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3 Historians Win Fellowships


From left, historians Stephan Miescher, Anita Guerrini, and Hilary Bernstein have snagged fellowships to aid their research.


By Andrea Estrada

Three UCSB professors have been awarded UC President’s Research Fellowships in the Humanities. The fellowships are part of an initiative established in 1987 to encourage faculty research in the humanities across the University of California system.
This year’s recipients include Hilary Bernstein, associate professor of history; Anita Guerrini, professor of history and environmental studies; and Stephan Miescher, associate professor of history.
Bernstein is a specialist in Europe’s early modern period through the Renaissance, with a special focus on political, cultural, and urban history. She will use her fellowship to conduct research in Paris for a book that focuses on the burgeoning culture of history writing in 16th- and 17th-century France.
Guerrini, whose areas of interest include early modern Europe, history of science, and environmental history, will continue work on a book titled “The Courtiers’ Anatomists: Animals and Humans in Louis XIV’s Paris.” In it she will examine two anatomists at the end of the 17th century–Claude Perrault and Joseph-Guichard Duverney–and two anatomy projects on which they collaborated.
Miescher is an associate professor of history and specialist in Africa. He also received a fellowship from the prestigious American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) and chose to decline the UC President’s Fellowship.
He will use his ACLS stipend to conduct research in Ghana, West Africa, for his book, “Akosombo Stories: The Volta River Project, Modernity, and Nationhood in Ghana.” The book explores the Volta River Project and its significance in Ghana’s development as a nation.