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52+ Works 1,630 Membros 24 Críticas 1 Favorited

About the Author

George L. Mosse (1918-99) was an influential historian, legendary teacher, and generous mentor. Over his career he authored more than two dozen books on the study of modern European cultural and intellectual history, the study of fascism, and the history of sexuality and masculinity.
Image credit: used by permission of the
Mosse Program in History
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Séries

Obras por George Mosse

Europe in the Sixteenth Century (1968) — Autor — 221 exemplares
The Reformation (1953) 73 exemplares
International Fascism 1920-1945 (1966) 28 exemplares
Confronting history : a memoir (2000) 27 exemplares
German Jews Beyond Judaism (1985) 19 exemplares
1914 the Coming of the First World War (1966) — Editor — 17 exemplares
Europe in review (1964) 15 exemplares
Literature and Politics in the Twentieth Century (1967) — Editor — 10 exemplares
the reformation third edition (1963) 3 exemplares
A estética no fascismo (1999) 2 exemplares
Police forces in history (1975) 1 exemplar
Image de l'homme (L') (1998) 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Degenerate Art: The Fate of the Avant-Garde in Nazi Germany (1991) — Contribuidor — 152 exemplares
Der homosexuellen NS-Opfer gedenken (1999) — Autor, algumas edições3 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome canónico
Mosse, George
Nome legal
Mosse, Gerhard Lachmann
Outros nomes
Lachmann-Mosse, Georg
Data de nascimento
1918-09-20
Data de falecimento
1999-01-22
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
Germany (birth)
USA (naturalized)
Local de nascimento
Berlin, Germany
Local de falecimento
Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Locais de residência
Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK
Haverford, Pennsylvania, USA
Educação
University of Cambridge
Haverford College (BA|1941)
Harvard University (Ph.D|1946)
Ocupações
historian
professor (History)
Relações
Laqueur, Walter (co-editor)
Tortorice, John (partner)
Organizações
The Journal of Contemporary History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (research historian in residence)
University of Iowa
University of Wisconsin-Madison
University of Cambridge
Cornell University (mostrar todos 9)
University of Tel Aviv
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Prémios e menções honrosas
American Historical Association's award for Scholarly Distinction
Leo-Baeck-Medal of the Leo Baeck Institute (1998)
Goethe Medal of the Goethe-Institut
Prezzolini Prize
Honorary doctorates from Hebrew University, Hebrew Union College, Lakeland College, and the University of Siegen, Germany

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George Mosse was a cultural and social historian best known for his studies of Nazism. He was born in Berlin. His family's media empire included the newspaper Berliner Tageblatt. He was educated at the Mommsen-Gymnasium and the elite Schule Schloss Salem boarding school. In 1933, with the rise of Nazi power, the family was forced to flee Germany and separated. His mother and sister went to Switzerland, his father moved to France. Mosse attended the Quaker Bootham School in York, England and then Cambridge University. In 1939, he went to the USA with his family and completed his undergraduate studies at Haverford College in 1941. He obtained a Ph.D. at Harvard University in 1946 with a dissertation on 16th- and 17th-century English constitutional history, subsequently published as The Struggle for Sovereignty in England (1950). Mosse joined the history faculty at the University of Iowa, where he focused on religion in early modern Europe, and published a brief study of the Reformation that became a widely-used textbook. In 1955, he moved to the University of Wisconsin–Madison and started to teach modern history. His book The Culture of Western Europe: the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, An Introduction (1961) which summarizes these lectures, also became a popular textbook. Prof. Mosse taught at the University of Wisconsin for more than 30 years, rising to became John C. Bascom Professor of European History and Weinstein-Bascom Professor of Jewish Studies, while also holding the Koebner Professorship of History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He also became a visiting professor at University of Tel Aviv and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. After retiring from the University of Wisconsin, he taught at Cambridge and Cornell University. Prof. Mosse was the first research historian in residence at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. He co-founded and edited The Journal of Contemporary History with Walter Laqueur.

Membros

Críticas

 
Assinalado
laplantelibrary | Feb 7, 2023 |
Grande studioso delle dittature e dei meccanismi da esse utilizzate per raggiungere e mantenere il potere, Mosse parte dalla fine del XVIII secolo per indagare la nascita e lo sviluppo di manifestazioni e riti di massa con i quali in Germania si sviluppò e prese forza il sogno di un popolo unito in uno stato unito. Analizzando fra l'altro la realizzazione dei monumenti nazionali, il ruolo delle associazioni sportive e di tiratori e l'organizzazione di grandi manifestazioni di massa nella Germania attorno al 1848, poi in quella di Bismarck e infine nella Repubblica di Weimar, Mosse individua tutti quegli elementi su cui il nazionalsocialismo poté contare per sviluppare una propria sistematica strategia di presa del potere. Un grandissimo libro.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
winckelmann | 2 outras críticas | Sep 22, 2017 |
https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2846481.html

I've been digging into the detail of sixteenth-century Irish history so much that I thought it was time to take a step back and think about the wider European context. This is an Open University textbook (probably written to accompany a course) which does what it says on the tin, looking mainly at Western Europe. There is half a chapter on the Ottomans, Russia and the Americas; if Ireland is mentioned, I did not spot it. There are a lot of good set-pieces - Charles V, Henry VIII, the Dutch Revolt, Florence, Luther, Calvin; it was an exciting time in Europe.

I took three main things from it. The first is that the religious situation in the rest of Europe was confused and unsettled for much of the century, so the English flip-flopping between religious regimes in the 1550s and the uncertainty of the Elizabethan settlement has a wider context of which all policy-makers and most international merchants would have been aware. The second is just how marginal Ireland was; the authors go a great deal into the developed economics of the cities, the surrounding countryside and the wider realms, but I suspect that Ireland had never really recovered from the Black Death two centuries before and was only loosely connected to the wider European economy. And the third is that this was an amazing period in the arts and sciences - the authors make the claim that in the sixteenth century, "more of the finest paintings and fresoes of Europe were painted, and in a greater and more contrasting variety of styles, than in any other similar period." I just had a quick look at Wikipedia; it lists over a thousand Italian painters from the sixteenth century. Europe would never look at itself the same way again.
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
nwhyte | 2 outras críticas | Sep 4, 2017 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
52
Also by
3
Membros
1,630
Popularidade
#15,774
Avaliação
4.0
Críticas
24
ISBN
158
Línguas
8
Marcado como favorito
1

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