Postal address:
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
Historisches Seminar
Lehrstuhl Patel
Postfach 105
Geschwister-Scholl-Platz 1
80539 München
Visitor address:
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
Historisches Seminar
Lehrstuhl Patel
Schellingstraße 12
Room: K133
Phone
+49 (0) 89 / 2180 - 5583
Consultation hours
Thursdays, 9 - 11 am (by prior appointment: manuel.mork@lmu.de, either in presence or via video call).
Short CV
Manuel Mork joined the chair of Modern History at the LMU in late 2024 as assistant professor. Prior to this he was a researcher at the Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History as well as a PhD candidate at the LMU Munich and the ENS Paris-Saclay. His PhD addressed French society under German occupation during the Second World War (Title: An Occupied Public. Wartime Propaganda, Informal Communication and Popular Protest in France (1940-44). He obtained a MA degree in history (2018) at the LMU.
His interest in research and teaching lie in the social and cultural histories as well as the history of ideas of modern Europe. Particular fields of interest include histories of daily life, political ideology, propaganda, fascism, National Socialism, the European workers’ movement, internationalism und the theory of history.
- Since October 2024: Assistant Professor (aka. Rat a.Z.) at the LMU
- 2022 - 2024: Researcher at the Leibnitz Institute for Contemporary History Munich as well as PhD candidate at the LMU Munich and the ENS Paris-Saclay
- 2021 - 2022: Guest researcher and scholarship holder of the German Historical Institute in Paris and the DAAD
- 2016 - 2018: MA in History at LMU Munich and Univeristà di Bologna (Erasmus)
Selected Publications
- An Occupied Public: Rumours, Graffiti, Prophecies and otherForms of Informal Communication in France (1940-44), in: Benno Nietzel, Norman Dormeier (Hrsg.), „Und morgen die ganze Welt." Nationalsozialismus und internationale Öffentlichkeit (Campus: Frankfurt, 2025), S. 175–190.
- Arbeiterwiderstand, faschistische Repression und internationale Solidarität. Eine italienische Provinzstadt im europäischen Fokus 1922 bis 1927, in: Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte 70 (2022) 1, S. 31-62.