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Meet Pitt鈥檚 first Berlin Prize recipient

A portrait of Michael Meyer

English Professor Michael Meyer won a 2023-24 Berlin Prize Fellowship 鈥 and became the first Pitt faculty member to receive the award.

Meyer, who teaches in the Writing Program in Pitt鈥檚 Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, will receive support and resources from the The American Academy in Berlin as he works on his book 鈥淭aiwan Rising: Biography of a Modern Nation,鈥 which will explore the country鈥檚 history through reporting, archival research and the perspectives of Taiwanese residents.

While in Berlin, the electus faculty fellow of the David C. Frederick Honors College will interview European academics and policymakers on the history of Taiwan鈥檚 international relations. These experts, he said, 鈥渉ave studied or lived in a divided nation, where families were torn asunder by ideology and geopolitics.鈥

As part of the fellowship, the writing professor will work among about a dozen U.S.-based writers, composers and artists to provide lectures, readings and performances to German audiences during the spring semester.

Meyer has authored several books on topics ranging from U.S. history to East Asian studies. His most recent project, 鈥淎 Dirty, Filthy Book: Annie Besant v. the Victorians over Sex and the Subjugation of Women,鈥 is set to be published by Penguin Books UK and Harvard 黑料吃瓜网 Press in 2024. His previous works include 鈥淏enjamin Franklin鈥檚 Last Bet: The Favorite Founder鈥檚 Divisive Death, Enduring Afterlife, and Blueprint for American Prosperity鈥 (HarperCollins, 2022) and 鈥淭he Road to Sleeping Dragon: Learning China from the Ground Up鈥澨(Bloomsbury Publishing, 2017).

Meyer is also a recipient of the 2023 Chancellor鈥檚 Distinguished Teaching Award and is a Fulbright scholar, Guggenheim fellow and Whiting Award winner.

鈥 Donovan Harrell, photo courtesy of Michael Meyer