This year’s Von Rosenstiel Lecture will be delivered by Professor Mark Mazower, currently Ira
D. Wallach Professor of History, Department Chair, and Director of the Heyman Center for the
Humanities at Columbia University.
Professor Mazower is one of the most accomplished historians working in the academy today.
The author of numerous prize-winning books and a frequent commentator on the historical
context shaping contemporary affairs, Professor Mazower’s work has long been focused on
some of the defining issues of modern times: the making of empires and nations, the causes of
war and peace, and the grand as well as anonymous work of governments and individuals to
define and expand their rights as citizens and participants in an increasingly global society. For
more on Professor Mazower’s many books and accomplishments, see his faculty web page at
Columbia: http://history.columbia.edu/faculty/Mazower.html
Trained as a historian of modern Greece and the Balkans, Professor Mazower’s interests
are far-reaching, and his current work places him very much at the forefront of trends in
international history, including his latest book, Governing the World: The History of An Idea
(Penguin, 2012), which offers a provocative interpretation of the ways in which individuals and
nations have helped shape the dream and reality of global governance from the 19th
the present.
During his visit to UC, Professor Mazower will deliver the Von Rosenstiel Lecture and host a
special session devoted to discussing Governing the World. Both events are free and open to
the public.
Thursday, February 27th
The Annual Von Rosenstiel Lecture
The Greek War for Independence in Global Perspective
Reception to follow
Friday, February 28th, 9:30-11:30 AM in 417 TUC
Book Seminar
Governing the World: The History of an Idea
4 PM at the Taft Research Center, Ground Floor, Edwards One
It is an honor for UC to host Professor Mazower for this visit. We are grateful to the Von
Rosenstiel family and to the memory of Mr. Werner E. Von Rosenstiel for their generosity in
creating the endowment that allows us to invite such eminent scholars to campus. The History
Department also expresses thanks to the UC Classics, Political Science, and Judaic Studies
Departments, the UC European Studies Program, the Morgan Center for Human Rights at the
College of Law, UC Amnesty International, the UC History Club, the Human Rights Taft Research
Group, and the Global Studies Taft Research Group for the funding and assistance.
for more information concerning the Annual Von Rosenstiel Lecture and related events, please
contact the Professor Ethan Katz of the UC History Department at ethan.katz@uc.edu\
2013-2014 Von Rosenstiel Lecture
D. Wallach Professor of History, Department Chair, and Director of the Heyman Center for the
Humanities at Columbia University.
Professor Mazower is one of the most accomplished historians working in the academy today.
The author of numerous prize-winning books and a frequent commentator on the historical
context shaping contemporary affairs, Professor Mazower’s work has long been focused on
some of the defining issues of modern times: the making of empires and nations, the causes of
war and peace, and the grand as well as anonymous work of governments and individuals to
define and expand their rights as citizens and participants in an increasingly global society. For
more on Professor Mazower’s many books and accomplishments, see his faculty web page at
Columbia: http://history.columbia.edu/faculty/Mazower.html
Dr. Mark Mazower |
Trained as a historian of modern Greece and the Balkans, Professor Mazower’s interests
are far-reaching, and his current work places him very much at the forefront of trends in
international history, including his latest book, Governing the World: The History of An Idea
(Penguin, 2012), which offers a provocative interpretation of the ways in which individuals and
nations have helped shape the dream and reality of global governance from the 19th
the present.
During his visit to UC, Professor Mazower will deliver the Von Rosenstiel Lecture and host a
special session devoted to discussing Governing the World. Both events are free and open to
the public.
Thursday, February 27th
The Annual Von Rosenstiel Lecture
The Greek War for Independence in Global Perspective
Reception to follow
Friday, February 28th, 9:30-11:30 AM in 417 TUC
Book Seminar
Governing the World: The History of an Idea
4 PM at the Taft Research Center, Ground Floor, Edwards One
It is an honor for UC to host Professor Mazower for this visit. We are grateful to the Von
Rosenstiel family and to the memory of Mr. Werner E. Von Rosenstiel for their generosity in
creating the endowment that allows us to invite such eminent scholars to campus. The History
Department also expresses thanks to the UC Classics, Political Science, and Judaic Studies
Departments, the UC European Studies Program, the Morgan Center for Human Rights at the
College of Law, UC Amnesty International, the UC History Club, the Human Rights Taft Research
Group, and the Global Studies Taft Research Group for the funding and assistance.
for more information concerning the Annual Von Rosenstiel Lecture and related events, please
contact the Professor Ethan Katz of the UC History Department at ethan.katz@uc.edu\
2013-2014 Von Rosenstiel Lecture
Wrote by UC History Department