UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Two Penn State faculty who have made distinguished contributions to the fields of literature and language studies and geography have been elected members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. They are part of the 2024 cohort of 250 new members representing 31 areas of expertise. They join the more than 14,600 members elected since the academy was established by John Adams, John Hancock and 60 other founders of the United States in 1780.
Penn State faculty elected to the 2024 class are P. Gabrielle Foreman, the Paterno Family Professor of American Literature and professor of African American studies and of history, and Karl S. Zimmerer, professor of geography and member of the ecology and rural sociology programs.
“Congratulations to Drs. Foreman and Zimmerer on this well-deserved recognition from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,” said Andrew Read, senior vice president for research at Penn State. “Conducting high-impact scholarship and research is part of Penn State’s DNA. Gabrielle’s work leading the Colored Conventions Project has preserved important and understudied events critical to understanding the American experience. Karl’s work in the field of agrobiodiversity has identified sustainable approaches to protecting crop biodiversity and addressing global hunger. Their accomplishments demonstrate our faculty’s commitment not only to providing our students with a world-class education but creating and disseminating knowledge for the benefit of our global society.”
With more than $1 billion in annual research expenditures, Penn State ranks among the top 30 U.S. research universities and is one of only three institutions in the nation accorded land-grant, sea-grant, sun-grant and space-grant status. This year’s members represent the College of the Liberal Arts and the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences.