Wayne S. Vucinich

Wayne S. Vucinich
Born June 23, 1913(1913-06-23)
Butte, Montana, USA
Died April 21, 2005(2005-04-21) (aged 91)
Menlo Park, California
Occupation Historian, Professor

Wayne S. Vucinich (June 23, 1913 - April 21, 2005) was an American historian and professor and a founding father of Russian and East European scholarship after World War II.

Life

Vucinich was born into a family of Serbian emigrants originating from Bosnia and Herzegovina.[1] He attended his early education in Herzegovina and Los Angeles.[2] He attended the University of California, Berkeley, earning a M.A. in East European history in 1936. He continued to pursue his doctoral studies between 1936 and 1941, also studying at Charles University in Prague.

After graduating, Vucinich joined the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) and worked as an analyst for the Balkans and the Soviet Union during the Second World War. In the course of his assignments, he visited London, Bari and Sofia. In 1946, after working in the State Department for a year, he accepted an offer to teach in Stanford's History Department, where he remained until his formal retirement in 1978.

From 1972 to 1985, Vucinich was director of the Center for Russian and Eastern European Studies. He also taught at Stanford's overseas campuses in Florence, Beutelsbach and Vienna. In 1977, he was appointed to Robert and Florence McDonnell Professor of Eastern European Studies at Stanford, a chair first established for Vucinich. He held it for many years after his formal retirement in 1978. Among his students were David Kennedy and Norman Naimark.

In his teaching and research, Vucinich covered a broad area of history, encompassing general European history, modern history, history of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Italy, the Balkans, Ottoman and Byzantine history, and nationalities of the Soviet Union.

From 1981 to 1982, he served as president of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, which established the Vucinich Book Prize in his honor in 1982. The Wayne S. Vucinich Book Prize is awarded annually for the most important contribution to Russian, Eurasian, and East European studies in any discipline of the humanities or social sciences published English in the United States in the previous calendar year.[3]

Selected works

References