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PRESS CONTACT:
David Manning
212. 817.7177 or 7170
dmanning@gc.cuny.edu
April 2009
for Immediate release:
Leon Levy Center for Biography Announces 2009-2010
Fellowships
The Leon Levy Center for Biography at the CUNY Graduate Center, established
by a generous gift from the Leon Levy Foundation, has announced the 2009-2010
Biography Fellows. Each fellow will receive $60,000, writing space, library
privileges, and participate in a seminar given by Executive Director, Nancy
Milford.
The 2009-2010 Biography Fellows are: Wendy Lesser, award-winning
author and founding editor of the Threepenny Review; Mary Lisa
Gavenas, a fashion editor and author, who has lectured at Fashion Institute
of Technology; John Matteson, Associate Professor of English
at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY and author of Eden's Outcasts:
The Story of Louisa May Alcott and Her Father; and journalist Vanda
Krefft, who has covered the entertainment industry and social issues
for national publications.
The Leon Levy Center for Biography was established last year and aims to raise
the profile of biography within the academy and cultivate lively interdisciplinary
discussion about biography in our time. All applications were read by a screening
committee that identified 15 finalists for the fellowship. Finalists were then
read by a selection panel comprised of Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, former editor
of the Sunday New York Times Book Review; Daniel Menaker, former Senior
Vice President and Executive Editor-in-Chief of Random House; James Oakes, Graduate
Center Professor and recipient of the 2008 Lincoln Prize; and Joyce Seltzer,
Senior Editor for History and Contemporary Affairs at Harvard University Press.
Wendy
Lesser is the founding editor of The Threepenny Review and
is the author of eight books, including one novel, The Pagoda in the Garden,
and seven works of nonfiction, the most recent of which is Room for Doubt. Besides
writing for Threepenny about dance, music, theater, and other cultural
subjects, she occasionally reviews books for Bookforum, The New York Times
Book Review, and other publications. She has received fellowships and awards
from the American Academy of Arts & Letters, the Guggenheim Foundation, the
Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers, the American Academy in Berlin, the
Dedalus Foundation, and many other institutions and organizations. Her
current project is a biography of Dmitri Shostakovich that focuses on his 15
string quartets.
Mary
Lisa Gavenas was a columnist at ELLE and served as senior editor
at Glamour, In Style, and Mirabella; she writes for
the academic and popular press. Following publication of Color Stories: Behind
the Scenes in America’s Billion-Dollar Beauty Industry, she became
a consultant on the beauty industry. Gavenas’ biography of Mary Kay Ash
had its genesis in her writing the Mary Kay Ash entry for the American National
Biography published by Oxford University Press.
John
Matteson is an Associate Professor of English at John Jay College of
Criminal Justice, CUNY. His scholarship in 19th-century American literature includes
articles published in Leviathan, Streams of William James, and The
New England Quarterly. His first book, Eden's Outcasts: The Story of
Louisa May Alcott and Her Father, was awarded the 2008 Pulitzer Prize in
Biography. During his residency, Matteson will continue his work on The Lives
of Margaret Fuller.
Vanda
Krefft’s articles on the entertainment industry and social issues
have been published in magazines and newspapers, including ELLE, Redbook, Woman’s
Day, and the Los Angeles Times. She is currently at work on her
first book, a biography of Twentieth Century Fox founder William Fox, to be published
by HarperCollins. Krefft has received a Helm Fellowship from Indiana University’s
Lilly Library and a grant from the Ludwig Vogelstein Foundation. Her project
explores the life and times of the forgotten movie mogul whose contributions
to the art, technology, and business of film laid the foundation for today’s
global popular culture.
The Leon Levy Center for Biography
The Leon Levy Center for Biography was established in 2008 at the CUNY Graduate
Center by a gift from the Leon Levy Foundation. Envisioned as a hub for writers,
scholars, students and readers of the genre, the Leon Levy Center for Biography
commenced programming in the academic year beginning September 2008. The center
seeks to build connections between university-affiliated and independent biographers
working in print, film, visual arts, and new media and across academic disciplines.
Acclaimed biographers and CUNY faculty members Professors Nancy Milford and David
Nasaw are the center’s executive director and faculty director, respectively.
The Graduate Center
The Graduate Center is the primary doctorate-granting institution of the City
University of New York (CUNY). The school offers more than 30 doctoral programs,
as well as a number of master's programs. The Graduate Center is also home to
more than 30 interdisciplinary research centers and institutes and offers an
extensive array of public lectures, exhibitions, concerts, and theatrical events.
Further information on the Graduate Center and its programs can be found at www.gc.cuny.edu.
The Leon Levy Foundation
The Leon Levy Foundation, founded in 2004, is a private, not-for-profit foundation
created from the estate of Leon Levy, a legendary investor with a longstanding
commitment to philanthropy. The Foundation's overarching goal is to continue
the tradition of humanism characteristic of Mr. Levy by supporting scholarship
at the highest level, ultimately advancing knowledge and improving the lives
of individuals and society at large.
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