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  1. Biography Childhood and education. Karl Mannheim was born 27 March 1893 in Budapest, to a Hungarian father, a textile merchant, and German mother, both of Jewish descent. His early education was in that city, he studied philosophy and literature at the University of Budapest, though he also went to Berlin (where he studied with Georg Simmel) and Paris to further his education, returning to ...

  2. Karl Mannheim (born March 27, 1893, Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now in Hungary]—died January 9, 1947, London, England) was a sociologist in Germany before the rise of Adolf Hitler and then in the United Kingdom who is remembered for his “sociology of knowledge” and for his work on the problems of leadership and consensus in modern societies.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jun 11, 2018 · The Hungarian-born sociologist and educator Karl Mannheim (1893-1947) explored the role of the intellectual in political and social reconstruction. He also wrote on the sociology of knowledge. Karl Mannheim was born on March 27, 1893, in Budapest to a German mother and a Jewish middle-class Hungarian father.

  4. Karl Mannheim (March 27, 1893 – January 9, 1947) was a Hungarian -born sociologist, one of the founding fathers of classical sociology. Mannheim rates as a founder of the "sociology of knowledge"—the study of the relationship between human thought and the social context. Mannheim used the word "ideology" in an almost pejorative sense ...

  5. MANNHEIM, KARL(1893–1947) Karl Mannheim, the German sociologist, was born in Budapest and died in London. He studied at Berlin and Paris, and at Heidelberg under Max Weber, and later taught at Heidelberg, Frankfurt am Main, and, after 1933, in London.

  6. Jun 23, 2021 · In Karl Mannheim: Essays. Edited by Paul Kecskemeti, 276–322. London: Routledge, 1952. In this seminal work, first published in 1927/1928 and also republished in 1972, Mannheim defines generations as those born in the same year who share “a common location in the historical dimension of the social process” (p. 290).

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  8. 4 days ago · Search for: 'Karl Mannheim' in Oxford Reference ». (1893–1947)A Hungarian sociologist who emigrated to Germany and finally to England shortly after Hitler came to power. His most enduring contribution was to the sociology of knowledge, which he defined as a theory of the social or existential conditioning of thought.

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