Mary Jean Alexandra Fulbrook, FRHistS, FBA (née Wilson; born 28 November 1951) is a British academic and historian. Since 1995, she has been Professor of German History at University College London.[1] She is a noted researcher in a wide range of fields, including religion and society in early modern Europe, the German dictatorships of the twentieth century, Europe after the Holocaust, and historiography and social theory.[2]
On 1 October 1983, Fulbrook joined University College London (UCL) as a lecturer.[5] She was promoted to Reader in German History in 1991, and made Professor of German History in 1995.[3] She was head of UCL's Department of German from 1995 to 2006,[4] and was Executive Dean of its Faculty of Social and History Sciences from 2013 to 2018.[5]
German National Identity after the Holocaust. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1999
Historical Theory Routledge, 2003
The People's State: East German Society from Hitler to Honecker. New Haven, Conn.; London : Yale University Press, 2008. ISBN9780300144246, OCLC227926611
Power and Society in the GDR, 1961-1979: The 'Normalisation of Rule'?. New York: Berghahn Books, 2008. ISBN9781782381013, OCLC822668120
^Alberge, Dalya (2012) Historian uncovers her family link to secret Nazi's role in the Holocaust: The guilty tale of the German civil servant who married her godmother is revealed in a new book by historian Mary Fulbrook, The Observer, Sunday 16 September.