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Sally Marks

American historian (1931–2018) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sally Marks
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Sally J. Marks (January 18, 1931 – January 14, 2018) was an American historian and author specialising in the field of post-First World War diplomatic history.

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Biography

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Marks was born in New Haven, Connecticut. After graduation from Wellesley College, she worked for the US Department of Defense. Marks received a master's degree at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, before doing a PhD in the United Kingdom at the London School of Economics.[1]

Marks lectured in history at Rhode Island College, receiving the Mary Tucker Thorp College Professorship in 1983.[2] Her research during the 1970s focused on then-newly opened archives of diplomatic correspondence from the period during and immediately after the First World War. Her discoveries in these archives cast doubt on the then-popular viewpoint advocated by John Maynard Keynes that the Versailles treaty had been excessively punitive. In 1988 she took early retirement from teaching at the college to focus full-time on research. From the 1990s onwards Marks suffered from myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, and in later life from poor eyesight.[1]

Historian William R. Keylor of Boston University said of her work that it had "...precipitated what might be called the post-Keynesian version of the economic portion of the peace settlement of 1919 that has won widespread acceptance in the profession".[3]

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Awards and honors

Marks received the George Louis Beer Prize for her 1981 book Innocent Abroad: Belgium at the Paris Peace Conference.[4] She also received the Phi Alpha Theta senior scholar award, as well as fellowships from the Woodrow Wilson Foundation and the American Council of Learned Societies.[1]

Books

Marks was the author of books including:

  • The Illusion of Peace: International Relations in Europe 1918–1933 (Macmillan, 1976)[5]
  • Innocent Abroad: Belgium at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 (University of North Carolina Press, 1981)[6]
  • The Ebbing of European Ascendancy: An International History of the World, 1914–1945 (Arnold, 2002)[7]
  • Paul Hymans: Belgium (Makers of the Modern World: The Peace Conferences of 1919–23 and Their Aftermath, Haus Publishing, 2010)[8]

References

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