einar Hille
Isidore Isaac Hirschman, Jr.
John Myhill
Arthur Everett Pitcher
Raphaël Salem
Edwin Spanier
André Weil Also won in 1944
Medicine and Health Elvira Goettsch
Arnold Bernard Scheibel Also won in 1958
Molecular and Cellular Biology Halvor Niels Christensen
Corwin Herman Hansch Also won in 1966
Niels Haugaard
James Angus Jenkins Also won in 1944
James W. Moulder
Aaron Novick
Bodil M. Schmidt-Nielsen
Knut Schmidt-Nielsen
Harold Hill Smith
John Henry Welsh
Organismic Biology and Ecology William Steel Creighton Also won in 1951
Demorest Davenport Also won in 1960
Herbert Girton Deignan
Richard Marshall Eakin
Gordon Enoch Gates Also won in 1953
Carl L. Hubbs
I. Michael Lerner Also won in 1947, 1956
Jane M. Oppenheimer Also won in 1942
Dixy Lee Ray
S. Dillon Ripley, II
Ernest Edward Williams Also won in 1981
Physics Theodore H. Berlin
Richard Gildart Fowler
Leonard Norman Liebermann
Darragh E. Nagle
Dorothea Rudnick
Hertha Dorothea Elisabeth Sponer
Plant Science Daniel I. Axelrod
Norman Hill Boke
Harold Johnston Brodie
Clair Alan Brown
Marion Stilwell Cave
Herschel Lewis Roman
Rolf Singer Also won in 1942
Truman George Yuncker
Statistics Harold A. Freeman
Herbert Ellis Robbins Also won in 1975
Social Sciences Anthropology and Cultural Studies Joseph Benjamin Birdsell Also won in 1946
David Crockett Graham Also won in 1955
Richard C. Rudolph Also won in 1959
Economics Raymond Adrien de Roover Also won in 1949
John Thomas Dunlop
George Alexander Elliott
George Herbert Hildebrand Also won in 1957
William Orville Jones
Law Thomas Irwin Emerson
Political Science Hannah Arendt
Psychology Herbert G. Birch (id)
William C. H. Prentice
Sociology Henry M. Pachter
John Lawrence Thomas
Nathan Laselle Whetten

1952 Latin American and Caribbean Fellows

Category Field of Study Fellow Notes Ref
Creative Arts Fiction Edgar Austin Mittelhölzer
Fine Arts Antonio Frasconi Also won in 1953
José Vela Zanetti Also won in 1951
Humanities Architecture, Planning and Design Erwin Walter Palm Also won in 1953
Education Carlos Cueto Fernandini (es)
Iberian and Latin American History John Horace Parry Also won in 1956
Natural Science Mathematics José Adem Also won in 1951
Mischa Cotlar Also won in 1950
Medicine and Health Ephraim Donoso Also won in 1951
José A. Knaudt
Molecular and Cellular Biology Silvio Bruzzone Also won in 1965
Ranwel Caputto
Carlos Méndez Domínguez
Organismic Biology and Ecology Guillermo Arroyave
José Cândido de Melo Carvalho Also won in 1953
Zacarias de Jesús
Ronald Gordon Fennah
Frederico Lane Also won in 1957
Antenor Leitão de Carvalho Also won in 1947
Federico Medem (es) Also won in 1961
Francisco de Asis Monrós
Plant Science Jorge León Arguedas (es) Also won in 1951
Alicia Lourteig Also won in 1951
José Antonio Molina Rosito (es)
Maria Muntañola Cvetković Appointed as María Muntañola de Monró
Edgard Sant'Anna Normanha
Jorge Eduardo Wright
Social Sciences Anthropology and Cultural Studies Luis Duque Gómez (es) (nl)
Roberto Pineda Giraldo
Virginia Gutiérrez Pineda Giraldo (es) Also won in 1964
Douglas MacRae Taylor

See also

References

  1. "1952". Guggenheim Foundation. Archived from the original on 2005-07-21. Retrieved 2022-10-10.
  2. ^ "33 Guggenheim Fellowships awarded to New Englanders". The Boston Globe. Boston, Massachusetts, USA. 1952-04-21. p. 2. Retrieved 2022-11-08 – via newspapers.com.
  3. ^ "Grant for Dr. Freeman". Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. Norfolk, Virginia, USA. 1952-06-08. p. 86. Retrieved 2022-11-09 – via newspapers.com.
  4. ^ "Guggenheim Fellowships given three". The Voice. Lincoln, Nebraska, USA. 1952-05-01. p. 8. Retrieved 2022-11-09 – via newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Give Held Guggenheim award; Bonime, Shapiro win grants". Barnard Bulletin. New York City, New York, USA. 1952-04-28. p. 2. Retrieved 2022-11-09 – via newspapers.com.
  6. ^ "Guggenheim awards to two countyites". The Journal News. White Plains, New York, USA. 1952-04-21. p. 5. Retrieved 2022-11-09 – via newspapers.com.
  7. ^ "Canadians win Guggenheim Fellowships". The Montreal Star. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 1952-04-21. p. 5. Retrieved 2022-11-08 – via newspapers.com.
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  38. "Frederick Pottle". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
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  41. "George Kubler". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  42. "Visitors hear Dr. Tuttle on Medieval Art". Star-Gazette. Elmira, New York, USA. 1952-09-14. p. 19. Retrieved 2022-11-09 – via newspapers.com.
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  44. "Libby Tannenbaum". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
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  46. "Historical News and Notices". The Journal of Southern History. 19 (2): 265. May 1953.
  47. "Bennington man gets Guggenheim Fellowship". Rutland Daily Herald. Rutland, Vermont, USA. 1952-04-21. p. 2. Retrieved 2022-11-08 – via newspapers.com.
  48. Lawson, Faith (1952-05-10). "Out and About". El Paso Times. El Paso, Texas, USA. p. 6. Retrieved 2022-11-09 – via newspapers.com.
  49. "Donald M. Frame". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  50. "John E. Pfeiffer". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  51. "Scholar of German Art Dies". The Harvard Crimson. 1995-12-15. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
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  53. "4 from Jersey get Guggenheim honor". Courier=Post. Camden, New Jersey, USA. 1952-04-21. p. 8. Retrieved 2022-11-08 – via newspapers.com.
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  60. "Alan Clifford". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
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  73. "Leonard N. Liebermann". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  74. "Darragh E. Nagle". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  75. "Harold J. Brodie". Indiana University. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
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  84. "Carlos Cueto Fernandini". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
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  104. "Edgard Sant'Anna Normanha". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
  105. "Jorge Eduardo Wright". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved 2022-11-10.
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