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Marc Bloch
A Life in History
This is the first biography of Marc Bloch (1886–1944), historian, soldier in both world wars, and leader of the Resistance, who was captured, tortured, and died a heroic death.
Carole Fink (Author)
9780521406710, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 2 May 1991
394 pages, 22 b/w illus. 2 maps
21.5 x 13.8 x 3.1 cm, 0.478 kg
'Carole Fink has written the first full-length biography of Marc Bloch with thoroughness, sympathy and perceptiveness ... an absorbing book ... [which would have] pleased Bloch, for whom history was both a fascinating story and a science always in motion.' New York Review of Books
This 1991 book was the first biography of Marc Bloch (1886–1944), historian, soldier in both world wars, and leader of the Resistance, who was captured, tortured, and died a heroic death. Based largely on Bloch's private letters, diaries and papers, as well as on other unpublished documents, it traces the remarkable life of this French-Jewish patriot under the Third Republic. As an historian, Bloch is perhaps best known for The Historian's Craft, an inspiring set of meditations on his life's work, and as co-founder of the now legendary journal Annales, which gave rise to a major school of historical writing. Profoundly influenced by the dark events that shaped his era - world wars, anti-semitism, and totalitarianism - Bloch has become something of an intellectual hero of our century, his life an epitome of the endeavour to uphold, in the face of such events, the spirit of unfettered critical enquiry.
List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of abbreviations
1. Forebears
2. Education
3. The young historian
4. The Great War
5. Strasbourg
6. L'histoire humaine
7. The Annales
8. Paris
9. Strange defeat
10. Vichy
11. Narbonne
12. The legacy
Appendix: selected bibliography of Marc Bloch's publications
Note of sources
Index.
Subject Areas: Historiography [HBAH]