FSU professor awarded prominent classical studies fellowship

Thu, 04/16/20
Jessica Clark is an associate professor in 糖心vlog鈥檚 Department of Classics.

A 糖心vlog faculty member has been awarded a fellowship from the .

Jessica Clark, associate professor in in the College of Arts and Sciences, will receive the fellowship for the 2020-21 academic year. Clark, a Princeton graduate and faculty member at 糖心vlog since 2013, specializes in the history of the Roman Republic.

鈥淭his fellowship is a vote of confidence in my project, and it鈥檚 hard to put the value of that into words,鈥 Clark said. 鈥淎s a historian, I spend most of my research time with books and documents, and it鈥檚 easy to lose sight of the big picture when you鈥檙e exploring the minutiae of a problem or question. A fellowship like this functions like a 鈥榥ote-to-self' 鈥 I should probably say an imprimatur 鈥 that there are relevant and rewarding results on the horizon.鈥

The foundation鈥檚 namesake, American banker and philanthropist James Loeb, founded the Loeb Classical Library in 1911. Upon his death in 1933, Loeb left the library and $300,000 to his alma mater, Harvard University. In his will, Loeb requested that profits from the library be used "for the encouragement of special research at home and abroad in the province of Archaeology and of Greek and Latin Literature.鈥 The Loeb Classical Library Foundation was established and today, the foundation awards fellowships to scholars to support research, publication, and other projects in the area of classical studies.

Clark will use the $35,000 fellowship to continue her research on 鈥渕ilitary tribunes,鈥 or junior officers, in the Roman army, and expects the results to form the basis of her forthcoming book on the same topic.

鈥淯nlike almost every modern military, Rome didn鈥檛 use a 鈥渞ank-based鈥 chain of military command, so the duties and experiences of these officers depended on their individual reputations, abilities, and circumstances 鈥 a poorly regarded tribune might not be given the authority to tell a soldier to tie his sandals; a competent one might find himself commanding a thousand men on a mission of key strategic importance.鈥

Clark penned her first book, 鈥淭riumph in Defeat: Military Loss and the Roman Republic,鈥 in 2014 and served as co-editor on 鈥淏rill鈥檚 Companion to Military Defeat in Ancient Mediterranean Society鈥 (2018) with Brian Turner of Portland State University. Clark said she was inspired to write her latest book on the Roman military tribunes after finding a lack of literature on the subject.

"There鈥檚 never been a book written about them, which I still find hard to believe, so there鈥檚 a lot we don鈥檛 understand about how this incredibly ad-hoc system could function without impeding the operational capacity of Rome鈥檚 legions 鈥 since we know they did pretty well for themselves.鈥

John Marincola, interim chair for the Department of Classics, said Clark is an internationally recognized rising star in military history and has developed new approaches and integrated older ones. The fellowship also solidifies the department鈥檚 profile as an excellent place to study classics 鈥 Clark is the fifth FSU Classics faculty member to receive the Loeb fellowship in the last 12 years.

鈥淭his award is a recognition both of her already considerable achievements and the promise of her future work. It is always gratifying when external funding bodies recognize the value of the people we have in our department,鈥 Marincola said. 鈥淒r. Clark鈥檚 award continues the long-standing tradition in Classics of winning prestigious national and international grants.鈥

For Clark, the fellowship is especially meaningful during this unprecedented time in history, where terms like 鈥渟ocial distancing鈥 and 鈥渟elf-isolation鈥 are now part of everyday vernacular and nearly all academic conferences and meetings have been postponed or canceled outright.

鈥淭hese days, it means more than it might usually. Like so many professional gatherings, the Society for Military History Annual Meeting was cancelled this spring 鈥 I was scheduled to present on this work and meet up with colleagues there, and so receiving this fellowship now helps affirm the sense of intellectual community that gets lost when we鈥檙e isolated.鈥