Faculty emerita supports early modern texts

Department of English professor celebrates retirement from 25-year career with endowment supporting early modern texts in the MSU Libraries.

portrait of jyotsna singh, a woman in glasses wearing a red-orange sweater and a white scarf

Faculty emerita supports early modern texts

Department of English professor celebrates retirement from 25-year career with endowment supporting early modern texts in the MSU Libraries.

In her 25 years at MSU, Jyotsna Singh, Professor Emerita, Department of English, has made certain that her students recognize the importance of primary source materials in their studies of English literature.

As she celebrated her retirement, she unveiled the Jyotsna G. Singh Endowment in Early Modern Studies: Race, Empire, and Global Connections, aimed at enriching the MSU Libraries’ collection of early modern texts within MSU Special Collections, and enhancing awareness of and engagement with the materials, which can give valuable historical context, even to the most contemporary social concerns and issues.

Inspired by her formative experiences in libraries—including the British Library and the University of Oxford’s Bodleian Libraries, among others—Singh recognizes libraries as magical spaces that connect scholars and communities.

Her endowment at the MSU Libraries will do the same, by providing funding for annual public events, exhibitions and classroom projects that spotlight the early modern period.

By facilitating research on topics like colonialism, trade, travel and early printed works, her gift will empower and inspire future generations of scholars and students. “To hold a book published 400-500 years ago is a magical moment,” she reflects. “Then to observe annotations and other marks on the paper, which tell an important history in itself.”

Leaders at the MSU Libraries are excited for Singh’s endowment, which comes alongside another important moment for the facility: the opening of the brand-new Stephen O. Murray and Keelung Hong Special Collections space. There, the vast collection of early modern materials that were so important to Singh’s career will have a new home, and thanks to her support, will be added to and cared for to serve the next generation of scholars and students.

“Giving and shaping this endowment has been an enriching journey for me,” Singh says. “I hope the events and activities will open up new and exciting journeys for students, researchers and the larger community.”

Her legacy will undoubtedly shape the future of the library and its role in exploring the complexities of history.