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Fernand Braudel

Fernand Braudel (French: [fɛʁnɑ̃ bʁodɛl]; 24 August 1902 – 27 November 1985) was a French historian and leader of the Annales School. His scholarship focused on three main projects: The Mediterranean (1923–49, then 1949–66), Civilization and Capitalism (1955–79), and the unfinished Identity of France (1970–85). He was a member of the Annales School of French historiography and social history in the 1950s and 1960s. He was a student of Henri Hauser.

Fernand Paul Achille Braudel
Born(1902-08-24)24 August 1902
Died27 November 1985(1985-11-27) (aged 83)
Cluses, France
EducationUniversity of Paris
OccupationHistorian
SpousePaule Braudel (m. 1933)
Plaque Fernand Braudel, 59 rue Brillat-Savarin, Paris 13

Braudel emphasized the role of large-scale socioeconomic factors in the making and writing of history.[1] He can also be considered one of the precursors of world-systems theory.[2]

Biography edit

Braudel was born in Luméville-en-Ornois (as of 1943, it merged with and became part of Gondrecourt-le-Château), in the département of the Meuse, France.[3] At the age of seven, he moved to Paris with his family. His father, who was a natural mathematician, aided him in his studies.

Braudel also studied a good deal of Latin and a little Greek. He was educated at the Lycée Voltaire and the Sorbonne, where, at the age of 20, he was awarded an agrégé in history. While teaching at the University of Algiers between 1923 and 1932, he became fascinated by the Mediterranean Sea and wrote several papers on the Spanish presence in Algeria in the 16th century. During that time, Braudel began his doctoral thesis on the foreign policy of King Philip II of Spain. From 1932 to 1935 he taught in the Paris lycées (secondary schools) of Pasteur, Condorcet and Henri-IV.[3]

By 1900, the French had solidified their cultural influence in Brazil by the establishment of the Brazilian Academy of Fine Arts. São Paulo still lacked a university, however, and in 1934, the francophile Julio de Mesquita Filho invited both the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss and Braudel to help establish one. The result was formation of the new University of São Paulo. Braudel later said that the time in Brazil had been the "greatest period of his life".[4]

In 1937, Braudel returned to Paris from Brazil. On his way, he met Lucien Febvre, who was the co-founder of the influential Annales journal. Both had booked passage on the same ship.[3] Braudel had started archival research on his doctorate on the Mediterranean when he fell under the influence of the Annales School around 1938. Also around that time he entered the École pratique des hautes études as an instructor in history.[3] He worked with Febvre, who would later read the early versions of Braudel's magnum opus and provide him with editorial advice.

At the outbreak of war in 1939, he was called up for military service and in 1940 was taken prisoner by the Germans.[3] He was held at a prisoner-of-war camp in Mainz from 1940 to 1942 before he was transferred to another near Lübeck, where he remained for the rest of the war. Braudel drafted his great work La Méditerranée et le Monde Méditerranéen à l'époque de Philippe II (The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II) without access to his books or notes and relied only on his prodigious memory and a local library.[3]

Braudel became the leader of the second generation of Annales historians after 1945. In 1947, with Febvre and Charles Morazé, Braudel obtained funding from the Rockefeller Foundation in New York and founded the noted Sixième Section for "Economic and social sciences" at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes. He received an additional $1 million from the Ford Foundation in 1960.[5]

In 1962, he and Gaston Berger used the Ford Foundation grant and government funds to create a new independent foundation, the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l'Homme (FMSH), which Braudel directed from 1970 to his death. It was housed in the building called "Maison des Sciences de l'Homme". FMSH focused its activities on international networking in order to disseminate the Annales approach to the rest of Europe and the world. In 1972, he gave up all editorial responsibility on the journal, but his name remained on the masthead.

In 1962, he wrote A History of Civilizations as the basis for a history course, but its rejection of the traditional event-based narrative was too radical for the French ministry of education, which in turn rejected it.[6]

A feature of Braudel's work was his compassion for the suffering of marginal people.[7] He articulated that most surviving historical sources come from the literate wealthy classes. He emphasised the importance of the ephemeral lives of slaves, serfs, peasants and the urban poor and demonstrated their contributions to the wealth and power of their respective masters and societies. His work was often illustrated with contemporary depictions of daily life and rarely with pictures of noblemen or kings.

In 1949, Braudel was elected to the Collège de France upon Febvre's retirement. He co-founded the academic journal, Revue économique, in 1950.[8][9] He retired in 1968. In 1984, he was elected to the Académie française.

La Méditerranée edit

His first book, La Méditerranée et le Monde Méditerranéen à l'Epoque de Philippe II (1949) (The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II) was his most influential and has been described as a "watershed".[10]

For Braudel there is no single Mediterranean Sea. There are many seas, indeed a "vast, complex expanse" within which men operate. Life is conducted on the Mediterranean: people travel, fish, fight wars, and drown in its various contexts, and the sea articulates with the plains and islands. Life on the plains is diverse and complex; the poorer south is affected by religious diversity (Catholicism and Islam), as well as by intrusions, both cultural and economic, from the north. In other words, the Mediterranean cannot be understood independently from what is exterior to it. Any rigid adherence to boundaries falsifies the situation.

The first level of time, geographical time, is that of the environment, with its slow, almost imperceptible change, its repetition and cycles. Such change may be slow, but it is irresistible. The second level of time comprises long-term social, economic, and cultural history, where Braudel discusses the Mediterranean economy, social groupings, empires and civilizations. Change at that level is much more rapid than that of the environment. Braudel looks at two or three centuries to spot a particular pattern such as the rise and fall of various aristocracies. The third level of time is that of events (histoire événementielle). This is the history of individuals with names. That, for Braudel, is the time of surfaces and deceptive effects. It is the time of the courte durée proper and the focus of Part 3 of The Mediterranean, which treats of "events, politics and people."

Braudel's Mediterranean is centered on the sea, but just as importantly, it is also the desert and the mountains. The desert creates a nomadic form of social organization where the whole community moves; mountain life is sedentary. Transhumance the movement from the mountain to the plain or vice versa in a given season is also a persistent part of Mediterranean existence.

Braudel's vast panoramic view used insights from other social sciences, employed the concept of the longue durée, and downplayed the importance of specific events. It was widely admired, but most historians did not try to replicate it and instead focused on their specialized monographs. The book firmly launched the study of the Mediterranean and dramatically raised the worldwide profile of the Annales School.

Capitalism edit

After La Méditerranée, Braudel's most famous work is Civilisation Matérielle, Économie et Capitalisme, XVe-XVIIIe ("Civilization and Capitalism, 15th-18th Century"). The first volume was published in 1967 and was translated to English in 1973. The last of the three-volume work appeared in 1979.[11] The work is a broad-scale history of the pre-industrial modern world focusing on how regular people made economies work. Like all of Braudel's other major works, it mixes traditional economic material with thick description of the social impact of economic events on various facets of everyday life, including food, fashion and other social customs.

The third volume, subtitled "The Perspective of the World", was strongly influenced by the work of German scholars like Werner Sombart. In it, Braudel traces the impact of the centers of Western capitalism on the rest of the world. Braudel wrote the series as a way of explanation for the modern way and partly as a refutation of the Marxist view of history.[12]

Braudel discussed the idea of long-term cycles in the capitalist economy that he saw developing in Europe in the 12th century. Particular cities and later nation-states follow each other sequentially as centres of these cycles: Venice in the 13th through the 15th centuries (1250–1510); Antwerp and Genoa in the 16th century (1500–1569 and 1557–1627, respectively), Amsterdam in the 16th through 18th centuries (1627–1733); and London (and England) in the 18th and 19th centuries (1733–1896). He used the word "structures" to denote a variety of social structures, such as organized behaviours, attitudes, and conventions, as well as physical structures and infrastructures. He argued that the structures established in Europe during the Middle Ages contributed to the successes of present-day European-based cultures. He attributed much of that to the long-standing independence of city-states, which, though later subjugated by larger geographic states, were not always completely suppressed, probably for reasons of utility.

Braudel argues that capitalists have typically been monopolists and not, as is usually assumed, entrepreneurs operating in competitive markets. He argued that capitalists did not specialize and did not use free markets, and he thus diverges from both liberal (Adam Smith) and Marxian interpretations. In Braudel's view, the state in capitalist countries has served as a guarantor of monopolists rather than a protector of competition, as it is usually portrayed. He asserted that capitalists have had power and cunning on their side, as they have arrayed themselves against the majority of the population.[13]

An agrarian structure is a long-term structure in the Braudelian understanding of the concept. On a larger scale the agrarian structure is more dependent on the regional, social, cultural and historical factors than on the state's undertaken activities.[14]

L'Identité de la France edit

Braudel's last and most personal book was L'Identité de la France (The Identity of France), which was unfinished at the time of his death in 1985.[12] Unlike in many of Braudel's other books, he makes no secret of his profound love of his country in this book and remarks at the beginning that he had loved France as if she were a woman. Reflecting his interest with the longue durée, Braudel's concern in L'Identité de la France was with the centuries and millennia, instead of the years and decades. Braudel argued that France is the product not of its politics or economics but rather of its geography and culture, a thesis that Braudel had explored in a wide-ranging book that saw the bourg and the patois: historie totale integrated into a broad sweep of both the place and the time.

L'Identité de la France was much coloured by a romantic nostalgia, as Braudel argued for the existence of a France profonde, a "deep France" based upon the peasant mentalité, which despite all of the turmoil of French history and the Industrial Revolution, has survived intact right up to the present.[12]

Historiography edit

According to Braudel, before the Annales approach, the writing of history was focused on the courte durée (short span), or on histoire événementielle (a history of events).

His followers admired his use of the longue durée approach to stress the slow and often imperceptible effects of space, climate and technology on the actions of human beings in the past.[15] The Annales historians, after living through two world wars and massive political upheavals in France, were very uncomfortable with the notion that multiple ruptures and discontinuities created history. They preferred to stress inertia and the longue durée, arguing that the continuities in the deepest structures of society were central to history. Upheavals in institutions or the superstructure of social life were of little significance, for history, they argued, lies beyond the reach of conscious actors, especially the will of revolutionaries. They rejected the Marxist idea that history should be used as a tool to foment and foster revolutions.[16] A proponent of historical materialism, Braudel rejected Marxist materialism, stressing the equal importance of infrastructure and superstructure, both of which reflected enduring social, economic, and cultural realities. Braudel's structures, both mental and environmental, determine the long-term course of events by constraining actions on, and by, humans over a duration long enough that they are beyond the consciousness of the actors involved.

Awards and honors edit

Honorary degrees edit

Orders of Merit edit

Learned societies edit

Legacy edit

Binghamton University in New York had a Fernand Braudel Center until 2020,[17] and there is an Instituto Fernand Braudel de Economia Mundial in São Paulo, Brazil.

In a 2011 poll by History Today magazine, Fernand Braudel was picked as the most important historian of the previous 60 years.[18]

Main publications edit

  • La Méditerranée et le Monde méditerranéen a l'époque de Philippe II, 3 vols. (1949; revised several times)
vol. 1: La part du milieu ISBN 2-253-06168-9
vol. 2: Destins collectifs et mouvements d'ensemble ISBN 2-253-06169-7
vol. 3: Les événements, la politique et les hommes ISBN 2-253-06170-0
  • The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II. 2 vols. (1972 and 1973, translated by Siân Reynolds)
  • Ecrits sur l'histoire (1969) ISBN 2-08-081023-5
  • On History (1980, translated by Sarah Matthews)
  • Civilisation matérielle, économie et capitalisme, xve et xviiie siècles
vol. 1: Les structures du quotidien (1967) ISBN 2-253-06455-6
vol. 2: Les jeux de l'échange (1979) ISBN 2-253-06456-4
vol. 3: Le temps du monde (1979) ISBN 2-253-06457-2
  • Civilization and Capitalism, 15th–18th Century, 3 vols. (1979, translated by Siân Reynolds)
vol. 1: The Structures of Everyday Life ISBN 0-06-014845-4
vol. 2: The Wheels of Commerce ISBN 0-06-015091-2
vol. 3: The Perspective of the World ISBN 0-06-015317-2
  • L'identité de la France, 3 vols. (1986)
vol. 1: Espace et histoire
vol. 2: Les hommes et les choses, première partie, le nombre et les fluctuations longues
vol. 3: Les hommes et les choses, seconde partie, une "économie paysanne" jusqu'au XXe siècle
  • The Identity of France, 2 vols. (1988–1990, translated by Siân Reynolds)
vol. 1: History and Environment ISBN 0-06-016021-7
vol. 2: People and Production ISBN 0-06-016212-0
  • Grammaire des civilisations (1987)
  • A History of Civilizations (1995, translated by Richard Mayne)
  • Le Modèle italien (1989)
  • Out of Italy, 1450–1650 (1991, translated by Siân Reynolds)
  • Les Mémoires de la Méditerranée (1998)
  • The Mediterranean in the Ancient World (UK) / Memory and the Mediterranean (US; both 2001, translated by Siân Reynolds)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ i.e. Fernand Braudel, "The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II" (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996)
  2. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 54.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Marnie Hughes-Warrington, Fifty Key Thinkers on History (London: Routledge, 2000), 17.
  4. ^ Thomas E. Skidmore, "Lévi-Strauss, Braudel and Brazil: a Case of Mutual Influence." Bulletin of Latin American Research 2003 22(3): 340–349. ISSN 0261-3050 Full text: Ebsco
  5. ^ Francis X. Sutton, "The Ford Foundation's Transatlantic Role and Purposes, 1951–81." Review (Fernand Braudel Center) 2001 24(1): 77–104. ISSN 0147-9032
  6. ^ Richard Mayne, "Translator's Introduction" in Fernand Braudel, A History of Civilization, (New York: Penguin Books, 1993), pp. xxvi–xxvii.
  7. ^ Fernand Braudel, A History of Civilizations, translated by Richard Mayne (New York: Penguin Books, 1993).
  8. ^ Revue économique official web site
  9. ^ Braudel, Fernand. "Pour une économie historique." Revue économique, Vol. 1, No. 1 (May, 1950), pp. 37-44.
  10. ^ Lee, Alexander. "Twilight of the History Gods: Jacques Le Goff, 1924-2014 | History Today". History Today. Retrieved 2020-11-04. "The appearance of Ferdinand Braudel’s magisterial La Méditerranée et le Monde Méditerranéen à l’Epoque de Philippe II (1949) marked a watershed and it is a rare historian today who has not glanced through its pages to find himself feeling a little like Keats on first looking into Chapman’s Homer."
  11. ^ Alan Heston, "Review Essay on Fernand Braudel's Civilization and Capitalism", EH.net, . Archived from the original on 2009-10-02. Retrieved 2009-11-16.
  12. ^ a b c Gwynne Lewis, "Braudel, Fernand," in The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing, edited by Kelly Boyd (Chicago: FitzRoy Dearborn, 1999) 114.
  13. ^ Wallerstein, Immanuel (1991), "Braudel on Capitalism, or Everything Upside Down", Journal of Modern History, 63 (2): 354–361, doi:10.1086/244319, ISSN 0022-2801, JSTOR 2938489, S2CID 144420894.
  14. ^ M. Pietrzak, D. Walczak, The Analysis of the Agrarian Structure in Poland with the Special Consideration of the Years 1921 and 2002, Bulgarian Journal of Agricultural Science, Vol 20, No 5, pp. 1025, 1038.
  15. ^ See Wallerstein, "Time and Duration" (1997)
  16. ^ Harris, Olivia (1 March 2004). "Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity". History Workshop Journal. OUP. 57 (1): 161–174. doi:10.1093/hwj/57.1.161. ISSN 1363-3554.
  17. ^ "FERNAND BRAUDEL CENTER". Binghamton University - State University of New York. Retrieved 12 March 2023.
  18. ^ "Top Historians: The Results | History Today". History Today. 2011-11-16. Retrieved 2020-11-06.

Further reading edit

  • Akhttiar, Maher. "Lépistémologie de l'Histoire chez Fernand Braudel (2022) éditeur L'Harmattan
  • Aurell, Jaume. "Autobiographical Texts as Historiographical Sources: Rereading Fernand Braudel and Annie Kriegel." Biography 2006 29(3): 425–445. ISSN 0162-4962 Fulltext: Project MUSE
  • Burke, Peter. The French Historical Revolution: The Annales School 1929–89, (1990), excerpt and text search
  • Carrard, Philippe (1988). "Figuring France: The Numbers and Tropes of Fernand Braudel". Diacritics. 18 (3): 2–19. doi:10.2307/465251. JSTOR 465251.
  • Carrard, Philippe. Poetics of the New History: French Historical Discourse from Braudel to Chartier, (1992)
  • Pierre Daix, Braudel, (Paris: Flammarion, 1995)
  • Dosse, Francois. New History in France: The Triumph of the Annales, (1994, first French edition, 1987) excerpt and text search
  • Giuliana Gemelli, Fernand Braudel (Paris: Odile Jacob, 1995)
  • Harris, Olivia. "Braudel: Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity." History Workshop Journal 2004 (57): 161–174. ISSN 1363-3554 Fulltext: OUP
  • Hexter, J. H. "Fernand Braudel and the Monde Braudellien," Journal of Modern History, 1972, vol. 44, pp. 480–539 in JSTOR
  • Hufton, Olwen. "Fernand Braudel", Past and Present, No. 112. (Aug., 1986), pp. 208–213. in JSTOR
  • Hunt, Lynn (1986). "French History in the Last Twenty Years: the Rise and Fall of the Annales Paradigm". Journal of Contemporary History. 21 (2): 209–224. doi:10.1177/002200948602100205. ISSN 0022-0094. JSTOR 260364. S2CID 162297581.
  • Kaplan, Steven Laurence. "Long-Run Lamentations: Braudel on France," The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 63, No. 2, A Special Issue on Modern France. (Jun., 1991), pp. 341–353. in JSTOR
  • Kinser, Samuel (1981). "Annaliste Paradigm? The Geo-historical Structuralism of Fernand Braudel". American Historical Review. 86 (1): 63–105. doi:10.2307/1872933. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1872933.
  • Lai, Cheng-chung (2000). . The European Legacy. 5 (1): 65–86. doi:10.1080/108487700115134. ISSN 1084-8770. S2CID 145622440. Archived from the original on 2011-01-10. Retrieved 2009-09-08.* Lai, Cheng-chung. Braudel's Historiography Reconsidered, Maryland: University Press of America, 2004.
  • Moon, David. "Fernand Braudel and the Annales School" online edition
  • Santamaria, Ulysses; Bailey, Anne M. (1984). "A Note on Braudel's Structure as Duration". History and Theory. 23 (1): 78–83. doi:10.2307/2504972. ISSN 0018-2656. JSTOR 2504972.
  • Stoianovich, Traian. French Historical Method: The Annales Paradigm, (1976)
  • Wallerstein, Immanuel. "Time and Duration: The Unexcluded Middle" (1997) online version

External links edit

  • Braudel, Colonialism and the Rise of the West 2013-10-20 at the Wayback Machine
  • Fernand Braudel:Mediterranean studies:Annales school
  • Fernand Braudel Center
  • Instituto Fernand Braudel de Economia Mundial
  • Fernand Braudel, father of the modern pop-history genre - by
  • Macfarlane, Alan (7 March 2013). "Fernand Braudel and Global History - Alan Macfarlane 1996". YouTube. Prof Alan Macfarlane - Ayabaya. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12.
  • "Fernand Braudel et l'histoire". YouTube. François Antaya. 21 March 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12.

fernand, braudel, french, fɛʁnɑ, bʁodɛl, august, 1902, november, 1985, french, historian, leader, annales, school, scholarship, focused, three, main, projects, mediterranean, 1923, then, 1949, civilization, capitalism, 1955, unfinished, identity, france, 1970,. Fernand Braudel French fɛʁnɑ bʁodɛl 24 August 1902 27 November 1985 was a French historian and leader of the Annales School His scholarship focused on three main projects The Mediterranean 1923 49 then 1949 66 Civilization and Capitalism 1955 79 and the unfinished Identity of France 1970 85 He was a member of the Annales School of French historiography and social history in the 1950s and 1960s He was a student of Henri Hauser Fernand Paul Achille BraudelBorn 1902 08 24 24 August 1902Lumeville en Ornois FranceDied27 November 1985 1985 11 27 aged 83 Cluses FranceEducationUniversity of ParisOccupationHistorianSpousePaule Braudel m 1933 Plaque Fernand Braudel 59 rue Brillat Savarin Paris 13Braudel emphasized the role of large scale socioeconomic factors in the making and writing of history 1 He can also be considered one of the precursors of world systems theory 2 Contents 1 Biography 2 La Mediterranee 3 Capitalism 4 L Identite de la France 5 Historiography 6 Awards and honors 6 1 Honorary degrees 6 2 Orders of Merit 6 3 Learned societies 6 4 Legacy 7 Main publications 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBiography editBraudel was born in Lumeville en Ornois as of 1943 it merged with and became part of Gondrecourt le Chateau in the departement of the Meuse France 3 At the age of seven he moved to Paris with his family His father who was a natural mathematician aided him in his studies Braudel also studied a good deal of Latin and a little Greek He was educated at the Lycee Voltaire and the Sorbonne where at the age of 20 he was awarded an agrege in history While teaching at the University of Algiers between 1923 and 1932 he became fascinated by the Mediterranean Sea and wrote several papers on the Spanish presence in Algeria in the 16th century During that time Braudel began his doctoral thesis on the foreign policy of King Philip II of Spain From 1932 to 1935 he taught in the Paris lycees secondary schools of Pasteur Condorcet and Henri IV 3 By 1900 the French had solidified their cultural influence in Brazil by the establishment of the Brazilian Academy of Fine Arts Sao Paulo still lacked a university however and in 1934 the francophile Julio de Mesquita Filho invited both the anthropologist Claude Levi Strauss and Braudel to help establish one The result was formation of the new University of Sao Paulo Braudel later said that the time in Brazil had been the greatest period of his life 4 In 1937 Braudel returned to Paris from Brazil On his way he met Lucien Febvre who was the co founder of the influential Annales journal Both had booked passage on the same ship 3 Braudel had started archival research on his doctorate on the Mediterranean when he fell under the influence of the Annales School around 1938 Also around that time he entered the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes as an instructor in history 3 He worked with Febvre who would later read the early versions of Braudel s magnum opus and provide him with editorial advice At the outbreak of war in 1939 he was called up for military service and in 1940 was taken prisoner by the Germans 3 He was held at a prisoner of war camp in Mainz from 1940 to 1942 before he was transferred to another near Lubeck where he remained for the rest of the war Braudel drafted his great work La Mediterranee et le Monde Mediterraneen a l epoque de Philippe II The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II without access to his books or notes and relied only on his prodigious memory and a local library 3 Braudel became the leader of the second generation of Annales historians after 1945 In 1947 with Febvre and Charles Moraze Braudel obtained funding from the Rockefeller Foundation in New York and founded the noted Sixieme Section for Economic and social sciences at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes He received an additional 1 million from the Ford Foundation in 1960 5 In 1962 he and Gaston Berger used the Ford Foundation grant and government funds to create a new independent foundation the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l Homme FMSH which Braudel directed from 1970 to his death It was housed in the building called Maison des Sciences de l Homme FMSH focused its activities on international networking in order to disseminate the Annales approach to the rest of Europe and the world In 1972 he gave up all editorial responsibility on the journal but his name remained on the masthead In 1962 he wrote A History of Civilizations as the basis for a history course but its rejection of the traditional event based narrative was too radical for the French ministry of education which in turn rejected it 6 A feature of Braudel s work was his compassion for the suffering of marginal people 7 He articulated that most surviving historical sources come from the literate wealthy classes He emphasised the importance of the ephemeral lives of slaves serfs peasants and the urban poor and demonstrated their contributions to the wealth and power of their respective masters and societies His work was often illustrated with contemporary depictions of daily life and rarely with pictures of noblemen or kings In 1949 Braudel was elected to the College de France upon Febvre s retirement He co founded the academic journal Revue economique in 1950 8 9 He retired in 1968 In 1984 he was elected to the Academie francaise La Mediterranee editHis first book La Mediterranee et le Monde Mediterraneen a l Epoque de Philippe II 1949 The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II was his most influential and has been described as a watershed 10 For Braudel there is no single Mediterranean Sea There are many seas indeed a vast complex expanse within which men operate Life is conducted on the Mediterranean people travel fish fight wars and drown in its various contexts and the sea articulates with the plains and islands Life on the plains is diverse and complex the poorer south is affected by religious diversity Catholicism and Islam as well as by intrusions both cultural and economic from the north In other words the Mediterranean cannot be understood independently from what is exterior to it Any rigid adherence to boundaries falsifies the situation The first level of time geographical time is that of the environment with its slow almost imperceptible change its repetition and cycles Such change may be slow but it is irresistible The second level of time comprises long term social economic and cultural history where Braudel discusses the Mediterranean economy social groupings empires and civilizations Change at that level is much more rapid than that of the environment Braudel looks at two or three centuries to spot a particular pattern such as the rise and fall of various aristocracies The third level of time is that of events histoire evenementielle This is the history of individuals with names That for Braudel is the time of surfaces and deceptive effects It is the time of the courte duree proper and the focus of Part 3 of The Mediterranean which treats of events politics and people Braudel s Mediterranean is centered on the sea but just as importantly it is also the desert and the mountains The desert creates a nomadic form of social organization where the whole community moves mountain life is sedentary Transhumance the movement from the mountain to the plain or vice versa in a given season is also a persistent part of Mediterranean existence Braudel s vast panoramic view used insights from other social sciences employed the concept of the longue duree and downplayed the importance of specific events It was widely admired but most historians did not try to replicate it and instead focused on their specialized monographs The book firmly launched the study of the Mediterranean and dramatically raised the worldwide profile of the Annales School Capitalism editAfter La Mediterranee Braudel s most famous work is Civilisation Materielle Economie et Capitalisme XVe XVIIIe Civilization and Capitalism 15th 18th Century The first volume was published in 1967 and was translated to English in 1973 The last of the three volume work appeared in 1979 11 The work is a broad scale history of the pre industrial modern world focusing on how regular people made economies work Like all of Braudel s other major works it mixes traditional economic material with thick description of the social impact of economic events on various facets of everyday life including food fashion and other social customs The third volume subtitled The Perspective of the World was strongly influenced by the work of German scholars like Werner Sombart In it Braudel traces the impact of the centers of Western capitalism on the rest of the world Braudel wrote the series as a way of explanation for the modern way and partly as a refutation of the Marxist view of history 12 Braudel discussed the idea of long term cycles in the capitalist economy that he saw developing in Europe in the 12th century Particular cities and later nation states follow each other sequentially as centres of these cycles Venice in the 13th through the 15th centuries 1250 1510 Antwerp and Genoa in the 16th century 1500 1569 and 1557 1627 respectively Amsterdam in the 16th through 18th centuries 1627 1733 and London and England in the 18th and 19th centuries 1733 1896 He used the word structures to denote a variety of social structures such as organized behaviours attitudes and conventions as well as physical structures and infrastructures He argued that the structures established in Europe during the Middle Ages contributed to the successes of present day European based cultures He attributed much of that to the long standing independence of city states which though later subjugated by larger geographic states were not always completely suppressed probably for reasons of utility Braudel argues that capitalists have typically been monopolists and not as is usually assumed entrepreneurs operating in competitive markets He argued that capitalists did not specialize and did not use free markets and he thus diverges from both liberal Adam Smith and Marxian interpretations In Braudel s view the state in capitalist countries has served as a guarantor of monopolists rather than a protector of competition as it is usually portrayed He asserted that capitalists have had power and cunning on their side as they have arrayed themselves against the majority of the population 13 An agrarian structure is a long term structure in the Braudelian understanding of the concept On a larger scale the agrarian structure is more dependent on the regional social cultural and historical factors than on the state s undertaken activities 14 L Identite de la France editBraudel s last and most personal book was L Identite de la France The Identity of France which was unfinished at the time of his death in 1985 12 Unlike in many of Braudel s other books he makes no secret of his profound love of his country in this book and remarks at the beginning that he had loved France as if she were a woman Reflecting his interest with the longue duree Braudel s concern in L Identite de la France was with the centuries and millennia instead of the years and decades Braudel argued that France is the product not of its politics or economics but rather of its geography and culture a thesis that Braudel had explored in a wide ranging book that saw the bourg and the patois historie totale integrated into a broad sweep of both the place and the time L Identite de la France was much coloured by a romantic nostalgia as Braudel argued for the existence of a France profonde a deep France based upon the peasant mentalite which despite all of the turmoil of French history and the Industrial Revolution has survived intact right up to the present 12 Historiography editAccording to Braudel before the Annales approach the writing of history was focused on the courte duree short span or on histoire evenementielle a history of events His followers admired his use of the longue duree approach to stress the slow and often imperceptible effects of space climate and technology on the actions of human beings in the past 15 The Annales historians after living through two world wars and massive political upheavals in France were very uncomfortable with the notion that multiple ruptures and discontinuities created history They preferred to stress inertia and the longue duree arguing that the continuities in the deepest structures of society were central to history Upheavals in institutions or the superstructure of social life were of little significance for history they argued lies beyond the reach of conscious actors especially the will of revolutionaries They rejected the Marxist idea that history should be used as a tool to foment and foster revolutions 16 A proponent of historical materialism Braudel rejected Marxist materialism stressing the equal importance of infrastructure and superstructure both of which reflected enduring social economic and cultural realities Braudel s structures both mental and environmental determine the long term course of events by constraining actions on and by humans over a duration long enough that they are beyond the consciousness of the actors involved Awards and honors editHonorary degrees edit Universite libre de Bruxelles University of Cambridge University of Chicago University of Cologne University of Geneva Leiden University University of Oxford University of Padua Complutense University of Madrid Universite de Montreal University of Warsaw Yale UniversityOrders of Merit edit Commander of the Legion of Honour Commander of the Ordre des Palmes academiquesLearned societies edit Member of the Academie francaise Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities Member of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities Member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences Member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and ArtsLegacy edit Binghamton University in New York had a Fernand Braudel Center until 2020 17 and there is an Instituto Fernand Braudel de Economia Mundial in Sao Paulo Brazil In a 2011 poll by History Today magazine Fernand Braudel was picked as the most important historian of the previous 60 years 18 Main publications editLa Mediterranee et le Monde mediterraneen a l epoque de Philippe II 3 vols 1949 revised several times vol 1 La part du milieu ISBN 2 253 06168 9 vol 2 Destins collectifs et mouvements d ensemble ISBN 2 253 06169 7 vol 3 Les evenements la politique et les hommes ISBN 2 253 06170 0The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II 2 vols 1972 and 1973 translated by Sian Reynolds Ecrits sur l histoire 1969 ISBN 2 08 081023 5 On History 1980 translated by Sarah Matthews Civilisation materielle economie et capitalisme xve et xviiie sieclesvol 1 Les structures du quotidien 1967 ISBN 2 253 06455 6 vol 2 Les jeux de l echange 1979 ISBN 2 253 06456 4 vol 3 Le temps du monde 1979 ISBN 2 253 06457 2Civilization and Capitalism 15th 18th Century 3 vols 1979 translated by Sian Reynolds vol 1 The Structures of Everyday Life ISBN 0 06 014845 4 vol 2 The Wheels of Commerce ISBN 0 06 015091 2 vol 3 The Perspective of the World ISBN 0 06 015317 2L identite de la France 3 vols 1986 vol 1 Espace et histoire vol 2 Les hommes et les choses premiere partie le nombre et les fluctuations longues vol 3 Les hommes et les choses seconde partie une economie paysanne jusqu au XXe siecleThe Identity of France 2 vols 1988 1990 translated by Sian Reynolds vol 1 History and Environment ISBN 0 06 016021 7 vol 2 People and Production ISBN 0 06 016212 0Grammaire des civilisations 1987 A History of Civilizations 1995 translated by Richard Mayne Le Modele italien 1989 Out of Italy 1450 1650 1991 translated by Sian Reynolds Les Memoires de la Mediterranee 1998 The Mediterranean in the Ancient World UK Memory and the Mediterranean US both 2001 translated by Sian Reynolds See also edit nbsp Biography portalWorld systems theory Annales school Arnold J Toynbee Oswald Spengler Carroll QuigleyReferences edit i e Fernand Braudel The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II Berkeley University of California Press 1996 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 54 a b c d e f Marnie Hughes Warrington Fifty Key Thinkers on History London Routledge 2000 17 Thomas E Skidmore Levi Strauss Braudel and Brazil a Case of Mutual Influence Bulletin of Latin American Research 2003 22 3 340 349 ISSN 0261 3050 Full text Ebsco Francis X Sutton The Ford Foundation s Transatlantic Role and Purposes 1951 81 Review Fernand Braudel Center 2001 24 1 77 104 ISSN 0147 9032 Richard Mayne Translator s Introduction in Fernand Braudel A History of Civilization New York Penguin Books 1993 pp xxvi xxvii Fernand Braudel A History of Civilizations translated by Richard Mayne New York Penguin Books 1993 Revue economique official web site Braudel Fernand Pour une economie historique Revue economique Vol 1 No 1 May 1950 pp 37 44 Lee Alexander Twilight of the History Gods Jacques Le Goff 1924 2014 History Today History Today Retrieved 2020 11 04 The appearance of Ferdinand Braudel s magisterial La Mediterranee et le Monde Mediterraneen a l Epoque de Philippe II 1949 marked a watershed and it is a rare historian today who has not glanced through its pages to find himself feeling a little like Keats on first looking into Chapman s Homer Alan Heston Review Essay on Fernand Braudel s Civilization and Capitalism EH net Civilization and Capitalism 15th 18th Century Book Reviews EH Net Archived from the original on 2009 10 02 Retrieved 2009 11 16 a b c Gwynne Lewis Braudel Fernand in The Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing edited by Kelly Boyd Chicago FitzRoy Dearborn 1999 114 Wallerstein Immanuel 1991 Braudel on Capitalism or Everything Upside Down Journal of Modern History 63 2 354 361 doi 10 1086 244319 ISSN 0022 2801 JSTOR 2938489 S2CID 144420894 M Pietrzak D Walczak The Analysis of the Agrarian Structure in Poland with the Special Consideration of the Years 1921 and 2002 Bulgarian Journal of Agricultural Science Vol 20 No 5 pp 1025 1038 See Wallerstein Time and Duration 1997 Harris Olivia 1 March 2004 Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity History Workshop Journal OUP 57 1 161 174 doi 10 1093 hwj 57 1 161 ISSN 1363 3554 FERNAND BRAUDEL CENTER Binghamton University State University of New York Retrieved 12 March 2023 Top Historians The Results History Today History Today 2011 11 16 Retrieved 2020 11 06 Further reading editAkhttiar Maher Lepistemologie de l Histoire chez Fernand Braudel 2022 editeur L Harmattan Aurell Jaume Autobiographical Texts as Historiographical Sources Rereading Fernand Braudel and Annie Kriegel Biography 2006 29 3 425 445 ISSN 0162 4962 Fulltext Project MUSE Burke Peter The French Historical Revolution The Annales School 1929 89 1990 excerpt and text search Carrard Philippe 1988 Figuring France The Numbers and Tropes of Fernand Braudel Diacritics 18 3 2 19 doi 10 2307 465251 JSTOR 465251 Carrard Philippe Poetics of the New History French Historical Discourse from Braudel to Chartier 1992 Pierre Daix Braudel Paris Flammarion 1995 Dosse Francois New History in France The Triumph of the Annales 1994 first French edition 1987 excerpt and text search Giuliana Gemelli Fernand Braudel Paris Odile Jacob 1995 Harris Olivia Braudel Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity History Workshop Journal 2004 57 161 174 ISSN 1363 3554 Fulltext OUP Hexter J H Fernand Braudel and the Monde Braudellien Journal of Modern History 1972 vol 44 pp 480 539 in JSTOR Hufton Olwen Fernand Braudel Past and Present No 112 Aug 1986 pp 208 213 in JSTOR Hunt Lynn 1986 French History in the Last Twenty Years the Rise and Fall of the Annales Paradigm Journal of Contemporary History 21 2 209 224 doi 10 1177 002200948602100205 ISSN 0022 0094 JSTOR 260364 S2CID 162297581 Kaplan Steven Laurence Long Run Lamentations Braudel on France The Journal of Modern History Vol 63 No 2 A Special Issue on Modern France Jun 1991 pp 341 353 in JSTOR Kinser Samuel 1981 Annaliste Paradigm The Geo historical Structuralism of Fernand Braudel American Historical Review 86 1 63 105 doi 10 2307 1872933 ISSN 0002 8762 JSTOR 1872933 Lai Cheng chung 2000 Braudel s Concepts and Methodology Reconsidered The European Legacy 5 1 65 86 doi 10 1080 108487700115134 ISSN 1084 8770 S2CID 145622440 Archived from the original on 2011 01 10 Retrieved 2009 09 08 Lai Cheng chung Braudel s Historiography Reconsidered Maryland University Press of America 2004 Moon David Fernand Braudel and the Annales School online edition Santamaria Ulysses Bailey Anne M 1984 A Note on Braudel s Structure as Duration History and Theory 23 1 78 83 doi 10 2307 2504972 ISSN 0018 2656 JSTOR 2504972 Stoianovich Traian French Historical Method The Annales Paradigm 1976 Wallerstein Immanuel Time and Duration The Unexcluded Middle 1997 online versionExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Fernand Braudel nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fernand Braudel Professor David Moon Fernand Braudel and the Annales School lecture 2005 Braudel Colonialism and the Rise of the West Archived 2013 10 20 at the Wayback Machine Fernand Braudel Mediterranean studies Annales school Fernand Braudel Center Instituto Fernand Braudel de Economia Mundial Annales School Fernand Braudel bio Fernand Braudel father of the modern pop history genre by blaqswans org Macfarlane Alan 7 March 2013 Fernand Braudel and Global History Alan Macfarlane 1996 YouTube Prof Alan Macfarlane Ayabaya Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Fernand Braudel et l histoire YouTube Francois Antaya 21 March 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fernand Braudel amp oldid 1200247754, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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