All Thinkers

Thinkers Timeline

Key thinkers across history — grouped by era, colour-coded by discipline. Click any card to explore ideas, quotations, and classroom contexts.

7 thinkers
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Modern — 1800 to 1950
C.L.R. James 1901-1989 · Trinidad and Tobago
Cyril Lionel Robert James was a Trinidadian historian, political thinker, novelist, and cricket writer. He is one of the most important intellectuals the Caribbean has produced. He was born on 4 January 1901 in Tunapuna, Trinidad, then a British colony. His father was a schoolteacher. His mother was a strong reader who filled the house with books. Young Cyril grew up reading English literature, the Bible, and Greek classics. He was also obsessed with cricket. These three loves, literature, politics, and cricket, stayed with him all his life. He won a scholarship to Queen's Royal College in Port of Spain, one of the best schools in Trinidad. He became a teacher, a cricketer, and a writer of short stories. In 1932, he sailed to England. In Lancashire, he lived with his friend Learie Constantine, the great West Indian cricketer. He wrote cricket reports for the Manchester Guardian. But he also became deeply involved in politics. He joined Trotskyist groups. He met African leaders like Kwame Nkrumah and Jomo Kenyatta who were then studying in London. He helped build the movement for African independence from outside Africa. In 1938, he published The Black Jacobins, his masterpiece, a history of the Haitian Revolution and Toussaint Louverture. That same year he moved to the United States. He lived there for fifteen years, writing, teaching, and working with labour movements. In 1953, he was arrested during the anti-communist scare and held on Ellis Island. He was eventually deported. He returned to Trinidad in the late 1950s to support his former student Eric Williams, then leading the country toward independence. The two later fell out. James spent his final decades moving between England, Trinidad, the United States, and Africa. He died in London on 31 May 1989, aged 88. He had lived through almost the whole 20th century and written about most of it.
"What do they know of cricket who only cricket know?"
Eric Hobsbawm 1917 - 2012 · Egypt / Austria / United Kingdom
Eric Hobsbawm was a British historian and one of the most influential historians of the 20th century. He wrote about the rise of capitalism, the development of the modern world, and the major political movements of the 19th and 20th centuries. He was a lifelong Marxist and Communist Party member. His writing was clear, ambitious, and read by both academics and general audiences. He was born in Alexandria, Egypt, in 1917. He died in London in 2012, aged 95. He came from a Jewish family. His father was British. His mother was Austrian. He was born in Alexandria where his father worked. The family moved to Vienna, then to Berlin. Both his parents died young. He was orphaned by 14. An aunt brought him to England in 1933, the year Hitler came to power in Germany. His timing was lucky. The move to England saved his life. Most of his Central European Jewish family who stayed behind were eventually killed in the Holocaust. He studied history at Cambridge from 1936. He joined the Communist Party as a young man and remained a member for the rest of his life, despite the party's decline and the revelations of Stalin's crimes. He served in the British army during the Second World War. After the war, he became a lecturer at Birkbeck College, University of London, where he taught for over 50 years. He wrote many books. His most famous are the four-volume series on the modern world: The Age of Revolution (1962), The Age of Capital (1975), The Age of Empire (1987), and The Age of Extremes (1994). Together these books cover European and world history from 1789 to 1991. He also wrote on bandits, on jazz, on nationalism, and on many other subjects. His autobiography Interesting Times came out in 2002. He continued writing into his nineties.
"The dustbin of history is humanity's largest receptacle."
Tony Judt 1948 - 2010 · United Kingdom (later United States)
Tony Judt was a British-American historian. He was one of the most important historians of postwar Europe and a sharp public intellectual. His massive 2005 book Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945 is widely considered one of the great works of modern historical writing. He was born in 1948 in London. He died in 2010 in New York, aged 62, from complications of motor neurone disease. He came from a Jewish family with roots in Eastern Europe. His parents were secular socialists. He grew up in north London. He studied history at King's College Cambridge from 1966. He spent time in Israel as a young man, where he worked on a kibbutz and briefly served in the Israeli army during the 1967 Six-Day War. The experience shaped him deeply. He returned home increasingly critical of Israeli policies, while remaining deeply engaged with Jewish history and identity. He earned his PhD in 1972. He taught at Cambridge and Oxford, then moved to the United States in 1987. He became professor of European history at New York University, where he taught for the rest of his career. In 1995 he founded the Remarque Institute at NYU for the study of Europe. He wrote across many fields: French intellectual history, postwar European history, contemporary politics, and questions of social democracy and political memory. He was politically a social democrat. He criticised both the radical left and the contemporary right. Some of his views, especially his strong criticism of Israeli policies and his 2003 essay calling for a binational state in Israel-Palestine, made him controversial. In 2008 he was diagnosed with motor neurone disease, also called ALS. The disease gradually paralysed him while leaving his mind intact. He continued writing through dictation. His final books, written as he was dying, are some of his most powerful. He died in 2010.
"Something is profoundly wrong with the way we live today."
Contemporary — 1950 to today
Timothy Snyder 1969 - present · United States
Timothy Snyder is an American historian. He is one of the most influential contemporary historians of Eastern Europe and 20th-century atrocity. He has also become a major public voice warning about threats to democracy in the United States and elsewhere. He was born in 1969 in Centerville, Ohio, in the American Midwest. He has spent most of his career as a professor at Yale University. He came from a non-academic family. His father was a veterinarian. He showed academic talent young. He studied history at Brown University, then at Oxford, where he earned his doctorate in 1997. His doctoral work was on Eastern European nationalism. He learned Polish, Ukrainian, German, French, Russian, Czech, Belarusian, and other languages over time. The linguistic range gave him access to sources most American historians cannot read directly. He joined the Yale faculty in 2001. His early academic books were specialised studies of Eastern European political history. They included The Reconstruction of Nations (2003) on Polish, Ukrainian, Belarusian, and Lithuanian national identities, and Sketches from a Secret War (2005) on a Polish-Soviet conflict. In 2010 he published Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. The book became a major international bestseller. It tells the story of the killings carried out by Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia between 1933 and 1945 in the lands between Berlin and Moscow. About 14 million civilians were killed in this region by the two regimes. The book brought together histories that had usually been told separately. Since 2017, Snyder has become a leading public voice warning about threats to democracy. His 2017 short book On Tyranny became a global bestseller. He has spoken extensively about Russian aggression in Ukraine and about authoritarian movements in the United States and elsewhere. He continues teaching at Yale.
"Do not obey in advance."