

JSTOR ( July 2022) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message)īorn Peter Joachim Fröhlich to a Jewish family in Berlin, he was educated as a child at Berlin's Goethe- Gymnasium.Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section. This section needs additional citations for verification. Gilman, a literary historian at Emory University, called Gay "one of the major American historians of European thought, period". Gay was the interim editor of The American Scholar after the death of Hiram Haydn in 1973 and served on that magazine's editorial board for many years. He left Columbia in 1969 to join Yale University's History Department as Professor of Comparative and Intellectual European History and was named Sterling Professor of History in 1984. From 1948 to 1955 he was a political science professor at Columbia University, and then a history professor from 1955 to 1969.

Gay was born in Berlin in 1923 and emigrated, via Cuba, to the United States in 1941. He authored over 25 books, including The Enlightenment: An Interpretation, a two-volume award winner Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider (1968), a bestseller and the widely translated Freud: A Life for Our Time (1988). He received the American Historical Association's (AHA) Award for Scholarly Distinction in 2004. He was a Sterling Professor of History at Yale University and former director of the New York Public Library's Center for Scholars and Writers (1997–2003). Peter Joachim Gay ( né Fröhlich J– May 12, 2015) was a German-American historian, educator, and author.
