- Arno J. Mayer
Arno Joseph Mayer (
June 19 ,1926 -) isLuxembourg -born American historian of modern Europe,diplomatic history , andthe Holocaust . A self-proclaimed "left dissident Marxist", Mayer's major interests are in modernization theory and what he calls "The Thirty Years' Crisis" between 1914 and 1945 [Perry, Matt "Mayer, Arno J." pages 786-787 from "The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing" page 786.] .Mayer received his education at the
City College of New York andYale University . He has been professor atWesleyan University (1952-1953),Brandeis University (1954-1958),Harvard University (1958-1961) andPrinceton University (1961-) [Perry, Matt "Mayer, Arno J." pages 786-787 from "The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing" page 787.] . He is also a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.In Mayer's view, Europe was characterized in the 19th century by rapid modernization in the economic field by industrialization and retardation in the political field [Perry, Matt "Mayer, Arno J." pages 786-787 from "The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing" page 786.] . In particular, Mayer feels that the aristocracy in all of the European countries held far too much power, and it was their efforts to keep power that led to
World War I , the rise offascism ,World War II , andthe Holocaust [Perry, Matt "Mayer, Arno J." pages 786-787 from "The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing" page 786.] . Mayer sees the Holocaust, or the "Judocide" as Mayer calls it as primarily an expression ofanti-communism and argues in "Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?" thatAdolf Hitler only ordered the Holocaust in December 1941, as gesture of despair when it became clear that theWehrmacht could not takeMoscow , hence ensuringNazi Germany 's defeat at the hands of theSoviet Union [Perry, Matt "Mayer, Arno J." pages 786-787 from "The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing" pages 786-787.] .Many have criticized this account, arguing that Mayer plays up anti-communism at the expense of
Anti-Semitism as an explanation for the Holocaust. Others have argued that the historical evidence shows that Hitler was not convinced that the war was lost as early as December 1941, and that Mayer's theory is anachronistic. Along the same lines, the American historianChristopher Browning has contended that the decision to launch the Holocaust was probably taken sometime in September 1941.Mayer sees the Paris Peace Conference as a struggle between what he calls the "Old Diplomacy" of the alliances, secret treaties and brutal power politics and the "New Diplomacy" as represented by
Vladmir Lenin 's Peace Degrees andWoodrow Wilson 'sFourteen Points , which Mayer sees as promoting peaceful and rational diplomacy [Perry, Matt "Mayer, Arno J." pages 786-787 from "The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing" pages 786-787.] . In Mayer's view, the greatest failure of theVersailles Treaty was that it was a triumph for the "Old Diplomacy" with a thin "New Diplomacy" veneer.Work
*"Political Origins of the New Diplomacy, 1917-1918", 1959.
*"Post-War Nationalisms, 1918-19" pages 114-126 from "Past and Present", Volume 34, 1966.
*"Politics and Diplomacy of Peacemaking: Containment and Counter-Revolution at Versailles, 1918-19", 1967.
*"Dynamics of Counter-Revolution in Europe, 1870-1956: An Analytical Framework", 1971.
*"Lower Middle Class as Historical Problem" pages 409-436 from "Journal of Modern History", Volume 47, 1975.
*"Internal Crisis and War Since 1870" from "Revolutionary Situations in Europe, 1917-22" edited by Charles L. Bertrand, 1977.
*"The Persistence of the Old Regime: Europe to the Great War", 1981.
*"Why Did the Heavens Not Darken? The "Final Solution" in History", 1988.
*"Memory and History: On the Poverty of Forgetting and Remembering about the Judocide" pages 5-20 from "Radical History Review", Volume 56, 1993.
*"The Furies: Violence and Terror in the French and Russian Revolutions", 2001.References
*Blackbourn, David & Eley, Geoff "The Peculiarities of German History: Bourgeois Society and Politics in Nineteenth Century German History", Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1984.
*Fry, Michael and Gilbert, Arthur "A Historian and Linkage Politics: Arno J. Mayer" pages 425-444 from "International Studies Quarterly", Volume 26, 1982.
*Lundgreen-Nielsen, Kay "The Mayer Thesis Reconsidered: The Poles and the Paris Peace Conference, 1919" pages 68-102 from "International History Review", Volume 7, 1985.
*Loez, André & Offenstadt, Nicolas "Un historien dissident ? Entretien avec Arno J. Mayer" pages 123-139 from "Genèses", Volume 49, December 2002 (an interview of Arno J. Mayer by two French scholars).
*Perry, Matt "Mayer, Arno J." pages 786-787 from "The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing", Volume 2, edited by Kelly Boyd, Volume 2, London: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishing, 1999.
*Righart, Hans "`Jumbo-History': perceptie, anachronisme en `hindsight' bij Arno J. Mayer en Barrington Moore" pages 285-295 from "Theoretische Geschiedenis", Volume 17, 1990.
*Thompson, E. P. "The Poverty of Theory and Other Essays", London: Merlin Press, 1978.Endnotes
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