Start Exploring the Publicly Engaged Humanities

What are the Engaged and Public Humanities? How do humanities professionals apply the knowledge and skills they gain from their training and from meaningful work experiences in different fields to address the most pressing issues facing society right now? The following blog entries are great starting points to learn about the possibilities Georgetown’s M.A. in the Engaged and Public Humanities opens for its graduate students.

Humanities for All

Humanities for All logo

Humanities for All is an initiative of the National Humanities Alliance Foundation that showcases higher ed-based publicly engaged humanities initiatives, which range from humanities research, teaching, preservation, and a wide variety of public programming. It presents a cross-section of over 2,000 undertaken over the past decade from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. This collection includes a wide range of humanities projects that engage with diverse publics as audiences and as partners.

Daniel Fisher-Livne, Research Affiliate at the National Humanities Alliance, wrote these three introductory essays, that delve into the different types of engagement of public humanities projects (Outreach, Engaged public programming, Engaged research, Engaged teaching, and the Infrastructure of engagement); the overarching goals toward which nearly all public humanities projects work (Informing contemporary debates; Amplifying community voices and histories; Helping individuals and communities navigate difficult experiences; Expanding educational access; and Preserving culture in times of crisis and change); and the importance of collaboration and partnerships to create truly engaged humanities projects.

MLA Connected Academics Blog

Connected Academics logo

The entries of the MLA Connected Academics blog present reflections and lessons learned from participants of the activities of the Connected Academics project, from exploring broad career paths, identifying transferable skills and considering diverse experiences as résumé-worthy, to reaching out to others for processional advice, conducting informational interviews and building community ties.

Georgetown, MLA and Connected Academics’ Reinvent PhD Project Blog (2015-2018)

Reinvent PhD project logo

Connected Academics is a national-scale project led by the Modern Language Association and funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, aimed at preparing doctoral students of language and literature to be influential in a diversity of academic and non-academic careers. Georgetown’s Reinvent PhD project focused on exploring ways to combine the strengths of scholarly training in the humanities with the experience of applying scholarly training in work environments beyond the university, expanding intellectual discourse beyond the university, by cultivating dialogues with public intellectuals and specialists in non-academic areas.

The entries of the Reinvent PhD blog exemplify these dialogues, covering broader ways of understanding humanities value in public life, the attitudes and skills cultivated in graduate education in the humanities, expanding pathways—personal and professional—for thinking about career options, advice for humanities professionals to master their job searches, and making public humanities work more inclusive of other cultural traditions.

Dispatches: the Publicly Engaged Humanities Respond to COVID

Text drawn on a street with chalk, with the words: "April distance brings May existence"

In this series of blog entries, written between March and May, 2020, the founding director and staff of the MAEPH Program provide insights on the value of the humanities in public life, particularly, how they can help us understand and address some of the experiences at the center of the COVID-19 pandemic: fear, isolation, lethargy, uncertainty… Click below to read the thoughts of founding director Kathryn Temple, program director Christine Tolentino, and project manager Justin Perry, and consider the value of the humanities in times of crisis.