Luis Martínez-Fernández (born January 14, 1960) is a Cuban-born American historian, educator, and columnist, specializing in Cuban and Caribbean history and culture, education, and global contemporary history.[1][2] He is Pegasus Professor of History at the
University of Central Florida[3] and was a weekly nationally syndicated columnist with
Creators Syndicate (2019-2023).[4][5]
The focus of his books ranges widely across centuries from Key to the New World: A History of Early ColonialCuba to Revolutionary Cuba: A History to contemporary US and World events.[6] He served as chief editor of the multiple-award winning Encyclopedia of Cuba: People, History Culture.[7]
Early life and education
Martínez-Fernández was born in Havana, Cuba in 1960, when the Cuban Revolution was entering its second year. In 1962, his family went into exile, settling briefly in Miami Beach then relocating to Lima Peru, until 1970, when his family moved to Puerto Rico. He attended the
University of Puerto Rico (Río Piedras), where he studied under historians
Fernando Picó and
Andrés Ramos Mattei, earning B.A. and M.A. degrees in History.[8] In 1986, Martínez-Fernández left Puerto Rico to attend
Duke University, where he received a PhD in Latin American history (1990). His dissertation director was historian of colonial Latin America
John TePaske.
Career
Upon graduation from Duke, Martínez-Fernández joined the faculty of Augusta State University and later Colgate University, where he specialized in Caribbean and Latin American History. In 1994 he joined the
Rutgers University faculty with a joint appointment in History and the Department of Puerto Rican and Hispanic Caribbean Studies, which he chaired between 1998 and 2004.[1]
Since 2004, he has taught at the
University of Central Florida, where he directed the Latin American Studies Program and founded the Latin American Cultural Festival of Central Florida. In 2021 he was awarded a Pegasus Professorship, UCF's highest academic honor.[9][10]
Martínez-Fernández is also an award-winning columnist,[11] whose op-eds have appeared in the Christian Science Monitor, The Miami Herald, and the
Chronicle of Higher Education among other periodicals, and the online news venue The Globe Post.[12] In 2020, he joined
Creators Syndicate as weekly syndicated columnist.[4][5]
Recognition, awards, and publications
National Society of Newspaper Columnists, Second place Award (online category), 2021.[11]
Pegasus Professorship, highest academic honor conferred to University of Central Florida faculty, 2021.[3]