Associate Professor
History
Peter Staudenmaier is Associate Professor of History, with a focus on modern Europe. He joined the Marquette faculty in 2011 after receiving his PhD from Cornell in 2010. His work centers on Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, environmental history, and the history of racial thought.
Education
Ph.D., Cornell 2010
Courses Taught
Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
Environmental History: Ecology and Society in the Modern World
Europe in the Twentieth Century
Histories of Race and Racism
The Search for Historical Justice in Modern Germany
Fascism and the Radical Right, 1918 to Today
Research Interests
Dr. Staudenmaier recently completed a book titled The Politics of Nature in Nazi Germany: Environmental Ideals and the Myth of Blood and Soil which will be published by Cambridge University Press in 2026. It is a detailed archival study examining the controversial history of ecological tendencies during the Nazi era. He is currently writing another book, under contract with Routledge, titled Julius Evola and the Radical Right: Spiritual Racism from Fascist Italy to the New Age. This study, based on archival research in Rome and Berlin, traces the career of Julius Evola, an iconic figure for the radical right, both before and after 1945. In addition to his primary research, Dr. Staudenmaier is pursuing a longer-term project under the working title “Inventing Race: A History of Racial Thought from the Enlightenment to the Genomic Age.”
Specialization
Modern Germany
Publications
He is the author of Between Occultism and Nazism: Anthroposophy and the Politics of Race in the Fascist Era (Leiden: Brill, 2014); Ecology Contested: Environmental Politics between Left and Right (New Compass Press 2021); and articles on topics ranging from antisemitism to esotericism.
Honors and Awards
Since arriving at Marquette, Dr. Staudenmaier has been honored with several university awards. He received the Way-Klingler Young Scholar Award in 2014; the College of Arts and Sciences Teacher of the Year Award and the Gettel Faculty Award for Teaching Excellence in 2019; and the Way Klingler Sabbatical Fellowship Award in 2024.