Charles Andler

{{Short description|French germanist and philosopher (1866–1933)}}

File:Charles Andler.jpg

Charles Philippe Théodore Andler (11 March 1866, Strasbourg – 1 April 1933, Malesherbes, Loiret) was a French Germanist and philosopher.

Life

Andler was born to a Protestant family in Strasbourg.Antoinette Blum, 'Charles Andler (1866-1933)', in L'affaire Dreyfus: dictionnaire, 2006, p/117-120 In 1887 and 1888, Andler failed to achieve his agrégation in philosophy, judged by Jules Lachelier, inspector-general in charge of philosophy, as showing "excessive bias" towards German philosophy. He therefore changed to take the German literature agrégation in 1889, passing out top of his class.Robert Alun Jones, The development of Durkheim's social realism, Cambridge University Press, 1999 Andler became professor of German at the Sorbonne in 1901 and at the Collège de France in 1926. Amongst his works were writings on Nietzsche, a commentary on The Communist Manifesto, and a life of his friend Lucien Herr.

Works

  • Les origines du socialisme d'état en Allemagne, 1897 – The origins of state socialism in Germany.
  • Collection de Documents sur le Pangermanisme, 4 vols, 1915–1917 – Collection of documents on Pan-Germanism.
  • Nietzsche, sa vie et sa pensée, 6 vols, 1920 – Nietzsche, his life and thinking.
  • Vie de Lucien Herr (1864-1926), 1932 – The life of Lucien Herr.

References

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Further reading