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History of the Present: Essays, Sketches, and Dispatches from Europe in the 1990s

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Click here to buy History of the Present: Essays, Sketches, and Dispatches from Europe in the 1990s by  Timothy Garton Ash. History of the Present: Essays, Sketches, and Dispatches from Europe in the 1990s
by Timothy Garton Ash
Sales Rank: 771643
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Features
  • Cover Type: Paperback with 496 pages
  • Published by: Vintage; Reprint edition September 11, 2001
  • Written in: English
  • ISBN 10 Number: 0375727620
  • ISBN 13 Number: 978-0375727627
  • Book Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Weighs: 12.8 ounces

    Product Review
    In the 1980s, Timothy Garton Ash was a respected Central Europe reporter, his books The Magic Lantern, The Uses of Adversity, and The Polish Revolution required reading on the area, still very much a specialized field. In the 1990s, Europe's supposed margins forced their way center stage, and everyone wants to know--needs to know--about Lech Walesa's fall from power in Poland, why Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia crumbled into pieces, about Bosnia and Kosovo, where Russia is going. These are the stories that fill our front pages at the turn of the millennium, and dominate discussions in Brussels and beyond.

    History of the Present is a series of 29 essays, sketches, and dispatches filed during the 1990s, its title coined by George Kennan in an attempt to capture the uniqueness of Garton Ash's work--journalistically contemporary and yet with a sense of historical perspective usually found only with that handily sure-footed guide, hindsight. Some of the pieces are now "outdated" in a narrow news sense, but all the more valuable for that--history-with-hindsight will inevitably iron out all the telling creases that Garton Ash records. What he produces is, in his own word, a "kaleidoscope" that eludes crass summary, but even so, he concludes with some wise words on what Europe might now mean at the end of the decade. We should all read this book. --Alan Stewart, Amazon.co.uk --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

    From Publishers Weekly
    Garton Ash (The File: A Personal History), a journalist and professor of history at Oxford University, is one of the most acute commentators on contemporary European politics. Well known for previous books about Central and southeastern Europe, he returns now with a collection of essays (previously published in the New York Review of Books and similar venues) about events of the past decade. Present for much of the tumult of those years, he writes about the fall of the Berlin Wall, the blood-soaked ground of Kosovo, the Serbs of Belgrade, Vaclav Havel and Erich Honecker (in prison but still defiant)Damong other matters. Interested in writing what George Kennan called a "history of the present," he offers accounts of history unfolding before his eyes marked by the detached precision of a trained historian. But he also writes with considerable verve and wit: "Penser l'Europe is a French book title, inconceivable as a British one. Thinking Europe is an un-British activity," he muses in one essay. "Those who do it, even as consenting adults in private, risk being stigmatized as 'Euro-intellectuals'Da neologism that neatly combines two things the British deeply distrust." As just that kind of intellectual, he cuts through the bewilderingly complex thickets of history and politics to compose a coherent picture of the upheaval of our times. (He includes a set of annotated chronologies to guide us through the last decade.) Reading these fine essays, one is astonished at the richness and danger of our timesDand grateful that Garton Ash is on hand to decipher the outlines of the newly emerging European order. Agent, Georges Borchardt. (Sept.)
    Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

    Reader Reviews
    Despite its rather pretentious title, this is a very informative collection of essays on Central and Eastern Europe during the 1990s. Garton Ash has a particularly intimate knowledge of Germany, Poland and the Czech lands, both past and present. His training as a historian and his practical journalistic work in the region make him eminently qualified to write a `history' of the region's recent past. The only flaws in this book are the several chapters that deal with the former Yugoslavia, as this is an area about which the author knows less (he doesn't speak any of the local languages) and his work suffers for it. The main problem is that he only began visiting the former Yugoslav lands after 1995, and depends on secondary and second-hand sources for his knowledge of wartime events from 1990 to 1995. Thus, he lacks the first-hand experience of the local circumstances that make his observations of Germany, Poland or the former Czechoslovakia so acute. (To his credit, and in contrast to most foreign correspondents, Garton Ash does quite candidly admit that he was playing the war tourist in his trips to Bosnia.) Nevertheless, these shortcomings are compensated by other parts of the book; particularly interesting is the chapter on the Ruthenians - that typical Eastern European stateless nation. Garton Ash is also at his best when discussing the future prospects of a united Europe and the role of Germany in this new continental political order. Comment | | (Report this)


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