Peter Gay
Peter Gay (1923—2015) was the author of more than twenty-five books, including the National Book Award winner The Enlightenment, the best-selling Weimar Culture, and the widely translated Freud: A Life for Our Time.
Awards
Shortlisted — Pulitzer Prize, 1994
Shortlisted — National Book Award, 1988
Shortlisted — Pulitzer Prize, 1989
Books by Peter Gay
Modernism: The Lure of Heresy
Peter Gay
Hardback, 2007
A celebration of subversives: the first one-volume history of the greatest cultural movement since the Enlightenment.The Party of Humanity: Essays in the French Enlightenment
Peter Gay
Paperback, 2008
Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider
Peter Gay
Paperback, 2002
A seminal work as melodious and haunting as the era it chronicles.Style in History
Peter Gay
Paperback, 1989
The Cultivation of Hatred: The Bourgeois Experience: Victoria to Freud
Peter Gay
Paperback, 1994
With the same sweep, authority, and originality that marked his best-selling Freud: A Life for Our Time, Peter Gay here takes us on a remarkable journey through middle-class Victorian culture.The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism
Peter Gay
1, Paperback, 1995
The eighteenth-century Enlightenment marks the beginning of the modern age, when the scientific method and belief in reason and progress came to hold sway over the Western world.The Enlightenment: The Science of Freedom
Peter Gay
2, Paperback, 1996
The second volume of Peter Gay's in-depth study of the dawn of the modern world—the Age of Reason.The Naked Heart: The Bourgeois Experience Victoria to Freud
Peter Gay
Paperback, 1996
In The Naked Heart, Peter Gay explores the bourgeoisie's turn inward.Pleasure Wars: The Bourgeois Experience Victoria to Freud
Peter Gay
Paperback, 1998
A master historian shows us a new side of the Victorian Era--the role of the Bourgeois as reactionaries, revolutionaries, and middle-of-the-roaders in the passage of high culture toward modernism.The Tender Passion: The Bourgeois Experience from Victoria to Freud
Peter Gay
Paperback, 1999
The Tender Passion looks at the Victorian middle classes' ideal and real notions of love.