Stefan Ihrig is an academic, author, and speaker. He is professor of history at the University of Haifa and director of the Haifa Center for German and European Studies. His research interests are European and Middle Eastern history, with a focus on media and political and social discourse. His 2014 and 2016 books dealing with German-Turkish history and entanglement have elicited critical praise. He is also an editor of the Journal of Holocaust Research published by the University of Haifa and has contributed articles for HuffPost, Tablet, Haaretz, and History Today, among other publications.
Early life and education
Ihrig is the son of Johann and Beate Ihrig.[1] He earned his bachelor's degree in law and politics at Queen Mary University, London. He received his master's degree in history, Turcology, and political science from the Free University of Berlin. He completed his PhD in history at the University of Cambridge.[2]
His doctoral thesis on German-Turkish relations in the 20th century was supervised by Sir Richard J. Evans.[3]
Ihrig's first individually-authored book, published in 2008, was Wer sind die Moldawier? Rumänismus versus Moldowanismus in Historiographie und Geschichtsschulbüchern der Republik Moldova ("Who are the Moldovans? Romanianism versus Moldovanism in Historiography and History Textbooks of the Republic of Moldova").[4] Reviewer Matthew H. Ciscel states that the book is "broadly detailed and well-written"[5] and Dietmar Müller describes it as "an impressive study on historiography and history politics in the Republic of Moldova based on a wide range of sources".[6]
Putting the Armenian genocide in its rightful place in the history of the world and of Europe is not an easy task and must lead to a radical revision of the twentieth century. The Armenian genocide was a very important alarm that the world has not heeded. The world knew but it was the wrong people who drew the right conclusions: that you can get away with oppression, violence and mass murder with impunity.[12]
Ihrig's wife, Roni Malkai Ihrig, is an attorney and CEO of the Israeli Public Forum for Youth Villages and Boarding Schools for Children at Risk.[20][21]
Bibliography
Books
Carnevale, R.; Ihrig, S.; Weiss, C. (2005). Europa am Bosporus (er-)finden? Die Diskussion um den Beitritt der Türkei zur Europäischen Union in den britischen, deutschen, französischen und italienischen Zeitungen – Eine Presseanalyse. Peter Lang.
Ihrig, Stefan (2008). Wer sind die Moldawier? Rumänismus versus Moldowanismus in Historiographie und Geschichtsschulbüchern der Republik Moldova, 1991-2006. Ibidem Press. ISBN978-3-89821-466-7
"Rediscovering History, Rediscovering Ultimate Truth History, Textbooks, Identity and Politics in Moldova". Reports from the International Symposium Held at Komaba Campus, the University of Tokyo (November 12th, 2005). Center for German and European Studies. n.d. CiteSeerX10.1.1.556.1788.
"The Hyperreality of the Empty Page: Disappeared Ethnic Minorities in the History Textbooks of Turkey and of the Republic of Moldova". Annals of the Young Historians Association of Moldova. 2005.
^Ciscel, Matthew H. (2009). "Wer sind die Moldawier? Rumänismus versus Moldowanismus in Historigraphie und Schulbüchern der Republik Moldova, 1991–2006, Stefan Ihrig (Stuttgart: Ibidem, 2008), 332 pp.+photos, graphs". Nationalities Papers. 37 (6): 961–963. doi:10.1017/S0090599200039209. ISSN0090-5992. S2CID165561200.
^ abAvedian, Vahagn (20 November 2018) [2016]. "Justifying genocide: Germany and the Armenians from Bismarck to Hitler, by Stefan Ihrig, Cambridge, MA, Harvard, 460 pp., $35.00 (HC), ISBN 978-0674504790". Nationalities Papers. 46 (3). Cambridge University Press: 532–535. doi:10.1080/00905992.2017.1390980. S2CID159627934.
^Zürcher, Erik Jan (24 December 2016). "Atatürk in the Nazi Imagination". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 30 (3): 560–562. doi:10.1093/hgs/dcw074. S2CID151612994.