Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius
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Field Specialties
Modern Germany; Modern Europe; Eastern Europe; Nazi Germany; Cultural and Intellectual History; Nationalism and Ethnicity; World War I; Utopian Thought
Professor Liulevicius specializes in modern German history, with a particular focus on German relations with Eastern Europe. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania in 1994 and was a postdoctoral research fellow at the Hoover Institution on War, Peace, and Revolution from 1994-95. He has taught at the University of Tennessee since 1995.
His first book, War Land on the Eastern Front: Culture, National Identity and German Occupation in World War I, was published in 2000 by Cambridge University Press (and is now newly available in paperback). His book also appeared in 2002 in German translation as Kriegsland im Osten, published in Germany by Hamburg Edition, the series of the Hamburg Institute for Social Research.
In March 2004, Germany's main magazine, "DER SPIEGEL", published an article by Dr. Liulevicius, entitled "Der vergiftete Sieg: Wie der erste Krieg im Osten Hitlers mörderisches Weltbild prägte" [The Poisoned Victory: How the First World War in the East Shaped Hitler's Murderous Worldview"], in its series on the First World War, and reprinted the piece twice afterwards, in a special issue and in a book.
He has published articles on current international affairs in the Baltic region, military occupations, and the phenomenon of "elective ethnicity" in northeastern Europe. Encyclopedia articles of his on different aspects of the Eastern front appeared in the new German Encyclopedia of the First World War. Other articles of his on World War I have also been translated, appearing in Italian, French, and German.
He has presented many papers at international conferences, including the 19th International Congress of the Historical Sciences at the University of Oslo, Norway in 2000, the University of Alberta, the German Military Historical Association Conference in Augsburg, Germany, the University of Genoa in Italy, the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, the University of Greifswald, Germany, and the Nordost Institut in Lüneburg, Germany. In the United States, he has presented at conferences at Columbia University, Yale, and Georgetown University. He has presented twice at the American Historical Association (AHA) Conference (in San Francisco and in Philadelphia), and at German Studies Association meetings in Houston, Washington, San Diego, and New Orleans.
Dr. Liulevicius has given invited talks about his research at Princeton University, at the University of Aarhus in Denmark, the University of Heidelberg in Germany, at the University of Toronto, and at the Bibliothek für Zeitgeschichte (Library of Contemporary History) in Stuttgart, Germany. In 2003, he gave a keynote address at the fifth Conference on Baltic Studies in Europe, "The Baltic World as a Multicultural Space" at the University of Turku, Finland. In May 2004, he was invited to give a public address at the German Historical Museum in Berlin. In fall 2004, he presented a paper at the 2004 German Historikertag in Kiel, Germany's most important historical conference. In 2005, he gave two invited seminar talks at the Ecole des Haute Etudes in Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris.
The Teaching Company of Chantilly, Virginia, has produced two taped lecture courses by Dr. Liulevicius in its "Great Courses Series", available on audiotape, CD, and DVD. The first, a 24-lecture course, is entitled "Utopia and Terror in the Twentieth Century" and examines the dictatorships, ideologies, and violent trajectory of the age. The second, a 36-lecture course (which appeared in 2006), is entitled "World War I: The Great War", and covers the military, social, and cultural history of this first "total war". For more information, see www.teach12.com.
He is currently completing his next book, a survey of German views and stereotypes of Eastern Europe from 1800 to 2000.
Professor Liulevicius has served as secretary on the Executive Board of the Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies and currently serves on both the Executive Board and the convention program committee of the Association for the Study of Nationalities (A.S.N.) at Columbia University.
In April 2001, Dr. Liulevicius was presented by the University of Tennessee with an Award for Professional Promise in Research and Creative Achievement. In the same month, the History Department presented him with the 2001-2002 Leroy P. Graff Award for Faculty Excellence. In spring 2003, he was awarded the University of Tennessee Provost's Excellence in Teaching Award. During the summer, he won the first new award in the humanities, the University of Tennessee College of Arts and Sciences Award for Research and Creative Achievement in the Arts and Humanities for 2003-2006. In 2005, he was awarded the Hendrickson Professorship in the College of Arts and Sciences, 2005-2007.
In 2005, Dr. Liulevicius was awarded a year-long national fellowship by the National Endowment for the Humanities (N.E.H.) for his research on his next book.
His undergraduate courses include The Rise and Fall of Nazi Germany; History of Modern Germany, 1800 to the Present; World War I: Causes, Ordeal, and Consequences; War and Culture in Modern Europe; Nationalism Past and Present: Models of Belonging; History of Austria: From Habsburg Empire to European Union; Germany Faces Eastern Europe, 1800-2000; and Contemporary Europe, 1900 to the Present.
His Honors Western Civilization courses have focused on topics ranging from the Utopian tradition to comparative nationalisms. In 2006, the University of Oregon’s Center for Educational Policy Research College Board Advanced Placement Best Practices Course Study designated his undergraduate course in German history 1800-2000 (History 335) as “one of the top examples of best practices in a national study of European History courses” with “specific elements of this course being designated as exemplary”.
His graduate seminars include Topics in the History of Modern Germany; German Ideas of Eastern Europe; Eastern Europe and Russia in the Twentieth Century; The First World War; Ideology, Violence, and the Modern State; Dictatorship and Diplomacy; Propaganda; and the Research Seminar in European History.
In terms of his work with graduate students, Dr. Liulevicius at present is directing two doctoral students. Jake Hamric is currently at work on a dissertation entitled "Pioneers of Modernization: German Ambitions in the Middle East, 1871-1918", and since coming to UT has received awards from the department, the university, and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) in recognition of his promise. Troy Dempster has just begun the doctoral program after completing his master's thesis in spring 2006, entitled "Reviving Germany: The Political Discourse of the German Fatherland Party, 1917-1918". His plans are to pursue questions of radical nationalism in the early Weimar Republic, growing out of the First World War experience he already has studied. Dr. Liulevicius has directed eight master's theses. Most recently, Benjamin Shannon completed a thesis entitled "Cultural Consensus, Political Conflict: The Problem of Unity Among German Intellectuals during World War I".
Education
- Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, 1994
- B.A. University of Chicago, 1988
Selected Publications
Books
- War Land on the Eastern Front: Culture, National Identity and German Occupation in World War I (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000).
- Kriegsland im Osten. Eroberung, Kolonialisierung und Militärherrschaft im Ersten Weltkrieg. German language edition of War Land on the Eastern Front, trans. Jürgen Bauer, Fee Engemann, Edith Nerke (Hamburg: Hamburger Edition of the Hamburg Institute for Social Research, 2002). See: http://his-online.de/edition/programm/081.htm
Articles
- (Forthcoming) “Precursors and Precedents: Forced Migration in Northeastern Europe during the First World War” in Nordost-Archiv.
- (Forthcoming) “German-Occupied Eastern Europe” in The Blackwell Companion to the First World War, ed. John Horne (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2007).
- (Forthcoming) "German Military Occupation and Culture on the Eastern Front in World War I", in The Germans and the East, ed. Charles Ingrao, et al. (Purdue University Press).
- “Die deutsche Besatzung im ‘Land Ober Ost’ im Ersten Weltkrieg”, in Besatzung. Funktion und Gestalt militärischer Fremdherrschaft von der Antike bis zum 20. Jahrhundert, ed. Günther Kronenbitter, Markus Pöhlmann, and Dierk Walter(Paderborn: Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh, 2006): 93-104.
- “Das Land Ober Ost im Ersten Weltkrieg: Eine Fallstudie zu den deutsch-litauischen Beziehungen und Zukunftsvorstellungen”, in “Kollaboration” in Nordosteuropa. Erscheinungsformen und Deutungen im 20. Jahrhundert, ed. Joachim Tauber (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2006): 118-127.
- “Der Osten als apokalyptischer Raum. Deutsche Fronterfahrungen im und nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg” in Traumland Osten. Deutsche Bilder vom östlichen Europa im 20. Jahrhundert, ed. Gregor Thum (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2006): 47-65.
- “Von ‘Ober-Ost’ nach ‘Ostland’?” in Die vergessene Front. Der Osten 1914/15: Ereignis, Wirkung, Nachwirkung, ed. Gerhard P. Groß (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 2006): 295-310.
- “Les dimensions sociales de l’occupation militaire: la domination allemande en Europe du Nord-Est pendant la Première Guerre mondiale”, in Histoire et Societes: Revue Européenne D’Histoire Sociale, No. 17 (January 2006): 20-31.
- “Elective Ethnicity: The Phenomenon of Chosen National Identity in the Modern Baltic World” in The Baltic World as a Multicultural World: Sea, Region and Peoples, ed. Marko Lehti (Berlin: Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag, 2005): 155-163.
- “L'Invasion comme voyage: l'occupation allemande sur le front de l'Est durant la Premiere Guerre mondiale” in 1914-1945 L’Ère de la Guerre: Violence, Mobilisations, Deuil. Tome 1 1914-1918, ed. Anne Dumenil, Nicolas Beaupré, Christian Ingrao (Paris: Agnes Viénot Editions, 2004): 183-205.
- "Der vergiftete Sieg: Wie der erste Krieg im Osten Hitlers mörderisches Weltbild prägte" [The Poisoned Victory: How
the First World War in the East Shaped Hitler's Murderous Worldview"], in Der Spiegel, No. 10, March 1, 2004: 130-38.
- "Representations of War on the Eastern Front, 1914-1918" in Power, Violence and Mass Death, ed. Joseph Canning, Hartmut Lehmann and Jay Winter (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004): 191-204.
- "L'esperienza di soldati e civili nella Grande Guerra: la gente commune sul fronte orientale, 1914-1918" ["Soldiers' and Civilians' Experience of World War I: Common People on the Eastern Front, 1914-1918"] in Storia e Memoria:
Rivista semestrale. Istituto Ligure per la storia della Resistenza e dell'età contemporanea, Vol. 9 (1) (November, 2000): 91-103.
- "As Go the Baltics, So Goes Europe," Orbis: A Journal of World Affairs 39.3 (Summer, 1995): 387-402.
- "Is Kaliningrad Really Lithuania Minor?: The Baltic Crucible of National Identities," Hoover Working Paper Series in International Studies (January, 1995).
- Entries on "Ober Ost," "Besetzter Osten" [Occupied Eastern Europe], "Ostpreußen" [East Prussia], in Enzyklopädie des Ersten Weltkrieges, ed. Gerhard Hirschfeld, Gerd Krumeich, and Irina Renz (Schöningh, 2003). Entry on “Military Occupations” in Jay Winter and John Merriman, eds., Encyclopedia of Europe, 1914-2000 (forthcoming).
Selected Honors and Awards
- National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, 2005-2006
- Hendrickson Professorship in the College of Arts and Sciences, University of Tennessee, 2005-2007
- University of Tennessee College of Arts and Sciences Award for Research and Creative Achievement in the Arts and Humanities, 2003-2006
- University of Tennessee Provost's Excellence in Teaching Award, 2003
- University of Tennessee Award for Professional Promise in Research and Creative Achievement, April 2001
- University of Tennessee Department of History LeRoy P. Graff Award for Faculty Excellence, April 2001
- Title VIII Postdoctoral Research Fellowship, Hoover Institution, Stanford University, 1994-95
- D.A.A.D. (German Academic Exchange Service) Dissertation Research Fellowship, Freiburg, Germany,1991-92
- National Mellon Fellowship in the Humanities, 1988-1994
- William Penn Graduate Fellowship, the University of Pennsylvania, 1988
Contact Information
Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius
Associate Professor of History
Hendrickson Professor in the College of Arts and Sciences
915 Volunteer Boulevard
6th Floor, Dunford Hall
Knoxville, TN 37996-4065
Office: (865) 974-7320
Fax: (865) 974-3915
E-mail: vliulevi@utk.edu

