Humanities of the Future: Perspectives from the Past and Present
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Abstract
It gives me great pleasure to introduce this essay collection which marks
the 50th anniversary of the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities
(IASH). Whilst the University’s own history is around ten times as long, fifty
years is an appreciable time for a research institute to be operating in the
current academic environment. Given this volume’s focus on ‘humanities
of the future’ it is interesting to observe how IASH’s own future has been
shaped by its past.
In what, even by today’s standards, looks like an innovatively crossdisciplinary
move, IASH was first proposed in 1968 by an extraordinary
natural scientist and by a leading humanities scholar: Professor Conrad Hal
Waddington (Professor of Animal Genetics) and Professor John MacQueen
(Professor of Scottish Literature and Oral Tradition). The following year
IASH was founded within the then Faculty of Arts at the University of
Edinburgh and in 1970, IASH hosted its first fellows and supported its first
conference: Scotland and the Enlightenment. The novelty of this proposal is
indicated by the fact that IASH is still Scotland’s only Institute for Advanced
Study (IAS) and one of the oldest IASs in the world.
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