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Word: braudel (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Braudel's work did not emerge all at once, or by itself. Its origin dates back to 1929, when Historians Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch founded a scholarly review in Paris called the Annales (Annals). Its tone was combative, its fervor evangelical. Its purpose: to debunk the chronicling of politics and biographies of great men that had obsessed historians since the 19th century. Let there be new approaches, Febvre exhorted, ranging from aerial photography to the study of climates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Master of the Mediterranean | 5/23/1977 | See Source »

...magazine's readers was young Fernand Braudel, then a fledgling schoolteacher in Algiers. "I am someone without ambition," Braudel remarked to TIME'S Ellie McGrath. "My father was a mathematician and wanted me to be a mathematician, so studying history was an adolescent revolt against my father." Looking out across the Mediterranean and wondering what to work on for his doctoral dissertation, Braudel decided on King Philip. But "little by little," recalls Braudel, "Philip II attracted me less and less, and the Mediterranean more and more." There was also the influence of Febvre, who had himself done work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Master of the Mediterranean | 5/23/1977 | See Source »

Then, the war. Captured by the Germans in 1940, Braudel chafed in a prisoner of war camp at Lübeck. He sustained himself by teaching other inmates (and occasionally playing pranks, like painting a pigeon's wings with the red. white and blue tricolor and then setting it loose, provoking a vain fusillade from German guards). He sustained himself too by a great feat of memory-writing The Mediterranean, filling up and mailing out one schoolboy copybook after another. "I had to believe that history, destiny, was written at a much more profound level," recalls Braudel of those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Master of the Mediterranean | 5/23/1977 | See Source »

...cities and societies; the history of political events, "surface disturbances, crests of foam that the tides of history carry on their strong backs." Striking insights emerge. Europe is not an entity; it is the physical sea that gives the region unity. Reversing the 19th century preoccupation with northern Europe, Braudel turns the globe upside down. Africa immediately looms large, overshadowing tiny Europe. The central struggle and axis in the Mediterranean is not north and south but east and west-the Spanish and Ottoman empires caught in endless "cultural conflict." At the end, there is an affirmation of the Annalistes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Master of the Mediterranean | 5/23/1977 | See Source »

...Ecoutez, chère amie," Braudel laughs. "Anything important in life is always in a state of crisis. Crisis is life. But in a sense there will always be capitalism because capital represents work that has already been finished, and you can live only by using this old work." Still, circumstances and details change. "In the world of exchange, there's always a central zone, an intermediary zone, and a peripheral zone. In 1929, the so-called Dark Year, the center of the world, which was London, passed to New York, peacefully. I don't really believe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The Master of the Mediterranean | 5/23/1977 | See Source »

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