"I love my job so much. There aren't many people who can spend their lives doing exactly what they like doing." Indianapolis News, 23 March 1985
Photograph from Ruth Lilly Special Collections and Archives
"I love my job so much. There aren't many people who can spend their lives doing exactly what they like doing." Indianapolis News, 23 March 1985
Photograph from Ruth Lilly Special Collections and Archives
One of the country's foremost experts on Mormonism, Jan Shipps, Ph.D. came to IUPUI in 1973 as a professor of history and religion. She is the author of Mormonism: the Story of a New Religious Tradition, a highly respected history of the Mormon faith. Shipps is one of the only non-Mormon scholars to have been elected as a member of the Council of the Mormon History Association.
Dr. Shipps' interdisciplinary approach to the fields of religion and history resulted in her interest in IUPUI's Center for American Studies, which was founded in 1975. In 1980, Shipps assumed directorship of the center and worked to strengthen its administration and national credibility. During this time, she helped establish the POLIS Center (1984) and the Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture (1989). Dr. Shipps' leadership also left a lasting impact on the Department of History. In the 1980s, she chaired the department's graduate affairs committee, which successfully petitioned to bring a graduate program in history to IUPUI in 1985.
Dr. Shipps retired in 1995 and currently works at the POLIS center as a research associate.
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