Jonathan Schneer is an American historian of modern Britain whose work ranges over labor, political, social, cultural, and diplomatic subjects. He is an emeritus professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology. In addition to writing numerous scholarly and popular books, he has written for such publications as The Washington Post, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Foreign Policy. His work has been translated into German, Chinese, and Turkish. He has appeared often on American, Canadian, and British media. He has lectured in six countries.
Schneer's first teaching post was at Boston College in 1976, initially as a teaching assistant for Peter Weiler, then as an Instructor. Yale University hired him as an Assistant Professor in 1979. He became a full professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1989, where he taught until 2018. He was an early member of the editorial board of the Radical History Review and served as an editor for many years, including three as book review editor. His book, London 1900: The Imperial Metropolis, opened his eyes to the possibility of writing for a broad audience. He has been trying to do that ever since, without sacrificing depth of scholarship.
Personal life
In 1980, Schneer married Margaret Hayman, a lawyer. Upon moving from New Haven to Atlanta, she took a position as staff attorney with the Atlanta Legal Aid Society, from which she retired in 2019. They have two sons, Benjamin Hayman Schneer, an Assistant Professor of American Politics at the Harvard Kennedy School who is married to the journalist and writer Elizabeth Segran, and Seth Hayman Schneer, a lawyer with McDermott Will & Emery in Washington, D.C., who specializes in health law. Schneer and his wife divide their time between Atlanta and Williamstown, Massachusetts.
Honors and awards
Schneer has been a Whiting Fellow and a fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies. More recently he has been a Beaufort Scholar at St. John’s College, Cambridge University, a Christensen Visiting Fellow at St. Catherine’s College, Oxford University, and the Helen Cam Visiting Scholar at Girton College, Cambridge. The New Statesman and The Irish Times both chose The Balfour Declaration as a book of the year. That book also won a 2010 National Jewish Book Award. The BBC History Magazine listed both The Balfour Declaration and Ministers of War as a book of the month.