Peter Novick


Peter Novick was an American historian, and Professor of History at the University of Chicago. He was best known for writing That Noble Dream: The "Objectivity Question" and the American Historical Profession and The Holocaust in American Life. The latter title has also been published as The Holocaust and Collective Memory, especially for non-US anglophonic markets.
Though deemed a precursor, Novick was a sharp critic of Norman Finkelstein, but also of his opponent Alan Dershowitz. He died in 2012 in Chicago of lung cancer.
Novick earned his bachelor's and doctoral degrees from Columbia University, in 1957 and 1965 respectively.

Major works

''That Noble Dream''

That Noble Dream: The "Objectivity Question" and the American Historical Profession questions the origins and prevalence of the notion of in current and 20th century history. It focuses on developments in university history departments within the United States, though it traces the concept of objectivity in history's origins back to 19th century Germany and Leopold von Ranke.

''The Holocaust in American Life''

has examined Novick's "particularization of the Holocaust" in The Holocaust in American Life, he has contrasted his universalizing view of the Holocaust, versus what he perceives as Novick's inextricable connection of the genocide with nationalism and Jewish identity politics.