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Birkelund Senior Fellowship
The Birkelund Senior Fellowship was endowed by John P. Birkelund, an investment executive and former director of the New York Stock Exchange. It has been awarded annually since 1999 to exceptional scholars from many disciplines, including historians, literary theorists, and philosophers.
While chairman of the board of trustees of the National Humanities Center from 1996–2004, Birkelund’s leadership propelled the success of the Center’s first major capital campaign, raising over $22 million and providing sixteen endowed fellowships for scholars in three years. Birkelund’s work as a trustee of other educational institutions focused on education and the interplay of history, diplomacy, policy and culture. He was, himself, an accomplished historian and wrote a biography of Gustav Stresemann, Chancellor and Foreign Minister during the Weimar Republic. Birkelund’s continued dedication to the academic community was recognized when he was elected a Fellow of the National Academy of Arts and Science.
1999–2000 | Robert D. Richardson, Jr. | Wesleyan University | An Intellectual Biography of William James |
2000–2001 | Thomas W. Laqueur | University of California, Berkeley | Death, Memory, and Modernity |
2001–2002 | Thomas A. Brady | University of California, Berkeley | German Histories in the Age of Reform |
2002–2003 | Bernard M.J. Wasserstein | University of Glasgow | Krakowiec: Jews and Their Neighbors in a Small Town in Eastern Galicia, 1772–1946 |
2003–2004 | Randolph Starn | University of California, Berkeley | Authenticating the Past: Archives, Museums, Libraries |
2004–2005 | Roger Chickering | Georgetown University | Total War in a Lovely Place: A Cultural History of Freiburg, 1914–1918 |
2005–2006 | Martin Jay | University of California, Berkeley | The Ambivalent Virtues of Mendacity: Lying in Politics |
2006–2007 | Christopher Browning | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Remembering Survival: The Factory Slave Camps of Starachowice, Poland |
2007–2008 | Nigel Smith | Princeton University | The State and Literary Production, c. 1500–c.1700 |
2008–2009 | Thomas L. Haskell | Rice University | Sensibility and Moral Capital in Abolishing the Slave Trade |
2009–2010 | Kit Fine | New York University | Metaphysics of Material Things |
2010–2011 | Dane Kennedy | George Washington University | Mapping Continents: British Exploration of Africa and Australia |
2011–2012 | Martin J. Weiner | Rice University | Liberalism and the British Empire |
2012–2013 | Stefan Collini | University of Cambridge | Nostalgic Imagination: Literary Criticism in English Culture |
2013–2014 | Harvey J. Graff | Ohio State University | Undiciplining Knowledge: Pursuing the Dream of Interdisciplarity in the Twentieth Century, A Social History |
2014 | William Newman | Indiana University, Bloomington | The Alchemy of Isaac Newton—A New Appraisal |
2015 | Derek Attridge | University of York | Poetry in Performance from Home to the Renaissance: The Middle Ages |
2015–2016 | Nancy Cott | Harvard University | World-Venturing: Cosmopolitan Self-Invention after the Great War |
2016–2017 | Annabel Wharton | Duke University | Manipulating Models: Diagnostic, Phenomenal, Architectural |
2017–2018 | Tera Hunter | Princeton University | The African American Marriage Gap in the Twentieth Century |
2018–2019 | Matthew Rubery | Queen Mary University of London | Reader’s Block: Testimonies of Neurological Reading Disorders |
2019–2020 | Giuseppe Gerbino | Columbia University | Music and Mind in the Renaissance |
2020–2021 | Jordynn Jack | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | Training the Brain: Rhetoric, Neuropolicy, and Education |
2021–2022 | Lorraine Daston | University of Chicago | Science Goes Global |
2022–2023 | Brian Lewis | McGill University | Greek to the Soul: George Ives and Homosexuality from Wilde to Wolfenden |
2023–2024 | Oleg Budnitskii | HSE University, Moscow | “The Red Army is Not Ideal”: Soviet Soldiers’ Violence Against Civilians, 1939–1947 |
2024–2025 | Julia A. King | St. Mary’s College of Maryland | Land as Archive: An Indigenous Landscape History of the Rappahannock People of Tidewater Virginia |