Field-Of-Study: Intellectual and Cultural History

Dagmar Herzog

Dagmar Herzog is Distinguished Professor of History and the Daniel Rose Faculty Scholar at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She has published widely in the history of religion in Europe and the U.S., on the Holocaust and its aftermath, and on the histories of gender and sexuality. She recently completed

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Thomas Kühne

Thomas Kühne is the Strassler Family Chair in the Study of Holocaust History and Professor of History at Clark University. Trained in Germany as a historian of modern Central Europe, he is committed to an integrative understanding of cultural history and explores how ideologies, symbols, and emotions affect, and are affected by, political institutions, social

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Hasia R. Diner

Hasia Diner is the Paul and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History at New York University, with a joint appointment in the departments of history and the Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies, and is the Director of the Goldstein Goren Center for American Jewish History. She has been a Lilly Fellow at

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David Caron

David Caron is a Professor of French and Women’s Studies at the University of Michigan. Born in Caen, France, he received his B.A. (1985) from the Université de Caen, then came to the United States to continue his education, earning his M.A. (1989) at West Virginia University and his Ph.D. (1994) at the University of

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Jacob Soll

Jacob Soll received a BA from the University of Iowa, a Diplôme d’Études Approfondies from the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris in 1995, and a Ph.D. from Magdalene College, Cambridge, UK.  He has taught at Princeton, and Rutgers University, Camden, where he is an associate professor. He has been a Luso-American Fellow

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Amanda Anderson

Amanda Anderson is Caroline Donovan Professor of English Literature at Johns Hopkins University. She is also the current Director of the School of Criticism and Theory, an international summer institute currently housed at Cornell University. Ms. Anderson received her Ph.D. in English from Cornell University and taught at the University of Illinois before moving to

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Bernard Wasserstein

Born in London, Bernard Wasserstein received his B.A. from Balliol College, Oxford University, in 1969, and his M.A. (1972), D.Phil. (1974), and D.Litt. (2001) from Nuffield College, Oxford. Before taking up an appointment as Harriet and Ulrich E. Meyer Professor of Modern European Jewish History at the University of Chicago in 2003, Mr. Wasserstein taught

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