Jump to content

Paul Freedman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 128.36.7.171 (talk) at 01:20, 2 February 2021 (removed the word "prestigious" from Haskins Medal. Added another award won by that book. Took out in second line "medieval cuisine" and replaced it with "the history of cuisine especially in the United States). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Paul Freedman during a book reading in Oxford, Mississippi, 2016

Paul H. Freedman is the Chester D Tripp Professor of History at Yale University. He specializes in medieval social history, the history of Spain, the study of medieval peasantry, and the history of cuisine especially in the United States.

Freedman was awarded a BA at the University of California at Santa Cruz and an MLS from the School of Library and Information Studies at the University of California at Berkeley. He received a Ph.D. in History at Berkeley in 1978 and then taught for 18 years at Vanderbilt University before joining the Yale faculty in 1997.[1]

His 1999 book Images of the Medieval Peasant won the Medieval Academy's Haskins Medal and the [Grundler Award of the Medieval Institute]

Bibliography

  • The Diocese of Vic: Tradition and Regeneration in Medieval Catalonia, 1983
  • The Origins of Peasant Servitude in Medieval Catalonia, 1991
  • Images of the Medieval Peasant, 1999
  • Food: The History of Taste (ed.), 2007
  • Out of the East: Spices and the Medieval Imagination, 2008
  • Ten Restaurants That Changed America, 2016
  • American Cuisine: And How It Got That Way, 2019

Lectures

References

  1. ^ "Paul Freedman". Yale University. Retrieved 5 January 2019.