@Article{duepublico_mods_00030963,
  author = 	{Sch{\"o}ttler, Peter},
  title = 	{Fernand Braudel, prisonnier en Allemagne : face {\`a} la longue dur{\'e}e et au temps pr{\'e}sent},
  year = 	{2013},
  month = 	{Apr},
  day = 	{25},
  volume = 	{2013},
  number = 	{10},
  pages = 	{7--25},
  abstract = 	{From 1940 to 1945, the French historian Fernand Braudel was a P.O.W. in Germany. During these years he wrote notably the first version of his famous book on the Mediterranean world in the age of Philip II. Some commentators have seen this as a kind of flight from the present, which would also explain the structure of the book and Braudel's concept of ``longue dur{\'e}e''. But a closer look at the historian's activities during his captivity, and especially at his lectures given in the ``Oflags'' of Mainz und L{\"u}beck, shows that he did reflect on the present at least as much as on the 16th Century.},
  issn = 	{1869-4748},
  doi = 	{10.17185/duepublico/19418},
  url = 	{https://duepublico2.uni-due.de/receive/duepublico_mods_00030963},
  url = 	{https://doi.org/10.17185/duepublico/19418},
  file = 	{:https://duepublico2.uni-due.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/duepublico_derivate_00032900/03_schoettler_braudel.pdf:PDF},
  language = 	{fr}
}