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July 2009

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awards in the café cabinet

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  • intute UK joint university database recommended

     

     

  • Channel 4 recommended

     

     

  • BBC radio recommended
    Radio 4

     

     

  • SBC Education Blue Ribbon Hot Site!

     

     

  • March '06 páginas recomendado

     

  • May '05 Site of the Month by SovLit, Harvard University.

     

  • April '05 Birmingham GRID for Learning Site of the Week

     

     

being read on the terrace.....

  • Michael Burleigh: Blood and Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism

    Michael Burleigh: Blood and Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism
    Starts with the Irish Fenians of the 19th century then progresses (regresses?) through Russian bombers, anarchists onto the 20th century terrorist groups: Israeli, Palestinian, Irish, Basque, the European Red Brigades. The final (largest) section encompasses contemporary Islamist terror groups. Some is done well. Burleigh is best on the more focused sections where he can follow a linear history: Fenians, Basques & Israeli terrorism as well as the final section on contemporary Islamist terror movements. Elsewhere (anarchism especially) exposition is at times over complex and confusing. I felt even a timeline would cope better with the huge amount of chronology and undeveloped personalities and events offered. Perhaps its scope is over ambitious. It may have been better to break it down into a couple of volumes (and so also include the latin American movements of the 1970’s: tightly linked in many ways to the Red Brigades/RAF but a curious and large omission, even if admitted to by the author in the introduction). At its best this a very good survey despite being openly opinionated, (increasingly so as chapters near the present). It could also do without the authors own explicit “solutions” at the end – many of these are certainly valid but are largely implicitly clear to the perceptive reader and do not require reinforcement. Perhaps more for research and dipping into rather than reading from cover to cover, this remains a valid and accessible addition to the topic. June '09 (***)

  • Tim Tzouliadis: The Forsaken: An American Tragedy in Stalin's Russia

    Tim Tzouliadis: The Forsaken: An American Tragedy in Stalin's Russia
    The "Forsaken" are a small group of US citizens who move and settle in the USSR to escape the Depression and work in a society they believed promised more than the capitalist USA in the 1930's. Within a couple of years all goes wrong as they get caught up (as dangerous "spies") in the 1930s Terror. One by one they disappear and this is where their tragedy begins. Innocents caught in Stalin's and then the NKVD's paranoia they are siezed off the street, tortured, forced to confess then shot or sent to the Siberian Gulags to be worked to death and vanish without trace. Just like the anything up to 20 million other Soviets that Tzouliadis includes in the narrative. What is especially appalling about these US victims is that they are disowned totally by the US. The Embassy ignores appeals for help (In fact it fails to even protect its own employees from disappearance. One of its key figures in the 1930's is Kennan of the containment telegram fame. He also sees little point in pushing to help these US citizens, who are perceived by many in officialdom as pinks and reds linked to US unionism. The lame response of FDR himself to the tragedy of the US citizens and the failure to perceive the true nature of the Stalin regime helps understanding of Churchills frustration with FDR-Stalin relations at the wartime meetings. It also provides a wider survey of the process of arrest, horrendous Gulag conditions, execution and disappearance during not one but three waves of Terror including US troops siezed during and after World War II. and how the process came to an end of sorts. "The Forsaken" is a valuable addition to the work on Stalin's Russia. Perhaps it will also start to show a wider audience that Stalin was no better than Hitler, in all probability much worse, in creating a society that dehumanised its members and eliminated millions. May ‘09 (*****)

  • Lisa Jardine: Going Dutch: How England Plundered Holland's Glory

    Lisa Jardine: Going Dutch: How England Plundered Holland's Glory
    After an effective account of 1688, Jardine then leaves the political to explore the artistic, architectural and scientific links that were already in place between the Netherlands and England by 1688. These were indeed amazingly widespread. much more than I had realised. This is knowledgeable and very well illustrated, if a little too dry, pure "history of art" focused for me. It, like much of the work, is also perhaps a lttle too centred on the experience and evidence of one particular family, the Dutch Huygens household. The final section looks at the economic ties. This is the least satisfying part of the work. Too little is said of the reasons why, despite the connections argued for in the book, Anglo-Dutch trade remains competitive to the point of war and massacres of rival trade posts. Equally, too little emphasis is made on reasons for the series of wars in mid century between the two, or (despite what is said on the final page) on why the Netherlands declined as Englands fortunes grew. Just like those of Scotland in the same period..... In fact Anglo-Dutch relations and connections & links at the time seem to uncannily mirror those of Anglo-Scottish. Only, the Netherlands escaped complete assimilation with England. Now there's a theme for another book..... March '09 (***)

  • Walter Nugent: Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion

    Walter Nugent: Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion
    Looks at the expansion of the USA from independence to today & identifies this in 3 stages (Empire I, the period of internal expansion, Empire II, the Pacific and Caribbean imperialism and Empire III, post 1945.) Most focus is on I & II and what a depressing tale he tells. It did not take long for the (thoroughly European Great Power) diplomatic skills of duplicity and selfish ambition to appear. Greatly assisted by an early ability to take advantage of Great Power problems elsewhere to acqiure territory by Treaty & Dollars, the young Republic is also quite happy to undermine states that helped it gain independence (most notably Spain) and attack neighbours (British Canada, Mexico) in search of the expansion of what it considered its manifest destiny. Worst of all though Nugent shows the impact of Manifest Destiny on the native population. Pushed, shoved, but most of all decimated by the diseases of what Nugent calls the Anglo-European settlers they are all but wiped out to become little more than another ethnic minority by the 20th century. At times the depth of detail of the early Spanish wars can be overwhelming, not to say tedious, but Nugent's book needs to be recommended reading for anyone who believes the US was isolationist before Teddy Rooosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. As I said at the start, a depressing read. Feb '09 (****)

  • Claire Tomalin: Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self

    Claire Tomalin: Samuel Pepys: The Unequalled Self
    A sympathetic survey of the able administrator that naval historians of the 17th century so admire. Yet it is the personal diarist/observer that takes centre stage. The diaries cover barely 10 years of Pepys life but include Sex, drink, brutal (but successful) surgery, plague, fire, music, marital conflict, the fall of kings, corruption and courage in public life, wars, navies, public executions, and incarceration in the Tower of London. These are all treated clearly and methodically in themed chapters, organised in a way which would have pleased the methodical man himself. Tomalin argues that the diaries are much more than an account of events but are a genuine piece of literary value displaying more than ever before the personal tensions, desires and most of all relationships and concerns of the upwardly mobile. In this sense Pepys is presented as a flawed but essentially caring man guilt ridden after doing something he feels remorse for. He is shown as quite modern. Like Marlborough, Pepys is another example of how individuals accommodate to the intriguing question of Regime change. Tomalin shows clearly how a generation that grew up or begun carrers under Cromwell had to accommodate themselves with the restoration of the monarchy. Pepys never seems to lose the republicanism of his boyhood – yet has to come to terms with rising to high office due to royal favour. However he has the honesty to stand by his Royal patrons (unlike Marlborough and James II) even if heir lifestyle is not to his taste and he has to ultimately resign. It is perhaps a mark of how close you get to Pepys that there is a genuine sense of loss when he passes away at the end. This is a real read – impressively researched, and reading like a page turner. Jan '09 (*****)

  • David Kynaston: Austerity Britain: A World to Build

    David Kynaston: Austerity Britain: A World to Build
    A mixture of Vox Pop (through the reports of the innovative Mass Observation reports of the time & diarists - often the self selecting celebs of then and now) and analysis. Very comprehensive - this covers 1945-47 only - but at times perhaps too much so, leading to a desire to skim in places. I found the analysis chapters more interesting than the ones populated by witness quotes. Most intriguing was the chapter on the ideas behind state nationalisation - I had not realised the degree to which this was seen as a top down model with no real consideration given to the value or necessity of any employer participation. In most cases existing managers were kept in control. (One other point: did it always rain then? By chance the photos mostly appear to have been taken on damp, dark rainy days. As if the time was not depressing enough...) Nov '08 (***)

  • Ryszard Kapuscinski: Imperium

    Ryszard Kapuscinski: Imperium
    This is a volume of essays dating from 1939 to the fall of Gorbachev by the Polish journalist. In them, Kapuscinski writes clearly and shows a sharp sense of observation of the workings of the Soviet Empire as he finds it in his travels during the period. Although we are well aware now that the former USSR was not a monolith but made up of many different nationalities and Soviet Republics, his writing from the 1980's from the Soviet "stans" reminds us that this was also the case at a time when the west tended to consider the USSR as one uniform state. In many ways the best is at the start and finish - a masterly description of the 1939 Soviet occupation of eastern Poland from a boys account and an analysis from the time by an easterner of the fall of Gorbachev. Not quite history writing, but a good resource for historical study of the period. Oct' 08. (***)

  • Richard Holmes: Marlborough: England's Fragile Genius

    Richard Holmes: Marlborough: England's Fragile Genius
    There is a fuller review as a post ("marlborough, template for winston churchill?"). Much more than the story of a single life. For non specialists it gives a clear and well explained narrative of the complex political developments of the period within which Marlborough operated. Marlborough, John Churchill is shown very much as a product of being born into the losing side of the civil war period, determined never again to be wrong footed by political change. One key thread running through is the links that are apparent between this Churchill and his relative, the World War II leader. The similarities between the two are eerie, leading one to speculate how much Winston Churchill actively used the example of Marlborough's experience to determine his own relationships with the allied leaders in World War II. Holmes is a military historian and the prospect of page after page of the military campaigns fought may be a daunting prospect for many. However, Holmes does not allow these to dominate and keeps a good balance between these and the other factors, notably his wife Sarah, that influenced the man. All in all, a well rounded and researched biography with relevant illustrations and very helpful map (although a key to the annotation of military maps would be useful to the non specialist) and a good read! Sept '08 (****)

  • Antonia Fraser: Marie Antoinette

    Antonia Fraser: Marie Antoinette
    Initially started as a holiday read and expecting to read of a weak, dissolute queen this biography (used as the basis for the weakish Sofia Coppola movie) soon began to reveal Marie Antoinette in a somewhat different light. Yes, much of her pre revolutionary time in France was spent out of touch with the country at large and largely oblivious to the real costs of the royal establishment. Yes, she was also rather naive and had a simplistic view of the socio-political structure. However, Fraser shows this to be as much a result of upbringing and Habsburg dynastic demands as because of flaws of character. Post 1789 sees a tougher, more considered MA emerge, a victim of the revolutionary pressures produced by the Ancien Regime of which she was part. Interestingly Fraser draws attention to the misogyny of the Jacobins as an element of the seemingly unjust treatment & trial of MA compared with Loius XVI. This is not so much a sympathetic account as one which makes much use of broad context to make the position of MA more understandable. Sept 2008 (***)

  • H.W. Brands: The Age of Gold: The California Gold Rush and the New American Dream

    H.W. Brands: The Age of Gold: The California Gold Rush and the New American Dream
    Brands provides a well detailed account of the California Gold rush of 1848-9, placing it in its national (and international) as well as Californian context. Especially valuable are the descriptions of the journeys taken by the argonauts (the hopeful gold prospectors) by sea (round the Horn, across the Pacific, through the Panama isthmus) and by land across the plains, deserts, Rockies & Sierras. Some of the dangers encountered are new to me - for example the high mortality rate from cholera as the wagons moved west. The destructive impact of the western migrants on the buffalo herds so vital to the Indian tribes is also made clear. Unfortunately, the 491 pages of small, dense type would have benefited from tighter editing. The post Gold Rush period especially seems to take on a life of its own (which perhaps should have been a separate book) but loses focus as a consequence of trying to cover too much. Brands' previous book, the Reckless Decade, on late 19th century US was more concise and all the better focused for being so. August 2008. (***)

  • Peter Chapman: Jungle Capitalists: A Story of Globalisation, Greed and Revolution

    Peter Chapman: Jungle Capitalists: A Story of Globalisation, Greed and Revolution
    Charts the economic rise and pervasive political influence of the first globalised company - the US United Fruit Company, precursor for the activities of today's multinationals. By building railways and the acquisition of land rights from central American states it created monopoly banana production and determined the politics of the region. By the 1930's the company had created a "vast feudal state" of plantations, worker settlements and client governments scattered across central America. The simple Banana may have been the product, but to ensure its continued profitability (ie keeping production costs low and free from native involvement) United Fruit was not averse to heavy involvement in agressive politics. Support for coups was common, most clearly seen in the 1929 Santa Marta massacre of 1000+ demonstrators in Colombia and the Guatamalan coup of 1954. But Guatamala backfired - it frightened the US government into starting anti trust procedures that would see United Fruit shrink into "Chiquita" in the 1980's; Ernesto Guevara witnessed the coup and it helped convince him of the need to use force to gain national freedom; the US press, heavily manipulated by United Fruit decided to pursue more personally investigative styles in future (Herbert Matthews went off in search of Castro on a personal quest for "truth" which was to give such positive press for Castro in the US). However the author warns for today: Chiquita has admitted to paying nearly $2 million to right-wing death squads in Colombia and Chapman cites the example of Costa Rica, (the only central American country to escape United Fruit and create a more welfare-orientated state) where modern multinationals working within a free-market economy are causing severe problems of social inequality. This book is timely and testimony to the survival of United Fruit and how well it has continued to cover its tracks outside latin America. May '08 (****)

  • Giles MacDonogh: After the Reich

    Giles MacDonogh: After the Reich
    There is a fuller review as a post ("After the Reich") Any modern writer of post war Germany who mentions the names of Hajo Holborn and Michael Balfour in the first few pages clearly has done their reading. This book fills in the gap left in many English language histories of postwar central Europe: from the actual end of war and its immediate impact to the outbreak of the Cold War. Covering not just the zones of Germany, but also Austria and the events of German speaking Europe elsewhere - the German Reich at its largest.Since the Wende, this has been a topic occupying the history shelves of most German bookshops. MacDonogh has done English readers a service with this account. The underlying sentiment is that this book records the consequences of the far greater evil perpetrated on others by the Germans - a feeling that many of those recorded reflect, despite their misery. It is not surprising that with the opening of the east Germans have wished to document the period, nor is it surprising that Anglo-saxon writers have shunned it for so long. May '06 (*****)

  • Robert Carver: Paradise with Serpents

    Robert Carver: Paradise with Serpents
    Carver's travel tales of Paraguay in 2001-2 see him comparing it with amongst others, the Congo, Albania, and the one I like best: pre partition 18th century Poland.... In places amusing, in others sadly pathetic this is a good companion to John Gimlettes Inflatable Pig (which has a more historical focus and which Carver is gracious enough to praise). Carver is well read and this gives a depth to his stories as well as allowing him to put modern Paraguay in a context with its neighbours. Starting off an enthusiastic investigative tourist, Carver ends desperate to leave and running for a seat on one of the few planes out of Paraguay for São Paulo. It may be good armchair adventure but I am not sure if this will encourage less intrepid tourists to travel far beyond Ciudad del Este though! April '08 (***)

  • Charles McKean: Battle for the North: The Tay and Forth Bridges and the 19th-Century Railway Wars

    Charles McKean: Battle for the North: The Tay and Forth Bridges and the 19th-Century Railway Wars
    Outlines the late 19th century railway rivalry between the Caledonian and North British railway companies that produced the two famous rail bridges over the Tay and Forth. Well detailed but perhaps too focussed on the minutiae of the boardroom disputes that lay behind the first Tay Bridge. Conversely it does Bouch a service in highlighting the role of fatigue in bringing down his Tay Bridge. Probably best read by someone with more than a nodding acquaintance to Jute era Dundee. Knowing Dundee I found this of interest, but the lay reader might not. A health warning is perhaps needed on the jacket. One last point. Good to see so many illustrations, but the maps are terrible. March '08 (**)

  • Max Hastings: Nemesis (US title:Retribution): The Battle for Japan, 1944-45

    Max Hastings: Nemesis (US title:Retribution): The Battle for Japan, 1944-45
    Another massive tome, this time on the final 18 months of the Pacific War. An overall synthesis, easily laid out with different theatres given seperate chapters. I found the most useful sections to be on those areas of conflict often less publicised in the west (& Europe. eg Burma, Australia, China, the sub war) By contrast, Macarthurs travails through the Philippines are less compulsive (as the man himself appears to have been). Some key points emerge: the (very) variable quality of US military commanders (FDR seems to have given them an almost free hand), the Japanese disinterest in technology (!!) and the early (quite considerable) failings of the B29. March '08 (****)

  • Ian W. Toll: Six Frigates: The Epic History of the Founding of the U.S. Navy

    Ian W. Toll: Six Frigates: The Epic History of the Founding of the U.S. Navy
    A huge tome that tells the story of the origins of the US Navy (It started with just 6 frigates...) in the late 18th/early 19th century. Written by a journalist rather than a historian so is not quite a US N.A.M. Rodgers but is well written and reads easily. Still it is perhaps one for the ship anorak rather than the general reader. Interesting to see the early potential wealth of the newly independent US: able to build a fleet and a state capital at the same time! Equally valuable are the links drawn at the end that connect this early growth directly to the Monroe doctrine and Thedore Roosevelts Great White fleet. Feb '07 (***)

  • Ben Elton: Blind Faith

    Ben Elton: Blind Faith
    Set in a flooded, overcrowded and globally warmed future this is a cutting, clever, satire on present face-booked, celeb and fame obsessed society from the writer of Black Adder. I do not usually include Eltons on this list, (with one exception) but this one is a worthwhile addition. A quick read and amusing but thought provoking. In addition to Elton's usually socially perceptive concepts, this one has the added advantage of having a worthwhile ending and less of the gratuitous sex, rock 'n roll..... Feb '08 (****)

  • Jessica Warner: Craze: Gin and Debauchery in an Age of Reason

    Jessica Warner: Craze: Gin and Debauchery in an Age of Reason
    Warner writes about the English (London?) gin "epidemic" of the early 18th century. As a piece of social history it is of value, well supported and argued (perhaps too drily though - this has the air of an academic work tweaked to do a Sobel "Longtitude" for a mass market). What is most surprising though is the way the argument shows that the issue was one focussed on women, and that it was the poorest women who emerge as the biggest victims economically as well as socially from the expansion of gin drinking as well as from its ever tighter control (they did most of the streetside selling). The big distillers/publicans were men.... they continued to survive, and were not locked up to the same extent. Dec '07 (**)

  • Frederick Taylor: The Berlin Wall: A World Divided, 1961-1989

    Frederick Taylor: The Berlin Wall: A World Divided, 1961-1989
    An interesting narrative of the history of the Berlin Wall by the autthor of Dresden. Like that earlier work much attention is given to context (although the potted history of the pre 1961 Cold War period is perhaps too potted). The Wall remains the focus, especially in the 1960's highlighting as it does the hypocrisy and lack of will of the western powers and the federal republic to support their rhetoric with action towards the east (which was probably the wise course...) But the most satisfactory chapter is perhaps the final one with insights and perceptions available only to a writer with a genuine affection and knowledge of the east gained through personal association. Useful also to anyone seeking an accessible, and general history of the GDR. One final point - in my (hardback) edition there are a surprising number of typos, signs perhaps of too swift editing. But why? Dec '07 (***)

  • Mike Dash: Batavia's Graveyard: The True Story of the Mad Heretic Who Led History's Bloodiest Mutiny

    Mike Dash: Batavia's Graveyard: The True Story of the Mad Heretic Who Led History's Bloodiest Mutiny
    This is the story of the 1629 Batavia mutiny of the Dutch East India Company (VOC). The (eventually quite horrific) story of shipwreck off modern Australia, mutiny, then "Lord of the Flies" type conflict between the shipwrecked survivors is well told, and equally provides a clear general insight into the workings of the VOC and the early routes to the east. The final section interestingly brings the story up to the present (despite a poor psycho-babble conclusion on the main character). There are a few caveats however: initially the book digresses too much from the story to talk of 17th century ships and trade in general. My edition had a third (over 100 pages) devoted to useful footnotes, but no numbering was given in the text - you had to look at the back in the "off chance" there may be a footnote and a statement was founded in history, not supposition..... Some illustrations would also be useful... Nov '07 (***)

  • Simon Sebag Montefiore: Young Stalin

    Simon Sebag Montefiore: Young Stalin
    This has to be read by anyone who seriously wants to understand what made Stalin tick. The account of his youth and formative years (up to Oct/Nov 1917) clearly indicates the impact of growing up in the wilds of (still lawless and gangster riddled) Georgia and the Caucasus. Sebag Montefiore's account does more though - it explains perhaps the ease with which the USSR slid into oligarchy and lawlessness in the 1990's - because of a general underlying tradition of violence, but also the dangers of faith schools and the risks of encarcerating enemies of the state in similar places. Stalin? More educated and culturally rounded than I had thought, but presents as not a pleasant character at all - easy to understand his purges and ruthlessness as later USSR leader. Equally repugnant seemed to be his inclination towards impregnating teenage girls at least half his age - one of whom was only 13, (he was in his 30's......) Very readable nonetheless. Oct '07 (****)

  • Paul Blustein: And the Money Kept Rolling In (and Out): Wall Street, the IMF, and the Bankrupting of Argentina

    Paul Blustein: And the Money Kept Rolling In (and Out): Wall Street, the IMF, and the Bankrupting of Argentina
    A readable account of the 2001-2 Argentine economic crash and how it emerged out of the growth of the 1990's. And at the end, where does Blustein point the finger of blame? To be sure, slack Argentine policies throughout the period and the impetuosity finally of Cavallo (where was President de la Rua at the time?) carry much of the final responsibility for the eventual collapse. However he argues that the real culprits are the international bankers - too willing to lend, to convince the Argentine government to issue more & more bonds and to push rates of repayment ever higher. The IMF? Blustein sees them as being blinded by what he calls "poster-child syndrome" ie unwilling to be tough & give unwelcome advice and support (especially post 1998) other then more loans, when "tough love" rather than more debts was needed by the country it had over-promoted as the free market success of the 1990's. Sept '07 (***)

  • Edward Pearce: The Great Man: Sir Robert Walpole: Scoundrel, Genius and Britain's First Prime Minister

    Edward Pearce: The Great Man: Sir Robert Walpole: Scoundrel, Genius and Britain's First Prime Minister
    Well reviewed tome on the 18th century prime minister. However, despite that I found the style tedious, not to say affected, with its large number of subordinate clauses (very Germanic - perhaps this is an attempt to produce a hanoverian style???). Nor does the amount of snide sniping at other historians help as this undermines the regard for the new material and ideas provided by Pearce. A shame as this (not necessarily likeable) character deserves a better presented modern treatment. Disappointing. Sept '07 (**)

  • Giles Tremlett: Ghosts of Spain: Travels Through Spain and Its Secret Past

    Giles Tremlett: Ghosts of Spain: Travels Through Spain and Its Secret Past
    Written by The Guardians Spain reporter this is a guide to help the anglo-saxon understand modern Spain by attempting to explain the history - ancient & modern - that is its foundation. Tremlett, as a long term resident writes with insight and real understanding - and at length. His best chapters are the early ones when he explains the secretos a voces originating from the Franco era and the "amnistía and amnesia" that followed it. He rationalises the dichotomy whereby Spains prosecutors are the most fervent in chasing up the perpetrators of Latin Americas military regimes whilst (until recently at least) ignoring the events of their own right wing period. Unfortunately the book will be too wordy to be read by most anglosajóns on the costas - tighter editing might have broadened its appeal - and value. (Sept '07) (***)

  • Ben Macintyre: Agent Zigzag: A True Story of Nazi Espionage, Love, and Betrayal

    Ben Macintyre: Agent Zigzag: A True Story of Nazi Espionage, Love, and Betrayal
    A quick holiday read but no less enjoyable for that. Macintyres account of the double agent Eddie Chapman is told well and in a sympathetic way - this despite the many initially questionable aspects of the man himself. Chapman, Agent Zigzag, a habitual criminal and serial womaniser/romancer became a spy for the German Abwehr then a double agent (of considerable value) for MI5. What is still unclear at the end is Chapman's motivation. Given the apparent complexities of his personality that may never be clear. As Le Carre is quoted in the blurb "meticulously researched, splendidly told and often very moving" especially in his loyalty to old friends. August '07 (***)

  • Thomas E. Ricks: Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq

    Thomas E. Ricks: Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq
    Written by a veteran war correspondent this is the most depressing piece of writing to show very clearly and exhaustively just how incompetent and unprepared the US govt and military was/is for the Iraq war. Ricks is very painstaking in his research and the real degree of the fiasco becomes clearer and clearer as each page of tight text unfolds. A couple of caveats: the book could have done with a little more editing as the catalogue of recorded failings grows & grows (If time is short the first 200 of 440 are the most telling). Equally it needs to be remembered it is a piece of journalism, not history (but will become a valuable historical document iteself for its interviews) and this comes through in places in style and presentation. Ultimately the question the reader is left with is how little grasp of affairs & ability the US Presidency had/has and how little (informed) leadership it provided - and how genuinely unpleasant and ill educated key advisers were. August '07 (****)

  • Adrian Tinniswood: The Verneys: A True Story of Love, War and Madness in Seventeenth-Century England

    Adrian Tinniswood: The Verneys: A True Story of Love, War and Madness in Seventeenth-Century England
    Based on the massive 17th century Verney correspondence collection this gives a unique insight into the trials & joys of a well to do English gentry family. Tinniswood's Verneys are presented in a very readable narrative - a historical soap - with well judged asides to provide context to the general reader (if a little irritating to a specialist). Three aspects are made especially clear: the constant presence of mortality; the impact of civil war at a family level; the significance of social networking. Equally the book traces a clear change in the pattern of political power: from court based patronage, to the political corruption of early party politics and the emergence of trade based influence. Grass roots history at its most enjoyable. Maybe there are enough later letters for an 18th century follow up? July '07 (***)

  • Jonathan Fenby: Alliance: The Inside Story of How Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill Won One War and Began Another

    Jonathan Fenby: Alliance: The Inside Story of How Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill Won One War and Began Another
    Meticulously detailed this looks exhaustively (at times perhaps too much so unless you are using this to research an essay!!) at the development of the WW2 alliance system. Several points emerge very clearly: that Teheran was probably the key meeting - Yalta was a case of formalising what had already been decided. Secondly, the emergence of Stalin as the main player with the support of FDR. Equally it is a surprise how many of the leading US & UK participants were in poor health, not just FDR but also many aides and military figures. As for Churchill he seemed unable to get Gallipoli out of his system, but was right in his postwar fears. For the publisher: why no maps? They would have been really helpful to envisage the logistics of the meetings. A false economy. June '07 (***)

  • Philip Roth: The Plot Against America: A Novel

    Philip Roth: The Plot Against America: A Novel
    An intriguing piece of counterfactual history - FDR loses the 1940 election to a right wing Lindbergh in league with Nazi Germany. Written in the first person from the viewpoint of a 10 year old boy this is perceptive and emotionally moving on a personal as well as social and political level as it charts the gradual decline of the US into antisemitic persecution. Yes, you can see how it might happen in a "civilised" society.... May '07 (****)

  • Sarah Helm: A Life in Secrets: Vera Atkins and the Missing Agents of WWII

    Sarah Helm: A Life in Secrets: Vera Atkins and the Missing Agents of WWII
    This story of Vera Atkins, responsible for sending British female secret agents to Nazi France and her cathartic efforts to find out what happened to those who did not return is a compelling, well crafted read. The Atkins life is full of twists and page turning mysteries. However in the process Helm emphasizes the bravery of those sent to France and the amateur incompetence of those who sent them. Equally, the transparent nature of the books structure serves as an excellent example of how history is laboriously researched and worked upon using a variety of sources – in this case very much like a detective thriller. March ´07 (****)

  • Antonia Fraser: Love and Louis XIV

    Antonia Fraser: Love and Louis XIV
    Fraser provides a feminine (as opposed to feminist) look at the reign of Louis XIV. Although it presents an interesting glimpse into the court life of the Sun King, it also reveals the dissolute and egocentric lifestyle of a royalty and nobility whose existence depended on the finances taken from the large tax base provided by a wealthy, absolutist state and from subjects they had little, or wished to have little in common with. Two points emerge ultimately: a better understanding of the future revolutionaries of 1789 and an intriguing glimpse of what might have been in England had such absolutism not been halted in 1642. Jan'07 (***)

  • Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness (Penguin Modern Classics)

    Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness (Penguin Modern Classics)
    The early 20th century novella stands up well with its account of Marlows journey in search of Kurtz. Its allusions to Stanley & the European exploitation of the Congo and its serving as the basis for Coppola's Apocolypse Now means there is plenty to think about. It is a long time since I have read an annotated Penguin classic of which this is an excellent example. Robert Hampson's Introduction and copious notes help greatly with understanding Conrad's nuances and probable intentions. Dec '06 (****)

  • John le Carre: The Mission Song

    John le Carre: The Mission Song
    Latest novel stays in Africa like the Constant Gardener. This time the action centres on the Congo where le Carre weaves a plot involving western government subterfuge and mercenary activity. Not quite up to the standard of the Constant Gardener, but a thoughtful read putting the helplessness of Africans in the face of war & exploitation into sharp focus. this is another book I have read recently with references to Conrad's Heart of Darkness... maybe that should figure next. Dec '06 (***)

  • J.G. Ballard: Kingdom Come

    J.G. Ballard: Kingdom Come
    An intriguing premise as always with Ballard - in this case his previous preoccupations with group psychology and behaviour focus this time on suburban shopping mall society. He creates a scenario plausible in contemporary England where motorways grid up at weekends as people go off to shop en masse in huge shopping centres. Unfortunately the plot is flawed by a rather confused portrayal of the central character. Worth a read, but not Ballard's best. Dec '06 (**)

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  • William Golding: The Inheritors

    William Golding: The Inheritors
    This fifty year old follow-up to Lord of the Flies stands up well. Uses the clever device of being (largely) seen in the first person through the eyes of the slow, but well meaning neandertals as they make catastrophic first contact with our less personable and more agressive ancestors, homo sapiens. At times this methodology makes for a difficult read but the story of this first genocide as homo sapiens searched for expansion and power is just as true today as it was in the post Nazi world, unfortunately. Nov '06 (***)

  • David Sinclair: Sir Gregor Macgregor and the Land That Never Was

    David Sinclair: Sir Gregor Macgregor and the Land That Never Was
    Story of a 19th century Scots fraudster, Gregor MacGregor and his scheme to make a fortune selling land in a non existent country in central America. The tale is an interesting one covering the MacGregors exploits in the Americas (where he fought alongside Miranda and Bolivar) and Europe as well as in Britain, but more judicious editing (especially of the independence campaigns MacGregor actually fought in) with a greater use of footnotes might make it both more useful to historians and efficient to read. Nov '06 (**)

  • Ronald Wright: A short history of progress

    Ronald Wright: A short history of progress
    This is a concise primer for all who want to see just how fragile human life & society really is. Wright shows clearly just how brief our “civilised” existence has been and also how easily it could end. He does this by looking at key previous civilisations: Sumer, Rome, China, Mayan America and Easter Island. Clear, sobering lessons are drawn out for us to be learned if we are not to over-farm, pollute or destroy the present. He concludes with an Argentine saying: “Each night God cleans up the mess the Argentines make by day” but makes it clear that we are now at the point where God alone cannot clean up our mess. We can help ourselves, but only if we act now. Excellent detailed footnotes develop the brevity of the presented arguments – and provide suggestions to a variety of further background reading. This should be a compulsory matriculation present for all school leavers…… Oct ´06 (*****)

  • Carlos Ruiz Zafon: The Shadow of the Wind

    Carlos Ruiz Zafon: The Shadow of the Wind
    An enjoyable read. Has a touch of Susskind's Perfume about it as this neo-gothic story within a story unfolds in dark post civil war Barcelona. Ideally needs to be read fairly swiftly as the characters are numerous and the twists keep coming. The English translation is worth remarking upon – flowing and with a good turn of phrase (“the heavens were weeping” to describe rain at a funeral). I do not know if the translation is accurate, but it reads as if it were not one…. Oct '06 (***)

  • S D Levitt & S J Dubner: Freakonomics

    S D Levitt & S J Dubner: Freakonomics
    This amusing & interesting read reminded me of the best of my Economics lessons so many years ago. We did little to no maths but much on the quirky reasoning behind many Economics theories and their outcomes. (our grades were not good, but they probably were the lessons I learned most from.) This book is full of these - it applies Economics reasoning to modern social issues. I liked the connection between the Ku Klux Klan's demise & Superman. Everyone who is not yet a parent and wants to be one later should read chapters 5 & 6 before they are. If you are already one it is too late to read them.... A little too US focussed perhaps and at times lends itself to speed reading (!) but a worthwhile read. Oct '06 (***)

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Entries categorized ".. imperialism"

new images of colonial east africa

Northwestern University Library has just made public more than 7,600 photos chronicling the European colonization of East Africa between 1860 and 1960. Taken by European explorers, colonial officials, settlers, missionaries, military officials, travellers, and early commercial photographers, the photos document the changing relationships among Africans and between Africans and Europeans during a period of dramatic change.

Assembled by the British collector Humphrey Winterton over about 30 years, the collection depicts the breadth of African experience; documents African life; European life in Africa in all its manifestations; and the African landscape, in particular as it changed over time. Included are photographs showing the building of East Africa's railways, the growth of its urban centres and the development of European colonial administration. The photographs extensively document rural life as well as the travels and work of European colonial officials and private businessmen. There are outstanding examples of portraiture, some of which were taken by commercial studios. Other photographs produced by commercial studios were specifically taken for sale and distribution in Europe and North America. The Winterton Collection also provides an unsurpassed resource for the study of the history of photography in East Africa. In particular, the earliest images, from the 1860s, portray life in Zanzibar off the east coast of Africa. They were taken and annotated by explorer and British abolitionist James Augustus Grant, best known for his 1864 book A Walk Across Africa: Or, Domestic Scenes from My Nile Journal. A set of pictures from the Abyssinian Campaign of 1868 preserves the first surviving use of photography in a military campaign.

Jonathan Glassman, an associate professor of history at Northwestern who has used the Winterton collection extensively, says its special value lies in its unusual subject matter. "The most familiar photographs of this era," he says, "tend to dwell on what the photographer considered the glamorous aspects of East Africa: wildlife, landscapes, settler life, the occasional posed portrait of an African sultan or Maasai warrior. What makes the Winterton collection stand out is the large number of items that document more prosaic matters. Such matters are precisely the most difficult for the student of African history to get a handle on."

In addition to digitizing the materials, the Library set itself a further challenge with the Winterton project. Assembled over a 40-year period by Winterton, the collection contained seventy-six photo albums, scrapbooks, and boxes of loose items like postcards and stereoscopic slides. "To a researcher," says the Library's head of Digital Collections Claire Stewart, "it might be important to be able to browse the collection exactly as it was originally physically organized, or it might be more important to be able to search it as a database, with dates or keywords. So we felt it was important to design a site that would do both." The resulting website, attempts to achieve both those goals: making an extraordinary historical collection available to other universities, secondary schools, and museums worldwide, and inviting users to explore it in a variety of creative ways.

Because the images are tagged with extensive metadata, they can also be searched by date or certain kinds of keywords. A school group viewing the site in its pilot stage, for example, asked Easterbrook to check if there were any photos related to the ancestry of President Barack Obama. That search yielded a group of 31 photos of people and places.

Designed in consultation with both a group of K-12 educators and members of Northwestern's Program of African Studies, the site also includes a "Winterton in the Classroom" feature that explains how elementary and secondary school teachers can use the collection for classroom projects and curricula, and links to other resources on teaching about Africa.

Set out in thumbnail fashion just click on an image to enalarge it and see the information about its origin & provenance. An extensive search system (still it would appear, under construction) helps with a particular area of research. This will be a real boon to students of African colonialism, German East Africa in particular.


image origin          post source: Northwestern   

linked casahistoria site: Imperialiam    

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ikea style raj hotel to shut 140 years after being shipped into india

It is well known that the British and other European Empire builders of the 19th century would export complete ships, bridges and trains in pieces, only to rebuild them bit by bit wherever they were required. Less well known is that the same principle was applied to buildings....

One of these is Mumbai's Watson's Hotel, a crumbling remnant of the Raj, and which has now been forced to shut down more than 140 years after it was shipped over from England. Just like these gunboats, river ferries, trains and bridges of empire its external cast-iron frame was made in England in numbered pieces then shipped to India to serve as a home-from-home for European guests, where it was reconstructed "by numbers" in a method that would look familiar to anyone trying to construct a piece of IKEA furniture.

The 1871 design has a good pedigree - by Rowland Mason Ordish, who is known for his detailed work on the single-span roof of the recently restored St Pancras High Speed Rail station in London. When opened the hotel was a majestic structure ahead of its time that served as the grandest hotel in Mumbai (it was the venue for the screening of the Lumiere Brothers moving film just six months after it had been screened in Paris). Named after its original owner, John Watson, the building was among the first cast iron structures constructed in India.

But its very exclusivity was to be its downfall: The hotel, which had a strict whites-only policy, employed English waitresses in its lavish bars and restaurant. Shortly after its opening, a Gujarati, Jamsetji Tata of the Tata industialist dynasty, was allegedly refused entry to Watson's one evening. Humiliated by the racist snub, Tata promptly built the Taj Mahal Hotel down the road, (the centre of last November's terrorist attacks) and which remains today an icon of modern India. As for Watson's, the hotel fell into decline after the death of Watson, and was rented out as office space. Today, the atrium (shown in the image) is smashed and the ballroom is now used as a rubbish dump by the current occupants. Several of the balconies, which once looked out over the Arabian Sea, have collapsed, many of the windows are broken and the building has barely seen any paint since the British left in 1948.

Despite being placed on the Global Watch List of 100 World Endangered Monuments by the New York-based World Monuments Fund Watson's has become a health hazard - in 2005, part of the hotel's façade collapsed, killing one person. Attempts at restoration, supported by Renzo Piano, who is the architect of the Centre Pompidou in Paris, have failed so The Mumbai housing authority has urged the Grade II–A heritage structure to be evacuated before the onset of the monsoon next week and has registered the 138-year-old building in the "most dilapidated" category of its pre-monsoon survey of dangerous structures.


image origin          post source: Daily Telegraph   

linked casahistoria site: The Raj     

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puerto rico - us colony by choice?

A recent article in Slate takes recent the appointment of Puerto Rican Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court as an opportunity to question why the US is still involved with Puerto Rico, a Spanish colony until the United States pushed Spain out in the Spanish-American War. That was 1898 (the image is of U.S. troops entering Mayaguez, Puerto Rico in August 1898) the same year the United States acquired the Hawaiian Islands. Hawaii became a state. Puerto Rico did not. Timothy Noah explains how almost from the beginning, the United States was at a loss about what to do with Puerto Rico. Latin America had plenty sugar cane and coffee, the two possible products that could have been grown there at the time. The Puerto Rican population was too poor to provide much of a market for manufactured goods. But the island had military value although after World War 1 the island became strategically negligible.

The article then outlines the mixed fortunes of various Puerto Rican secession movements. Noah argues this was probably due less to U.S. opposition (for the past half-century the U.S. position on this question has mainly been indifference) than to the risk independence posed to Puerto Ricans' ability to migrate to the mainland, as they started doing en masse in the 1940s. Today, although that migration has slowed, the Puerto Rican diaspora in the continental United States exceeds the island's own population.

A worthwhile item, deserving to be read in full (click on post source below). This is aptly subtitled "An imperial primer." The other interesting factor (not looked at in the article) is why the development of US Puerto Rican relations has been so different to Cuban-US relations.

Sounds like an exam question.... 

image origin          post source: Slate 

linked casahistoria site: The US and Latin America

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france remembers its colonial liberators…..

Last weekend I watched the DVD of Indigènes (see earlier post) which is based on the role of the 150,000 North Africans from the French colonies who fought for France and helped liberate it in World War II. The took part in the Italian campaign from 1943 onwards, and in the invasion of Provence, in August 1944. The film ends with an indication of how little (as indeed with the recent case of the British Governmet and the Gurkhas) the government has kept its promises to these colonial troops.

Yet this week it would seem the survivors have been remembered once more. The French Secretary of State for Defence and Veterans, Jean-Marie Bockel, has just visited Algiers, to discuss the pensions of the Algerian veterans. Seven veterans were awarded a military medal in recognition of their contribution to the war effort and a centre was opened which is is designed to provide medical and administrative assistance to the almost 40,000 surviving Algerian veterans.

Le Monde reports that Bockel recieved a mixed welcome with an 89 year old claiming that the medal was useless and explained that what he wanted, above all, was to be granted a visa in order to return to France. The ceremony was criticised for coming far too late, over 65 years after the events and close to the anniversary of the Sétif massacre on May 8th, 1945, a catalyst for the Algerian War.

There is still some way to go to end such criticism. 47,000 war pensions are currently paid to Algerian veterans of the French army and to their families in Algeria but only in 2007 (partly in response to the film) did France begin to increase the pensions of Algerian veterans to the same level as those of French war veterans.. During the Second World War, 150,000 Algerian soldiers fought alongside French troops; 200,000 Algerians fought on the French side during the First World War.

But worst of all has been the treatment of those north Africans who fought with France, known as the Harkis, in the Algerian War of Independence. (The image shows a Harki villager receiving a machine gun from the French Army minister in 1960). After the ceasefire in March 1962, the French government forbade the repatriation of Harkis (by 1962 almost 200,000 fought for France) and their families to France. It is estimated that approximately 150,000 Harkis were murdered by the FLN, the Algerian independence forces. Those who were able to escape to France were placed in camps. (The term harki continues to be an emotive one in the French-Algerian community; Zinedine Zidane, the ex-captain of the French national football team, was described as acceptable by the far right National Front because, allegedly, his father was a Harki. This led to death threats from extremists of all stripes, and the disruption of a friendly encounter between the French and Algerian football teams in October 2001.) Only in 2003, was a national day of remembrance instituted for the Harki soldiers. Up to 1999 the Algerian conflict was not officially war so this impacted on any eligibility they might have had for pensions...

Who said old style colonialism was over?

image origin          post source: History Today   

linked casahistoria site: Decolonisation

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vietnam photographer van es dies

The photographer who took one of the most iconic photos of the end of the Vietnam war, Dutch photographer Hugh Van Es, has died at the age of 67.

His is the famous image showing US citizens queuing on a rooftop to board a US helicopter owned by Air America, the CIA-run airline during the evacuation of Saigon in 1975, which was clearly too small too carry them all (shown alongside). The photo gained further coverage after the musical "Miss Saigon" featured the final Americans evacuating from the city from the Embassy roof by helicopter (in reality they were not on the embassy roof).

Van Es covered the Vietnam War between 1969 and 1975, working first for the Associated Press new agency and then for United Press International. His photo of a wounded soldier with a tiny cross gleaming against his dark silhouette, taken 40 years ago this month, became the best-known picture from the May 1969 battle of Hamburger Hill. This was the proudest of the pictures he took during the conflict — not the evacuation photo. It was in 1975, as North Vietnamese forces were approaching Saigon, that he photographed the thousands of US military personnel and Vietnamese civilians trying to flee the city.

After the war, Van Es returned to Hong Kong from where he continued to photograph conflicts including the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Moro rebellion in the Philippines.

image origin          post source: Yahoo News  

linked casahistoria site: Vietnam War

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passenger lists & proconsuls: two new podcasts from the archive

Nat archive The talks & lectures produced as podcasts by the National Archives of the United Kingdom which are of value to casahistorians continues to grow.

The latest is of particular benefit to family researchers hoping to make good use of passenger lists:

In Every journey has two ends: using passenger lists Chris Watts reveals the benefits of using both arrival and departure records when searching for details of migrant ancestors, as well as demonstrating how the shortcomings of content, indexing and accessibility can be minimised. This will be of interest to users of the four casahistoria immigration sites.

A second podcast by Tony Stockwell, From Mountbatten to Patten: the last proconsuls and the ending of the British Empire explains how after the Second World War, the role of governors in Britain's overseas territories changed. Stockwell examines the personalities and mixed fortunes of these proconsuls, and argues that, in spite of their declining power and authority, they performed a key role in managing the imperial threat.

Good listening to on your ipod!!


post source: National Archives

linked casahistoria sites: Emigration Decolonisation  

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tamils & the legacy of decolonisation

This weekend at the London Marathon there was an unusual (for the marathon that is) police presence around the final stretch of the race at Westminster. Equally, it appears that the organisers had made arrangements to change the Finish area at the last moment if need be. But why? What was the fear? The race after all has been held for many years with the threat of both IRA and then al Quaeda terrorism. This time it was due to concerns that Sri Lankans who are demonstrating/hunger striking outside Parliament and close to the finish might try to disrupt the race. They are demonstrating to get the British government involved in brokering a peace. They did not disrupt the race but why were they there in the first place is what many have asked.

Well, as the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka face final defeat after 35 years of conflict and at the cost of more than 70,000 it is a sad fact that this is yet another conflict that has its roots in Britain's colonial period. The British colonial regime, which ended with independence in 1948, was marked by the classic British policy (Palestine, Cyprus, Malaya, Ireland…) of "divide and rule" among the Buddhist Sinhalese and ethnic Hindu Tamil minority which now comprises 12.6 percent of the island's 20 million population. This was the foundation for the ethnic divide that continued after the British left (again reflecting the post colonial ethnic conflicts in Palestine, Cyprus, Malaya, Ireland as well as tribal groupings in west & east Africa). In 1956, and by now independent, a policy of adopting Sinhalese as the country's official language was introduced by the Buddhist Sinhalese majority. At the same time dropping both English and Tamil effectively meant Tamils who could not speak Sinhalese consequently found themselves excluded from government jobs.

Tensions continued to grow and in 1972, the Tamil Tigers had its origins as a militant group to use force to achieve a Tamil territory. During the height of its power in the mid-1990s the Tigers controlled nearly a third of the island of Sri Lanka. Now it has been reduced to a tiny area in the north, surrounded by official government troops and facing defeat.

Unfortunately this has been another conflict induced by the aftermath of the arbitrary boundaries imposed by Europe's 19th century colonialists and the policies pursued to sustain them. Given its past record, perhaps the best outcome for Sri Lanka would be for them to fail to get the British Government involved…..


image origin          post source: AFP    

linked casahistoria site: Decolonisation  

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john rabe – nazi saviour of the chinese in nanjing

A new film released this week in Germany (trailer here) draws attention to another "Schindler" - only this time the group protected by a Nazi party member were Chinese, sheltered from the Japanese invaders in 1937.

John Rabe, a co-produced German-Chinese movie is based on the diary of John Rabe, a German businessman and a member of the Nazi party, who was working for Siemens in China at the time of the Japanese invasion. Rabe had worked in China for 30 years and was about to return to Berlin when Japanese troops arrived in Nanjing (the Guomindang capital at the time) at the beginning of December 1937. The city's inhabitants were subject to extreme violence during six weeks and it is claimed that thousands of girls and women were raped in what has become known as the Rape of Nanjing.

Rabe remained in China, as the head of the International Committee for the Nanking Safety Zone and, along with a few other Westerners and using his Nazi party membership, is believed to have prevented the massacre of over 200,000 Chinese by creating a safety zone centred on the American Embassy. Food and shelter was provided in the zone and Rabe is believed to have sheltered 650 refugees in his own house and garden.

However when Rabe returned to Berlin in 1938 he was arrested by the Gestapo for having collaborated with the Chinese. In post-war Germany, Rabe was denounced for his Nazi Party membership and arrested first by the the Russians and then the British. However, subsequent investigations exonerate him of any wrongdoing. He was "de-Nazified" by the Allies in June 1946 but lived in poverty. Monthly food parcels and money sent from grateful colleagues in China partly sustained Rabe and his family, but after the Guomindang was defeated by the communists in 1949 the deliveries stopped. A year later he died in poverty after a stroke in Berlin, unknown in Germany.

In China, however, he is now remembered as a hero. His diaries only became public in the late 1990s, when they were published in Germany.

The film is due to be premiered in China at the Shanghai Film Festival in June but it remains unclear whether the film will be shown in Japan. The issue is a controversial one in Japan where recognition of Japanese crimes during the Sino-Japanese war remains highly debatable. Whilst the Chinese claim that 300,000 were massacred, some conservative Japanese politicians and scholars deny that the massacre even took place. (During the war Japan rigorously counted its own dead but paid little attention to Chinese casualties. The defeated Japanese military also took care to burn its records in the city.) In the face of the best evidence, many Japanese textbooks minimize the event, playing down suggestions of Japanese atrocities.

For more on Rabe, you could start with the John Rabe Communication Centre. This website has a CV of his life with some (harrowing) extracts from the diaries. There is a very brief comparison with Schindler at its end.


image origin          post source: History Today / New York Times     

linked casahistoria site: Republican China     

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gandhi’s few possessions up for sale

Changes in the distribution of global wealth are beginning to see a number of historical inequities being redressed. We have grown used to Russians buying up the ephemera distributed throughout the west during the post revolution diaspora. Chinese buyers are also beginning to appear in the auction houses to buy up what went west in the 18th & 19th centuries. Now India is seeking to reclaim its past from the auction houses of the west.

A number of Mahatma Gandhi's personal possessions are due up for auction in New York next month, and cries are being made for them to be returned to India. Items include Mahatma Gandhi's spectacles, which he once said gave him "the vision to free India", a pair of his sandals and his pocket watch. Auctioneers have put an estimate of £30,000 ($42,000) on the items and MPs across Indian parties have said that all efforts should be made to retrieve the possessions. One minister suggested the government should enter the auction and buy the items, which he described as part of India's heritage.

But are the items of any worth historically?

  • Gandhi presented the spectacles to Indian army colonel HA Shiri Diwan Nawabin in the 1930s, after he had asked the great leader for inspiration.
  • The Zenith pocket watch, made in about 1910, was given to Gandhi's grand-niece, Abha Gandhi, who was his assistant for some years. Gandhi was pictured wearing the pocket watch.
  • The sandals were given to a British army officer in 1931 before talks in London about Indian self-rule.

Perhaps most of all their importance lies in their simplicity: Gandhi's modest lifestyle - epitomised by his simple white robe and few possessions - helped to inspire a generation of Indians to peaceful, and successful, resistance against British rule in the 1930s.

It would be fitting if the present world economic collapse made possible, through lower auction expectations, the return of a few of the non consumerist Gandhi's simple belongings to their spiritual home.

Interested in reading more? Go to the article by clicking below on "post source".

image origin                  post source: BBC   

linked casahistoria site: Decolonisation

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"we can bomb the bejesus out of them all over north vietnam", henry kissinger

One of the advantages of the spectacular Apollo programme after Apollo 8 was that it offered a part distraction from the US war in Vietnam - and 1968 with the Tet offennsive was a torrid year there for the US. Incoming President Nixon and his Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger, were determined to finish the war, if not on the ground then by bombing the North into submission.

A new set of files released by the National Security Archive shows that after several years of this, Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon candidly shared their evident satisfaction at the "shock treatment" of American B 52s, according to a declassified transcript of their telephone conversation published for the first time this week by the Archive.

"They dropped a million pounds of bombs," Kissinger briefed Nixon. "A million pounds of bombs," Nixon exclaimed. "Goddamn, that must have been a good strike." The conversation, secretly recorded by both Kissinger and Nixon without the other's knowledge, reveals that the President and his national security advisor shared a belief in 1972 that the war could still be won. "That shock treatment [is] cracking them," Nixon declared. "I tell you the thing to do is pour it in there every place we can…just bomb the hell out of them." Kissinger optimistically predicted that, if the South Vietnamese government didn't collapse, the U.S. would eventually prevail: "I mean if as a country we keep our nerves, we are going to make it."

The transcript of the April 15, 1972, phone conversation is one of over 15,500 documents in a unique, comprehensively-indexed set of the telephone conversations (telcons) of Henry A. Kissinger. Kissinger, like his chief, Nixon, secretly taped his incoming and outgoing phone conversations. After destroying the tapes, Kissinger took the transcripts with him when he left office in January 1977, claiming they were "private papers." In 2001, the National Security Archive used the freedom of information act to obtain the declassification of most of them and after a three year project to catalogue and index the transcripts, which total over 30,000 pages, this on-line collection was published by the Digital National Security Archive (ProQuest) this week.

According to William Burr, senior analyst at the National Security Archive, who edited the collection, "Kissinger created a gift to history that will be a tremendous primary source for generations to come." He called on the State Department to declassify over 800 additional telcons that it continues to withhold on the grounds of executive privilege.

Interested in reading more of the article and the links to the Kissinger transcripts? Go to the article by clicking below on "post source".

The bombing campaign may have encouraged the North to come to discuss peace, but (as future Presidents may have forgotten) intense bombing did not "crack" the North (as the stamp shows). Nor did it see the US prevail as Kissinger believed. All it did was to allow for a swifter departure whilst leaving the Vietnamese to sort out the damage caused by the intervention.....

During the US Vietnam War the Christmas/New Year period was commonly covered by ill kept truce periods which both sides used to consolidate positions. It is fitting that these records of a "behind the scenes" gung-ho US Presidency appear during the same festive period.

image origin                  post source: National Security Archive     

linked casahistoria site: The US Vietnam War 

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remembering japan’s christian martyrs

An engraving of the martyrdom of Nikolao Keian, one of those being beatified in Monday's ceremony, from Societas Iesu usque ad Sanguinis et Vitae Profusionem Militans (The Martyrs of The Society of Jesus), Matthia Tanner SJ, Prague, 1675. In the collection of the Japanese Shrine of the 26 Martyrs.One of the lesser known periods of Christian persecution was that experienced by Japans converts in the 17th century.

Christianity was brought to Japan by Francis Xavier in 1549, a Jesuit missionary, but was eventually banned by Japan's shogunate rulers. They expelled missionaries from Spain and Portugal who had won many converts, especially in western Japan. Christianity was regarded as a malevolent influence on Japanese affairs whose rulers at the time were attempting to unify the country and repel foreigners. These events were part of the process that closed the Japanese islands to outside influence until the fateful arrival of Commodore Perry's Black ships in 1854.

At the time there were approximately 400,000 Catholics and many who did not renounce their faith were killed. Crucifixion and burning at the stake were common forms of execution. Particularly brutal treatment was meted out to the Jesuits themselves. To persuade them to give up their faith and become apostate captured priests were at times suspended upside down in excrement filled pits (see image) until they renounced their faith. This usually meant a long, lingering death.

This week an event in Nagasaki was organised by the Roman Catholic church (a cardinal sent by the Pope is attending) to commemorate some of many thousands of people who lost their lives. Thois present hope that this will be the first stage in the beatification (making into saints) of these martyrs.

Today, fewer than 1% of Japanese people identify themselves as Christian; most follow Buddhist or Shinto faith.

For more of the context read Revisiting Japan's 'Christian Century' (article by Dr Massarella)

 

image origin                  post source: BBC 

linked casahistoria site: Imperialism

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crusoe “lost” no more

There is a European fascination with small islands in the Pacific and South Atlantic, perhaps inspired by stories like that of the fictitious Robinson Crusoe which I remember being one of the staples of my own primary school "story times" (sitting at desks beneath the big red world map!). The fictional castaway was inspired by the real life experience of Alexander Selkirk, a Scots sailor marooned on an island off the coast of Chile in 1704 after arguing with his captain…….

Now it is reported in the journal Post-Medieval Archaeology that archaeologists have found evidence of Selkirk's settlement on the island of Más a Tierra — now renamed Robinson Crusoe Island, part of the Juan Fernández group 470 miles off Chile. In particular they found bits of navigational dividers (Selkirk was apparently the ships navigator) as well as holes for posts, which suggest that Selkirk constructed two shelters by a freshwater stream and set up a viewpoint to watch out for any ships.

Eventually, after five years in the Pacific an English ship rescued Selkirk, with Daniel Defoe scripting his 18th century "Lost" ten years later.

 

image origin                  post source: Times

linked casahistoria site: Chile 

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wmd’s shot in the foot

The role of Weapons of Mass Destruction as a key reason for the US/UK invasion of Iraq continues to be undermined. This time by documents produced by the intelligence communities of both countries.

A set of documents posted on the Web today by National Security Archive senior fellow John Prados suggests that the public relations push for war came before the intelligence analysis, The intelligence Analysis was then adjusted to support the public positions taken by Pentagon and White House officials. This supports a similar comparison published recently between a declassified draft and the final version of the British government's "White Paper" on Iraq weapons of mass destruction.

The two sets of documents add to evidence that the two nations colluded in the effort to build public support for the invasion of Iraq. Dr. Prados concludes that the new evidence tends to support charges raised by former White House press secretary Scott McClellan and by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence in its long-delayed June 2008 "Phase II" report on politicisation of intelligence.

Interested in reading more? Go to the article by clicking below on "post source"

This story is going to run for some time yet but is unlikely to provide much scope for future historians to discuss and argue over: the evidence suggesting that no real WMD's existed was known about before the Iraq invasion is now too clear and evident…..

In World War II as the previous post shows the intelligence community provided crucial information - and was listened to. Now it seems the listening was turned off.

image origin                 post source: National Security Archive

linked casahistoria site: Iraq & the West    

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new orientalism exhibition

Leila by frank dicksee café addition to this previous post: having just visited the exhibition I would thoroughly recommend it. One intriguing aspect is that many pieces are accompanied by an "analysis" provided by a current "oriental" scholar/academic which often place the genre in a less sympathetic, but no less valuable light.

An interesting new exhibition (June 4th - August 31st, 2008) at London's Tate Britain on British Orientalist Painting explores the responses of British artists to the cultures and landscapes of the Near and Middle East between 1780 and 1930, offering historical and cultural perspectives on the challenging questions of the ‘Orient’ and its representation in British art.

It brings together over 120 paintings including the TE Lawrence portrait by Augustus John, prints and drawings of bazaars, public baths, domestic interiors and religious sites, and all the major genres, themes and preoccupations of Orientalism in British art will be considered. Several exceptional and rarely seen paintings by John Frederick Lewis, Edward Lear, David Wilkie, Richard Dadd, Lord Leighton, and William Holman Hunt, will be shown, as well as significant works by many less familiar names.

The only downside (apart from the $20 admission) is that you need to be near to London (and the relatively inaccessible by public transport, Millbank site). Never mind though as the Tate has produced an excellent website for the exhibition which takes you through each room and highlights the main exhibits in each. The resources section has articles and further sites to visit....

image origin                 post sourceTate Britain 

linked casahistoria site: Iraq & the West 

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emigration – new uk podcast

The Life of Emigration (Unknown maker, London, c.1840) A dissected puzzle, hand-coloured lithographed paper on wood, Children’s Literature Research Collection, State Library of South AustraliaThe latest podcast in the series of lectures and other events presented by The National Archives of the United Kingdom is on the subject of Emigration records and will be of value to all casahistorians researching family emigration history.

This podcast by Roger Kershaw explains the reasons behind the emigration of some 16 million people since the 17th century. It discusses the most popular destinations for emigrants and sources such as outgoing passenger lists, passport records, and a host of emigration schemes supported and fostered by the government. It also features the various child migration schemes that have been responsible in migrating some 150,000 children from the UK between 1618 and 1967. Particular reference will be made to the growing number of online sources relevant to this subject.

Presentation is worthy, but a little lecture –ish…..

image origin                 podcast: National Archives

linked casahistoria site: European Emigration 

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