Our Stories
Toward Infinite possibility
February 17, 2025
Share:
Spring Color: 2023
KU professor of anthropology receives prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship to work on second book
Ranjit Arab
Assistant Director of Communications | University of Kansas College of Liberal Arts & Sciences

Jennifer Raff is on a mission to make genetic research on human evolution something everyone can understand.

Raff, associate professor of anthropology at the University of Kansas, was recently awarded a prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship for her work on the history of human populations through sequencing the genomes of contemporary peoples and their ancestors.

The fellowship will allow Raff to work on her second book, a follow-up to her successful debut, “Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas,” which also explained her research in terms relatable to general audiences by combining science and storytelling. That book was listed for two weeks on the New York Times Best Sellers list for nonfiction titles.

As she works on her second book, tentatively titled “The Ancients,” Raff said one of her goals is to dispel the notion of biological races.

“I’m not only telling the stories about human evolution and genetics, but I’m also trying to focus more directly on the concept of biological race and what DNA shows in terms of how we are related and whether these biological races are actually a useful way of describing genetic variation. Spoiler alert: They’re not,” Raff said.

The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation created the fellowships for midcareer individuals who have demonstrated exceptional capacity for productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the arts and exhibit great promise for their future endeavors. Each year, the foundation receives approximately 3,000 applications and awards approximately 175 fellowships.

Arash Mafi, executive dean of KU’s College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, said Raff’s fellowship is a testament to the quality of scholarship being conducted across the College.

“Professor Raff is doing what we encourage all of our researchers to do, and that is to make their complex research findings accessible to general audiences,” Mafi said. “It’s a very effective way to have a better informed, better prepared citizenry.”

Raff said receiving the prestigious award will help take her research to the next level.

“I think it’s going to be career changing for me,” she said. “It is providing me with monetary support to travel to some of these sites in Europe, Asia and Africa, so I can actually study them and write about them firsthand. I’m really excited to see what will develop.”

Raff also plans to take a small camera crew with her to these important sites in evolutionary history, which in turn will improve the quality of education she provides to her students at KU, she said.

“We will be filming the sites and I’ll do a little bit of discussion at each one of these sites, and perhaps some interviews with the archaeologists and paleontologists that are conducting the research, and all of that will be folded back into my courses,” she said.

Raff said she is grateful to the Guggenheim Foundation and to many at KU for making her next book possible by freeing up her time so she can focus on research, writing and visiting the sites over the next two semesters.

“I want to extend my deepest thanks to my amazing colleagues and chair in the Department of Anthropology and the Indigenous Studies Program, the KU administration, the KU Center for Research, the Institute for Policy & Social Research, KU Center for Genomics and the College for all their wonderful support,” she said.

Ensuring the presence of preeminent educators, or Faculty Fellows, to mentor KU students is one of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences’ priorities in the current campus fundraising campaign with KU Endowment. For information on how you can help support the College, please contact Sheri Hamilton, College Development Team Lead, at KU Endowment (785-832-7454).

MORE STORIES

Two Blessings boost honors emergency fund
To attend the University of Kansas, Anne Blessing cobbled together funds from a number of sources: scholarships, awards, work-study.
Graphic guide makes music therapy accessible
Bill Matney’s 2019 article “A Knowledge Framework for the Philosophical Underpinnings of Research: Implications for Music Therapy” delved deeply into the subject for readers of the field’s top journal.
‘Bright Circle’ illuminates role of women in American intellectual tradition
Almost every American high school graduate has been introduced to Henry David Thoreau and Walden Pond. But how many have heard of Elizabeth Palmer Peabody and her Boston bookshop?