Religious Studies professor to receive 51³Ō¹Ļappās 2019 Paul ParĆ© Medal of Excellence
Dr. Fiona Black to be honoured during Convocation ceremonies
SACKVILLE, NB ā A 51³Ō¹Ļapp professor is being recognized with the Universityās pre-eminent faculty award at this springās Convocation ceremonies on May 13. Dr. Fiona Black is the recipient of the 2019 Paul ParĆ© Medal of Excellence.
The ParƩ Medal is presented annually to a faculty member who has exemplified outstanding teaching, research, scholarship, and/or creative activities, and who has an exemplary record of service.
āDr. Black is an active and respected scholar who is consistently bringing new ideas and knowledge to her research and teaching. She demonstrates excellence in all of the areas the ParĆ© Medal is designed to recognize,ā says Dr. Jeff Ollerhead, 51³Ō¹Ļapp Provost and Vice-President, Academic and Research. āOn behalf of the entire University community I would like to congratulate her on this latest, well-deserved honour.ā
Blackās areas of research span a broad range, from biblical reception history, to Caribbean hermeneutics, and gender and sexuality in Western religious traditions. Well-known and well regarded, she is an active scholar who has become one of the formative voices in new scholarly currents within her discipline.
āI was thrilled to learn that I had been awarded the ParĆ© Medal this year,ā says Black. āItās a great honour to have my work recognized in this way and to be included in the company of the previous winners, whose work I really admire and respect.ā
Black is currently working on a number of different research projects, including examining the way religion intersects with the cultural history of mental illness; the history of the Song of Songs (the Bibleās love poetry) in Western art, music, and politics; the role of the Bible in the Bahamasā history as a colony of Great Britain; and the role of the Bible in Indigenous residential school education.
In the classroom, Black works to create hands-on, interdisciplinary learning experiences not only for students but also for faculty members. She was awarded 51³Ō¹Ļappās Hebert and Leota Tucker Teaching Award in 2013, the Universityās top teaching honour and is a founding member of Research Partnerships for Education and Community Engagement Centre (R-PEACE) ā a centre for engaged learning on campus established in 2018.
Along with an active research program and teaching duties, Black has served as department head of religious studies for nine consecutive years, 11 years on the University Senate, and is has been a member of the University Planning, Research and Creative Activities, and Tenure and Promotion Committees, among others.