Generated by GPT-5-mini| Glenn Feldman | |
|---|---|
| Name | Glenn Feldman |
| Occupation | Historian, Professor |
| Employer | University of Tampa |
| Alma mater | University of Kansas |
| Nationality | American |
Glenn Feldman is an American historian and academic specializing in modern European history, Central and Eastern European studies, and Polish history. He has authored and edited books and articles on Polish politics, nationalism, antisemitism, and memory studies, and has held teaching and administrative positions in higher education. He is known for interdisciplinary work connecting cultural history, political movements, and historiography.
Feldman was born in the United States and raised in a context that led him to pursue studies in European history, with formative influences from scholars associated with University of Kansas, Harvard University, Columbia University, Stanford University, and other major research institutions. He earned his doctorate at the University of Kansas where he studied modern Polish history and Central European affairs, engaging with archival collections from Poland, Germany, Russia, and Austria-Hungary. His graduate training included mentorship from specialists in modern Poland and Eastern European historiography, situating him within scholarly networks connected to the Polish Institute of Arts and Sciences of America, American Historical Association, and regional research centers.
Feldman has held faculty positions at several institutions, most notably as a professor at the University of Tampa where he served in roles spanning teaching, curriculum development, and program leadership in history and international studies. His career includes visiting appointments and fellowships at research centers such as the Institute for Human Sciences, archives in Warsaw, and collaborations with scholars affiliated with the University of Illinois, Indiana University Bloomington, Yale University, and Princeton University. Feldman has participated in conferences hosted by organizations including the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies, the Polish Studies Association, and the International Association for Holocaust Research, and has contributed to academic committees linked to the National Endowment for the Humanities and regional cultural institutions.
Feldman's research focuses on twentieth-century Polish history, nationalism, antisemitism, and memory, often emphasizing the interplay of political movements, cultural production, and state institutions. He has examined topics such as the political dynamics of interwar Poland, the impact of the Second World War on Polish-Jewish relations, the historiography of the Holocaust, and postwar memory politics in Central Europe. His interdisciplinary approach draws on sources from archives in Warsaw, Kraków, Lodz, Berlin, and Prague, and engages with theoretical frameworks employed by scholars at Oxford University, Cambridge University, and Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Notable themes in his work include the role of intellectuals and political parties in shaping national identity, the legal and social status of minorities in modern Poland, and contested commemorations related to events such as the Warsaw Uprising, the Jedwabne pogrom, and postcommunist transitional processes.
He has collaborated with historians, sociologists, and political scientists from institutions including the University of Michigan, the London School of Economics, the Central European University, and the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity. Feldman's contributions have been cited in debates involving scholars like Jan T. Gross, Norman Davies, Timothy Snyder, Omer Bartov, and Michael Marrus.
Feldman is the author and editor of monographs and edited volumes that address Polish politics, antisemitism, and collective memory. His books and edited collections have been published by academic presses associated with universities such as Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, and regional publishers in Poland and the United States. Selected articles and chapters appear in journals and edited volumes affiliated with the Journal of Modern History, East European Politics and Societies, Slavic Review, Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and collections produced by the Polish Academy of Sciences.
Representative works include analyses of interwar party politics, studies of wartime violence and civilian experiences during the Second World War, and essays on postcommunist debates over monuments, museums, and public history initiatives. He has contributed chapters to volumes dealing with the historiography of Central Europe, the legal frameworks of minority rights in Europe, and comparative studies of nationalist movements across Eastern Europe and the Baltic States.
Feldman has received recognition for research and teaching from academic institutions and professional associations. His honors include fellowships and grants from organizations such as the National Endowment for the Humanities, academic awards bestowed by the University of Tampa, and research support from foundations connected to studies of Central Europe and Holocaust remembrance. He has been invited to lecture at universities and cultural institutions including the Jagiellonian University, the University of Warsaw, the Polish Academy of Sciences, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, and international conferences hosted by the European University Institute.
Category:American historians Category:Historians of Poland Category:University of Tampa faculty