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Renaissance literature scholar wins top honor

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Photo: Margie Ferguson
The senate's highest accolade goes to Distinguished Professor Margaret Ferguson.

Margaret Ferguson, a distinguished professor of English at the University of California, Davis, is the recipient of the 2011 Faculty Research Lecture Award, given by her colleagues in the Davis Division of the Academic Senate.

The 69-year-old award, recognizing outstanding scholarly research, is the senate's highest accolade, and comes with a $1,000 cash prize.

The recipient also delivers the Faculty Research Lecture, with Ferguson's talk scheduled for Friday, May 27, on the topic: "Missing the Maidenhead: Cultural Debates About the Hymen."

The lecture, free and open to the public, will begin at 4 p.m. in Ballroom B at the Activities and Recreation Center. Seating is limited; for more information, contact Mary White, (530) 752-1696 or  mjwhite@ucdavis.edu.

Professor Ferguson is an extraordinary scholar, whose prize-winning publications and transformative co-edited scholarly texts and collections locate her at the very center of current developments in the study of early modern (Renaissance) literature, wrote colleague Karl Zender, professor emeritus of English, in a letter nominating her for the honor.

After receiving her bachelors degree in the history of art and English at Cornell, Ferguson earned her masters and doctorate in comparative literature at Yale.

She taught at Yale, Columbia and the University of Colorado, Boulder, before joining the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis faculty in 1997. She has held visiting professorships at 51勛圖窪蹋 Berkeley and Middlebury College.

She is the author of two books, more than 35 refereed articles and book chapters, and 15 reviews and other publications, and has edited or co-edited 11 books, among them the widely used "Norton Anthology of Poetry."

Her first book, Trials of Desire: Renaissance Defenses of Poetry, established her as a significant critic of Renaissance literature and helped her earn tenure at Yale.

That book was followed by Didos Daughters: Literacy, Gender and Empire in Early Modern England and France, in which she worked in three languages: Latin, English and French.

Zender, in his nomination letter, characterized Didos Daughters as a watershed in the study of Renaissance culture. The book won the Sixteenth Century Society's Roland H. Bainton Prize and the Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Book Prize, among other honors.

Fergusons scholarship also has been recognized with fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and, most recently, the American Council of Learned Societies.

The yearlong ACLS fellowship, one of the nations most prestigious, came with a $60,000 grant to support the writing of her new book, Missing the Maidenhead: Cultural Debates About the Hymen in the Early Modern Period.

"This is the book Ive been wanting to write for a while," Ferguson said. "I dont think I would have focused on this topic had I not been thinking about education for girls in the present and indeed, the education of my own three girls."

Ferguson and her husband, David Simpson, who holds the Needham Endowed Chair in English at 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis, are the parents of Susanna, 23, and twins Marianne and Christina, 14.

In her own youth, Ferguson explored journalism and considered a career with the United Nations as a translator.

But, inspired in part by the example of her teacher parents, she chose academia.

"Teaching and research go hand in hand, she said. Students push me to find out things that I dont know."

Ferguson received teaching awards at Yale and the University of Colorado. At 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis, she received an Outstanding Graduate Mentor Award.

Along with her scholarship and teaching, Ferguson has made major contributions to campus governance, chairing the Department of English from 2006 to 2009.

According to Zender, she helped to rejuvenate the department, by attracting outstanding graduate students and new faculty members and overseeing a thorough revision of the curriculum.

While her list of honors is lengthy, Ferguson said she is most pleased with her latest one.

"I am just so grateful that my colleagues would think of me and then put so much time and effort into my candidacy," she said.

History of the award

The Davis Sigma Chi club established the Faculty Research Lecture Award in 1941, honoring a faculty member whose research contributions have greatly enhanced human knowledge and brought widespread honor and recognition to themselves and the university.

The Academic Senate assumed responsibility for the award after 1951. The most recent previous recipients from the Department of English were Gary Snyder and Sandra Gilbert.

Media Resources

Claudia Morain, (530) 752-9841, cmmorain@ucdavis.edu

Margaret Ferguson, English, (530) 752-1160, mwferguson@ucdavis.edu

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