Wolf Schäfer



Professor of History (Dr. phil., History of Science and Technology and Social History, University of Bremen). Director of the Center for Global & Local History and the Stony Brook Institute for Global Studies.
E-Mail
wolf.schafer@sunysb.edu
Office
SBS S-329
Phone
631-632-7488
Fax
631-632-7367
Research Interests

Global History, Social History, History of Science and Technology, Historical Geography, Historiography and Methodology

Publications

See Center for Global & Local History: Publications

Blog by Wolf Schäfer

New York Times

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Tuesday, December 15, 2009, the Science Times section of the New York Times has published my first Letter to the Editor ever. Some decline.

Long Island History Journal

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Monday, 14 December 2009, volume 21, issue 1, of the LIHJ went online with six articles, eight reviews, a video interview, the first images of its eMuseum and the “enhanced mission” of writing Long Island history into the larger framework of local, national, and global history.

The Editor in Chief, Charles Backfish, summarized the main content of volume 21, issue 1:

The articles in this first online issue of the Long Island History Journal underscore this enhanced mission. Our publisher and Editor at Large, Wolf Schäfer, sets the conceptual stage using a letter written by Albert Einstein (summering in what is now Cutchogue) to illustrate the intersection of global, national and local history. Joshua Ruff, Associate Editor, offers historical perspective on recent tensions on Long Island involving undocumented day laborers. Joseph Tiedemann’s article on Thomas Jones, a loyalist in the era of the American Revolution, examines the plight of a Long Island man of privilege confronted with the realities of a more democratic society. Frank Cavaioli traces the chartering of a prominent area educational institution in response to the area’s changing economic needs. Neil Buffett studies high school students organizing to call attention to environmental conservation, while Associate Editor Noel Gish profiles Lee Koppelman, whose important work as a planner in Nassau and Suffolk Counties spanned several decades and whose Center for Regional Policy Studies was the previous publisher of the LIHJ. This article serves as a companion piece to video excerpts from an interview with Koppelman, which inaugurates what will be an on-going feature of the LIHJ.

1st year students at holiday party 2009

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Margaret, Sharon, Gregory, Tao, Nicholas, Erin, Michelle, and William

1st years students at holiday party 2009

1st year graduate students at holiday party 2009

The 20th Century in Global Historical Perspective

Friday, January 11th, 2008

Coming to grips with the twentieth century started early and is a historical challenge that will probably stimulate interesting responses for a long time. This seminar will explore some of the first exemplary efforts to “understand” that pivotal century:

Barraclough, Geoffrey. An introduction to contemporary history. New York: Basic Books, 1964.

Von Laue, Theodore H. The world revolution of westernization: the twentieth century in global perspective. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987.

Hobsbawm, Eric. The age of extremes: a history of the world, 1914-1991. New York: Vintage Books, 1996 [1994].

McNeill, John R. Something new under the sun: an environmental history of the twentieth-century world. New York and London: W. W. Norton, 2000.

Ferguson, Niall. The war of the world: twentieth-century conflict and the descent of the west. New York: The Penguin Press, 2006.

For MA and PhD students only.