Sir Ian Kershaw FBA FRHistS (born 29 April 1943) is an English historian and one of the most famous experts on Nazi Germany.
Early works
Kershaw started his job as a historian studying life in the Middle Ages. In the 1970s he changed to studying Nazi Germany. He worked with Martin Broszat's study on what ordinary Germans in Bavaria thought about Adolf Hitler and the Nazis. He then did studies and books of his own, including The "Hitler Myth": Image and Reality in the Third Reich in 1987. Kershaw is also well-known for writing a biography (life story) of Hitler. This was written as two books, one published in 1998 and another published in 2000.
Ideas
One of Kershaw's most important ideas is the idea of "working towards the Führer". (Hitler called himself the "Führer", a German word for "leader".) This is his idea about why the Nazi government caused World War II, the Holocaust and other mass killings. Kershaw believes that they cannot simply be blamed on just one person, and it is more important to study the rest of the Nazi government and German society.[1][2] However, unlike his friend Hans Mommsen, Kershaw does not believe that Hitler was a weak ruler. Instead, he thinks that Hitler was powerful but lazy. He believes that events like the Holocaust happened because Hitler's followers were working towards what they thought Hitler wanted them to do.[3]
Other writings
Kershaw has also written many other books and worked as an advisor to documentaries. In the 2010s, he also wrote books on the wider history of Europe in the 20th century.
References
- ↑ Kershaw, Ian Hitler 1889–1936: Hubris, W. W. Norton, New York, 1998, p. xx
- ↑ Lukacs, John The Hitler of History, New York: Vintage Books, 1997, 1998 p. 32
- ↑ Kershaw, Ian Hitler 1889–1936: Hubris, W. W. Norton, New York, 1998 pp. 531–533
Winners of the Wolfson History Prize |
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| 1970s | |
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| 1980s |
- R. J. W. Evans / F. S. L. Lyons (1980)
- J. W. Burrow (1981)
- John McManners (1982)
- Martin Gilbert / Kenneth Rose (1983)
- Antonia Fraser / Maurice Keen (1984)
- Richard Davenport-Hines / John Grigg (1985)
- J. H. Elliott / Jonathan Israel (1986)
- Rees Davies / John Pemble (1987)
- no award (1988)
- Richard Evans / Paul Kennedy (1989)
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| 1990s |
- Richard A. Fletcher / Donald Cameron Watt (1990)
- Colin Platt (1991)
- John Bossy / Alan Bullock (1992)
- Linda Colley / Robert Skidelsky (1993)
- Robert Bartlett / Barbara Harvey (1994)
- Fiona MacCarthy / John C. G. Röhl (1995)
- H. C. G. Matthew (1996)
- Orlando Figes (1997)
- John Brewer / Patricia Hollis (1998)
- Antony Beevor / Amanda Vickery (1999)
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| 2000s |
- Joanna Bourke / Andrew Roberts (2000)
- Ian Kershaw / Mark Mazower / Roy Porter (2001)
- Barry Cunliffe / Jerry White (2002)
- William Dalrymple / Robert Gildea (2003)
- Frances Harris / Julian T. Jackson / Diarmaid MacCulloch (2004)
- Richard Overy / David Reynolds (2005)
- Evelyn Welch / Christopher Wickham (2006)
- Christopher Clark / Vic Gatrell / Adam Tooze (2007)
- John Darwin / Rosemary Hill (2008)
- Mary Beard / Margaret M. McGowan (2009)
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| 2010s |
- Dominic Lieven / Jonathan Sumption (2010)
- Ruth Harris / Nicholas Thomas (2011)
- Susie Harries / Alexandra Walsham (2012)
- Susan Brigden / Christopher Duggan (2013)
- Cyprian Broodbank / Catherine Merridale (2014)
- Richard Vinen / Alexander Watson (2015)
- Robin Lane Fox / Nikolaus Wachsmann (2016)
- Christopher de Hamel (2017)
- Peter Marshall (2018)
- Mary Fulbrook (2019)
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| 2020s |
- David Abulafia (2020)
- Sudhir Hazareesingh (2021)
- Clare Jackson (2022)
- Halik Kochanski (2023)
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Authority control databases |
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| National | |
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