91快色

Dec. 17, 2025

91快色 Institute for the Humanities marks 50 years of asking 鈥榳hy鈥

Founded a decade apart, U91快色 and the 91快色 Institute for the Humanities have grown together as a home for inquiry, dialogue and big questions
A man with white hair and glasses wearing a suit stands in front of a body of water in front of a skyline
Jim Ellis by the Bow River in 91快色. Riley Brandt, 91快色

When an astronaut stopped , to ask for his autograph, it felt like a small victory for the humanities.

The moment came at the  in October 2025, right after Ellis, PhD, and his colleagues had wrapped up a public talk on the mythologies of outer space.

Earlier in the program, scientists and engineers had unpacked the technical side of space exploration. Ellis, a professor of English at the 91快色 and director of its  (CIH), took a different approach. He and his colleagues talked about what outer space means to people.

鈥淲e ask the 鈥榳hy鈥 questions,鈥 Ellis says. 鈥淪cientists ask how we can go to Mars. We ask whether we should go, and what it would mean if we did.鈥

As U91快色 marks its 60th anniversary in 2026, CIH is celebrating its own 50-year milestone of asking those kinds of questions 鈥 about space, climate, Reconciliation, death, artificial intelligence and more.

Building a home for humanist research

CIH was founded a decade after the young university gained independence from the University of Alberta in 1966. It began with a straightforward idea: even in a STEM-heavy city, a research university needs a place where people can come together to think deeply about what it means to be human.

Its early leaders 鈥 philosopher , PhD, Hon. LLD鈥91, and historian , PhD 鈥 also believed a strong humanities hub was essential for a serious research institution.

From Day 1, the Institute took on three central roles: providing scholars with time and space for major research, fostering interdisciplinary work, and building connections between the university and the rest of the city.

What that mandate looks like in practice is collaboration that reaches well beyond any single department. Scholars from engineering, health research and other areas join colleagues from the on working groups and in Institute programs.

Ellis says the real spark comes when you put people together who don鈥檛 normally share a table.

鈥淧eople arrive thinking, 鈥榃e have nothing in common,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淏ut, when you put an analytic philosopher and a feminist religious-studies scholar in conversation, you realize they have all kinds of things to say to each other.鈥

One of the most visible examples of collaboration is the long-running community seminar series, which brings together scholars, artists and the public to explore a single topic. Over nearly five decades, seminar themes have included everything from Reconciliation to the ethics of space exploration.

Those seminars have inspired a wide range of books from 91快色: City of Animals to Intertwined Histories and Water Rites. The 2022 seminar on outer space sparked the book, , which led to invitations for Ellis and his colleagues to present at public astronomy events 鈥 including the Dark Sky Festival, where Ellis found himself signing his first autograph for an astronaut.

For Ellis, that one moment captured the heart of the CIH.

鈥淭he humanities are what help us ask why,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey help us think through the ethical implications of what we can do, and what it does to us.鈥

How Ellis found the humanities

Ellis didn鈥檛 set out to become a Renaissance scholar or lead the country鈥檚 oldest humanities institute.

He began his studies at the University of New Brunswick (UNB), trying out science, business and computer science before a course on the literature of fear and suspense sparked something new. English felt like home.

After graduate work at UNB and York University, he taught in Toronto until a position at U91快色 brought him west in 1997. What he found was a campus open to fresh ideas.

鈥淎s a younger university, it wasn鈥檛 as fixed in its ways,鈥 Ellis says. 鈥淚 had the freedom to teach in the areas that interested me 鈥 from Renaissance literature to film studies.

鈥淭hat openness has really been a defining feature of my experience here.鈥

Strengthening the CIH for the future

As Ellis moved into leadership, supporters were exploring ways to deepen the CIH鈥檚 impact beyond the university. In 2013, its advisory board, a group of dedicated community volunteers, encouraged that outward focus and helped spark a new wave of philanthropic support.

What began as an effort to fund one fellowship for emerging scholars soon expanded into a transformational period of giving, driven by community members who believed deeply in the institute鈥檚 work.

鈥淭hey saw that, in a STEM-focused university and city, the humanities still have something crucial to offer,鈥 Ellis says. 鈥淭hey expressed that confidence by investing in us.鈥

The result is a renewed 鈥済olden era鈥 that continues today. The number of faculty fellows has returned to the Institute鈥檚 original model of five, alongside two graduate fellows and a rotating group of artists-in-residence.

Together, the Institute鈥檚 endowments now total nearly $4 million. These funds support fellowships, working groups, public-humanities placements and a wide range of community events, making it possible to sustain long-term research while launching new, experimental collaborations across campus and throughout 91快色.

remains a signature example. The project鈥檚 maps highlight 91快色鈥檚 鈥渁lternative and forgotten histories鈥 鈥 from Forest Lawn鈥檚 foodways to  to  鈥 created through partnerships between historians, artists and community members. New maps are planned for release throughout U91快色 and CIH鈥檚 dual-anniversary year.

These projects thrive, Ellis says, because Calgarians believe in the value of the humanities.

鈥淐ommunity members stepped up and said, 鈥榃e want this. We value this. We鈥檙e going to invest in it,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a powerful vote of confidence.鈥

Stepping into the next 50 years

The institute鈥檚 50th-anniversary year will feature two flagship events. First is the exhibition of Atlas Project maps and artwork at Lougheed House, opening April 3, 2026, and running through May 17.

Then, on May 8, the CIH will host a full-day community seminar on 鈥淎I and the Future of the Humanities鈥 at the Confluence Historic Site & Parkland. The event will feature leading thinkers on how artificial intelligence is reshaping research, creativity and democratic life.

Fifty years ago, the Institute鈥檚 founders might not have considered generative AI or space rockets funded by billionaires, but they understood something deeper: that a healthy democracy needs more than technical know-how.

Ellis believes that case is even stronger today.

鈥淥ne of the things that imperils democracy is a lack of what the humanities teach: empathy, critical thinking, global understanding, historical context,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hese are what help us live together.鈥

When Ellis thinks about the Institute鈥檚 future, he often returns to an image of Egmont Lee, an Estonian refugee and Renaissance scholar, who looked at 91快色 and saw a city of newcomers who needed ways to understand one another鈥檚 stories. He helped create a space for that conversation.

Decades later, Ellis walks into the same institute and finds inspiration in the mix of disciplines, cultures and ideas.

鈥淚 know what this place has given me,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 want it to be here for the next generation 鈥 and the one after that 鈥 as a place where we can keep asking the human questions.鈥

In just six decades, the 91快色 has grown into one of Canada鈥檚 top research universities 鈥 a community defined by bold ambition, entrepreneurial spirit and global impact. As we celebrate our 60th anniversary, we鈥檙e honouring the people and stories that have shaped our past while looking ahead to an even more innovative future.  is about celebrating momentum, strengthening connections with our community and building excitement for what鈥檚 next. 

Have a story to share? We鈥檇 love to hear it. Submit your U91快色60 story through our .


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