|
The
foundation of Modeling Interdisciplinary Inquiry is the mentor
relation between senior faculty and our postdoctoral scholars.
In the talented younger faculty we have hired in recent years
and among our own dissertation students we have found both
the curiosity and the ambition to achieve a more integrated
way of thinking about their dissertation research than has
been common in traditional Ph.D. programs in the humanities
and social sciences. Such work has been recently conducted
under such rubrics as cultural studies and gender studies,
and research in these areas has often meant the integration
of social history with aesthetics, of demography with popular
culture, or economic history with cultural forms. Work on
Renaissance theater, painting, and authorship is now regularly
informed by the study of early modern economics, patronage,
and legal history. Further, contemporary literary study and
intellectual history are often supplemented and strengthened
by the insights of social psychology into gender identity
and gender formation, and fields like American colonial history
or early modern European history have been transformed by
the insights of cultural anthropology into the practices of
gift exchange, ritual, and performance.
These examples just touch the surface of the current climate
of interdisciplinary scholarship. Fundamental to all such
work is expertise in fields allied to but beyond the dissertation
student's initial scope of work and training. Since nothing,
to our mind, is more important to effective interdisciplinary
work than sustained inquiry into and training in more than
one traditional field of humanities or social sciences research,
we see the mentor relation between a senior faculty member
and the postdoctoral scholar as crucial to Modeling Interdisciplinary
Inquiry.
|