Peter Gay, a German-born historian whose sense of tellectual adventure led him to wre groundbreakg books on the Enlightenment, the Victorian middle class, Sigmund Frd, Weimar culture and the cultural suatn of Jews Germany, died on Tuday at his home Manhattan. He was 91. Read the plete article at the New York Tim webse.
Contents:
- PETER GAY
- IN MEMORIAM: PETER GAY
- PETER GAY, HISTORIAN WHO EXPLORED SOCIAL HISTORY OF IAS, DI AT 91
- PETER GAY OBUARY
- PETER GAY, 1923–2015
- PETER J. GAY PAPERS
- PETER GAY - BGRAPHY
PETER GAY
* peter gay yale *
Home > News > In Memoriam: Peter Gay. In Memoriam: Peter Gay.
Peter Gay, a German-born historian whose sense of tellectual adventure led him to wre groundbreakg books on the Enlightenment, the Victorian middle class, Sigmund Frd, Weimar culture and the cultural suatn of Jews Germany, died on Tuday at his home Manhattan. Yee/The New York TimMay 12, 2015Peter Gay, a German-born historian whose sense of tellectual adventure led him to wre groundbreakg books on the Enlightenment, the Victorian middle class, Sigmund Frd, Weimar culture and the cultural suatn of Jews Germany, died on Tuday at his home Manhattan.
He was ath was nfirmed by his stepdghter Elizabeth Gay, a refugee om Nazi Germany, voted his reer to explorg the social history of ias, a qut that took him far om his origal area of specializatn, Voltaire and the Enlightenment. Gay’s reputatn as one of the pre-ement historians of his generatn. Gay to tra at the Wtern New England Instute for Psychoanalysis and motivated him to wre a revisnist psychohistory of the Victorian middle class, “The Bourgeois Experience: Victoria to Frd, ” whose five volum were published the 1980s and 1990s.
IN MEMORIAM: PETER GAY
Gay were both assiated, nonrelig Jews nourished by and trapped a Germanic culture whose anti-Semic unrcurrents gathered strength around them. Gay’s most personal and anguished historil wrg, notably the says “Frd, Jews and Other Germans” (1978) and the tobgraphil “My German Qutn: Growg Up Nazi Berl” (1998). Gay relled the pleasur of attendg the 1936 Olympics — spoiled only by the sight of Hler and Görg the stands — and the nfg mix of savage reprsn and tolerance that characterized life unr the Nazis until 1938.
Gay was forced out of his school, and his father’s gentile partner appropriated the glassware bs.
Gay attend bs school and tght himself English by readg magaz like Time and Collier’s. Gay changed to s English graduatg om the Universy of Denver 1946, Mr.
PETER GAY, HISTORIAN WHO EXPLORED SOCIAL HISTORY OF IAS, DI AT 91
Gay entered Columbia Universy, where he earned a master’s gree history 1947 and a Ph.
Gay wrote “Voltaire’s Polics” a revisnist spir. Gay signaled a Frdian turn his terpretatn of history that was ratified by his formal psychoanalytic trag the 1970s. Gay’s Frdian tour of the 19th century long on lorful stanc but short on analytic rigor, suggtive rather than persuasive.
PETER GAY OBUARY
Gay’s nonil thkers.
Gay remaed an unignorable historian long after his retirement.
PETER GAY, 1923–2015
Gay received his Ph. A rrectn was ma onMay 15, 2015: An obuary on Wednday about the historian Peter Gay referred imprecisely to the ship on which he and his fay left Germany 1939.
PETER J. GAY PAPERS
Gay’s “The Bourgeois Experience: Victoria to Frd.
PETER GAY - BGRAPHY
” They me out the 1980s and the 1990s, not jt the we handle rrectnsA versn of this article appears prt on, Sectn A, Page 25 of the New York edn wh the headle: Peter Gay, Historian and Frd Bgrapher, Di at 91. Peter Gay, who has died aged 91, was one of Ameri’s leadg historians, known particularly for his work on morn European cultural and tellectual history. The first volume, subtled The Rise of Morn Paganism, was wily acclaimed far beyond the amic world, and won the Natnal Book award the first volume, subtled The Rise of Morn Pagansim, of Peter Gay’s massive study, was wily acclaimed far beyond the amic world In his encyclopedic The Bourgeois Experience: Victoria to Frd (five volum between 1984 and 1998), Gay explored wonrfully readable prose a wi range of aspects of the European – pecially the Brish, French and German – and the North Amerin middle class their heyday.