Thomas Adam is professor of transnational history at the University of Texas at Arlington, USA. The editor of the Yearbook of Transnational History, he has edited and published more than 25 books and specializes in the study of intercultural transfer and philanthropy. Among Adam's most recent publications are Transnational Philanthropy: The Mond Family's Support for Public Institutions in Western Europe from 1890 to 1938 (2016); Philanthropy, Civil Society, and the State in German History, 18151989 (2016); and Intercultural Transfers and the Making of the Modern World, 18002000 (2012).
Thomas Adam's new book provides us with a rich and stimulating collection of essays. The many different examples of cross-national and cross-Atlantic exchanges make the book interesting to a wide range of readers, while also serving as a model of how to design similar case studies. He argues convincingly that transfer did not make the world more homogeneous, but that it strengthened its diversity. -Axel Koerner, Professor of Modern History, and Director, UCL Centre for Transnational History, University College London This collection offers a practical introduction to the theory, methodology and implications of intercultural history. The book's well-researched, clearly argued case studies bring together a mass of material and references that will be much appreciated by researchers focused on social policy, philanthropy, cultural institutions and popular culture in transnational context. -Alan Lessoff, University Professor of History, Illinois State University, USA