Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann

Job title: 
Associate Professor
Department: 
History
Bio/CV: 

I am an historian of German, European and International History from the late 18th century to the present. I have also an ongoing interest in social, legal and political thought as well as in the theory of history.

My most recent book is an intellectual biography of Reinhart Koselleck and an exploration of his premise that twentieth-century experiences of time require a new theory of history. Currently, I am working on two research projects: a book-length essay on human rights internationalism from imperial beginnings to our global present, and a monograph on everyday life in Berlin in the 1940s, as it went from multinational capital of the Nazi Empire to shattered metropolis of the early Cold War. My previous two books traced the afterlives of Enlightenment concepts and social practices (sociability, cosmopolitanism) in the long nineteenth century and their late twentieth-century resurgence. Together with Samuel Moyn, I am the editor of the Cambridge series Human Rights in History(link is external)

My writings appear simultaneously in German and English on both sides of the Atlantic and have been translated into several other languages. At Berkeley, I am affiliated with the Institute for European Studies(link is external), the Pacific Regional Office of the German Historical Institute(link is external), the Institute for Slavic, East European and Eurasian Studies(link is external), the Institute for International Studies, the Department of Rhetoric, the Department of German and The Program in Critical Theory(link is external)

Research interests: 

Late Modern European History, Post-Enlightenment Sociability and Social Thought, Post-Catastrophic Cities, Begriffsgeschichte, Theory of History, Human Rights and Internationalism