Sunday, March 14, 2004
Obit:W. J. Bouwsma, 80; Expert on Italian Historical Studies, Renaissance
The ANNOTICO Report

Bouwsma served as president of the Society for Italian Historical Studies, and the American Historical Assn.

As vice chancellor of Berkley, Bouwsma eased the way for more studies of ethnic history and culture in a period when traditional educators resisted the changes.
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OBITUARIES
WILLIAM J. BOUWSMA, 80, EXPERT ON RENAISSANCE, UC BERKELEY PROFESSOR, VICE CHANCELLOR.

Los Angeles Times
By Myrna Oliver
Times Staff Writer
March 13, 2004

William J. Bouwsma, a UC Berkeley scholar and author on the European Renaissance and its influence on modern culture, has died. He was 80.

Bouwsma, who taught at Berkeley from 1957 until his retirement in 1991, died March 2 at Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Berkeley of complications from an aneurysm....

All of Bouwsma's books on the Renaissance were widely praised. His 1968 work, "Venice and the Defense of Republican Liberty: Renaissance Values in the Age of the Counter Reformation," was greeted by the Journal of Modern History as "brilliant, provocative, multi-leveled" and "one of the most important contributions to Renaissance historiography in recent memory."

His more recent book, "The Waning of the Renaissance, 1500-1640" published in 2000, was praised by a Providence Journal-Bulletin reviewer: "From the title onward … this long-awaited work by the distinguished historian William J. Bouwsma is a series of surprises, some playful, some profound."

All of Bouwsma's books, that reviewer commented, illustrate an approach to the Renaissance that is "consistently intellectual, yet places the Renaissance intellect in a psychological and cultural framework that displays ideas like ripe grapes on a summer trellis, the moment of ripeness yielding suddenly to the moment of rot, sweet and sour a dream apart."

Bouwsma's other books included: "The Interpretation of Renaissance Humanism" in 1959; "The Culture of Renaissance Humanism" in 1973; and "A Usable Past: Essays in European Cultural History" in 1990.

Bouswma earned bachelor's and doctoral degrees from Harvard, was chairman of Berkeley's department of history in the mid-1960s and early 1980s, and served as vice chancellor for academic affairs from 1967 to 1969.

As vice chancellor of Berkley, Bouwsma eased the way for more studies of ethnic history and culture in a period when traditional educators resisted the changes.

"Ethnic studies appear relevant as they reflect a coherent ideal of a socially relevant education," he told The Times in 1969.

"They would prepare persons to go back to their communities and assume responsibilities for their own people. If this idea is not excessively politicized, it represents the first revival in a long time of undergraduate education with a social emphasis."

Bouwsma served as president of the American Historical Assn. and the Society for Italian Historical Studies.

He is survived by his wife of 60 years, Beverly...

William J. Bouwsma, 80; UC Berkeley Professor Was Expert on Renaissance
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/
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