Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945
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Average customer review:Product Description
Europe in 1945 was prostrate. Much of the continent was devastated by war, mass slaughter, bombing and chaos. Large areas of Eastern Europe were falling under Soviet control, exchanging one despotism for another. Today, the Soviet Union is no more and the democracies of the European Union reach as far as the borders of Russia itself. "Postwar" tells the rich and complex story of how we got from there to here. It tells of Europe's recovery from the devastation; of the decline and fall of Soviet Communism and the rise of the EC and EU; of the end of Europe's empires; and of Europe's uneasy and changing relationships with the memory of the war and with the two great powers that bracket it, Russian and America. With clarity and economy, he tells of developments across the continent as a whole, as well as of the contrasting experiences of Eastern and Western Europe. Along the way, we learn of Greece's Civil War, of Scandinavian social democracy, the stresses of multilingual Belgium, the struggles of Northern Ireland and the Basque country. And this is a history of people as well as of peoples, Churchill and Mitterand, General Franco and General Jaruzelski, Silvio Berlusconi and Joseph Stalin. And "Postwar" also has cultural and social histories to tell: of French and Czech cinema, of the rise of the fridge and the decline of the public intellectual, of immigration and gastarbeiters, existentialism and punk rock, Monty Python and brutalist architecture. Running right up to the Iraq War and the election of Benedict XVI, "Postwar" makes sense of Europe's recent history and identity, of what Europe is and has been, in what can only be described as a masterpiece: Europe in our time.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #55373 in Books
- Published on: 2007-02-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 960 pages
Editorial Reviews
Irish Times - Rev'd Tim Fanning
'With an eye for the telling statistic... lucid, comprehensive'
New York Review of Books
A book that has the pace of a thriller and the scope of an encyclopaedia...a very considerable achievement
Sunday Times
Judt’s clear-eyed judgment and mastery of detail are at their absolute best… This magnificently rich and readable book’
Customer Reviews
Europe's Guilt
Tony Judt's book is a lively and contentious narrative of Postwar Europe from the effects of WW2 right up to the removal of the last statue of Franco in Madrid on March 17th 2005. The key European events covered in detail: Cold War, formation of the European Union, collapse of Communism, war in the Balkans. Weaved through this is a commanding sense of social and political history from a liberal/left perspective.
It is particular strong on film [and TV] which is used to underscore political and social narratives, with plenty of illustrations from memoirs and satire. The grand theme is Europe's collective guilt over the Holocaust and how the different countries have denied, then acknowledged (or not) their roles. This theme is defining for Judt and it will continue to define Europe's collective persona for future generations. On this latter issue Judt's arguments are well illustrated with examples from literature and Europe's intellectuals - both largely ignored by the politicians.
Europe's future will be tested by whether or not it grow towards something more than just a grand market place for the exchange of goods and services.
My only regret is the lack of a thematic bibliography - bibliographical references are within the text at the bottom of the page only.
This is a big read at 830 pages - but it is engrossing
Superb
I can't recommend this book highly enough. It is very well-researched, full of insights and connections and most importantly, extremelty well-written. My main objection was that the Iberian countries were not well-covered and there is barely any mention of sport as a cultural influence.
The criticisms by communists below should be ignored. Judt does no more than set out accurately the history of eastern European countries alongside those of western countries. It is hardly his fault that those countries were economically and culturally backward and that their people were repressed. I should also defent Judt against the claim that he is somehow biased in favour of Turkey in some way. It is quite clear that Turkey is not within the purview of this book. Far from "one of the main claims" of the book being that Turkey is not a periphral country, Denmark gets more coverage. It is mentioned only in the context of the Cold War and it's conflict with Greece over Cyprus.
Stunningly informative
Although a reasonably well-read European, I was stunned by how much I learned from Postwar. It is an amazing work that tracks European development from 1945 to 2005 in political, economical, social and cultural terms. Key political figures as well as philosophers, writers and film-makers are portrayed in the context of their times and circumstances. Their impact at national as well as pan-European levels suddenly make more sense. It seems to me balanced and objective where assessments or judgements are made. I also loved the language and was glad that there were not interminable notes to interrupt the page-turning. This is a book I will read again.



