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August 2008

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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.....

  • 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 (***)

  • Peter Nichols: Evolution's Captain

    Peter Nichols: Evolution's Captain
    The story of Robert FitzRoy who took Darwin around the world. FitzRoy's life is shown as tragedy, from his early attempt to "civilise" the natives of Tierra del Fuega to his realisation that having facilitated Darwin produced the massive attack by Science on his own fundamentalist beliefs. Written not by a historian with an understanding of the sea but by a yachtsman with a sound grasp of the history this is a very readable account - although the paperback is much in need of a good map of Patagonia! Sept '06 (***)

  • Anonymous: A Woman in Berlin

    Anonymous: A Woman in Berlin
    This diary, written by a Berlin woman in her 30's during the fall of Berlin illustrates clearly and forcefully the real meaning of defeat. Interesting asides on the nature of the Russian conquerors: raised in a society where they received but could not choose they had little concept of "value", even of booty. Most of all it reveals the commonplace nature & acceptance of rape or of attaching oneself to an Ivan lover - for protection and survival. A very human diary of survival in year zero. Sept '06 (****)

  • Robert Harvey: The Liberators

    Robert Harvey: The Liberators
    Sympathetic & comprehensive narrative of the latin American Wars of Independence. Gave a new appreciation & respect for the social values of Bolivar and San Martin especially. Unfortunately, all were unappreciated in the ensuing states that they fought for - in particular by the criolla landowning families who undermined their reforms thus creating the years of chaos that followed - very much to the present. A worthy reference on the period but too heavy on military details for the general reader and limited on recent Spanish language scholarship. Aug '06 (***)

  • Tomás Eloy Martínez: The Tango Singer

    Tomás Eloy Martínez: The Tango Singer
    A short but intriguing novel set in 2001 from Eloy Martínez, a writer whose work battles between history and literature. Whereas 'Santa Evita' (****) and The 'Perón Novel' (****) saw history dominant, here it is the literary side that provides an (ale-gorical?) framework for an almost mystical search through the horrors of Argentina's recent history. Best read if you have a knowledge of Buenos Aires and Borges - and a map handy!. July '06 (***)

  • Nigel Farndale: Haw-Haw : The Tragedy of William and Margaret Joyce

    Nigel Farndale: Haw-Haw : The Tragedy of William and Margaret Joyce
    Tells the story of Lord Haw Haw (William Joyce), the wartime broadcaster from Germany, later hanged for treason in Britain. Presents Joyce as a tragic figure with strongly held (if seriously flawed) beliefs. I had not been aware of his (and for a while dominant) role in British interwar fascism, made clear in the book. Much writing is devoted to the time in wartime Berlin - and the experiences of their living as a couple in an alien environment with limited grasp of the language...... His postwar trial nonetheless is shown as a vengeful travesty of British justice - which Joyce accepts with grace (and perhaps a little enigmatic comfort from MI5..... - are the secret MI5 files on Joyce's possible work with them still closed?). June '06 (***)

  • N.A.M. Rodger: Safeguard of the Sea : A Naval History of Britain Vol 1 660-1649

    N.A.M. Rodger: Safeguard of the Sea : A Naval History of Britain Vol 1 660-1649
    Monumental (691 pages!!) first volume in the excellent Naval History of Britain. Likely to be used more as a reference than as a a book to read (unlike the very readable Vol II) this has much of interest and value. Debunks the rounded military leaderships of William I & Edward I. It shows very clearly the emergence of naval structure & power in Elizabethan times - and the origins of the English pirate stealing from the Spanish pirate.... More surprising perhaps is the real contribution Charles I's Ship money made to the Navy Royal. One quibble, despite claims to the contrary it is very anglocentric; Scottish marine developments are crucial but are generally en passant. May '06 (****)

  • Luis Sepulveda: The Name of a Bullfighter

    Luis Sepulveda: The Name of a Bullfighter
    Dark plot which ranges from the seedy Reeperbahn of Hamburg to Chile's Patagonia as cold warriors and retired guevarista leftists race to find a horde of gold hidden by SS refugees in south America..... Post modernist Boys Own stuff I'm afraid. April '06 (*)

  • Marina  Lewycka: A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian : A Novel

    Marina Lewycka: A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian : A Novel
    Plot outline suggests an interesting narrative, but does not live up to this promise. Limited character development and very UK focussed. April '06 (*)

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Entries categorized ".. the americas"

the korean henequen

I am presently reading about the 1848-9 California Gold Rush and the influx of argonauts from the eastern states, Europe, Australia and the Far East. Of these immigrants probably the worst treated were those from China, the descendants of whom now make up a substantial group within modern California's population.

Today's LA Times tells another story of another Asian immigrant group - and equally submerged by the population of their adopted country. In 1905 a group of Koreans were lured in 1905 by ship to plantations on the Yucatan Peninsula in southern Mexico. Instead of finding a better life, they were sold to plantation owners and forced to cultivate henequen, a plant whose tough fibre was used to make things like rope. The Koreans and their descendants would come to be known as the Henequen, in part because like the plant, they were so hardy and hard-working.

The Koreans had fled a Korea that was under Japanese rule, and despite their struggle, they sent money back home, hoping to help their countrymen gain independence. In the ensuing decades, they spread to other parts of Mexico. Integration was hard. The Mexicans at first would not accept them. Soon many decided to cut off the language and just talk Spanish. Fights were a part of life in primary school for the children, when they would be called chinos (Chinese). In the beginning, intermarriage was strongly discouraged.

For decades, the Korean Mexicans were largely forgotten. Various estimates place their numbers at up to 30,000. But as South Korea began to prosper economically and the centennial of the Koreans' arrival in Yucatan drew near, attention has focused on them. Recently several have visited Los Angeles to meet up with Korean groups there. Hence the LA article.

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

image origin                 post source: LA Times

linked casahistoria site: Mexico   

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Paperandcup2Click_and_visit_casahistoria_2

celebrating japans brasileiros

It was exactly one hundred years ago that the first Japanese immigrants arrived in Brazil, and this weekend the country as a whole has been reflecting on the anniversary. The celebrations are a chance to pay tribute to the pioneering immigrants that first arrived at the port of Santos near to Sao Paulo - and, the organisers say, to thank Brazilian society for making them welcome. The 165 families who arrived here on 18 June 1908 came to escape poverty and lack of job opportunities in Japan, and to meet the demand for workers in Brazil's coffee plantations.But there is plenty of evidence at the Museum of Japanese Immigration in Sao Paulo that this was not always a comfortable story.......


Interested in reading more? Go to the article by clicking below on "post source"
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Interesting café fact #224:
The more that is unearthed about latin american immigration history the less latin it seems to become......

image origin                 post source: BBC 

nearest(!) casahistoria site: Argentine immigration

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to rosario, a statue of ernesto

The existence or otherwise of statues and monuments are often a good guide to national sensitivities and to changes in public feelings towards a collective past. Where I grew up in Hamburg for example there was/is only one municipal monument to the fallen German troops of the Great War (Kuöhl's 1936 memorial, erected to commemorate those who died in the Franco-Prussian War and the First World War is typical of the ones erected during the Third Reich and is one of the few remaining. The monument, with it's almost mocking inscription, Germany must live, even if we have to die continues to be swathed in controversy, with much public sentiment favouring removing it while others, particularly veterans groups demanding that it remain......) In Spain plaques to the Republican victims of the Civil War have taken 60 years to emerge. Then there are the statue parks of eastern Europe where the great & good of the communist era have been removed to and put out to graze.

In Argentina a historical sensitivity is that of Ernesto "Che" Guevara. While he remains the most famous export of the Argentine city of Rosario, his legacy here has long been a low-key one. Except for a handful of businesses named in his honour, few markers alert visitors that the revolutionary leader was born here exactly 80 years ago before becoming one of the most mythic figures of the 20th century.

That changed this weekend when civic leaders inaugurated the first official monument (click here for more images/background - in Spanish) honouring the revolutionary leader in Argentina, ending decades of government silence about the controversial figure.

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

image origin                 post source: Yahoo! News 

linked casahistoria site: Castro & Cuba 

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kennedy, khrushchev & castro on the brink of nuclear war

Fkrcruise missile As 9/11 captives go on military trial in Guantanamo,  a new book by Washington Post reporter Michael Dobbs tells how Soviet nuclear-tipped cruise missiles were ready to destroy the U.S. naval base had the U.S. military persuaded President Kennedy to invade Cuba during the missile crisis in 1962.

In One Minute to Midnight  he writes that documents show that U.S. intelligence listed the Soviet weapons as "unidentified artillery" pieces, when they were actually cruise missiles armed with Hiroshima-sized nuclear devices. They were deployed to within 15 miles of the Guantanamo base on the same day -- October 27, 1962 -- that the Joint Chiefs of Staff recommended an all-out U.S. invasion of Cuba to destroy the Soviet missile bases. President Kennedy rejected the advice of his military advisers in favor of a diplomatic solution to the crisis that included a secret understanding between his brother and the Soviet ambassador.

Nikita Khrushchev alluded to the nuclear threat hanging over the U.S. Naval base at Guantanamo during a meeting in the Kremlin on October 24, 1962, with the president of Westinghouse, William Knox. According to Knox’s notes on the meeting, Khrushchev said he was not interested in the “destruction of the world” but it was up to the Americans “if you want us to all meet in hell.” He told Knox that the Guantanamo naval base would “disappear the first day” after a U.S. invasion of Cuba. At the time, Khrushchev’s threat seemed like empty bluster. What Kennedy did not know was that the Soviets had deployed nuclear cruise missiles to Cuba, armed with 14-kiloton warheads, roughly the power of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima, 15 miles from Guantanamo naval base. Two Soviet soldiers were killed during this deployment when their truck fell down a ravine.

The FKR missiles were still in position in Filipinas on November 12, long after the Soviets had begun to dismantle the strategic missile sites.

The U.S. evacuated 2,810 women and children from the Guantanamo naval base on October 22, shortly before JFK addressed the nation about the presence of Soviet missiles on Cuba. Five thousand U.S. Marines were sent to Guantanamo to reinforce the base, which could have been wiped out by the Soviets in a matter of minutes.

So we were even closer to nuclear war than we thought!

Over the next five weeks, the National Security Archive will publish some of the key primary sources behind One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War. The new information includes such episodes as a startling Soviet plan to destroy the Guantanamo naval base, the storage and handling of Soviet nuclear weapons on Cuba, and the “Eyeball to Eyeball” confrontation between U.S. and Soviet ships that never happened.

image origin                 post source: US National Security Archive 

linked casahistoria site: Castro's Cuba 

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jungle capitalists: a history of el pulpo, the united fruit company

Chiquita If you have ever wondered why support inside Cuba for Fidel Castro has been maintained despite domestic hardship and international isolation you could do far worse than reading this (admittedly polemical) book by Financial Times writer Peter Chapman, Jungle Capitalists.

Chapman charts the economic rise and the pervasive political influence of the first globalised company - the US United Fruit Company, producer and controller of the central American banana which served as the precursor for the activities of today's multinationals. He shows the 19th century emergence of "el Pulpo" (the octopus, as its detractors named it) through building railways and the acquisition of land rights from central American states both of which it then used to create monopoly banana plantation production and determine the politics of the region . By the 1930's the company had created a "vast feudal state" of plantations, worker settlements and governments in the pocket of United Fruit scattered across central America. Pay was low, conditions hard, company law ruled. Even to the extent of doing business with Nazi Germany in preference (and to the detriment) of its native, depressed USA.

Image problems were spun, as is the norm today. Madman father Bernays ran the PR side - even to the extent of rebranding Central America as Middle America to improve the image of the banana's origin to the US housewife....

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 on which much is written.

Chapman shows though that Guatamala was a turning point that backfired - it frightened the US government into starting anti trust procedures that would see United Fruit shrink into "Chiquita" in the 1980's. But it had wider repercussions: Ernesto Guevara witnessed the coup and it helped convince him of the need to use force to gain national freedom. Also, the US press had been heavily manipulated by United Fruit which it soon realised and decided to pursue more personally investigative styles. 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 has one note of warning for today: United Fruit may have gone and been replaced by modern multinationals claiming commitment to social responsibility, but these multinationals behave no differently to the old United Fruit who also trumpeted its philanthropy (reclaiming Mayan temples; endowments for women at universities) whilst ruthlessly exploiting its workers to produce far more cheaply than in the more regulated markets of the developed world. Under the guise of the "free market" modern multinationals are proving more ruthless than even United Fruit. (Even modern Chiquita has admitted to paying nearly $2 million to right-wing death squads in Colombia). 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.

When discussing this book with colleagues, it emerged that none (including one from New Mexico) had ever heard of United Fruit. So this book is timely - but also testimony to the survival of United Fruit and how well it has continued to cover its tracks outside latin America.

As Gabriel García Márquez (whose grandfather publicly denounced the events of the Santa Marta massacre) has one of the characters say in One Hundred Years of Solitude, “Look at the mess we’ve got ourselves into just because we invited a gringo to eat some bananas.”

(See also earlier post)

image origin    

linked casahistoria site: US & Latin America

Further Reviews: Latin Am. Review of Books; New York Timesabc Australia (TV interview);

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walking quietly in south america with that big stick, again

A provocative article in this weeks New Statesman by the respected journalist John Pilger shows how US involvement in south America has not waned in recent years, but is beginning to return to the proactive policies of the early and mid 20th century.

Using proxies, Pilger argues how Washington aims to restore and reinforce the political control of a privileged group calling itself middle-class, to shift the responsibility for massacres and drug trafficking away from the psychotic regime in Colombia and its mafiosi, and to extinguish hopes raised among Latin America's impoverished majority by the reform governments of Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia.

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

Pilger is a very committed, left wing journalist but this article does suggest quite convincingly that the US is continuing to play a key undercover role in the affairs of south America. The readers comments at the end of the article are interesting too.....

image origin                 post source: New Statesman

linked casahistoria site: The US & Latin America

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mexican colours, not just red, white and green, but black too

When in Argentina one of the questions that intrigued me (and some of my history collegues) was what exactly had happened to the substantial black (originally African) population that was known to have existed in early independent Argentina. They seemed to have vanished without trace... However there is now a growing awareness of who they were, the key role they played in the early state and what became of them (see the casahistoria Afro-Argentine section )

It seems that another latin country similarily has issues with acknowledging a black as opposed to amerindian past. In Mexico, the story of the country's black population has been largely ignored in favour of an ideology that declares that all Mexicans are "mixed race." But it's the mixture of indigenous and European heritage that most Mexicans embrace; the African legacy is overlooked.

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

image origin                 post source: Los Angeles Times

linked casahistoria site: Mexico

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reassessing argentina's past

I am presently reading Paradise with Serpents by Robert Carver in which he describes how Argentina's 19th century President Sarmiento ordered the removal of indigenous (evergreen) palm trees from the streets of Buenos Aires so that they might be replaced by imported deciduous plane trees that would drop leaves in autumn and give the capital a more European feel. This reinforced the concept still held by many Argentines that they are not south American, rather Europeans living in south America. But this may be changing.

In a perceptive and wide ranging article for the Guardian in advance of the visit of the Kirchners to the UK, Richard Gott describes a cultural reawakening now spreading across Argentina. Gott argues that the Kirchners, survivors of the upheavals and political cull of their generation of the 1970's are presiding over a desire to face up to a reality of the national past, darker than most are willing to acknowledge. This means not forgetting the perpetrators and victims of th military dictarship but it also means reassessing the nation's history and its deeper key elements  - immigration yes, but also its outcomes: the massacre of the native population.....

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

It would indeed be refreshing if the history books, and the perceptions created by them were about to change - and contribute to more than just the occasional "Solidarity Day". However one word of caution. Europe has just had government by its generation of committed idealistic politicals, those who were not disappeared but still beaten, shot at and locked away. This was the generation of the 60's, the Fischers, the Blairs, the Straws. But their respective establishments eventually got to them once in office for more than five years. Let's wish Kirchner & Co of the 1970's more luck!

image origin                               post source: Guardian

(mural in San Javier, Argentina, commemorating the 18th-century indigenous rebellion against Spanish power)

linked casahistoria site: Argentina

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its all in those (genuinely latin) genes

In 18th century Andean America, Túpac Amaru attempted to defeat his colonial enemies in battle by thrusting his native womenfolk forward as a sexual distraction and post coital weakening factor to allow the (male) army to defeat the Spanish in the battle that followed. However a recent report in the journal "Public Library of Science Genetics" shows that sex had a much greater role to play in the settlement and aftermath of settlement across latin America.

It shows what is clear to visitors to latin America today - that European colonisation resulted in a dramatic shift from a native American population to a largely mixed one, a genetic study has shown. It suggests male European settlers mated with native and African women, and slaughtered the men. But it adds that areas like Mexico City "still preserve the genetic heritage" because these areas had a high number of natives at the time of colonisation.

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

Interesting as this may be, I can't help thinking that this is another report that seems to give a scientific imprimatur to what is otherwise pretty obvious????

image origin ...... post sourceBBC

casahistoria site:.Spanish settlement in latin America

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“the only thing we have to fear is fear itself,” is 75 years old

Fdr_new_deal_2 As yet it has been kept at a relatively low profile (although we may hear more of it in the next week from the democratic contestants) but next week, March 14th to be precise, sees the birthday of one of the most intense, committed and (in 21st centry parlance) inclusive programmes of legislation ever produced by a democracy. Next Friday, FDR's New Deal will be 75.

The New Deal, born out of the 1929 Crash and Depression of the 30's is being celebrated across the US in  a series of events. Some of which re listed below:

Fair enough, but where are the stamps? The federal funded online exhibits? The PBS blockbuster documentaries? Maybe I have missed them, but I would have thought the 75th celebrations of the key domestic policy associated with arguably the US's greatest President deserved better publicity.

Or perhaps his measures are still thought too close to socialism for the establishment? Even for Hilary and Barack.....

image origin                  

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New Deal Network massive collection of photos and primary sources

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patricia verdugo del carmen aguirre, writer and journalist of the pinochet dictatorship

Patricia Verdugo, who recently died aged 60, was a leading Chilean activist, author and journalist who risked her life investigating, and promoting public awareness of, the human rights crimes of the regime of General Augusto Pinochet between 1973 and 1990. Her meticulous exposés revealed what had previously been ignored or denied in Chile, and helped to pave the way for judicial proceedings against the former dictator and his henchmen.....

Interested in reading more? Go to the article by clicking below on "post source" or on the "Worthies who have departed the café" section alongside.


image origin                   post source: Guardian 

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linked casahistoria site: Allende & Pinochet

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cuban comments on a retirement

 Not perhaps an objective selection from the Guardian's Havana reporter, but.....

Omar answers his mobile phone with perfunctory aplomb, Bluetooth earpiece proudly displayed, a symbol of his vision of the modernised revolution he would like to see in his country. "What you can be sure about is that Cuba will remain a socialist country," he says. "The international situation means that we have to make some changes and we have to become competitive, but the development this brings will be distributed in a socialist way."......

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

image origin         post source: Guardian

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casahistoria site: Castro's Cuba

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how lousy was columbus?

As debates seem to gather strength as to who brought what diseases to and from the New World, the latest research according to US and French researchers announces that Christopher Columbus wasn't responsible for the spread of lice in the New World. Teams in Marseilles and Florida have separately examined two lice-ridden Peruvian mummies dating back to the early 11th century - almost 500 years before the Italian explorer arrived in the Caribbean.

''The DNA from these parasites showed that the animals predated the arrival of Columbus by hundreds of years,'' said David L. Reed of the Florida Museum of Natural History....

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

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europeans took measles to the americas and brought back.....

As we consider the danger from Avian Flu and the probability of its jump to humans, a new report on the spread of syphillis from the New World illustrates the danger of the process.

The analysis of the genetics of syphilis provides support for the theory that the disease hitched a ride with Christopher Columbus from the New World back to the Old World. But the research also suggests the disease may not have been transmitted through sex until it adapted to the environment in Europe. "It evolved this whole new transmission mode, and it didn't take very many genetic changes," said study lead author Kristin Harper, a graduate student at Emory University. "What this tells us is that new transmission modes may evolve pretty rapidly. This is important to us today, because we're worried about things like avian influenza going from human to human."

There is a long-running controversy over how syphilis found its way to Europe, where it spread havoc for centuries......

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

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click for casahistoria home          source: Health Day 

   

"I fell in love with a woman who thought che guevara was the most wonderful man in the world"

Philip_agee Philip Agee, campaigner for human rights in latin America, CIA agent turned whistleblower branded a traitor by Bush died died in Cuba in January 7th, 2008, aged 72.

"Why did I leave the CIA?" the former agent Philip Agee, who died this week aged 72, once asked himself at a public meeting. "I fell in love with a woman who thought Che Guevara was the most wonderful man in the world." It was this mixture of commitment and romance that was to characterise the man who was denounced as a traitor by George Bush senior, threatened with death by his former agency colleagues and deported from Britain as a threat to the security of the state.......

Interested in reading more? Go to the article by clicking below on "post source" or on the "Worthies who have departed the café" section alongside.


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