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John Lukacs

John Adalbert Lukacs (/ˈlkəs/;[1] Hungarian: Lukács János Albert; 31 January 1924 – 6 May 2019) was a Hungarian-born American historian and author of more than thirty books. Lukacs was Roman Catholic.[2][3] Lukacs described himself as a reactionary.[4]

John Lukacs
Born
John Adalbert Lukacs

(1924-01-31)January 31, 1924
Budapest, Hungary
DiedMay 6, 2019(2019-05-06) (aged 95)
EducationUniversity of Budapest (PhD)
OccupationHistorian

Life and career

Lukacs was born in Budapest, Hungary, the son of Magdaléna Glück and Pál Lukács (born Löwinger), a physician.[5] His parents, Jewish converts to Roman Catholicism, were divorced before World War II. Lukacs attended a classical gymnasium, had an English language tutor, and spent two summers at a private school in England. He studied history at the University of Budapest.[6]

During the Second World War, when German troops occupied Hungary in 1944, Lukacs was forced to serve in a Hungarian labour battalion for Jews. By the end of 1944, he had deserted from the battalion and was hiding in a cellar until the end of the war, evading deportation to death camps and surviving the siege of Budapest. According to his son, Lukacs never saw his parents again.[7]

After the war, Lukacs worked as the Secretary of the Hungarian-American Society.[8][9] In 1946, he received his doctorate from the University of Budapest.[7][10]

On 22 July 1946, as it was becoming clear that Hungary would become a Communist state, he fled to the United States. He found employment as a part-time assistant lecturer at Columbia University in New York City. He then relocated to Philadelphia, where in 1947 he began work as a history professor at Chestnut Hill College, a women's college at the time.[7]

He was a professor of history at Chestnut Hill College until 1994 and chaired the history department from 1947 to 1974. He served as a visiting professor at Johns Hopkins University, Columbia University, Princeton University, La Salle University, Regent College in British Columbia and the University of Budapest and Hanover College.

He was a president of the American Catholic Historical Association and member of both the Royal Historical Society and the American Philosophical Society.[11]

Views

Being a proponent of a liberal democracy and an anti-Communist, Lukacs nevertheless wrote in the early 1950s several articles in Commonweal criticizing the approach taken by Senator Joseph McCarthy, whom he described as a vulgar demagogue.[4]

Lukacs saw populism as the primary threat to modern civilization. By his own description, he considered himself a reactionary.[7] He identified populism as the essence of both Nazism and Communism, denying the existence of generic fascism and asserted that the differences between the political regimes of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy were greater than their similarities.[12]

A major theme in Lukacs's writing is his agreement with the French historian Alexis de Tocqueville that aristocratic elites have been replaced by democratic elites, which obtain power via an appeal to the masses. In his 2002 book, At the End of an Age, Lukacs argued that the modern/bourgeois age, which began around the time of the Renaissance, is coming to an end.[13] The rise of populism and the decline of elitism is the theme of his experimental work, A Thread of Years (1998), a series of vignettes set in each year of the 20th century from 1900 to 1998, tracing the abandonment of gentlemanly conduct and the rise of vulgarity in American culture. Lukacs defends traditional Western civilization against what he sees as the leveling and debasing effects of mass culture.

An Anglophile, Lukacs gives the highest historical importance to Winston Churchill. He considered Churchill to be the greatest statesman of the 20th century, the savior not only of Great Britain but also of Western civilization itself. A recurring theme in his writing is the duel between Churchill and Adolf Hitler for mastery of the world. Their moral struggle, which Lukacs sees as a conflict between the archetypical reactionary and the archetypical revolutionary, is the major theme of The Last European War (1976), The Duel (1991), Five Days in London (1999) and 2008's Blood, Toil, Tears and Sweat, a book which features Churchill's first major speech as Prime Minister. Lukacs argues that Great Britain (and by extension the British Empire) could not defeat Germany by itself and that winning required the entry of the United States and the Soviet Union. He points out that by inspiring the British people to resist German air attacks and to "never surrender" during the Battle of Britain in 1940, Churchill laid the groundwork for the subsequent victory of the Allies.

Lukacs had strong isolationist beliefs and unusually for an anti-Communist émigré also had "surprisingly critical views of the Cold War from a unique conservative perspective".[14] Lukacs claimed that the Soviet Union was a feeble power on the verge of collapse and contended that the Cold War was an unnecessary waste of American treasure and life. Likewise, Lukacs was critical of American intervention abroad[15] and also condemned the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

In his book George F. Kennan and the Origins of Containment, 1944-1946 (1997), a collection of letters exchanged between Lukacs and his close friend George F. Kennan during 1994–1995, Lukacs and Kennan criticized the claim of the New Left that the Cold War was caused by the United States. However, Lukacs argued that while Joseph Stalin was largely responsible for the beginning of the Cold War, the administration of Dwight D. Eisenhower missed a chance for ending the Cold War in 1953 after Stalin's death, which kept it on for many more decades.

The Hitler of History

From around 1977 onwards, Lukacs became one of the leading critics of the British author David Irving, whom Lukacs accused of engaging in unscholarly practices and having neo-Nazi sympathies. In a review of Irving's Hitler's War in 1977, Lukacs commented that as a "right-wing revisionist" who had admired some of Irving's early works, he initially had high hopes for Hitler's War, but he found the book to be "appalling".[16] Lukacs commented that Irving had uncritically used personal remembrances by those who knew Hitler to present him in the most favorable light possible.[17] In his review, Lukacs argued that although World War II ended with Eastern Europe being left under Soviet domination, a victory that left only half of Europe to Stalin was much better than a defeat that left all of Europe to Hitler.[18]

External video
  Booknotes interview with Lukacs on The Hitler of History, February 28, 1998, C-SPAN

Lukacs’s book The Hitler of History (1997), a prosopography of the historians who have written biographies of Hitler, is in part a critique of Irving’s work. Lukacs considered Irving to be sympathetic to the Nazis.[7] In turn, Irving has engaged in what many consider to be antisemitic and racist attacks against Lukacs. Because Lukacs' mother was Jewish, Irving disparagingly refers to him as "a Jewish historian". In letters of 25 October and 28 October 1997, Irving threatened to sue Lukacs for libel if he published his book (The Hitler of History) without removing certain passages which were highly critical of Irving's work.[19] The American edition of The Hitler of History was published in 1997 with the passages included, but because of Irving's legal threats no British edition of The Hitler of History was published until 2001.[19] As a result of Irving's threat of legal action under British libel laws, when the British edition was finally published the passages containing the criticism of Irving's historical methods were expunged by the publisher.[20][21]

In The Hitler of History, inspired by the example of Pieter Geyl's book, Napoleon For and Against, Lukacs examines the state of Hitler scholarship and offers his own observations about Hitler. In Lukacs's view, Hitler was a racist, nationalist, revolutionary and populist.[22] Lukacs criticizes Marxist and liberal historians who claim that the German working class were strongly anti-Nazi and argues that the exact opposite was the case. Each chapter of The Hitler of History is devoted to a particular topic, such as whether Hitler was a reactionary or revolutionary; a nationalist or a racist; and he examines the roots of Hitler's ideology. Lukacs denies that Hitler developed a belief in racial purity in Vienna under the Habsburg monarchy. Instead, Lukacs dates Hitler's turn to antisemitism to 1919 in Munich, in particular to the events surrounding the Bavarian Soviet Republic and its defeat by the right-wing Freikorps. Much influenced by Rainer Zitelmann's work, Lukacs describes Hitler as a self-conscious, modernizing revolutionary. Citing the critique of National Socialism developed by German conservative historians such as Hans Rothfels and Gerhard Ritter, Lukacs describes the Nazi movement as the culmination of the dark forces which lurk within modern civilization.

In Lukacs’s view, Operation Barbarossa was not inspired by anti-Communism or any long-term plan to conquer the Soviet Union as suggested by historians such as Andreas Hillgruber, who claims that Hitler had a stufenplan (stage-by-stage plan), but it was rather an ad hoc reaction forced on Hitler in 1940–1941 by Britain’s refusal to surrender.[23] Lukacs argues that the reason Hitler gave for the invasion of Russia was the real one. He claimed that Britain would not surrender because Winston Churchill held out the hope that the Soviet Union might enter the war on the Allied side and so Germany had to eliminate that hope. However, other historians have argued that the reason was just a pretext.[24] For Lukacs, Operation Barbarossa was as much anti-British as it was anti-Soviet. He argues that Hitler's statement in August 1939 to the League of Nations High Commissioner for Danzig, the Swiss diplomat Carl Jacob Burckhardt ("Everything I undertake is directed against Russia"), which Hillgruber cited as evidence of Hitler's anti-Soviet intentions, was part of an effort to intimidate Britain and France into abandoning Poland.[25] Lukacs takes issue with Hillgruber's claim that the war against Britain was of "secondary" importance to Hitler compared to the war against the Soviet Union.[26] Lukacs has also been one of the leading critics of Viktor Suvorov, who has argued that Barbarossa was a "preventative war" forced upon Germany by Stalin, who according to Suvorov was planning to attack Germany later in the summer of 1941.

Later work

External video
  Presentation by Lukacs on Democracy and Populism, April 1, 2005, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Lukacs on George Kennan: A Study of Character, May 2, 2007, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Lukacs on Blood, Toil, Tears, and Sweat, June 17, 2008, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Lukacs on Last Rites, February 22, 2009, C-SPAN

In his book Democracy and Populism: Fear and Hatred (2005), Lukacs writes about the current state of American democracy. He warns that the populism he perceives as ascendant in the United States renders it vulnerable to demagoguery. He claims that a transformation from liberal democracy to populism can be seen in the replacement of knowledge and history with propaganda and infotainment. In the same book, Lukacs criticizes legalized abortion, pornography, cloning and sexual permissiveness as marking what he sees as the increasing decadence, depravity, corruption and amorality of modern American society.[4]

June 1941: Hitler and Stalin (2006) is a book-length study of the two leaders with a focus on the events leading up to Operation Barbarossa. George Kennan: A Study of Character (2007) is a biography of Lukacs' friend George F. Kennan, based on privileged access to Kennan's private papers. Blood, Toil, Tears and Sweat (2008) is a continuation of his work on what Lukacs considered the greatness of Churchill. Last Rites (2009) continues the "auto-history" he published in Confessions of an Original Sinner (1990). The Future of History was published on 26 April 2011.

In A Short History of the Twentieth Century (2013), Lukacs attempts to challenge the idea (common to both professional historians and experts in international relations) that the Cold War presented a bipolar system or a major strategic rivalry or conflict, instead arguing that the 20th century was one of American dominance. Citing the biographical example of Hitler as well as left- and right-wing populism in the United States, Lukacs also argues in the book that populism was the most destructive force of the 20th century and attempts to disentangle the concept of populism from its frequent (though, Lukacs argues, inaccurate) conflation with the inherent stances of left-wing politics.

Private life

In 1953, he married Helen Elizabeth Schofield, the daughter of a Philadelphia lawyer; the couple had two children. His wife died in 1971.[7] He married his second wife, Stephanie Harvey, in 1974.[27] From this marriage, Lukacs had step-children; his second wife died in 2003. He married for a third time, but his marriage to Pamela Hall ended in divorce.[7]

After his retirement in 1994, Lukacs concentrated on writing. He resided in Schuylkill Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania and retained nearly 18,000 books in his home library.[6]

Lukacs died from congestive heart failure on May 6, 2019, at his home in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania.[7]

Works

External video
  Presentation by Lukacs on A Thread of Years, April 9, 1998, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Lukacs on Five Days in London: May 1940, September 21, 2001, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Lukacs on At the End of an Age, May 17, 2002, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Lukacs on The Legacy of the Second World War, April 17, 2010, C-SPAN
  • The Great Powers and Eastern Europe (New York: American Book Co., 1953).
  • A History of the Cold War (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1961).
  • Decline and Rise of Europe: A Study in Recent History, With Particular Emphasis on the Development of a European Consciousness (Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1965).
  • A New history of the Cold War (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1966).
  • Historical Consciousness; or, The Remembered Past (New York: Harper & Row, 1968).
  • The Passing of the Modern Age (New York: Harper & Row, 1970).
  • A Sketch of the History of Chestnut Hill College, 1924–1974 (Chestnut Hill, PA: Chestnut Hill College, 1975).
  • The Last European War: September 1939–December 1941 (Garden City, N.Y.: Anchor Press, 1976).
  • 1945: Year Zero (New York: Doubleday, 1978).
  • Philadelphia: Patricians and Philistines, 1900–1950 (New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1981).
  • Outgrowing Democracy: A History of the United States in the Twentieth century (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1984).
  • Budapest 1900: A Historical Portrait of a City and Its Culture (New York: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1988).
  • Confessions of an Original Sinner (New York: Ticknor and Fields, 1990).
  • The Duel: 10 May–31 July 1940: the Eighty-Day Struggle between Churchill and Hitler (New York: Ticknor & Fields, 1991).
  • The End of the Twentieth Century and the End of the Modern Age (New York: Ticknor & Fields, 1993).
  • Destinations Past: Traveling through History with John Lukacs (Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 1994).
  • The Hitler of History (New York: A. A. Knopf, 1997).
  • George F. Kennan and the Origins of Containment, 1944–1946: the Kennan-Lukacs Correspondence, Introduction by John Lukacs. (Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 1997).
  • A Thread of Years (New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press, 1998).
  • Five Days in London, May 1940 (New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press, 1999).
  • A Student's Guide to the Study of History (Wilmington, DE: ISI Books, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2000).
  • Churchill: Visionary, Statesman, Historian (New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press, 2002).
  • At the End of an Age (New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press, 2002).
  • A New Republic: A History Of The United States In The Twentieth Century(New Haven [Conn.]: Yale University Press, 2004).
  • Democracy and Populism: Fear & Hatred (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005).
  • Remembered Past: John Lukacs On History, Historians & Historical Knowledge: A Reader (Wilmington, DE: ISI Books, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2005).
  • June 1941: Hitler and Stalin. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 2006 (ISBN 0-300-11437-0).
  • George Kennan: A Study of Character. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 2007 (ISBN 0-300-12221-7).
  • Blood, Toil, Tears and Sweat: The Dire Warning. New York: Basic Books, 2008 (ISBN 0-465-00287-0).
  • Last Rites. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 2009 (ISBN 978-0-300-11438-6).
  • The Legacy of the Second World War. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 2010 (ISBN 0-300-11439-7).
  • Through the History of the Cold War: The Correspondence of George F. Kennan and John Lukacs / Edited by John Lukacs. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2010. (ISBN 978-0-812-22271-5)
  • The Future of History. New Haven; London: Yale University Press, 2011 (ISBN 0-300-16956-6).
  • A Short History of the Twentieth Century. Harvard University Press, 2013 (ISBN 978-0-674-72536-2)
  • We at the Center of the Universe. St. Augustines Press, 2017 (ISBN 978-1587319099)

See also

References

  1. ^ "John Lukacs “Popular Tides and the Ship of State”"
  2. ^ Lee Congdon. The Reactionary Loyalties of John Lukacs, The Imaginative Conservative, Summer 2014.
  3. ^ John Wilson. John Lukacs’s Valediction, The American Conservative, October 25, 2013.
  4. ^ a b c Heer, Jeet (March 2005). . Boston Globe. Archived from the original on May 12, 2009. Retrieved August 4, 2008.
  5. ^ "Lukacs, John 1924– | Encyclopedia.com".
  6. ^ a b John Lukacs. Surrounded by Books. Chronicles: A magazine of American Culture, November 2, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "John Lukacs, iconoclastic scholar of history, dies at 95". The Washington Post. May 6, 2019. Retrieved May 7, 2019.
  8. ^ James W. Tuttleton. The Faith of a Catholic Intellectual. Review of Confessions of an Original Sinner by John Lukacs, Modern Age: A Conservative Review, Spring 1993, Vol. 35, No. 3.
  9. ^ Mark Imre Major. American Hungarian Relations 1918-194. Chapter YII. Danubian Press, 1974. ISBN 978-0-879-34036-0 Note: Formed in 1921 at Budapest, the Hungarian-American Society aimed at promoting good relations between the two nations.
  10. ^ Directory of American Scholars, 6th ed. (Bowker, 1974), Vol. I, p. 389.
  11. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2021-07-08.
  12. ^ Lukacs, John The Hitler of History New York: Vintage Books, 1997, 1998 page 118
  13. ^ Lukacs, John At the End of An Age Yale University Press, 2003 page 3
  14. ^ Stromberg, Joseph (2005-02-07) An Anti-Imperialist's Reading List: Part Two, Antiwar.com
  15. ^ Gerald J. Russello. What You Need to Know About John Lukacs, Front Porch Republic, October 14, 2013.
  16. ^ Lukacs, John "Caveat Lector" pages 946-950 from National Review, Volume XXIX, Issue # 32, August 19, 1977, pages 946-947
  17. ^ Lukacs, John "Caveat Lector" pages 946-950 from National Review, Volume XXIX, Issue # 32, August 19, 1977, page 946
  18. ^ Lukacs, John "Caveat Lector" pages 946-950 from National Review, Volume XXIX, Issue # 32, August 19, 1977, pages 949-950
  19. ^ a b Evans, Richard J (2001). Lying About Hitler. p. 27.
  20. ^ Adams, Tim (24 February 2002). "Memories are made of this". The Observer. -London. Retrieved December 21, 2008.
  21. ^ Lipstadt, Deborah (2007). "Search: January 1, 2007 to January 1, 2008". Deborah Lipstadt's Blog. Blogspot. Retrieved December 21, 2008.
  22. ^ Lukacs, John The Hitler of History, New York: Vintage Books, 1997, 1998 pages 218-219
  23. ^ Lukacs, John The Hitler of History New York: Vintage Books, 1997, 1998 pages 133 & 149-150
  24. ^ Lukacs, John The Hitler of History New York: Vintage Books, 1997, 1998 pages 149-151
  25. ^ Lukacs (1997), p.147.
  26. ^ Lukacs (1997), p. 149.
  27. ^ 2005 Schuylkill Oral History Project interview: Dr. John Lukacs, Transcribed by Nancy Loane, Edited by John Lukacs on October 25, 2017.

Sources

  • Allitt, Patrick Catholic Intellectuals And Conservative Politics In America 1950-1985, Cornell University Press, 1993.
  • Williamson, Chilton The Conservative Bookshelf: Essential Works That Impact Today's Conservative Thinkers, Citadel Press, 2004.
  • Rodden, John; Rossi, John (2008). "John Lukacs: Visionary, Critic, Historian". Society. 45 (3): 222–232. doi:10.1007/s12115-008-9095-3. S2CID 143569547.

External links

Lectures

  • Three lectures by John Lukacs

Essays

  • by John Lukacs
  • Putting Man Before Descartes by John Lukacs
=Further Reading=: 
  • Bernhard Valentinitsch,Max-Erwin von Scheubner-Richter(1885-1923)-Zeuge des Genozids an den Armeniern und früher,enger Mitarbeiter Hitlers.Diplomarbeit.Graz 2012.,(also digitalised at Harvard University Libray,dedicated to John Lukacs,with many reflexions about his work,especially his work about Hitler and similar ways of thinking in the work of Lukacs and his friend Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn)

Lukacs reviewed

  • George Kennan: A Study of Character Review by James Traub in The New York Times, April 29, 2007.
  • The People's Hitler Does Hitler's popularity discredit populism itself?: A Review of The Hitler of History by Adam Shatz
  • The Anti-Populist Traditionalist historian John Lukacs laments the direction of conservatism in America by Jeet Heer
  • Towards the Fuhrer: Review of The Hitler Of History
  • Churchill and His Myths
  • The Lettered Reactionary (retrieved 5 January 2017) Lukacs' profile by John Rodden and John Rossi

Lukacs interviewed

  • In Depth interview with Lukacs, February 6, 2000, C-SPAN
  • 2005 Schuylkill Oral History Project interview: Dr. John Lukacs, December 8, 2005. Transcribed by Nancy Loane. Edited by John Lukacs on October 25, 2017.
  • Interview with Lukacs on "New Books in History"

john, lukacs, this, article, about, historian, anthropologist, john, lukacs, other, persons, similar, name, john, lucas, disambiguation, john, adalbert, lukacs, hungarian, lukács, jános, albert, january, 1924, 2019, hungarian, born, american, historian, author. This article is about the historian For the anthropologist see John R Lukacs For other persons of a similar name see John Lucas disambiguation John Adalbert Lukacs ˈ l uː k e s 1 Hungarian Lukacs Janos Albert 31 January 1924 6 May 2019 was a Hungarian born American historian and author of more than thirty books Lukacs was Roman Catholic 2 3 Lukacs described himself as a reactionary 4 John LukacsBornJohn Adalbert Lukacs 1924 01 31 January 31 1924Budapest HungaryDiedMay 6 2019 2019 05 06 aged 95 Phoenixville Pennsylvania U S EducationUniversity of Budapest PhD OccupationHistorian Contents 1 Life and career 2 Views 2 1 The Hitler of History 2 2 Later work 3 Private life 4 Works 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External links 8 1 Lectures 8 2 Essays 8 3 Lukacs reviewed 8 4 Lukacs interviewedLife and career EditLukacs was born in Budapest Hungary the son of Magdalena Gluck and Pal Lukacs born Lowinger a physician 5 His parents Jewish converts to Roman Catholicism were divorced before World War II Lukacs attended a classical gymnasium had an English language tutor and spent two summers at a private school in England He studied history at the University of Budapest 6 During the Second World War when German troops occupied Hungary in 1944 Lukacs was forced to serve in a Hungarian labour battalion for Jews By the end of 1944 he had deserted from the battalion and was hiding in a cellar until the end of the war evading deportation to death camps and surviving the siege of Budapest According to his son Lukacs never saw his parents again 7 After the war Lukacs worked as the Secretary of the Hungarian American Society 8 9 In 1946 he received his doctorate from the University of Budapest 7 10 On 22 July 1946 as it was becoming clear that Hungary would become a Communist state he fled to the United States He found employment as a part time assistant lecturer at Columbia University in New York City He then relocated to Philadelphia where in 1947 he began work as a history professor at Chestnut Hill College a women s college at the time 7 He was a professor of history at Chestnut Hill College until 1994 and chaired the history department from 1947 to 1974 He served as a visiting professor at Johns Hopkins University Columbia University Princeton University La Salle University Regent College in British Columbia and the University of Budapest and Hanover College He was a president of the American Catholic Historical Association and member of both the Royal Historical Society and the American Philosophical Society 11 Views EditBeing a proponent of a liberal democracy and an anti Communist Lukacs nevertheless wrote in the early 1950s several articles in Commonweal criticizing the approach taken by Senator Joseph McCarthy whom he described as a vulgar demagogue 4 Lukacs saw populism as the primary threat to modern civilization By his own description he considered himself a reactionary 7 He identified populism as the essence of both Nazism and Communism denying the existence of generic fascism and asserted that the differences between the political regimes of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy were greater than their similarities 12 A major theme in Lukacs s writing is his agreement with the French historian Alexis de Tocqueville that aristocratic elites have been replaced by democratic elites which obtain power via an appeal to the masses In his 2002 book At the End of an Age Lukacs argued that the modern bourgeois age which began around the time of the Renaissance is coming to an end 13 The rise of populism and the decline of elitism is the theme of his experimental work A Thread of Years 1998 a series of vignettes set in each year of the 20th century from 1900 to 1998 tracing the abandonment of gentlemanly conduct and the rise of vulgarity in American culture Lukacs defends traditional Western civilization against what he sees as the leveling and debasing effects of mass culture An Anglophile Lukacs gives the highest historical importance to Winston Churchill He considered Churchill to be the greatest statesman of the 20th century the savior not only of Great Britain but also of Western civilization itself A recurring theme in his writing is the duel between Churchill and Adolf Hitler for mastery of the world Their moral struggle which Lukacs sees as a conflict between the archetypical reactionary and the archetypical revolutionary is the major theme of The Last European War 1976 The Duel 1991 Five Days in London 1999 and 2008 s Blood Toil Tears and Sweat a book which features Churchill s first major speech as Prime Minister Lukacs argues that Great Britain and by extension the British Empire could not defeat Germany by itself and that winning required the entry of the United States and the Soviet Union He points out that by inspiring the British people to resist German air attacks and to never surrender during the Battle of Britain in 1940 Churchill laid the groundwork for the subsequent victory of the Allies Lukacs had strong isolationist beliefs and unusually for an anti Communist emigre also had surprisingly critical views of the Cold War from a unique conservative perspective 14 Lukacs claimed that the Soviet Union was a feeble power on the verge of collapse and contended that the Cold War was an unnecessary waste of American treasure and life Likewise Lukacs was critical of American intervention abroad 15 and also condemned the 2003 invasion of Iraq In his book George F Kennan and the Origins of Containment 1944 1946 1997 a collection of letters exchanged between Lukacs and his close friend George F Kennan during 1994 1995 Lukacs and Kennan criticized the claim of the New Left that the Cold War was caused by the United States However Lukacs argued that while Joseph Stalin was largely responsible for the beginning of the Cold War the administration of Dwight D Eisenhower missed a chance for ending the Cold War in 1953 after Stalin s death which kept it on for many more decades The Hitler of History Edit From around 1977 onwards Lukacs became one of the leading critics of the British author David Irving whom Lukacs accused of engaging in unscholarly practices and having neo Nazi sympathies In a review of Irving s Hitler s War in 1977 Lukacs commented that as a right wing revisionist who had admired some of Irving s early works he initially had high hopes for Hitler s War but he found the book to be appalling 16 Lukacs commented that Irving had uncritically used personal remembrances by those who knew Hitler to present him in the most favorable light possible 17 In his review Lukacs argued that although World War II ended with Eastern Europe being left under Soviet domination a victory that left only half of Europe to Stalin was much better than a defeat that left all of Europe to Hitler 18 External video Booknotes interview with Lukacs on The Hitler of History February 28 1998 C SPANLukacs s book The Hitler of History 1997 a prosopography of the historians who have written biographies of Hitler is in part a critique of Irving s work Lukacs considered Irving to be sympathetic to the Nazis 7 In turn Irving has engaged in what many consider to be antisemitic and racist attacks against Lukacs Because Lukacs mother was Jewish Irving disparagingly refers to him as a Jewish historian In letters of 25 October and 28 October 1997 Irving threatened to sue Lukacs for libel if he published his book The Hitler of History without removing certain passages which were highly critical of Irving s work 19 The American edition of The Hitler of History was published in 1997 with the passages included but because of Irving s legal threats no British edition of The Hitler of History was published until 2001 19 As a result of Irving s threat of legal action under British libel laws when the British edition was finally published the passages containing the criticism of Irving s historical methods were expunged by the publisher 20 21 In The Hitler of History inspired by the example of Pieter Geyl s book Napoleon For and Against Lukacs examines the state of Hitler scholarship and offers his own observations about Hitler In Lukacs s view Hitler was a racist nationalist revolutionary and populist 22 Lukacs criticizes Marxist and liberal historians who claim that the German working class were strongly anti Nazi and argues that the exact opposite was the case Each chapter of The Hitler of History is devoted to a particular topic such as whether Hitler was a reactionary or revolutionary a nationalist or a racist and he examines the roots of Hitler s ideology Lukacs denies that Hitler developed a belief in racial purity in Vienna under the Habsburg monarchy Instead Lukacs dates Hitler s turn to antisemitism to 1919 in Munich in particular to the events surrounding the Bavarian Soviet Republic and its defeat by the right wing Freikorps Much influenced by Rainer Zitelmann s work Lukacs describes Hitler as a self conscious modernizing revolutionary Citing the critique of National Socialism developed by German conservative historians such as Hans Rothfels and Gerhard Ritter Lukacs describes the Nazi movement as the culmination of the dark forces which lurk within modern civilization In Lukacs s view Operation Barbarossa was not inspired by anti Communism or any long term plan to conquer the Soviet Union as suggested by historians such as Andreas Hillgruber who claims that Hitler had a stufenplan stage by stage plan but it was rather an ad hoc reaction forced on Hitler in 1940 1941 by Britain s refusal to surrender 23 Lukacs argues that the reason Hitler gave for the invasion of Russia was the real one He claimed that Britain would not surrender because Winston Churchill held out the hope that the Soviet Union might enter the war on the Allied side and so Germany had to eliminate that hope However other historians have argued that the reason was just a pretext 24 For Lukacs Operation Barbarossa was as much anti British as it was anti Soviet He argues that Hitler s statement in August 1939 to the League of Nations High Commissioner for Danzig the Swiss diplomat Carl Jacob Burckhardt Everything I undertake is directed against Russia which Hillgruber cited as evidence of Hitler s anti Soviet intentions was part of an effort to intimidate Britain and France into abandoning Poland 25 Lukacs takes issue with Hillgruber s claim that the war against Britain was of secondary importance to Hitler compared to the war against the Soviet Union 26 Lukacs has also been one of the leading critics of Viktor Suvorov who has argued that Barbarossa was a preventative war forced upon Germany by Stalin who according to Suvorov was planning to attack Germany later in the summer of 1941 Later work Edit External video Presentation by Lukacs on Democracy and Populism April 1 2005 C SPAN Presentation by Lukacs on George Kennan A Study of Character May 2 2007 C SPAN Presentation by Lukacs on Blood Toil Tears and Sweat June 17 2008 C SPAN Presentation by Lukacs on Last Rites February 22 2009 C SPANIn his book Democracy and Populism Fear and Hatred 2005 Lukacs writes about the current state of American democracy He warns that the populism he perceives as ascendant in the United States renders it vulnerable to demagoguery He claims that a transformation from liberal democracy to populism can be seen in the replacement of knowledge and history with propaganda and infotainment In the same book Lukacs criticizes legalized abortion pornography cloning and sexual permissiveness as marking what he sees as the increasing decadence depravity corruption and amorality of modern American society 4 June 1941 Hitler and Stalin 2006 is a book length study of the two leaders with a focus on the events leading up to Operation Barbarossa George Kennan A Study of Character 2007 is a biography of Lukacs friend George F Kennan based on privileged access to Kennan s private papers Blood Toil Tears and Sweat 2008 is a continuation of his work on what Lukacs considered the greatness of Churchill Last Rites 2009 continues the auto history he published in Confessions of an Original Sinner 1990 The Future of History was published on 26 April 2011 In A Short History of the Twentieth Century 2013 Lukacs attempts to challenge the idea common to both professional historians and experts in international relations that the Cold War presented a bipolar system or a major strategic rivalry or conflict instead arguing that the 20th century was one of American dominance Citing the biographical example of Hitler as well as left and right wing populism in the United States Lukacs also argues in the book that populism was the most destructive force of the 20th century and attempts to disentangle the concept of populism from its frequent though Lukacs argues inaccurate conflation with the inherent stances of left wing politics Private life EditIn 1953 he married Helen Elizabeth Schofield the daughter of a Philadelphia lawyer the couple had two children His wife died in 1971 7 He married his second wife Stephanie Harvey in 1974 27 From this marriage Lukacs had step children his second wife died in 2003 He married for a third time but his marriage to Pamela Hall ended in divorce 7 After his retirement in 1994 Lukacs concentrated on writing He resided in Schuylkill Township Chester County Pennsylvania and retained nearly 18 000 books in his home library 6 Lukacs died from congestive heart failure on May 6 2019 at his home in Phoenixville Pennsylvania 7 Works EditExternal video Presentation by Lukacs on A Thread of Years April 9 1998 C SPAN Presentation by Lukacs on Five Days in London May 1940 September 21 2001 C SPAN Presentation by Lukacs on At the End of an Age May 17 2002 C SPAN Presentation by Lukacs on The Legacy of the Second World War April 17 2010 C SPANThe Great Powers and Eastern Europe New York American Book Co 1953 A History of the Cold War Garden City N Y Doubleday 1961 Decline and Rise of Europe A Study in Recent History With Particular Emphasis on the Development of a European Consciousness Garden City N Y Doubleday 1965 A New history of the Cold War Garden City N Y Doubleday 1966 Historical Consciousness or The Remembered Past New York Harper amp Row 1968 The Passing of the Modern Age New York Harper amp Row 1970 A Sketch of the History of Chestnut Hill College 1924 1974 Chestnut Hill PA Chestnut Hill College 1975 The Last European War September 1939 December 1941 Garden City N Y Anchor Press 1976 1945 Year Zero New York Doubleday 1978 Philadelphia Patricians and Philistines 1900 1950 New York Farrar Straus Giroux 1981 Outgrowing Democracy A History of the United States in the Twentieth century Garden City N Y Doubleday 1984 Budapest 1900 A Historical Portrait of a City and Its Culture New York Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1988 Confessions of an Original Sinner New York Ticknor and Fields 1990 The Duel 10 May 31 July 1940 the Eighty Day Struggle between Churchill and Hitler New York Ticknor amp Fields 1991 The End of the Twentieth Century and the End of the Modern Age New York Ticknor amp Fields 1993 Destinations Past Traveling through History with John Lukacs Columbia MO University of Missouri Press 1994 The Hitler of History New York A A Knopf 1997 George F Kennan and the Origins of Containment 1944 1946 the Kennan Lukacs Correspondence Introduction by John Lukacs Columbia Mo University of Missouri Press 1997 A Thread of Years New Haven Conn Yale University Press 1998 Five Days in London May 1940 New Haven Conn Yale University Press 1999 A Student s Guide to the Study of History Wilmington DE ISI Books Intercollegiate Studies Institute 2000 Churchill Visionary Statesman Historian New Haven Conn Yale University Press 2002 At the End of an Age New Haven Conn Yale University Press 2002 A New Republic A History Of The United States In The Twentieth Century New Haven Conn Yale University Press 2004 Democracy and Populism Fear amp Hatred New Haven Yale University Press 2005 Remembered Past John Lukacs On History Historians amp Historical Knowledge A Reader Wilmington DE ISI Books Intercollegiate Studies Institute 2005 June 1941 Hitler and Stalin New Haven London Yale University Press 2006 ISBN 0 300 11437 0 George Kennan A Study of Character New Haven London Yale University Press 2007 ISBN 0 300 12221 7 Blood Toil Tears and Sweat The Dire Warning New York Basic Books 2008 ISBN 0 465 00287 0 Last Rites New Haven London Yale University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 300 11438 6 The Legacy of the Second World War New Haven London Yale University Press 2010 ISBN 0 300 11439 7 Through the History of the Cold War The Correspondence of George F Kennan and John Lukacs Edited by John Lukacs University of Pennsylvania Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 812 22271 5 The Future of History New Haven London Yale University Press 2011 ISBN 0 300 16956 6 A Short History of the Twentieth Century Harvard University Press 2013 ISBN 978 0 674 72536 2 We at the Center of the Universe St Augustines Press 2017 ISBN 978 1587319099 See also EditList of books by or about Adolf HitlerReferences Edit John Lukacs Popular Tides and the Ship of State Lee Congdon The Reactionary Loyalties of John Lukacs The Imaginative Conservative Summer 2014 John Wilson John Lukacs s Valediction The American Conservative October 25 2013 a b c Heer Jeet March 2005 The Anti Populist Traditionalist historian John Lukacs laments the direction of conservatism in America Boston Globe Archived from the original on May 12 2009 Retrieved August 4 2008 Lukacs John 1924 Encyclopedia com a b John Lukacs Surrounded by Books Chronicles A magazine of American Culture November 2 2017 Archived a b c d e f g h John Lukacs iconoclastic scholar of history dies at 95 The Washington Post May 6 2019 Retrieved May 7 2019 James W Tuttleton The Faith of a Catholic Intellectual Review of Confessions of an Original Sinner by John Lukacs Modern Age A Conservative Review Spring 1993 Vol 35 No 3 Archive Mark Imre Major American Hungarian Relations 1918 194 Chapter YII Danubian Press 1974 ISBN 978 0 879 34036 0 Note Formed in 1921 at Budapest the Hungarian American Society aimed at promoting good relations between the two nations Directory of American Scholars 6th ed Bowker 1974 Vol I p 389 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2021 07 08 Lukacs John The Hitler of History New York Vintage Books 1997 1998 page 118 Lukacs John At the End of An Age Yale University Press 2003 page 3 Stromberg Joseph 2005 02 07 An Anti Imperialist s Reading List Part Two Antiwar com Gerald J Russello What You Need to Know About John Lukacs Front Porch Republic October 14 2013 Lukacs John Caveat Lector pages 946 950 from National Review Volume XXIX Issue 32 August 19 1977 pages 946 947 Lukacs John Caveat Lector pages 946 950 from National Review Volume XXIX Issue 32 August 19 1977 page 946 Lukacs John Caveat Lector pages 946 950 from National Review Volume XXIX Issue 32 August 19 1977 pages 949 950 a b Evans Richard J 2001 Lying About Hitler p 27 Adams Tim 24 February 2002 Memories are made of this The Observer London Retrieved December 21 2008 Lipstadt Deborah 2007 Search January 1 2007 to January 1 2008 Deborah Lipstadt s Blog Blogspot Retrieved December 21 2008 Lukacs John The Hitler of History New York Vintage Books 1997 1998 pages 218 219 Lukacs John The Hitler of History New York Vintage Books 1997 1998 pages 133 amp 149 150 Lukacs John The Hitler of History New York Vintage Books 1997 1998 pages 149 151 Lukacs 1997 p 147 Lukacs 1997 p 149 2005 Schuylkill Oral History Project interview Dr John Lukacs Transcribed by Nancy Loane Edited by John Lukacs on October 25 2017 ArchivedSources EditAllitt Patrick Catholic Intellectuals And Conservative Politics In America 1950 1985 Cornell University Press 1993 Williamson Chilton The Conservative Bookshelf Essential Works That Impact Today s Conservative Thinkers Citadel Press 2004 Rodden John Rossi John 2008 John Lukacs Visionary Critic Historian Society 45 3 222 232 doi 10 1007 s12115 008 9095 3 S2CID 143569547 External links EditAppearances on C SPANLectures Edit Three lectures by John LukacsEssays Edit The Universality of National Socialism The Mistaken Category of Fascism by John Lukacs Putting Man Before Descartes by John Lukacs Further Reading Bernhard Valentinitsch Max Erwin von Scheubner Richter 1885 1923 Zeuge des Genozids an den Armeniern und fruher enger Mitarbeiter Hitlers Diplomarbeit Graz 2012 also digitalised at Harvard University Libray dedicated to John Lukacs with many reflexions about his work especially his work about Hitler and similar ways of thinking in the work of Lukacs and his friend Erik von Kuehnelt Leddihn Lukacs reviewed Edit George Kennan A Study of Character Review by James Traub in The New York Times April 29 2007 The People s Hitler Does Hitler s popularity discredit populism itself A Review of The Hitler of History by Adam Shatz The Anti Populist Traditionalist historian John Lukacs laments the direction of conservatism in America by Jeet Heer Review of THE HITLER OF HISTORY by John Lukacs amp EXPLAINING HITLER THE SEARCH FOR THE ORIGINS OF HIS EVIL by Ron Rosenbaum History in a Democratic Age A Conversation with John Lukacs Towards the Fuhrer Review of The Hitler Of History Churchill and His Myths The Lettered Reactionary retrieved 5 January 2017 Lukacs profile by John Rodden and John RossiLukacs interviewed Edit In Depth interview with Lukacs February 6 2000 C SPAN 2005 Schuylkill Oral History Project interview Dr John Lukacs December 8 2005 Transcribed by Nancy Loane Edited by John Lukacs on October 25 2017 Archived Interview with Lukacs on New Books in History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Lukacs amp oldid 1151819827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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