François Weil (1) (1961–)
Author of Family Trees. A History of Genealogy in America
For other authors named François Weil, see the disambiguation page.
Works by François Weil
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1961-02-03
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Université de Paris VIII (Habilitation à diriger des recherches, 20O0)
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences sociales (DDoctorat, 19 91)
Fondation Thiers (Pensionnaire ( [1988] ∙ [1991])
Université Harvard, USA ( [1985] ∙ [1987])
Agrégation d'histoire (1984)
Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris ( [1981] ∙ [1984]) - Occupations
- Professeur (Histoire)
Historien (Etats-Unis)
Américaniste
Recteur d'Académie
Haut-Fonctionnaire - Organizations
- Conseil d'état français (Conseiller, 2016)
Académie de Paris (Recteur, ( [2012] ∙ [2016])
Ministère de la recherche (Conseiller technique pour les sciences humaines et sociales [2001] ∙ [2002])
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences sociales (Maître de conférence ∙ 19 94 ∙ Président ∙ 20 09l20 12)
Musée du quai Branly, Paris (Membre du Conseil d'administration)
Institut national du patrimoine (Président du conseil d'administration [20 18]) (show all 12)
Université du Michigan, USA (Visiting professor, History and american culture, 20 00)
Université d'État de New York, Plattsburg, USA (Visiting Professor, Histoire, 20 00)
Université de Virginie, USA (Visiting Professor ∙ 2O02 ∙ 2O08)
Institut universitaire de hautes études internationales de Genève, Suisse (Professeur invité ∙ 20O2l2O03)
Université Tulane, Louisiane, USA (Professor, Humanities, 20O3)
Université de Genève (Professeur suppléant ∙ Histoire contemporaine ∙ 20O5l20O7) - Awards and honors
- Officier de la Légion d'honneur
Officier de l'ordre national du mérite
Commandeur des Palmes académiques
Chevalier des Arts et des Lettes
Grand officier de l'ordre mexicain dde l'ordre Aztèque
Grand officier de l'ordre de l'étoile d'Italie (show all 8)
Commandeur de l'ordre du Mérite de la République Fédérale d'Allemagne
Commandeur de l'ordre de la République tunisienne - Relationships
- Bergeron Louis (Directeur de thèse)
- Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Paris, Île-de-France, France
- Map Location
- France
Members
Reviews
Given its popularity, I've long been surprised that not much attention has been devoted to the history of genealogical research and pursuit. François Weil's Family Trees starts to correct that trend in a meaningful way, offering a scholarly exploration of several key elements and themes of genealogical pursuit in America from the colonial period to the internet age. The book is by no means comprehensive, and there is much more that might have been said, but Weil's thematic and chronological show more treatment works very well for what it is, and he manages to get to the roots (no pun intended) of a few of the very different ways genealogical research has been used and viewed by Americans since the colonial period.
Aside from a faulty transcription (the "long s" is not an "f"!) that bugged me, I didn't find much to complain about here; I might have stressed different points here and there, but on the whole I found this book quite well done.
Not by any means a breezy read, but certainly an informative and fascinating one. show less
Aside from a faulty transcription (the "long s" is not an "f"!) that bugged me, I didn't find much to complain about here; I might have stressed different points here and there, but on the whole I found this book quite well done.
Not by any means a breezy read, but certainly an informative and fascinating one. show less
Note: Did Not Finish - Made it to Page 41
I had hoped for arguments and conclusions not just collections of historical quotes, mostly from people who no one has ever heard of and without adequate context to make them interesting or useful. The author made only the vaguest assertions that people wanted the respect that a coat of arms would bring so they mostly faked them - throughout all history. And that people generally wanted to know who their ancestors were because they either felt it was show more good to know that you could be better than or as good as they were. No psychological insights into WHY any of this mattered to them or what impact this had on society. Supremely boring when I hoped it would be interesting, exciting, and possibly even provocative. show less
I had hoped for arguments and conclusions not just collections of historical quotes, mostly from people who no one has ever heard of and without adequate context to make them interesting or useful. The author made only the vaguest assertions that people wanted the respect that a coat of arms would bring so they mostly faked them - throughout all history. And that people generally wanted to know who their ancestors were because they either felt it was show more good to know that you could be better than or as good as they were. No psychological insights into WHY any of this mattered to them or what impact this had on society. Supremely boring when I hoped it would be interesting, exciting, and possibly even provocative. show less
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 150
- Popularity
- #138,699
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 12
- Languages
- 2





