51勛圖

Letter: Weber's wilder side

Last updated
May 22, 2015
Published on
November 17, 2000

Frank Webster writes that Max Weber had "little life outside writing, reading and worrying about the state of the world" (Books, THES , November 10). Sounds like the sad contemporary Brit academic.

For Weber, it was the reverse. His public life included being a member of the Stock Exchange commission, a wartime hospital administrator, a member of the German delegation to Versailles and political adviser to Friedrich Naumann. In 1910, newspapers said his wife was part of a women's movement composed of "old maids, sterile wives, widows and Jewesses". Weber halted his academic work to bring libel and defamation actions and was ready to fight a duel. The defamers retracted. Likewise Weber acted for years as a lawyer for Frieda Gross, the wife of the libertarian psychoanalyst Otto Gross. Add in love affairs, his travelling and interest in the arts, and you have a man to whom no research assessment exercise-conscious university would give tenure.

Sam Whimster
Reader in sociology
London Guildhall University

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