Richard J. Evans
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Richard J. Evans
Professor Richard Evans (born 1947) is a British historian of Germany. He was born in London, of Welsh parentage, and is now Professor of Modern History at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Gonville & Caius College. He has also taught at the University of Stirling, University of East Anglia and Birkbeck College, London.
Early lifeEvans received his education at the Forest School in Walthamstow and Jesus College, Oxford. His first teaching position was at the University of Stirling between 1972 and 1976 where he taught a final year unit entitled 'Weimar Germany and the Third Reich', despite another member of department, Peter D. Stachura, teaching another final year unit on 'Adolf Hitler and National Socialism'. Career as a historianHe was drawn to German history in the late 1960s because of what he saw as parallels between the Vietnam War and German imperalism. Evans was much influenced by the Sonderweg view of continuity of German history of Fritz Fischer. Evans' main interests are in social history and he is much influenced by the Annales School. He largely agrees with Fischer that the way that German society developed in the 19th century led to the rise of Nazi Germany, although Evans takes pains to point out that this outcome was one among many possibilities and was not inevitable. For Evans, the values of the 19th century German middle class had the seeds of National Socialism already germinating. In the 1980s, Evans played a prominent role in the Historikerstreit. Evans took issue with the historical work and theories of Ernst Nolte, Joachim Fest, Andreas Hillgruber, Michael Stürmer and Klaus Hildebrand, all of whom he described as seeking to white-wash the German past. In addition, in his book about the Historikerstreit, In Hitler's Shadow, Evans attacked the historical work of Robert Conquest, Hugh Thomas, Gertrude Himmelfarb, and Geoffrey Rudolph Elton, all of whom Evans viewed as part of a neo-conservative historical trend. He is perhaps best known for his role as expert witness for the American historian Deborah Lipstadt when she was sued for libel by the British historian David Irving. His book Telling Lies About Hitler describes the trial, his role as an expert witness, and the study he made of Irving's work. One of his most famous works is In Defence of History, a book in defence of the study of history against postmodernist theories that hold the study of history to be outmoded and no longer useful. However, Evans stresses throughout his book that some of the criticisms made by postmodernists have been beneficial to history as a whole, in particular that subjectivity is an inevitable and unavoidable part of the historic construct. He has currently published two volumes of a proposed three volume work on the history of the Third Reich. The final volume is scheduled for October 2008. Work
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