Timothy Snyder

About the Author

Timothy Snyder was born and raised near Dayton, Ohio. He studied political science and European history at Brown University, then completed his PhD as a Marshall Scholar at the University of Oxford. Snyder’s research ranges from intensive biographies to broader histories of 20th-century Europe (like Bloodlands: Eastern Europe Between Hitler and Stalin, which brought him to international prominence), and popular bestsellers about the present-day. Snyder has won dozens of scholarly awards, including the literature award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Hannah Arendt Award for Political Thought. He has played an important part in leading a number of prominent American scholarly and historical organizations, including the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In addition to his academic work, popular bestsellers, and YouTube lecture series “Timothy Snyder Speaks,” Snyder also writes frequently for the New York Review of Books and has lectured and fielded interviews in French, German, Polish, Ukrainian, and English about his recent work. Beyond these languages and the several other Eastern European languages that Snyder can read, his books have been translated into dozens more. Although he has held several fellowships in Europe and the United States, he has been a history professor at Yale University since 2001, where he researches and teaches on the political history of 20th-century Eastern Europe (especially Ukraine and Poland), and he also holds a permanent fellowship at the Institute for Human Sciences, in Vienna, Austria. His wife, Marci Shore, is also a Yale professor specializing in European history.

LitCharts guides for works by Timothy Snyder

Explore LitCharts literature guides for works by Timothy Snyder. Each guide includes a full summary, detailed analysis, and helpful resources for studying Timothy Snyder's writing.

On Tyranny

In On Tyranny, a short guide to 20 different strategies that citizens can use to defend democracy against an authoritarian government, historian Timothy Snyder looks to 20th-century Europe in an ef... view guide