John M. Merriman
John M. Merriman (b.?) is a Charles Seymour Professor of History at Yale University.[1] He is the author of many books including his most well known A History of Modern Europe since the Renaissance (1996 & 2002), a popular text for undergraduate history classes. Merriman was born and raised in Oregon where he attended a Jesuit all-boys high-school, although he does not consider himself religious.[2] His favorite music is The Rolling Stones, "[I’ve] never written a thing without a record on."[3] Merriman formed many of his current political views during the volatile Vietnam years; he still describes himself as "virulently anti-establishment".[3] His most recent book is The Dynamite Club: How a Bombing in the Fin-De-Siecle Paris Ignited The Age of Modern Terror (2009) about the French Anarchist Emile Henry (1872-1894).
He received his Ph.D. at the University of Michigan. Merriman teaches French and Modern European history and first began teaching at Yale in the mid 1970s where he still resides.[3] He lives part of each year with his family in France.[2]
Awards and honors
- Yale University Byrnes-Sewall Teaching Prize in 2000
- Awarded an honorary doctorate in France
Published works
- The Agony of the Republic: The Repression of the Left in Revolutionary France, 1848-1851 (1978)
- The Red City: Limoges and the French Nineteenth Century (1985)
- The Margins of City Life: Explorations on the French Urban Frontier (1991)
- A History of Modern Europe since the Renaissance, 2 vols. (1996 and second edition 2002)
- The Stones of Balazuc: A French Village in Time (2002), available in French as Mêmoires de pierres: Balazuc, village ardechois (Paris, 2005).
- Police Stories: Making the French State, 1815-1851 (Oxford UP, 2006)
- The Dynamite Club: How a Bombing in the Fin-De-Siecle Paris Ignited The Age of Modern Terror (2009)
Edited books include:
- 1830 in France (1975)
- Consciousness and Class Experience in Nineteenth-Century Europe (1979)
- French Cities in the Nineteenth Century (1981)
- For Want of a Horse: Chance and Humor in History (1985)
- Edo and Paris: Urban Life and the State in Early Modern Europe (with James McClain and Ugawa Kaoru, 1994)
- The Story of Mankind (with Hendrik Willem Van Loon, first published 1921, updated by Merriman in 1999)
- The Encyclopedia of Europe, 1789-1914 and The Encyclopedia of Europe, 1914-2006, (each 5 volumes, Charles Scribner's Sons, 2006, co-edit (and contributed to) with Jay Winter)
Notes
- ^ John Merriman, Yale faculty page.
- ^ a b John Merriman, HIST 276: France Since 1871 (Fall, 2007), at Academic Earth. Merriman peppers his course lectures with biographical details.
- ^ a b c "Listening to Music with... John Merriman", Nick Vinocur, Yale Daily News, October 27, 2006
External links
- John Merriman, Yale faculty page.
- John Merriman, at Academic Earth.