Dr. Eve Rosenhaft
Geb. 1951, Professor seit 2005, Liverpool, Großbritannien/Nordirland
German Studies (Fachgebiet) - Deutsche Sozial- und Kulturgeschichte 1750-1950 (Lehrgebiet)
Kontaktinformationen:
The University of Liverpool - School of Cultures, Languages and Area Studies, Cypress Building - Chatham Street, Liverpool, L69 7ZR
Forschungsgebiete
Besondere Forschungsgebiete
- Kolonialismus
- Holocaust
- Rasse
- Finanzkulturen
Monographien
- Black Germany: The Making and Unmaking of a Diaspora Community 1884-1960 (monograph, with R.J.M. Aitken). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013
- Beating the Fascists? The German Communists and Political Violence 1929-1933, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983 [Reissued 2008]
Aufsätze und Beiträge
- ‘How Germans learned to invest: German responses to the first bubbles 1720’, in Mary Lindemann and Jared Poley(eds), Money in the German-Speaking Lands. Oxford and Providence: Berghahn (forthcoming 2015)
- ‘Blacks and Gypsies in Nazi Germany: The Limits of the “Racial State”’, History Workshop Journal 72 (Autumn 2011), 161-71
- ‘How to Tame Chance: Evolving Languages of Risk, Trust and Expertise in 18th-century German Proto-Insurances’, in Geoffrey W. Clark and Gregory Anderson (eds.), The Appeal of Insurance. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2010, pp. 16-42
- ‘Women and financial knowledge in eighteenth-century Germany’, in Anne Laurence, Josephine Maltby and Janette Rutterford (eds.), Women and Their Money. Essays on Women and Finance 1700-1950. London: Routledge, 2008, pp. 59-72
- ‘Herz oder Kopf. Erfahrungsbildung beim Kaufen von Aktien und Witwenrenten im norddeutschen Bildungsbürgertum des späten 18. Jahrhunderts’, Historische Anthropologie 14 (2006), pp. 349-69
- ‘Mother Ada Wright and the International Campaign to Free the Scottsboro Boys’ (with Susan Pennybacker and James Miller), American Historical Review 106, no. 2 (April 2001), pp. 387-403
- ‘Did women invent life insurance? Widows and the demand for financial services in eighteenth-century Germany’, in David R. Green and Alastair Owens (eds.), Family Welfare: Gender, Property and Inheritance since the Seventeenth Century. London and Westport CT: Praeger, 2004, pp. 163-94