Peter Sahlins | |
Birth Date: | 26 April 1957 |
Nationality: | American |
Education: | Harvard University Princeton University |
Occupation: | Historian |
Father: | Marshall Sahlins |
Peter Sahlins (born April 26, 1957) is an American historian of France and Europe. He was a professor of history at the University of California, Berkeley, where he specialized in early modern France.[1] From 2006 to 2008 he was on leave at the Social Science Research Council as its Director of Academic Programs, where he directed the major fellowship programs and led a new environmental programming initiative.
Professor Sahlins completed his undergraduate degree at Harvard University in 1979. In 1986, he obtained his doctorate in history from Princeton University. Afterwards he taught at Columbia University and Yale University before joining the history department at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1989, where he has served widely on university and professional committees, was executive director of the France-Berkeley Fund (1994-2002) and founding director of the University of California's Paris Study Center and its constituent international programs. He is a former director of the Interdisciplinary Studies Field major at Berkeley.[2]
His father was Marshall Sahlins, a noted anthropologist.
The interests that form the bulk of Peter Sahlins’ work include the social and legal history of early modern France and Europe. He has written on a range of topics, including the formation of national identities and frontiers (Boundaries: The Making of France and Spain in the Pyrenées, UC Press, 1989); Forest Governance, Peasant Culture and Protest in the Nineteenth Century (The War of the Demoiselles in Nineteenth-Century France, Harvard University Press, 1994); State-Building and Immigration in Seventeenth-Century France (with Jean-Francois Dubost, Et si on faisait payer les étrangers? Louis XIV, les immigrés et quelques autres, Flammarion, 1999); The Premodern History of Nationality Law (Unnaturally French: Foreign Citizens in the Old Regime and After, Cornell University Press, 2004); and most recently on animals, 1668: The Year of the Animal in France (New York: Zone Books, 2017).