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SPEAKER
Professor of History and International Affairs, University of Aberdeen; Director, Center for Global Security and Governance, University of Aberdeen
When he first became a historian, Thomas Weber never imagined writing at any length about Adolf Hitler. So many great works of scholarship had been published about the leader of the Third Reich, he found it difficult to imagine that there was anything new or worthwhile left to say. However, as his research took him through archives and private collections in attics and basements on three continents, he started to see the flaws in our understanding of Hitler. Most notably, at a time of new authoritarian populism, new threats to democracy, and an unraveling of the globalization of our own times, he was no longer sure that we really knew how Hitler had become a Nazi.
Sponsors
- Jews in Modern Europe Study Group
- Politics Through Time Program, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Harvard University
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CHAIRS
Visiting Professor of History, Harvard University; Resident Faculty, CES, Harvard University; Co-Chair, Jews in Modern Europe, CES, Harvard University; Fellow, Royal Society of Canada; Fellow, American Academy for Jewish Research
Professor of Government, Harvard University; Resident Faculty, CES, Harvard University; Faculty Associate, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs; Faculty Associate, Institute of Quantitative Social Science