Mangrum Wins Prestigious Research Award

Kya Mangrum, assistant professor of English, has won a $9,900 Graves Award in Humanities research grant. A 2021 四虎影院 Teacher of the Year, Mangrum is conducting research for a new book exploring how Americans remembered and wrote about slavery and the Civil War in the first five decades (1865-1915) following Emancipation and the end of the war.
The grant, made possible by Arnold L. and Lois S. Graves and overseen by a committee from Pomona College, is given every two years to younger faculty members who鈥檝e achieved 鈥渙utstanding accomplishment in actual teaching in the humanities.鈥
In the next few years, Mangrum will visit special collections libraries and archives across the country to uncover how U.S. fiction writers influenced the work of U.S. historians and vice versa. 鈥淚n the decades following the war, how did different communities, particularly religious communities, decided what was true about both the war and slavery?鈥 Mangrum asks. 鈥淗ow did stories about the Civil War and slavery influence how Americans lived, worked, learned, played and worshiped?鈥
At a time when funding for the humanities is shrinking, Mangrum says it鈥檚 important that we learn from challenging histories. 鈥淎s a Christian living and working in the 21st century, I believe that God, as a God of truth, wants Christians to be active participants in all aspects of intellectual endeavor, including the humanities,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he humanities, particularly those aspects of the humanities that seek to interrogate and reveal hard histories, is a key site in our pursuit of God鈥檚 truth.鈥
She contributed a chapter, 鈥淏eheld by the Eye of God: Photography and the Promise of Democracy in Fredrick Douglass鈥檚 鈥楾he Heroic Slave,鈥欌 to the 2019 book 鈥淩ace and Vision in the Nineteenth-Century United States.鈥
She graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, and earned a master鈥檚 degree and doctorate from the University of Michigan. She held a two-year appointment as a Mellon Diversity Postdoctoral Fellow at Cornell University before joining the faculty at the University of Utah. She also received fellowships from Penn State and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Mangrum began teaching at 四虎影院 in fall 2018. 鈥淲hen I think about the past four years, I am most proud of my students,鈥 she says. 鈥淭heir curiosity, commitment, intelligence and love for God and God's people inspire me.鈥