FAQ
Intro
Survey
Topics
Please select the name from the list.
If the name is not there, means it is not connected with a GND -ID?

GND: 113653654


Click on a term to reduce result list Information symbol The result list below will be reduced to the selected search terms. The terms are generated from the titles, abstracts and STW thesaurus of publications by the respective author.

b

Match by:
Sort by:

The information on the author is retrieved from: Entity Facts (by DNB = German National Library data service), DBPedia and Wikidata

Paul Edward Gottfried


Alternative spellings:
Paul E. Gottfried
Paul Gottfried

B: 1941 Brooklyn, NY
The image of the author or topic
Source: Wikimedia Commons

Information about the license status of integrated media files (e.g. pictures or videos) can usually be called up by clicking on the Wikimedia Commons URL above.

Profession

  • Politologe
  • Historiker
  • Affiliations

  • Elizabethtown College
  • New York University
  • Case Western Reserve University
  • Rockford University
  • Yale University
  • External links

  • Gemeinsame Normdatei (GND) im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek
  • Wikipedia (Deutsch)
  • Wikipedia (English)
  • Kalliope Verbundkatalog
  • NACO Authority File
  • NACO Authority File
  • Virtual International Authority File (VIAF)
  • Wikidata
  • International Standard Name Identifier (ISNI)


  • Paul Edward Gottfried (born November 21, 1941) is an American paleoconservative political philosopher, historian, and writer. He is a former Professor of Humanities at Elizabethtown College in Pennsylvania. He is editor-in-chief of the paleoconservative magazine Chronicles. He is an associated scholar at the Mises Institute, a libertarian think tank, and the US correspondent of Nouvelle École, a Nouvelle Droite (French: New Right) journal. He helped coin the term paleoconservative in 1986 and alternative right (with Richard Spencer) in 2008. The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has described him as a "far-right thinker". He founded the H.L. Mencken Club, which the SPLC considers a white nationalist group. Although noted for working with far-right and alt-right groups and figures, he has said that he does "not want to be in the same camp with white nationalists" or associated with pro-Nazis, "as somebody whose family barely escaped from the Nazis in the '30s". (Source: DBPedia)

    Publishing years

    1
      1988

    Series

    1. Social movements past and present (1)