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Titre : | The Atlantic and Its Enemies: A History of the Cold War |
Auteurs : | Norman Stone |
Type de document : | document électronique |
Editeur : | [S.l.] : Basic Books, 2010 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-465-02043-0 |
Index. décimale : | 909.825 (1950-1959) |
Résumé : |
"From Publishers WeeklyStone builds on his expertise in the long 19th century in this very successful overview of a cold war whose end, he says, was a complete surprise. Intellectually, Marxism-Leninism in parts of the West was more of a vital belief system than in the East, where it was an orthodoxy Diplomatically, for every Western success there seemed to be multiple triumphs for Communist countries or Third World proxies. Militarily, a thermonuclear stalemate framed a spectrum of defeats in unconventional wars and insurgencies. Europe was moribund; America was uncertain. Then the U.S.S.R. imploded. The Western-generated forces of individualism and creativity might have been overshadowed, says Stone, but for Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, who he says personified their re-emergence. The Atlantic world boomed unexpectedly while the East was gridlocked and the Third World hobbled by ideologically based overextension and overmanagement, too arteriosclerotic to withstand the stress of reform. Stone's consistently vivid text presents history as a contingent process whose results are never idealÔÇöbut neither are they permanent. Illus. (June 1) ReviewThe Economist Michael Burleigh, Spectator New Statesman ÔÇ£StoneÔÇÖs eye for the telling detail gives his account of the cold war years an edge of authenticity lacking from more conventional historiesÔǪ. A beguiling mix of grand narrative and autobiographical vignettes, The Atlantic and its Enemies is the one book that anyone who wants to understand the cold war as it developed must readÔǪ. [A] rich, exuberant and melancholy book.ÔÇØ Wall Street Journal ÔÇ£[Norman Stone] paints on a broad canvas, showing how the Cold War unfoldedÔǪ. The West is currently engaged in a new sort of war, with radical Islam.... Meanwhile, the economy of the developed world is more precarious than it was in the darkest hours of the 1970s. Mr. Stone doesnÔÇÖt stop to address the contemporary crisis, but The Atlantic and Its Enemies is an inspiring reminder that the West has risen to meet such challenges before, helped at crucial moments by bold leaders.ÔÇØ Library Journal ÔÇ£Stone, one of Great BritainÔÇÖs most distinguished historians, now offers his own assessment of the period between the end of World War II and the fall of the Soviet UnionÔǪ. [He] bring[s] decades of erudition to his analysis; moreover, he lived in Eastern Europe during part of the period under review and brings that perspective to his work as well.ÔÇØ John Gray, New Statesman (London) The Times (UK) ÔÇ£Brilliant....A forthright, brave history, full of wit and humanity, and readable to a degree that will delight all but the green-eyed.ÔÇØ Geoffrey Wheatcroft, Guardian (London) Boyd Tonkin, Independent (London) (UK) Mark Mazower, Financial Times _ _TusconCitizen.com _ _Bookviews.com National Review ÔÇ£Stone, the veteran British journalist and historian, has produced an original interpretative narrative that is idiosyncratic and downright odd in placesÔǪ. Yet it is precisely StoneÔÇÖs departures from the standard political-diplomatic themes that enable him to offer a fresh and provocative perspective on events we might have thought thoroughly familiarÔǪ. One of the beguiling charms of StoneÔÇÖs narrative is the way in which his cool, understated prose bursts from the page at piquant moments, especially when describing the defects of political leaders of the 1960s and 1970sÔǪ. The Atlantic and Its Enemies [is] a worthy addition to the essential Cold War canon. Add it to your shelf.ÔÇØ Pat Shipman, Professor of Anthropology at the Pennsylvania State University and author of Femme Fatale: Love, Lies, and the Unknown Life of Mata Hari ÔÇ£Nancy Marie Brown again uses her extraordinary ability to bring medieval time to life in_ The Abacus and the Cross_, in the person of the ÔÇÿScientist PopeÔÇÖ Gerbert of Aurillac (later Pope Sylvester III). Working from sparse records, Brown manages to tell us of the remarkable scholar, brilliant mathematician, and inveterate punster who loved both his holy orders and luxurious living. She shows us a time in which the route to God lay through the study of science and math and when intellectual developments flowed across the boundaries of religion and empire in Eurasia. This is a remarkable book that reflects on our modern times on every page.ÔÇØ Jeff Sypeck, author of Becoming Charlemagne ÔÇ£A pleasure to read, The Abacus and the Cross draws readers into a world┬áof┬áintrigue, superstition, and scholarship. Nancy Marie Brown writes lucidly about math and science, finding important stories in the lives of medieval people┬áwho deserve to be widely remembered.ÔÇØ " |