Growing Up with Central European History

Central European History (CEH) was the first scholarly journal I really got to know, and for more than thirty years, it has been important to me in all kinds of ways. I first encountered CEH as a Master's student at the University of Alberta, where my primary supervisor was the extraordinary An...

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Veröffentlicht in:Central European history 2018-03, Vol.51 (1), p.23-25
1. Verfasser: Bergen, Doris L.
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creator Bergen, Doris L.
description Central European History (CEH) was the first scholarly journal I really got to know, and for more than thirty years, it has been important to me in all kinds of ways. I first encountered CEH as a Master's student at the University of Alberta, where my primary supervisor was the extraordinary Annelise Thimme, author of highly original works on Hans Delbrück, Gustav Stresemann, and the Deutschnationale Volkspartei. The discipline of history was new to me, and although I had taken some interesting undergraduate classes on early modern and modern history at the Universities of Saskatchewan and Munich, I had no idea about historiography, professional networks, or academic publishing. I probably did not even understand what the term Central Europe meant.
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ispartof Central European history, 2018-03, Vol.51 (1), p.23-25
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Cambridge Journals
subjects 20th century
Antisemitism
Editorials
Editors
European history
Historians
Historiography
Modern history
Part I Recollections and Reminiscences
Reflections on the Past, Present, and Future of Central European History and Central European Studies: Taking Stock of the Journal and the Field
Scholarly publishing
Stresemann, Gustav (1878-1929)
title Growing Up with Central European History
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