Fotografía de autor
180+ Obras 923 Miembros 36 Reseñas

Reseñas

Contents: Preface / Stephen R. Graubard -- Mitteleuropa? / Timothy Garton Ash -- The Rediscovery of Central Europe / Tony Judt -- The Political Traditions of Eastern Europe / George Schöpflin -- Between Hope and Despair / Bronislaw Geremek -- Bohemia of the Soul / Josef Škvorecký -- Political Change and National Diversity / Ivo Banac -- Landscape after Battle: Films from "the Other Europe" / Yvette Biró -- In Search of a Paradigm / Elemér Hankiss -- Reform Economics: The Classification Gap / János Mátyás Kovács -- Central Europe or Mitteleuropa? / Jacques Rupnik -- Ethnicity and Faith in Eastern Europe / Ernest Gellner -- To the Stalin Mausoleum / Z [pseudonym of Martin Malia]
 
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villemezbrown | Jan 12, 2024 |
1917-1924
What did the Russian Revolution mean for the British Labour Party - and the British labor movement generally - in the period 1917-1924? Mr Graubard here presents a clear and incisive analysis of that problem: how the Bolshevik victory influences the Labour Party's views on foreign policy, particularly with respect to Russian affairs; the story behind the creation of the Communist Party in Great Britain and the Communists' rivalry with the Labour Party; and the Labour Party's attitude towards international communism, as reflected in its efforts to lead and organize the noncommunist socialist parties in a new labor and socialist international.

Mr Graubard views these and other questions as aspects of a single large questions: how did the victory of communism in Russia challenge a socialist party unwilling to accept Marxism but conscious of the necessity of coming to some sort of terms with it? He explores the British Labour Party's record in some detail, and, in doing so, explains why, in the realm of foreign affairs, the Labour Party showed a willingness to accept Soviet Russia, while in the domestic sphere its hostility towards the British Communist Party constantly increased. Mr Graubard traces the effects of this ambivalence on British domestic politics.
 
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LarkinPubs | Mar 1, 2023 |
 
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urnmo | Jul 29, 2019 |
Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences: Summer, 1968. Issued as Vol. 97, No. 3 of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
 
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LanternLibrary | Aug 20, 2017 |
The nature of presidential leadership, and the question of how to judge its quality, is an ever-present issue, particularly in this age of constant media coverage and discussion of the presidency, whether on talk radio, cable news networks, on the Internet. Most of what passes for analysis, in this cacophony, is rapid-fire gut reactions to the latest presidential action.

Stephen Graubard, retired professor of history at Brown University, attempts a more systematic analysis of the modern presidency in "Command of Office." This book, which offers chapter-length analyses of each president since Theodore Roosevelt (who is arguably the first modern president), tries to demonstrate the massive power that has flowed into the Executive Branch of the federal government in a century dominated by the perpetual threat, and frequent realization, of war.

The resulting effort demonstrates years of research and study into the 18 presidents (it was published during George W. Bush's presidency). The wealth of material consulted is evident from the lengthy, and heavily annotated, endnotes. This frequently results in a presentation of some of the complex currents of public opinion and bureaucratic advice that shaped key presidential decisions.

However, the book is crippled by Graubard's persistent condescension. At every step, Graubard knows better than the men who held office. And while hindsight is usually considered 20/20, which explains how a scholar could comment with some confidence about many mistakes, "Command of Office" offers a tone that differs from the best history. Oddly, in exploring more than 100 years of presidential decisions, the author never seems to be pleasantly surprised by a decision -- in fact, the insights always seem to point to a gamut of actions that run from slightly better than mediocre to incomprehensible.

There is valuable material and insight in the book, which is what kept me slogging through it, but the tone in which the critique is almost always critical makes it a tiresome experience.½
 
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ALincolnNut | Nov 21, 2012 |
A comprerhensive and well written history of the Presidents of the United States that looks at each man individually and as part of the historic whole. Very interesting to see the men as individuals and to look at the paths that led them to the White house. Graubard effectively makes his case that the primary system has dumbed down the presidency and while the old political machines were corrupt and undemocratic they did elevate some great men to the top office.
 
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JustAGirl | otra reseña | Feb 6, 2008 |
I'm reading this book at the moment, and so far I've found it thorough, interesting and easy to read. It's an overview of the Presidency throughout the 20th century, and yet it manages to retain quite a bit of detail. In style and objective, it's very much like Peter Hennessy's book 'The Prime Minister: The Office And Its Holders Since 1945' (which, incidentally, is superb).

One strange thing: I'm nearly at the end of the Truman chapter now, and I've just noticed that Graubard has skipped over August 1945 without even the vaguest mention of America's dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The word 'Hiroshima' doesn't even appear in the index! The book generally goes into important decisions and relationships in a fair bit of detail, so this glaring omission is pretty staggering.
 
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DLSmithies | otra reseña | Aug 26, 2007 |
Spengler's The Decline of the West
Rostovtzeff's Social and Economic History of the Roman Empire
Pirenne's Mohammed and Charlemagne
Huisinga's The Waining of the Middle Ages
Polanyi's The Great Transformation
Veblen's The Theory of the Leisure Class
H Adam's The Education of Henry Adams
Beard's Women and a Force in History
Ortega y Gassett's Revolt o the Masses
Manheim's Ideology and Utopia
Freud's The Interpretation of Dreams
R Niebuhr's The Nature and Destiny of Man
A Flexner's The Flexner Report
J Frank's Law and the Modern Mind
Santayana Three Philosophical Poets
W B Yates A Vision
Used as a short talk to the Birch-Tunac-Mansouri Group using Yates, Mannheim and Huzinga March 2012
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 16, 2012 |
Edmund Burke III "Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth" 127 - 135
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 16, 2012 |
M I Finley ""Progress" in Historiography" 125 - 142
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 16, 2012 |
Lynn White, Jr. Science and the Self: The medieval Background of a Modern Confrontation 47 - 59
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 16, 2012 |
Montaigne on Illusion: The Denunciation of Untruth Jean Starobinski 85- 101
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 16, 2012 |
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 13, 2012 |
Eclectic. What is the History of Books? 65-84
Auden and the Romantic Tradition in The Age of Anxiety 149 171
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 13, 2012 |
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 13, 2012 |
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 13, 2012 |
Stanley Hoffmann A Note on the French Revolution and the Language of Violence 149 - 156
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 13, 2012 |
Daniel Bell The Wold and the United States in 2013 1-31
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 13, 2012 |
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 13, 2012 |
Not a coherent themed issue: the first three chapters are on Japan.
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 12, 2012 |
Philosophical and Political Thought in Europe Today Eric Weil p. 185-194
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 12, 2012 |
Stewards of Opportunity: America's Public Community Colleges 95
The American Professorate in Comparative Perspective 315
 
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Jwsmith20 | Mar 11, 2012 |