Three Penn Arts and Sciences Professors Awarded 2016 Guggenheim Fellowships

Penn Arts and Sciences' Diana Mutz, Samuel A. Stouffer Chair in Political Science and Communication; Timothy Rommen, professor of music and Africana studies; and Joseph Subotnik, associate professor of chemistry, have won 2016 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowships. They are among 178 scholars, artists and scientists selected from nearly 3,000 applicants from the United States and Canada.

The new fellows were chosen on the basis of prior achievement and exceptional promise.

Mutz, who has dual appointments in Penn Arts and Sciences and the Annenberg School for Communication, will use her Guggenheim in conjunction with her fall sabbatical so that she can work on a study of American attitudes toward globalization over the next academic year.

“The central focus of this project,” said Mutz, “is the social psychology underlying the formation of attitudes toward globalization. Given that mass attitudes toward globalization are affected very little by economic self-interest, how do people form their views about their own country’s relationship with the rest of the world?”

Mutz teaches and does research on public opinion, political psychology and mass political behavior, with an emphasis on political communication. She serves as the director of the Institute for the Study of Citizens and Politics, a non-partisan research institute at Penn, whose purpose is to promote research on the many ways in which citizens interact with the political world.

Rommen specializes in the music of the Caribbean with research interests that include folk and popular sacred music, popular music, critical theory, ethics, tourism, diaspora, and the intellectual history of ethnomusicology. He will use his Guggenheim to complete a book, Sounding a Borderless Caribbean: The Creole Geographies of Dominica’s Popular Music.

"Cadence-lypso and bouyon are Dominican genres that have shaped the sound of popular music throughout the English- and French-speaking Caribbean since the 1970s, but very few people have written about or engaged with these sounds. The Commonwealth of Dominica more generally remains marginal within academic inquiry in the region,” Rommen said. “Rethinking centers and peripheries has been a major part of my intellectual project throughout my career, and the popular musics of Dominica offer me an opportunity to critically engage with these relations in a small place that is actively rethinking the whole region through sound.”

A theoretical chemist, Subotnik will use his award to further fundamental understanding of electrochemistry, the study of chemical reactions that involve the transfer of electrons at metal surfaces. These reactions are critical to the operation of catalysts, batteries, photovoltaic cells, and many other energy-related devices.

“Electrochemistry is probably the nastiest subject you can find in the physical sciences,” Subotnik said. “It’s on the borders of physics, chemistry, materials science, and engineering. In the back of our heads, we have a big picture understanding of what’s going on in electrochemical reactions. But there’s no microscopic understanding and that’s really the goal here. If we understand what individual atoms are doing, then you can design better, more efficient catalysts and batteries.”   

Subotnik will collaborate with Stanford University’s Todd Martinez, as well as other theorists there, to make faster, more detailed computer simulations of these reaction dynamics. 

More information about the 2016 Guggenheim Fellows is available here.

Arts & Sciences News

Wale Adebanwi and Deborah A. Thomas Named 2024 Guggenheim Fellows

The award is designed to allow independent work at the highest level under “the freest possible conditions.”

View Article >
2024 College of Arts & Sciences Graduation Speakers

James “Jim” Johnson, C’74, L’77, LPS ’21, a School of Arts and Sciences Board of Advisors member, and student speaker Katie Volpert, C’24, will address the Class of 2024 Sunday May 19 on Franklin Field.

View Article >
Undergraduate and Graduate Students Honored as 2024 Dean’s Scholars

This honor is presented annually to students who exhibit exceptional academic performance and intellectual promise.

View Article >
Azuma and Hart Named Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professors of American History

Eiichiro Azuma specializes in Asian American and transpacific history, while Emma Hart teaches and researches the history of early North America, the Atlantic World, and early modern Britain between 1500 and 1800.

View Article >
Arts & Sciences Students Honored during 37th Annual Women of Color Day

Sade Taiwo, C’25, and Kyndall Nicholas, a Ph.D. candidate in neuroscience, were honored for their work.

View Article >
Nine College Students and Alums Named Thouron Scholars; Will Pursue Graduate Studies in the U.K.

The Scholars are six seniors and three recent graduates whose majors range from neuroscience to communication.

View Article >