Lars Clausen Explained

Lars Clausen
Birth Date:8 April 1935
Birth Place:Berlin
Death Place:Hamburg
Nationality:German
Institution:University of Kiel
Field:Sociology of disaster
Alma Mater:University of Münster

Lars Michael Clausen (8 April 1935, Berlin – 20 May 2010, Hamburg) was a German sociologist and professor at the University of Kiel.[1]

Life and work

During World War II, the family lived on the Darß (in Pomerania). 1944 his father Jürgen Clausen, a movie producer, was killed in action; his mother Rosemarie Clausen, a famous photographer, fled with her three children 1945 to Hamburg, where Lars Clausen attended the Christianeum. 1955, he took up Business, Economics, Sociology, and History at the universities of Berlin (the Free University), Cologne, and Hamburg. 1960, he took his first degree in business in Hamburg (Dipl.-Kfm.). He got both his doctorate (Dr.sc.pol.) and post-doctoral degree (Habilitation) at the University of Münster (1964 resp. 1968) in sociology, having done field work in Zambian industries, 1964—65. After academic teaching in Münster, Bielefeld, and The Hague, he was called 1970 to the chair of Sociology at Kiel University. Clausen inspired generations of students with his ingenuity and his ability to illustrate sociological theories with practical examples. He was considered by many to be one of the last polymaths, and his lectures had cult status among students. [2]

He specialized in the sociology of culture, of labor, and of disaster, and is chief editor of the Complete Works of Ferdinand Tönnies.

1993 to 1994, Clausen was Chairman of the German Society for Sociology. He served as well as President of the German Africa Society and as Chairman of the Schutzkommission of the German Ministry of Interior, 2003—2009. From 1978, he was President of the Ferdinand Tönnies Society.

Awards

Select bibliography

See as well here:[3]

Monographs and papers

Selected editions

Further reading

Notes

  1. News: Abschied von einem Universalgelehrten. 16 June 2010. Kieler Nachrichten online. 27 May 2010. German. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100601010102/http://www.kn-online.de/lokales/kiel/153880-Abschied-von-einem-Universalgelehrten.html. 1 June 2010.
  2. Martina Drexler: Abschied von einem Universalgelehrten. Kieler Nachrichten, 27 May 2010, 2010
  3. cf. as well Publikationen Lars Clausen