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May 18, 2006 Contact: Scott Rappaport (831) 459-2495; srapp@ucsc.edu Georges Van Den Abbeele named dean of humanities at UCSCGeorges Van Den Abbeele, a scholar of French literature and philosophy with a wide expertise in public humanities programs and education, has been named the new dean of the UC Santa Cruz Humanities Division, effective July 1.
Since 1997, Van Den Abbeele has been the director of the Davis Humanities Institute, a campuswide unit established to foster and support humanistically oriented research by UC Davis faculty. He also directs the Pacific Regional Humanities Center, one of nine regional humanities centers established in 2002 through a National Endowment for the Humanities competition. The center generates, convenes, and brokers humanities research and programs for the states along the West Coast, including Alaska and Hawaii, as well as the U.S. Pacific Territories. Van Den Abbeele has also served as president of the Western Humanities Alliance, a growing consortium of 23 West Coast universities, since he was elected in 1999. He is currently a professor of French and Italian on the UC Davis faculty and was chair of the university’s Department of French and Italian between 1997 and 2001. Both before (1993-97) and after (2000 to present) his chair appointment, he also served as the director of the Humanities Program at Davis, where he engaged faculty from across the Davis campus in developing and teaching a wide range of interdisciplinary courses for freshmen and sophomores. “Georges Van Den Abbeele is an ideal choice to provide quality academic leadership and administrative direction for the UC Santa Cruz Humanities Division,” noted Chancellor Denice D. Denton. “His extensive background and experience will help the campus expand its interdisciplinary programs and ongoing innovative research in the humanities.” Van Den Abbeele will succeed Gary Lease, who has served as interim dean of humanities since September of 2004. “UC Santa Cruz is a wondrous exception in today's higher education--a distinguished research university that consistently maintains a high premium on learning for its own sake, whether through classroom teaching or scholarly inquiry,” Van Den Abbeele said. “I am extraordinarily proud and honored to continue building the most dynamic humanities faculty in the country.” Van Den Abbeele earned his B.A. from Reed College in 1976, and his Ph.D. in Romance Studies from Cornell University in 1981. He began his academic career at UC Santa Cruz, when he was appointed as visiting assistant professor of literature in 1981, and was promoted to associate professor in 1985. He joined the faculty at Ohio’s Miami University in 1986, before accepting an appointment in 1991 as associate professor at UC Davis. UC Santa Cruz’s Division of Humanities has three alumni MacArthur “Genius” recipients, 13 faculty Guggenheim Fellows, plus 27 faculty and 38 alumni who have received Fulbright awards. Its linguistics doctoral program was ranked in the nation’s Top Ten by the National Research Council, and the campus is internationally known for its groundbreaking Department of Feminist Studies. The division’s Dickens Project is additionally recognized as the premier center for Dickens studies in the world and is one of the leading sites for research on 19th-century British culture. Notes to reporters and editors: A photo of Dean Van Den Abbeele is available for download from the web at www.ucsc.edu/news_events/press/photos/ Reporters may obtain information about the compensation for this position by contacting Elizabeth Irwin, UCSC Public Information Office, at (831) 459-5190 or emirwin@ucsc.edu.
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