After the Enlightenment: Histories, Debates and Reinterpretations
Turin Humanities Programme 6th – 2025-2026-2028 research cycle
Published on Monday, December 15, 2025
Abstract
Fondazione 1563 is pleased to launch the sixth call for applications of the Turin Humanities Programme (THP) to award up to 4 two year fellowships for advanced studies on After the Enlightenment: Histories, Debates, and Reinterpretations. Candidates are invited to propose projects examining how the concept of the Enlightenment has been constructed, adapted, contested and (re)appropriated in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries—that is, after the historical period conventionally associated with it.
Announcement
Presentation
Introduction
Fondazione 1563 per l’Arte e la Cultura (hereinafter “Fondazione 1563”) has since 2013 supported research and advanced training in the field of the humanities.
In a wider effort to pursue this goal, in 2020 Fondazione 1563 has launched the Turin Humanities Programme, a research initiative that allows junior scholars to work on interrelated research projects under the guidance of especially appointed Senior Fellows.
Subject of the call
Fondazione 1563 is now pleased to launch the sixth call for applications to award up to 4 two year fellowships for advanced studies on After the Enlightenment: Histories, Debates, and Reinterpretations.
The Director of Studies for this programme (2026-2028) will be Elisabeth Décultot, the Director of the IZEA Interdisciplinary Centre for research on the European Enlightenment studies and Humboldt Professor for modern written culture and European knowledge transfer at the Institute of German Literature, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg.
Candidates are invited to propose projects examining how the concept of the Enlightenment has been constructed, adapted, contested and (re)appropriated in the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries—that is, after the historical period conventionally associated with it.
The project will focus on the diverse issues surrounding the construction of the concept of the Enlightenment during this period, potentially in connection with related notions such as civilisation, colonisation, Eurocentrism, public space, and secularisation (among others).
It will pay particular attention to the interplay between national, transnational, and global dimensions of the Enlightenment, privileging both comparative and interdisciplinary perspectives.
The subject potentially encompasses all disciplines within the humanities, including history, art history, cultural history, history of science, philosophy, European and nonEuropean literature, political science, and many other fields.
Details of the research framework can be found here.
Submission guidelines
Applications must be submitted online by filling in the form available here
Applications submitted by other means will not be considered.
For the application instructions please visit the following page.
Applications must be submitted by February 16, 2026 (12.00 PM CET).
For information and questions please email: info@fondazione1563.it
Applicants are invited to submit research projects of a maximum of 3000 words, plus bibliography. Projects are expected to engage with one or more aspects of the general research framework After the Enlightenment: Histories, Debates, and Reinterpretations.
In addition to the research proposal, applicants must submit their Curriculum vitae et studiorum and:
- an article-length piece of writing, published or unpublished, which demonstrates innovative thinking (written in English, French, German, Italian, or Spanish) and
- the contact information of two scholars familiar with the applicant’s work and willing to act as their referees (one of whom can be their PhD supervisor); only the referees of shortlisted candidates will be contacted by the Fondazione 1563.
Successful candidates will carry out their individual research projects under the supervision of the Director of Studies. They will also collaborate to the organization of activities such as seminars, conferences, exhibitions and summer schools, during which they will be invited to share their research projects with a wider community of academics as well as students and the general public.
Eligible applications
- The call is open to applicants holding a doctorate in the Humanities.
- Applicants who will be awarded their doctoral title before 30 September, 2026 are also eligible to apply. Applicants should normally be within 7 years of the award of their Ph.D.
- They must be fluent in English, both spoken and written. English will be the working language of THP.
- There are no nationality requirements.
- Fondazione 1563 encourages applications from scholars of all backgrounds. We welcome diversity and are committed to creating an inclusive working environment.
Fellowship grants
Each of the 4 Fellowships consists of an overall grant of € 60.000 (before taxes) to be paid according to the terms and conditions available here.
The grant covers a period of two years, from November 1, 2026 to October 31, 2028.
These grants may not be held in conjunction with any other award.
Fellows will be required to reside in Turin for at least seven months per calendar year. All the activities of the programme will take place in person, and the presence of the fellows is expected.
If a fellow is awarded any other grant during the THP fellowship, Fondazione 1563 reserves the right to withdraw and cancel the remaining part of the grant to be disbursed.
For any further information on the grants please refer to the THP Terms and Conditions of
Grant on the page of Fondazione 1563.
Scientific Committee
The Scientific Committee of the Turin Humanities Programme, that will evaluate eligible applications, is made of:
- Prof. Elisabeth Décultot, the Director of the IZEA Interdisciplinary Centre for European Enlightenment Studies and Humboldt Professor for Modern Written Culture and European Knowledge Transfer at the Institute of German Literature, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg
- Jill Burke, Professor of Renaissance Visual and Material Cultures at the University of Edinburgh
- Vincenzo Ferrone, former Professor of History, University of Torino
- Nicholas Cronk, Director of the Voltaire Foundation, University of Oxford
- Serena Ferente, Professor of Medieval History in the History Department of the University of Amsterdam
- Nino Luraghi, Professor of Ancient (Greek) History at the University of Oxford
- Sophus Reinert, Professor of Business Administration and of History in the Business, Government, and the International Economy Unit at Harvard Business School and in the History Department and Harvard University.
Subjects
- Modern (Main category)
- Society > Science studies > History of science
- Mind and language > Thought > Philosophy
- Periods > Modern > Nineteenth century
- Mind and language > Thought > Intellectual history
- Mind and language > Language > Literature
- Mind and language > Representation > History of art
- Periods > Modern > Twentieth century
Places
- Turin, Italian Republic
Date(s)
- Monday, February 16, 2026
Attached files
Keywords
- enlightenment, intellectual idea, global history
Reference Urls
Information source
- Virginia Ciccone
courriel : virginia [dot] ciccone [at] fondazione1563 [dot] it
License
This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0 International - CC BY 4.0 .
To cite this announcement
Elisabeth Decultot, « After the Enlightenment: Histories, Debates and Reinterpretations », Scholarship, prize and job offer, Calenda, Published on Monday, December 15, 2025, https://doi.org/10.58079/15cdw

