| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Norman Dental Office, Norman Cosmetic Dentist, Norman General Dentist, aardnorman.com | Stone Oak Sedation Dentistry - Stone Oak Sedation Dentist - Stone Oak sedationdentistsanantonio... | Kidney Stone Clinic - Stone treatment & Stone prevention, Sydney Australia kidneystoneclinic.com.au | Hot Stone Spa Massage Workshops & Trainings - Ayurveda - Basic Hot Stone... stoneandspa.com |
For the American psychotherapist and art collector (born 1939), see Norman C. Stone. For the U.S. Senator (born 1935), see Norman R. Stone, Jr..
Norman Stone (born March 8, 1941, in Glasgow, Scotland) is a prominent British academic, currently a member of the faculty of the department of International Relations at Bilkent University, Ankara. Former professor at Oxford and lecturer at Cambridge, adviser to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, prize-winning author, and a leading public intellectual in the UK and Europe, Stone is one of the world's foremost historians writing in the English language.
[edit] Early life and educationStone attended Glasgow Academy on a scholarship for the children of dead servicemen – his father having been killed in the war[2] – and graduated with First Class Honours in History from Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge University, England (1959–1962). Following his undergraduate degree, Stone did research in Central European History in Vienna and Budapest (1962–1965). [edit] Career[edit] CambridgeUpon completion of his secondary degree, Stone was offered a research fellowship by Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he later became an Assistant Lecturer in Russian and German History (1967), and a full Lecturer (1973). In 1971 he had transferred from Caius to Jesus College where, as director of studies in history, he combined a reputation for academic brilliance with an engaging angle on college politics. In 1983 Stone launched an attack on the recently deceased E. H. Carr via the London Review of Books. Stone wrote of Carr's History of Soviet Russia series that:
[edit] OxfordStone was subsequently accepted in 1984 as a Professor of Modern History at Oxford University, England.[4] [edit] TurkeyIn 1997, Stone accepted retirement from Oxford and left to teach at the department of International Relations at Bilkent University, Ankara.[5] In 2005 Stone transferred to Koc University, Istanbul. However, currently Stone is returning to Bilkent University, Ankara, to teach for the 2007-2008 academic year. Stone also guest lectures at Bogazici University, Istanbul. Since moving to Turkey Stone has become a frequent contributor to Cornucopia, a magazine about the history and culture of Turkey. [edit] ViewsStone's tenure at Oxford was not without incident, largely based around his political views, which were considered to be highly conservative. He published a regular column in the Sunday Times between 1987 and 1992, and helped comment for many news services, including the BBC, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, and the Wall Street Journal.[6] During this same time Stone also became Margaret Thatcher's foreign policy advisor on Europe,[4] as well as her speech writer.[7] Stone's wife was a leading member of the British Helsinki Human Rights Group, a conservative contrarian organization not affiliated with Helsinki Watch.[8] He is also known for his denial of Armenian Genocide: for example, in 2004 he wrote from Ankara to the Times Literary Supplement to deny "Armenian nationalist claims that a 'genocide' as classically defined had taken place".[9] In 2009, he argued for the proposition that "Churchill was more a liability than an asset to the free world" along with Pat Buchanan and Nigel Knight.[10][11] [edit] WritingStone's books of greatest note are The Eastern Front 1914-1917 (1975) which won the Wolfson History Prize.[12] Also Hitler (1980), and Europe Transformed 1878-1919 (1983) which won the Fontana History of Europe Prize.[4] He is nearing the completion of his recent work on a general history of the U.S., Russia, and Europe, post-1945. [edit] Personal lifeWhile in Vienna in the 1960s, Stone met his first wife Nicole, the niece of the finance minister in "Papa Doc" Duvalier's Haiti government. Their son Nick Stone is a thriller writer.[12] Stone keeps a house in the Galata neighborhood of Istanbul,[13] and spends his time between Turkey and England. [edit] Published works
[edit] References
[edit] External links
Categories: 1941 births | Living people | British historians | Scottish historians | People from Glasgow | Alumni of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge | Armenian Genocide deniers | British military historians | Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge | Fellows of Jesus College, Cambridge | Fellows of Worcester College, Oxford | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |