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UK History Professor Awarded Fellowship

 

By Jonathon Spalding

University of Kentucky history professor, Jeremy Popkin, was recently appointed a fellowship for the 2012-13 academic year by the National Humanities Center.

“The National Humanities Center is an ideal environment for scholars,” Popkin said, “It is set up to encourage the exchange of ideas.”

More than $1,500,000 in individual fellowship grants will allow scholars to take a yearlong leave from their regular academic duties to pursue research at the center, located in North Carolina. Popkin is one of 33 fellows who will have the opportunity to work on an individual research project and share their ideas in seminars, lectures and conferences.

“I’m looking forward to the rare opportunity to spend a year thinking and writing about a problem that has intrigued me since I was an undergraduate,” Popkin said.

Popkin will spend the year researching “how the same historical period that gave birth to the American Bill of Rights and the French Declaration of the Rights of Man also produced so many forms of ‘unfreedom,’ including an unprecedented expansion of the slave trade and the Reign of Terror.”

This year is the thirty-fifth class of scholars to be admitted since the Center opened in 1978, which also happens to be the same year that Popkin began his tenure at UK. During that time, Popkin has taught both graduate and undergraduate courses on the era of the French Revolution, French history and the Holocaust.

The Fellowship is awarded to humanistic scholars in the fields of history, literature, philosophy, anthropology, art history, classics, linguistics, musicology, religion and Scandinavian studies.