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C. Greene

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C. Greene
NameC. Greene
Birth date19XX
Birth placeLondon
OccupationWriter; Researcher; Public intellectual
NationalityBritish

C. Greene is a British writer and researcher known for interdisciplinary work spanning history, biography, and public policy. Greene's writing engages subjects ranging from European politics to transatlantic relations and has appeared in major outlets and academic venues. They are noted for bringing archival scholarship into public debate and for collaborations with institutions across United Kingdom, United States, and France.

Early life and education

Greene was born in London and raised in a family with connections to Cambridge University and the British Museum. They attended Eton College before studying at University of Oxford where mentors included scholars affiliated with All Souls College and the Bodleian Library. Greene completed postgraduate training at University College London with a dissertation drawing on sources from the National Archives (United Kingdom) and the Imperial War Museums. During formative years Greene participated in seminars at the Royal Historical Society and workshops hosted by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Chatham House network.

Career and major works

Greene's early career included fellowships at the Institute for Advanced Study and the Harvard University Center for European Studies. Major books and essays have addressed themes connected to the Treaty of Versailles, the Cold War, and postwar reconstruction in Germany, often citing archival material from the Bundesarchiv and the Archives Nationales (France). Greene has contributed essays to the London Review of Books, the New Yorker, and the Times Literary Supplement, and has collaborated on edited volumes with scholars from Princeton University, Yale University, and the University of Chicago. Greene's notable titles include a political biography comparing figures across the United Kingdom, United States, and France and a study of diplomatic networks involving actors such as Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Charles de Gaulle, and Konrad Adenauer. Greene has lectured at venues including the Royal Society, the British Academy, and the Council on Foreign Relations.

Personal life and legacy

Greene has held residencies at cultural institutions including the Tate Modern and the British Library, and maintains links with think tanks such as the Brookings Institution and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Personal collaborations have included projects with curators from the V&A Museum, historians from King's College London, and journalists at the BBC. Greene's mentorship of doctoral students at University of Oxford and Columbia University has produced scholars working on topics related to the European Union and transatlantic policy. Greene's papers are deposited with a major archive—collections frequently cross-reference materials from the Public Record Office, the Library of Congress, and the National Archives and Records Administration.

Awards and recognition

Greene has received fellowships and prizes from institutions such as the Leverhulme Trust, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the Royal Society of Literature. Honorary appointments have included election to the British Academy and membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Greene's work has been shortlisted for awards from the Wolfson Foundation and the National Book Critics Circle, and they have been invited to deliver named lectures at Oxford, Cambridge, and Princeton University.

Controversies and criticism

Greene's reinterpretations of diplomatic history have provoked critiques from scholars affiliated with Princeton University, Yale University, and Harvard University, who debated methodological choices in articles appearing in the American Historical Review and the Journal of Modern History. Commentators at outlets such as the Guardian, the Times (London), and the New York Times have questioned Greene's use of unpublished sources from the National Archives (United Kingdom), leading to discussions in forums hosted by the Royal Historical Society and panels at the International Congress of Historical Sciences. Critics have also engaged with Greene's public interventions on policy in commentaries published by the Brookings Institution and the Council on Foreign Relations.

Category:British writers Category:Historians