MacArthur Fellows Program
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The MacArthur Fellows Program or MacArthur Fellowship (sometimes nicknamed the "genius grant" ) is an award given by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation each year to typically 20 to 40 citizens or residents of the U.S. , of any age and working in any field, who "show exceptional merit and promise for continued and enhanced creative work." According to the Foundation website, "the fellowship is not a reward for past accomplishment, but rather an investment in a person's originality, insight, and potential." The current amount of the award is $500'000, paid in quarterly installments over five years. There have been 731 recipients to date. The MacArthur Foundation has distributed over $350 million to these recipients. The Fellowship has no application. People are nominated anonymously, by a body of nominators who submit recommendations to a small selection committee of about a dozen people, also anonymous. The committee then reviews every nominee and passes along their recommendations to the President and the board of directors. The entire process is anonymous and confidential. Most new MacArthur Fellows first learn that they have even been considered when they receive the congratulatory phone call - see NY Times Op-Ed by MacArthur genius Jim Collins for insight into the experience.
List of MacArthur Fellows
MacArthur Fellows organized by the year of their awards:
1981
A. R. Ammons , poet
Joseph Brodsky , poet
Gregory V. Chudnovsky , mathematician
Robert Coles , child psychiatrist
Shelly Errington , cultural anthropologist
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. , literary critic
Michael Ghiselin , evolutionary biologist
Stephen Jay Gould , paleontology
Ian Graham , archaeologist
John Imbrie , climatologist
Elma Lewis , arts educator
James Alan McPherson , novelist, writer
Roy P. Mottahedeh , historian
Douglas D. Osheroff , physicist
Robert Root-Bernstein , biologist and historian of science
Lawrence Rosen , attorney and anthropologist
Carl E. Schorske , intellectual historian
Leslie Marmon Silko , writer
Derek Walcott , poet and playwright
Robert Penn Warren , poet, writer, and literary critic
Stephen Wolfram , computer scientist and physicist[1]
John Cairns , molecular biologist
Joel E. Cohen , population biologist
Richard Critchfield , essayist
Howard Gardner , psychologist
John Gaventa , sociologist
David Hawkins , philosopher
John P. Holdren , arms control and energy analyst
Ada Louise Huxtable , architectural critic and historian
Robert Kates , geographer
Raphael Carl Lee , surgeon
Cormac McCarthy , writer
Barbara McClintock , geneticist
Richard C. Mulligan , molecular biologist
Elaine H. Pagels , historian of religion
David Pingree , Historian of Science
Paul G. Richards , seismologist
Richard Rorty , philosopher
Joseph Hooton Taylor Jr. , astrophysicist
Michael Woodford , economist
George Zweig , physicist and neurobiologist[2]
1982
Conlon Nancarrow , composer
Alfonso Ortiz , cultural anthropologist
Francesca Rochberg , Assyriologist and historian of science
Charles Sabel , political scientist and legal scholar
Ralph Shapey , composer and conductor
Michael Silverstein , lingust
Randolph Whitfield, Jr , ophthalmologist
Frank Wilczek , physicist
Frederick Wiseman , documentary filmmaker
Edward Witten , physicist [3]
1983
R. Stephen Berry , physical chemist
Philip D. Curtin , historian of Africa
William H. Durham , biological anthropologist
Bradley Efron , statistician
David L. Felten , neuroscientist
Shelomo Goitein , medieval historian
Ramon Gutierrez , historian
Bela Julesz , psychologist
William Kennedy , novelist
Leszek Kolakowski , historian of philosophy and religion
Brad Leithauser , poet and writer
Lawrence W. Levine , historian
Ralph Manheim , translator
Charles S. Peskin , mathematician and physiologist
Julia Robinson , mathematician
John Sayles , filmmaker and writer
Peter Sellars , theater and opera director
Adrian Wilson (book designer) , book designer, printer, and historian of the book
Irene J. Winter , art historian and archaeologist
Mark S. Wrighton , chemist[4]
Seweryn Bialer , political scientist
William C. Clark , ecologist and environmental policy analyst
Randall W. Forsberg , political scientist and arms control strategist
Alexander L. George , political scientist
Mott T. Greene , historian of science
John J. Hopfield , physicist and biologist
Sylvia A. Law , human rights lawyer
Robert K. Merton , historian and sociologist of science
Walter F. Morris, Jr. , cultural preservationist
A.K. Ramanujan , poet, translator, and literary scholar
Alice M. Rivlin , economist and policy analyst
Richard M. Schoen , mathematician
Karen K. Uhlenbeck , mathematician[5]
1984
George Archibald , ornithologist
Ernesto J. Cortes, Jr. , community organizer
Robert Hass , poet, critic, and translator
J. Bryan Hass , religion and foreign policy scholar
Robert Irwin , painter and installation artist
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala , novelist and screenwriter
Paul Oskar Kristeller , intellectual historian and philosopher
Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot , educator
Heather Lechtman , mateirals scientist and archaeologist
Michael Lerner (environmentalist) , public health leader
Andrew W. Lewis , medieval historian
Arnold J. Mandell , neuroscientist and psychiatrist
Matthew Meselson , geneticist and arms control analyst
David R. Nelson , physicist
Michael Piore , economist
Judith N. Shklar , political philosopher
Charles Simic , poet, translator, and essayist
David Stuart , linguist and epigrapher
John E. Toews , intellectual historian
James Turrell , light sculptor
Jay Weiss , psychologist
Carl R. Woese , molecular biologist[6]
Shelly Bernstein , pediatric hematologist
Peter J. Bickel , statistician
William Drayton , public service innovator
Sidney Drell , physicist and arms policy analyst
Mitchell J. Feigenbaum , mathematical physicist
Michael H. Freedman , mathematician
Curtis G. Hames , family physician
Shirley Heath , linguistic anthropologist
Bette Howland , writer and literary critic
Bill Irwin , writer and performance artist
Fritz John , mathematician
Galway Kinnell , poet
Henry Kraus , art historian
Peter Mathews , archaeologist and epigrapher
Beaumont Newhall , historian of photography
Roger S. Payne , zoologist and conservationist
Edward V. Roberts , civil rights leader
Elliot Sperling , Tibetan studies scholar
Frank Sulloway , psychologist (child birth-order research)
Alar Toomre , astronomer and mathematician
Amos Tversky , cognitive scientist
J. Kirk Varnedoe , art historian
Bret Wallach , geographer
Arthur Winfree , physiologist and mathematician
Billie Young , community development leader[7]
1985
Joan Abrahamson , community development leader
John Ashbery , poet
John F. Benton , midieval historian
Harold Bloom , literary critic
Valery Chalidze , physicist and human rights organizer
William Cronon , environmental historian
Merce Cunningham , choreographer
Jared Diamond , environmental historian and physiologist
Marian Edelman , Children's Defense Fund founder
Morton Halperin , political scientist
Robert M. Hayes , lawyer and human rights leader
Edwin Hutchins , cognitive scientist
Sam Maloof , Woodworker
Andrew McGuire , trauma prevention specialist
Patrick Noonan , conservationist
George Oster , mathematical biologist
Thomas G. Palaima , classicist
Peter Raven , botanist
Jane S. Richardson , biochemist
Gregory Schopen , historian of religion
Franklin Stahl , geneticist
J. Richard Steffy , nautical archaeologist
Ellen Stewart , theater director
Paul Taylor , choreographer, dance company founder
Shing-Tung Yau , mathematician [8]
1986
Paul Adams , neurobiologist
Milton Babbitt , composer
Christopher Beckwith , philologist
Richard Benson , photographer
Lester R. Brown , agricultural economist
Caroline Bynum , medieval historian
William A. Christian , historian of religion
Nancy Farriss , historian
Benedict Gross , mathematician
Daryl Hine , poet and translator
John Robert Horner , paleobiologist
Thomas C. Joe , social policy analyst
David Keightley , historian and sinologist
Albert J. Libchaber , physicist
David C. Page , molecular geneticist
George Perle , composer and music theorist
James Randi , educator
David Rudovsky , civil rights lawyer
Robert Shapley , neurophysiologist
Leo Steinberg , art historian
Richard P. Turco , atmospheric scientist
Thomas Whiteside , journalist
Allan C. Wilson , biochemist
Jay Wright , poet and playwright
Charles Wuorinen , composer[9]
1987
Walter Abish , writer
Robert Axelrod , political scientist
Robert F. Coleman , mathematician
Douglas Crase , poet
Daniel Friedan , physicist
David Gross , physicist
Ira Herskowitz , molecular geneticist
Irving Howe , literary and social critic
Wesley Charles Jacobs, Jr. , rural planner
Peter Jeffery , musicologist
Horace Freeland Judson , historian of science
Stuart Alan Kauffman , evolutionary biologist
Richard Kenney , poet
Eric Lander , geneticist and mathematician
Michael Malin , geologist and planetary scientist
Deborah W. Meier , education reform leader
Arnaldo Dante Momigliano , historian
David Mumford , mathematician
Tina Rosenberg , journalist
David Rumelhart , cognitive scientist and psychologist
Robert Morris Sapolsky , neuroendocrinologist and primatologist
Meyer Schapiro , art historian
John H. Schwarz , physicist
Jon Seger , evolutionary ecologist
Stephen Shenker , physicist
David Dean Shulman , historian of religion
Muriel S. Snowden , community organizer
Mark Strand , poet and writer
May Swenson , poet
Huynh Thong , translator and editor
William Julius Wilson , sociologist
Richard Wrangham , primate ethologist[10]
1988
Charles Archambeau , geophysicist
Michael Baxandall , art historian
Ruth Behar , cultural anthropologist
Ran Blake , composer and pianist
Charles Burnett , filmmaker
Philip James DeVries, insect biologist
Andre Dubus , writer
Helen T. Edwards , physicist
Jon H. Else , documentary filmmaker
John G. Fleagle , primatologist and paleontologist
Cornell H. Fleischer , Middle Eastern historian
Getatchew Haile , philologist and linguist
Raymond Jeanloz , geophysicist
Marvin Phillip Kahl , zoologist
Naomi Pierce , biologist
Thomas Pynchon , novelist
Stephen J. Pyne , environmental historian
Max Roach , percussionist and jazz composer
Hipolito (Paul) Roldan , community developer
Anna Curtenius Roosevelt , archaeologist
David Alan Rosenberg , military historian
Susan Irene Rotroff , archaeologist
Bruce Schwartz , figurative sculptor and puppeteer
Robert S. Shaw , physicist
Jonathan Spence , historian
Noel M. Swerdlow , historian of science
Gary A. Tomlinson , musicologist
Alan Walker , paleontologist
Eddie Williams , policy analyst and civil rights leader
Rita P. Wright , archaeologist
Garth Youngberg , agriculturalist[11]
1989
Anthony Amsterdam , attorney and legal scholar
Byllye Avery , women's healthcare leader
Alvin Bronstein , human rights lawyer
Leo Buss , evolutionary biologist
Jay Cantor , writer
George Davis , environmental policy analyst
Allen Grossman , poet
John Harbison , composer and conductor
Keith Hefner , journalist and educator
Ralf Hotchkiss , rehabilitation engineer
John Rice Irwin , curator and cultural preservationist
Daniel Janzen , ecologist
Bernice Johnson Reagon , music historian, composer, and vocalist
Aaron Lansky , cultural preservationist
Jennifer Moody , archaeologist and anthropologist
Errol Morris , filmmaker
Vivian Paley , educator and writer
Richard Powers , novelist
Martin Puryear , sculptor
Theodre Rosengarten , historian
Margaret W. Rossiter , historian of science
George Russell , composer and music theorist
Pam Solo , arms control analyst
Ellendea Proffer Teasley , translator and publisher
Clair Van Vliet , book artist
Baldemar Velasquez , farm labor leader
Bill Viola , video artist
Eliot Wigginton , educator
Patricia Wright , primatologist [12]
1990
John Christian Bailar , biostatistician
Martha Clarke , theater director
Jacques d'Amboise , dance educator
Guy Davenport , writer and critic
Lisa Delpit , education reform leader
John Eaton , composer
Paul R. Ehrlich , population biologist
Charlotte Erickson , historian
Lee Friedlander , photographer
Margaret Geller , astrophysicist
Jorie Graham , poet
Patricia Hampl , writer
John Hollander , poet and literary critic
Thomas Cleveland Holt , social and cultural historian
David Kazhdan , mathematician
Calvin King , land and farm development specialist
M. A. R. Koehl , marine biologist
Nancy Kopell , mathematician
Michael Moschen , performance artist
Gary Nabhan , ethnobotanist
Sherry Ortner , anthropologist
Otis Pitts , community development leader
Yvonne Rainer , filmmaker and choreographer
Michael Schudson , sociologist
Rebecca J. Scott , historian
Marc Shell , scholar
Susan Sontag , photographer, writer
Richard Stallman , Free Software Foundation founder, Copyleft concept inventor
Guy Tudor , conservationist
Maria Varela , community development leader
Gregory Vlastos , classicist and philosopher
Kent Whealy , preservationist
Eric Wolf , anthropologist
Sidney Wolfe , physician
Robert Woodson , community development leader
Jose Zalaquett , human rights lawyer[13]
1991
Jacqueline Barton , biophysical chemist
Paul Berman , journalist
James Blinn , computer animator
Taylor Branch , social historian
Trisha Brown , choreographer
Mari Jo Buhle , American historian
Patricia Churchland , philosopher
David Donoho , statistician
Steven Feld , anthropologist
Alice Fulton , poet
Guillermo Gómez-Peña , writer and artist
Jerzy Grotowski , theater director
David Hammons , artist
Sophia Harris , child care leader
Lewis Hyde , writer
Ali Akbar Khan , musician
Sergiu Klainerman , mathematician
Martin Kreitman , geneticist
Harlan Lane , psychologist and linguist
William Linder , community development leader
Patricia Locke , tribal rights leader
Mark Morris , choreographer and dancer
Marcel Ophüls , documentary filmmaker
Arnold Rampersad , biographer and literary critic
Gunther Schuller , composer, conductor, jazz historian
Joel Schwartz , epidemiologist
Cecil Taylor , jazz pianist and composer
Julie Taymor , theater director
David Werner , health care leader
James Westphal , engineer and scientist
Eleanor Wilner , poet [14]
1992
Janet Benshoof , attorney
Robert Blackburn , printmaker
Unita Blackwell , civil rights leader
Lorna Bourg , rural development leader
Stanley Cavell , philosopher
Amy Clampitt , poet
Ingrid Daubechies , mathematician
Wendy Ewald , photographer
Irving Feldman , poet
Barbara Fields , historian
Robert Hall , journalist
Ann Hanson , historian
John Henry Holland , computer scientist
Wes Jackson , agronomist
Evelyn Keller , historian and philosopher of science
Steve Lacy , saxophonist and composer
Suzanne Lebsock , social historian
Sharon Long , plant biologist
Norman Manea , writer
Paule Marshall , writer
Michael Massing , journalist
Robert McCabe , educator
Susan Meiselas , photojournalist
Amalia Mesa-Bains , artist and cultural critic
Stephen Schneider , climatologist
Joanna Scott , writer
John T. Scott , artist
John Terborgh , conservation biologist
Twyla Tharp , dancer and choreographer
Philip Treisman , mathematics educator
Laurel Thatcher Ulrich , historian
Geerat J. Vermeij , evolutionary biologist
Gunter Wagner , developmental biologist[15]
1993
Nancy Cartwright , philosopher
Demetrios Christodoulou , mathematician and physicist
Maria Crawford , geologist
Stanley Crouch , jazz critic and writer
Nora England , anthropological linguist
Paul Farmer , medical anthropologist
Victoria Foe , developmental biologist
Ernest Gaines , writer
Pedro Greer , physician
Thom Gunn , poet and literary critic
Ann Hamilton , artist
Sokoni Karanja , child and family development specialist
Ann Lauterbach , poet and literary critic
Stephen Lee , chemist
Carol Levine , AIDS policy specialist
Amory Lovins , physicist and energy analyst
Jane Lubchenco , marine biologist
Ruth Lubic , nurse / midwife
Jim Powell , poet and translator
Margie Profet , evolutionary biologist
Thomas Scanlon , philosopher
Aaron Shirley , health care leader
William Siemering , journalist and radio producer
Ellen Silbergeld , biologist
Leonard van der Kuijp , philologist and historian
Frank von Hippel , arms control and energy analyst
John Wideman , writer
Heather Williams , biologist and ornithologist
Marion Williams , gospel music performer
Robert H. Williams , physicist and energy analyst
Henry T. Wright , archaeologist and anthropologist[16]
1994
Joseph E. Marshall , educator
Carolyn McKecuen , economic development leader
Donella Meadows , writer
Arthur Mitchell , choreographer
Hugo Morales , radio producer
Janine Pease , educator
Willie Reale , theater arts educator
Adrienne Rich , poet and writer
Sam-Ang Sam , musician and cultural preservationist
Vincent Almendros , animator
Jack Wisdom , physicist[17]
1995
Allison Anders , filmmaker
Jed Z. Buchwald , historian
Octavia Butler , science fiction novelist
Sandra Cisneros , writer and poet
Sandy Close , journalist
Frederick C. Cuny , disaster relief specialist
Sharon Emerson , biologist
Richard Foreman , theater director
Alma Guillermoprieto , journalist
Virginia Hamilton , writer
Donald Hopkins , physician
Susan W. Kieffer , geologist
Elizabeth LeCompte , theater director
Patricia Nelson Limerick , historian
Michael Marletta , chemist
Pamela Matson , ecologist
Susan McClary , musicologist
Meredith Monk , vocalist, composer, director
Rosalin P. Petchesky , political scientist
Joel Rogers , political scientist
Cindy Sherman , photographer
Bryan Stevenson , human rights lawyer
Nicholas Strausfeld , neurobiologist
Richard White , historian[18]
1996
James Angel , astronomer
Joaquin Avila , voting rights advocate
Allan Berube , historian
Barbara Block , marine biologist
Joan Breton Connelly , classical archaeologist
Thomas Daniel , biologist
Martin Daniel Eakes , economic development strategist
Rebecca Goldstein , writer
Robert Greenstein , public policy analyst
Richard Howard , poet
John Jesurun , playwright
Richard Lenski , biologist
Louis Massiah , documentary filmmaker
Vonnie McLoyd , developmental psychologist
Thylias Moss , poet and writer
Eiko Otake & Koma Otake , dancers, choreographers
Nathan Seiberg , physicist
Anna Deavere Smith , playwright/journalist/actress
Dorothy Stoneman , educator
William E. Strickland , art educator[19]
1997
Luis Alfaro , writer and performance artist
Lee Breur , playwright
Vija Celmins , artist
Eric Charnov , evolutionary biologist
Elouise Cobell , banker
Peter Galison , historian
Mark Harrington, AIDS researcher
Eva Harris , molecular biologist
Michael Kremer , economist
Russel Lande , biologist
Kerry James Marshall , artist
Nancy Moran , artist
Han Ong , playwright
Kathleen Ross , educator
Pamela Samuelson , copyright scholar and activist
Susan Stewart , literary scholar and poet
Elizabeth Streb , dancer and choreographer
Trimpin , sound sculptor
Loïc Wacquant , sociologist
Kara Walker , artist
David Foster Wallace , writer and journalist
Andrew Wiles , mathematician
Brackette Williams , anthropologist[20]
1998
Janine Antoni , artist
Ida Applebroog , artist
Ellen Barry , lawyer
Tim Berners-Lee , inventor of the world wide web protocol
Linda Bierds , poet
Bernadette Brooten , historian
John Carlstrom , astrophysicist
Mike Davis , historian
Nancy Folbre , economist
Avner Greif , economist
Kun-Liang Guan , biochemist
Gary Hill , artist
Edward Hirsch , poet, essayist
Ayesha Jalal , historian
Charles R. Johnson , writer
Leah Krubitzer , neuroscientist
Stewart Kwoh , human rights activist
Charles Lewis , journalist
William McDonald , rancher and conservationist
Peter Miller , historian
Don Mitchell , cultural geographer
Rebecca Nelson , plant pathologist
Elinor Ochs , linguistic anthropologist
Ishmael Reed , poet, essayist, novelist
Benjamin D. Santer , atmospheric scientist
Karl Sims , computer scientist and artist
Dorothy Thomas , human rights activist
Leonard Zeskind , human rights activist
Mary Zimmerman , playwright[21]
1999
Jillian Banfield , geologist
Carolyn Bertozzi , chemist
Xu Bing , printmaker
Bruce G. Blair , policy analyst
John Bonifaz , election lawyer and voting rights leader
Shawn Carlson , educator
Mark Danner , journalist
Alison L. Des Forges , human rights activist
Elizabeth Diller , architect
Saul Friedländer , historian
Jennifer Gordon , lawyer
David Hillis , biologist
Sara Horowitz , lawyer
Jacqueline Jones , historian
Laura Kiessling , biochemist
Leslie Kurke , scholar
David Levering Lewis , biographer and historian
Juan Maldacena , physicist
Gay J. McDougall , human rights lawyer
Campbell McGrath , poet
Denny Moore , anthropological linguist
Elizabeth Murray , artist
Pepon Osorio , artist
Ricardo Scofidio , architect
Peter Shor , computer scientist
Eva Silverstein , physicist
Wilma Subra , scientist
Ken Vandermark , saxophonist , composer
Naomi Wallace , playwright
Jeffrey Weeks , mathematician
Fred Wilson , artist
Ofelia Zepeda , linguist[22]
2000
Susan E. Alcock , archaeologist
K. Christopher Beard , paleontologist
Lucy Blake , conservationist
Anne Carson , poet
Peter J. Hayes , energy policy activist
David A. Isay , radio producer
Alfredo Jaar , photographer
Ben Katchor , graphic novelist
Hideo Mabuchi , physicist
Susan Marshall , choreographer
Samuel Mockbee , architect
Cecilia Muñoz , civil rights policy analyst
Margaret Murnane , optical physicist
Laura Otis , literary scholar and historian of science
Lucia M. Perillo , poet
Matthew Rabin , economist
Carl Safina , marine conservationist
Daniel P. Schrag , geochemist
Susan E. Sygall , civil rights leader
Gina G. Turrigiano , neuroscientist
Gary Urton , anthropologist
Patricia J. Williams , legal scholar
Deborah Willis , historian of photography and photographer
Erik Winfree , computer and materials scientist
Horng-Tzer Yau , mathematician[23]
2001
Andrea Barrett , writer
Christopher Chyba , astrobiologist
Michael Dickinson , fly biologist/bioengineer
Rosanne Haggerty , housing and community development leader
Lene Hau , physicist
Dave Hickey , art critic
Stephen Hough , pianist
Kay Redfield Jamison , psychologist
Sandra Lanham , pilot and conservationist
Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle , artist
Cynthia Moss , natural historian
Dirk Obbink , classicist and papyrologist
Norman Pace , biochemist
Suzan-Lori Parks , playwright
Brooks Pate , physical chemist
Xiao Qiang , human rights leader
Geraldine Seydoux , molecular biologist
Bright Sheng , composer
David Spergel , astrophysicist
Jean Strouse , biographer
Julie Su, human rights lawyer
David Wilson , creator of The Museum of Jurassic Technology [24]
2002
Danielle Allen , classicist and political scientist
Bonnie Bassler , molecular biologist
Ann M. Blair , intellectual historian
Katherine Boo , Journalist
Paul Ginsparg , physicist
David B. Goldstein , energy conservation specialist
Karen Hesse , writer
Janine Jagger , epidemiologist
Daniel Jurafsky , computer scientist and linguist
Toba Khedoori , artist
Liz Lerman , choreographer
George E. Lewis , trombonist
Liza Lou , artist
Edgar Meyer , bassist and composer
Jack Miles , writer and Biblical scholar
Erik Mueggler , anthropologist and ethnographer
Sendhil Mullainathan , economist
Stanley Nelson , documentary filmmaker
Lee Ann Newsom , paleoethnobotanist
Daniela Rus , computer scientist
Charles C. Steidel , astronomer
Brian Tucker , seismologist
Camilo José Vergara , photographer
Paul Wennberg , atmospheric chemist
Colson Whitehead , writer[25]
2003
Guillermo Algaze , archaeologist
Jim Collins , biomedical engineer
Lydia Davis , writer
Erik Demaine , theoretical computer scientist
Corinne Dufka , human rights researcher
Peter Gleick , conservation analyst
Osvaldo Golijov , composer
Deborah Jin , physicist
Angela Johnson , writer
Tom Joyce , blacksmith
Sarah H. Kagan , gerontological nurse
Ned Kahn , artist and science exhibit designer
Jim Yong Kim , public health physician
Nawal M. Nour , obstetrician and gynecologist
Loren H. Rieseberg , botanist
Amy Rosenzweig , biochemist
Pedro A. Sanchez , agronomist
Lateefah Simon , women's development leader
Peter Sis , illustrator
Sarah Sze , sculptor
Eve Troutt Powell , historian
Anders Winroth , historian
Daisy Youngblood , ceramic artist
Xiaowei Zhuang , biophysicist[26]
2004
Guillermo Algaze , anthropologist and archaeologist
Angela Belcher , materials scientist and engineer
Gretchen Berland , physician and filmmaker
James Carpenter , artist
Joseph DeRisi , biologist
Katherine Gottlieb , health care leader
David Green , technology transfer innovator
Aleksandar Hemon , writer
Heather Hurst , archaeological illustrator
Edward P. Jones , writer
John Kamm , human rights activist
Daphne Koller , computer scientist
Naomi Leonard , engineer
Tommie Lindsey , school debate coach
Rueben Martinez , businessman and activist
Maria Mavroudi , historian
Vamsi Mootha , clinical molecular biologist
Judy Pfaff , American sculptor
Aminah Robinson , artist
Reginald Robinson , pianist and composer
Cheryl Rogowski , farmer
Amy Smith , inventor and mechanical engineer
Julie Theriot , microbiologist
C. D. Wright , poet[27]
2005
Marin Alsop , symphony conductor
Ted Ames , fisherman , conservationist , marine biologist
Terry Belanger , rare book preservationist
Edet Belzberg , documentary filmmaker
Majora Carter , urban revitalization strategist
Lu Chen , neuroscientist
Michael Cohen , pharmacist
Joseph Curtin , violinmaker
Aaron Dworkin , music educator
Teresita Fernández , sculptor
Claire Gmachl , quantum cascade laser engineer
Sue Goldie , physician /researcher
Steven Goodman , conservation biologist
Pehr Harbury , biochemist
Nicole King , molecular biologist
Jon Kleinberg , computer scientist
Jonathan Lethem , novelist
Michael Manga , geophysicist
Todd Martinez , theoretical chemist
Julie Mehretu , painter
Kevin M. Murphy , economist
Olufunmilayo Olopade , clinician/researcher
Fazal Sheikh , photographer
Emily Thompson , aural historian
Michael Walsh , vehicle emissions specialist[28]
2006
David Carroll (naturalist) , naturalist author /illustrator
Regina Carter , jazz violinist
Kenneth C. Catania , neurobiologist
Lisa Curran , tropical forester
Kevin Eggan , biologist
James Fruchterman , technologist
Atul Gawande , surgeon and author
Linda Griffith , bioengineer
Victoria Hale , CEO OneWorld Health
Adrian Nicole LeBlanc , journalist and author
David Macaulay , author /illustrator
Josiah McElheny , sculptor
D. Holmes Morton , physician
John A. Rich , physician
Jennifer Richeson , social psychologist
Sarah Ruhl , playwright
George Saunders , short story writer
Anna Schuleit , commemorative artist
Shahzia Sikander , painter
Terence Tao , mathematician
Claire J. Tomlin , aviation engineer
Luis von Ahn , computer scientist
Edith Widder , deep-sea explorer
Matias Zaldarriaga , cosmologist
John Zorn , composer and musician [29]
2007
Deborah Bial , education strategist
Peter Cole , translator /poet /publisher
Lisa Cooper , public health physician
Ruth DeFries , environmental geographer
Mercedes Doretti , forensic anthropologist
Stuart Dybek , short story writer
Marc Edwards , water quality engineer
Michael Elowitz , molecular biologist
Saul Griffith , inventor
Sven Haakanson , Alutiiq curator /anthropologist /preservationist
Corey Harris , blues musician
Cheryl Hayashi , spider silk biologist
My Hang V. Huynh , chemist
Claire Kremen , conservation biologist
Whitfield Lovell , painter /installation artist
Yoky Matsuoka , neuroroboticist
Lynn Nottage , playwright
Mark Roth , biomedical scientist
Paul Rothemund , nanotechnologist
Jay Rubenstein , medieval historian
Jonathan Shay , clinical psychiatrist /classicist
Joan Snyder , painter
Dawn Upshaw , vocalist
Shen Wei , choreographer [30]
References in popular culture
In the television show Will and Grace , during episode 6.17, Grace says to Will: "If the Macarthur Foundation gave out Evil Genius Grants, you would so win one."
In the Family Guy episode "Petarded ," Peter takes an IQ test to determine if he is eligible for a MacArthur grant, believing himself to be a genius ; however, the test results say that he is mentally retarded .
In the television show Friends , during episode 9.20 (The One With the Soap Opera Party), Charlie (Aisha Tyler ) says to Ross when describing her first boyfriend, "He did win the Macarthur Genius Grant though" in response to all of her boyfriends winning Nobel Prizes except one.
In the movie Little Miss Sunshine , Frank says that he attempted suicide after his rival was awarded a genius grant for his studies of Marcel Proust .
References
External links
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