In 2021, when Sara Guyer became dean of arts and humanities for the College of Letters and Science, it was a time of profound uncertainty nationwide for higher education — and for the humanities, in particular. To this day, university leaders across the nation continue to grapple with financial pressures, declining enrollment, and post-pandemic disruption by cutting costs, eliminating programs, and adopting other austerity measures.
But Guyer, who was reappointed today for a second five-year term as dean, has refused contraction, focusing instead on investment, growth, and cohort-building. She argues that the arts and humanities remain essential to public life; to understanding the effects of AI and technological change, democratic society, and global culture; and to human meaning itself — and that universities must invest in them accordingly.
Rejecting the pervasive narrative that places the humanities in a defensive crouch, Guyer instead has positioned them at the core of Berkeley’s excellence, drawing national recognition. Her vision during her first term resulted in successful interventions, including the recruitment of 50 faculty members, many in at-risk fields; a boost in graduate funding, faculty research support, and public-facing humanities initiatives; a rigorous communications campaign; new facilities, endowed chairs, and leadership positions; and more than $83 million raised in philanthropic support.
Together, these efforts — with growth and investment framing the vision — position the arts and humanities at Berkeley to lead the way in defying the so-called “death of the humanities.”
“Sara has been utterly transformative for the division,” said Stephen Best, director of the Townsend Center for the Humanities and professor of English. “Her accomplishments over the past five years have contributed to this success, but it is also the ethos she has established. Her approach to ‘say yes’ whenever possible has encouraged many in the division to think expansively about what the humanities can build, instead of just preserving. Our faculty and leadership feel seen and in partnership with the division.”
“Her insistence on investment has radiated beyond Berkeley, and we are known nationally at other institutions as bucking the trend,” Best said. “She has created a model for what ambitious, future-facing humanities leadership can look like in higher education today.”
