George Mosse
historiador estadounidense
George Mosse was a renowned American historian, born in Germany in 1918 to a Jewish family. He fled Nazi Germany, initially settling in Great Britain before ultimately emigrating to the United States. Mosse's academic career spanned multiple institutions, including professorships at the University of Iowa and the University of Wisconsin–Madison, as well as a stint at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel. His expertise lay in social and cultural history, with a particular focus on the complexities of Nazism.
Throughout his prolific career, Mosse authored over 25 books, demonstrating a remarkable range of interests and scholarship. His topics of study included constitutional history, Protestant theology, and the evolution of masculinity, among others. In 1966, Mosse co-founded The Journal of Contemporary History with Walter Laqueur, and the two historians served as co-editors. Mosse's contributions to the field of history remained significant until his passing in 1999, leaving behind a legacy of rigorous scholarship and insightful analysis that continues to inform historical discourse.