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The Big Questions in History [Hardcover]

Harriet Swain
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd; 1st Edition edition (9 Jun 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0224072803
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224072809
  • Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 13.8 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,104,691 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Independent on Sunday

'It’s hard to think of a similar resource for accessible, contemporary ideas about how the world is organised.'

Product Description

What wins wars? Why do empires rise and fall? What makes a great leader? What causes nationalism? How do spiritual movements spread? These are questions in the forefront of our minds today but they meant just as much to people in the past. How did earlier generations tackle them? And how far can historians use the lessons of the past to help to find some answers? Drawing on examples ranging from ancient Greece to Tony Blair's Britain, leading historical thinkers address 20 of the really big questions that have been asked over the centuries about the course of human events. While Richard Evans asks what history is, Ian Kershaw considers how personality affects politics, Lisa Jardine looks at the impact of technology on social change, Felipe Fernandez-Armesto measures the influence of geography, David A Bell assesses what causes nationalism and Colin Renfrew considers how civilisations develop. Others examine why revolutions happen, how spiritual movements spread, why economies collapse, how intellectual movements start, and what impact our physical bodies and our private lives have on changing history. Each essay is accompanied by commentary by a journalist, discussing the differing views of other leading thinkers, today and in the past. The result is a stimulating ride over continents and across centuries in search of answers that are sometimes surprising, often controversial, and all of great relevance to how we live today.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Approachable, Intelligent, Illuminating., 1 Sep 2005
By 
Rev. Thomas Scarborough (Cape Town, South Africa) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Big Questions in History (Hardcover)
Big Questions In History was a most worthwhile read. It deals with twenty major themes, including:

* What is history?
* What makes a great leader?
* Why do revolutions happen?
* How does private life affect public life?
* Why do religious and spiritual movements grow?
* Can history have an end?

Each theme is introduced by a leading authority in the field, and this is followed by a commentary by freelance writers -- contributions which are equally interesting and profound. Each contribution is about five pages long -- dealing with the issues in an approachable way, and opening up intelligent discussion, with illuminating examples from history. As a mere glimpse at the content of the book, three subjects follow -- the first two being chapter themes, and the third being an underlying theme of the book.

Linda Woodhead deals with the question as to why religious and spiritual movements grow. She proposes the following. Religion is likely to flourish in alliance with worldly power -- or, on the other hand, in DEFIANCE of earthly power -- while spirituality (personal religion) is likely to flourish in the wake of the same. In this regard, she comments, "Islam finds itself in the sweet spot where the two most propitious conditions for religious growth coincide." On the other hand, Stephen Phillips proposes that those Christian Churches which are seeing the strongest growth today "feature a less intellectually rarefied, omniscient, interventionist God", which further appeals to "the poor and downtrodden".

The chapter which came as the greatest surprise to me was, What makes a great leader? Brendan Simms and Phil Baty describe characteristics which at first seem quite counter-intuitive. Leadership, firstly, should be unplanned -- a major example being Otto von Bismarck, who began as "a defender of a narrow conservative Prussian aristocratic interest", yet became the architect of German unification. Simms quotes Oliver Cromwell: "He goeth furthest who knows not where he is going." Secondly, great leaders tended to surround themselves with "enemies". Baty refers to Margaret Thatcher as an example, for "her willingness to keep critics".

As for the persons considered to have had the greatest impact on our modern understanding of history, Niccolo Machiavelli and Karl Marx rank high on the list. Machiavelli was a famous-notorious political philosopher, and a great realist and pragmatist. By and large, it would seem to be his realist approach to history that gives him his present appeal. Ideology is out, realism is in. Marx, on the other hand, has pride of place, not for his view of historical progress (which the book generally regards as a "blithe" attitude), but for the view that history is shaped by broad movements of men and women. Before Marx, history tended to be limited to "great men".

This book was a most worthwhile read, and gave one a good feel for "the state of history" today. It includes useful lists for further reading, and a comprehensive index.

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Amazon.com: 2.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The questions are interesting, the discussions are bad, 28 Jan 2006
By BernardZ - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Big Questions in History (Hardcover)
This book asks some of big questions in history eg What is history? Why do empires rise? Why do wars begin? What makes effective laws? etc. I am not sure if a historian is the best one to answer many of these interesting questions.

Yet on these topics, one could write books. Many of the questions should be summarized in one line "We don't know" maybe with a few examples and a discussion on some points of views. However what we get is a short essay on these questions sometimes with a second essay by someone else. Overall the quality of these essays I would rate as poor and simplistic.

For example in answer to the question how does personality affect politics? The conclusion is that it is accelerating or retarding to some extent processes which are in the main shaped by impersonal forces. I would argue that most forces in history are not impersonal, that many conflicting processes are occurring and that people can somewhat select different futures. For example a less forceful person then Alexander the Great, might have lost his army to the Persians. The Greek kingdoms of Ptolemy's and Seleucids would have remained under Persian rule. The Romans would have been less influenced by the Greeks and more by the Persians. More importantly Judaism would have evolved under Persian not Greek influence. If Christianity would have arisen it would have been a very different religion. History would be very different.

Another example to the question of Why do economies collapse? One essay states wars. Two examples quoted of Romans and Britain empire don't suggest this is true as both got rich and powerful though continuous wars. War made them great and rich.

The next essay on this topic seems to think the cause is economic collapse is Paul Kennedy's book which contains his theory of relative decline and growing burdens of an expanding empire. This controversial theory that predicted the decline of the United States as a world power proved to be totally wrong by the time this book came out. So why is it quoted as what most historians believe today?

Also some essays read like people are pushing a political agenda eg that the British prime minister Tony Blair is a great leader for his handling of the current war in Iraq. For books like this I would suggest that the writers stays away from current affairs as much as possible, if only as it takes time before one can get a chance to assess the relevance of current events in history.

4.0 out of 5 stars A Time For Discussion, 17 May 2008
By Rady Fahmy "Check my blog at: radyfahmy.manal... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Big Questions In History (Paperback)
If you are expecting to dip in the Big Questions in History like "Why do Empires Rise?" and have that in one concise tome, then that is not the book you are looking for.

I personally truly enjoyed this book, though, because this a sophisticated material written in a essay format about some of the most important questions in history. Each essay writer and their commentators is forced to delve into a discussion elegantly and intelligently in less than five pages. The concept of forcing you the reader, to question the larger questions of life without having to spend years understanding or researching a subject as difficult as "How Do Intellectuals Movements Begin?" is brilliant!

The book's weakness is in the disparity between writers in terms of quality. Some of the commentator essays feel like a bibliography! Some other writers used the discussion board on a general topic as a "spinning" opportunity to push for, what seems like, a personal agenda. "What Makes an Effective Leader?" and trying to make a case for Tony Blair is a shameful use of the 5 pages the author had!

I highly recommend this book, it will push your thinking into really interesting concepts without having to spend years delving into dense topics that make "Big Questions in History?"
 Go to Amazon U.S. to see both reviews  2.5 out of 5 stars 
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