Deborah M. Valenze | |
|---|---|
![]() in 2023 | |
| Born | 1953 (age 71–72) |
| Education | Radcliffe College |
| Employer | Barnard College |
| Known for | History professor and author |
Deborah M. Valenze is an American historian and professor known for her work inBritish cultural andeconomic history.[1] She is currently the Ann Whitney Olin Professor of History atBarnard College, Columbia University.[2] Her research and teaching have covered the impact ofpolitical economy on social thought in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the cultural history of economic life in Europe, the history of food and commodities, women’s work and industrialization, and the social history of religion.[3]
Valenze was born in Plattsburgh, New York, in 1953, where she attended public schools through high school.[1] At the age of eight, she began studying the violin, the start of a life-long passion for music.[4] She attendedRadcliffe College,Harvard University, where she majored inEuropean history.[5]
She graduated Magna cum laude in 1975 and spent the next year on a Radcliffe scholarship as an independent researcher at theInstitute of Historical Research in London.[4]
She earned her doctorate atBrandeis University in 1982 and taught there, atSmith College, and atWorcester Polytechnic Institute before becoming an assistant professor at Barnard College.[6]
Valenze joined the faculty atBarnard College, Columbia University, in New York in 1989.[7] She received tenure in 1995 and became the Ann Whitney Olin Professor of History in 2015.[4]
She was also a research associate at theCenter for European Studies at Harvard University and acting director of the Women’s Studies in Religion Program atHarvard Divinity School during the 1997–1998 academic year.[6] In 1998-99, she was a Fellow at theMary Ingraham Bunting Institute of Radcliffe College.[8]
Valenze was President of the North American Conference on British Studies from 2021 to 2023. She is a Fellow of theRoyal Historical Society in Britain. She is currently a Board Member of the American Friends of theInstitute of Historical Research, London.[9]
Her scholarly work has been supported by the Guggenheim Foundation,[10] the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Yale Center for British Art, the American Association of University Women, and the Fulbright-Hays Program.[11]
Valenze frequently participates in public lectures and academic panels on the cultural and historical significance of early modern Britain, the history of agriculture and the environment, and changing ideas about food production.[12] She is recognized by peers and reviewers for her interdisciplinary approach and her original contributions to the fields of political economy, food history, and gender studies.[13][14]
Valenze was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship in 2011.Milk: A Local and Global History appeared that same year.[15] A UK reviewer called the book a "fascinating history."[1]