Monday, 21 December 2009

New selection of books for reader reviews

Every month, we offer our readers the opportunity to review some of the latest history publications and to have their review published on the History Today Books Blog. Here is the selection for December. To submit a review, please send an email to Kathryn Hadley (k.hadley[at]historytoday.com) specifying your choice of book. We will then send you the book with a one-month deadline to send us your review. Books will be sent on a first come first served basis. (Unfortunately, we are unable to send out books to the USA).


Strange Victory: Hitler’s Conquest of France, Ernest R. May (I.B. Tauris)
This study of the years leading up to the weeks of the Wehrmacht’s attack on Paris, in the spring of 1940, weaves together decisions of the high commands with the confused responses from exhausted and ill-informed officers in the field, to provide new insights into the tragic paradoxes of the battle for France.

A History of Modern Latin America: 1800 to the Present, Teresa A. Meade (Wiley-Blackwell)
This study of post-colonial Latin America analyses the major and minor political events that shaped Latin American history, while portraying the everyday lives of men and women from a variety of class, racial and ethnic backgrounds.

Alexis de Tocqueville, Hugh Brogan (Profile Books)
A biography of Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859), who wrote incisively on the nature of liberty and democracy and is now known as the prophet of democracy.

Journalism’s Roving Eye, John Maxwell Hamilton (Louisiana State University Press)
This history of American foreign news reporting, from its inception to the present day, chronicles the economic and technological advances that have influenced overseas coverage, as well as the personalities who shaped readers’ perceptions of the world across two centuries.

Czechoslovakia: The State that Failed, Mary Heimann (Yale University Press)
This political history of Czechoslovakia, from its founding in 1918 to partition in 1992, rejects the simplistic Western view that Czechoslovakia was simply a victim of its nationalistic German and Soviet neighbours, arguing, instead, that it was also a perpetrator of intolerant nationalism.

Kingmakers, Karl E. Meyer and Shareen Blair Brysac (W.W. Norton & Company)
The story of how the modern Middle East came to be, told through the lives of the Britons and Americans who shaped it, some of whom are famous (Lawrence of Arabia and Gertrude Bell) and others who have been largely forgotten (Sir Mark Sykes and A. T. Wilson).

The Killer Trail: A Colonial Scandal in the Heart of Africa, Bertrand Taithe (Oxford University Press)
The story of the Voulet-Chanoine mission (led by French army captains Voulet and Chanoine), which set out from Dakar to Lake Chad in November 1898 to establish territorial boundaries between the French and British empires, but degenerated into violence, pillage, murder and enslavement when Voulet and Chanoine declared their independence and set about establishing their own African kingdom.

This week's new books

Demobbed: Coming Home After the Second World War, Alan Allport (Yale University Press)
Drawing on personal letters and diaries, newspapers, reports, novels and films, an account of the darker side of the homecoming experiences of ex-servicemen, their families and society at large, in the aftermath of the Second World War.


Famous Faces of the Spanish Civil War, Steve Hurst (Pen & Sword)
The story of the Spanish Civil War, from the Generals’ rebellion in the summer of 1936 to the destruction of Guernica, Barcelona and Franco’s victorious march, through the eyes of famous writers, artists and musicians who were involved in the conflict, such as Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali and Federico Lorca.


The Red Rose and the White, John Sadler (Longman)
This military and political account of the Wars of the Roses provides an analysis of key commanders and senior figures and explores troop movements and military thinking during the wars, as well as influential issues of the time such as morale, propaganda, disease and betrayal.


The Passage to Cosmos, Laura Dassow Walls (University of Chicago Press)
To mark the 240th anniversary of the birth of Alexander von Humboldt, this book explores his ideas for Cosmos, the book that crowned his career, and in which he offered to the world his vision of humans and nature as integrated halves of a single whole.

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

New Wednesday Paperbacks

Strange Victory: Hitler’s Conquest of France, Ernest R. May (I.B. Tauris)
This study of the years leading up to the weeks of the Wehrmacht’s attack on Paris, in the spring of 1940, weaves together decisions of the high commands with the confused responses from exhausted and ill-informed officers in the field, to provide new insights into the tragic paradoxes of the battle for France.



A History of Modern Latin America: 1800 to the Present, Teresa A. Meade (Wiley-Blackwell)
This study of post-colonial Latin America analyses the major and minor political events that shaped Latin American history, while portraying the everyday lives of men and women from a variety of class, racial and ethnic backgrounds.



The English Civil War: A Historical Companion, Martyn Bennett (The History Press)
This history of the English Civil War covers the run-up to the conflict, the wars themselves and the aftermath. It provides an introduction to the main debates surrounding the Civil War, from the St Giles riots in Edinburgh in 1637 to the restoration of Charles II in May 1660, and includes biographies of all the key personalities, events, battles and military institutions.



Inside the Neolithic Mind, David Lewis-Williams and David Pearce (Thames & Hudson)
A study of the intricate web of belief, myth and society in the Neolithic period, when agriculture became a way of life and the society that we know today was born, which proposes new theories about the causes of an ancient revolution in cosmology and the origins of social complexity.

Monday, 14 December 2009

This week's new books

Journalism’s Roving Eye, John Maxwell Hamilton (Louisiana State University Press)
This history of American foreign news reporting, from its inception to the present day, chronicles the economic and technological advances that have influenced overseas coverage, as well as the personalities who shaped readers’ perceptions of the world across two centuries.


In Defence of the Enlightenment, Tzvetan Todorov (Atlantic Books)
In this analysis of the heritage of the Enlightenment, Todorov defends the role of the Enlightenment as the philosophical cornerstone of the modern world and argues that the wisdom of the Enlightenment thinkers is as relevant today as it was in the 18th century.


Covert Action in the Cold War, James Callanan (I.B. Tauris)
Drawing on unpublished government records and documents, Callanan charts the growth of the CIA’s covert action arm, created to counter the challenge posed by the Soviet Union and its allies and to bolster American interests worldwide.


Cracking the Einstein Code, Fulvio Melia (University of Chicago Press)
An account of the events leading up to Roy Kerr’s cracking of the Einstein code, in 1963, forty years after the publication of Einstein’s theory of general relativity.

Thursday, 10 December 2009

Reader review: The Hemingses of Monticello

Matthew Kilburn reviews The Hemingses of Monticello by Annette Gordon-Reed.

by Matthew Kilburn,

A society where one sector of the population were entitled to be owners of another sector principally on the grounds of skin colour and their, or their recent ancestors', continent of origin is remote from 21st-century Britain. It exists, nevertheless, in close historical proximity to it. Slavery and the slave trade were part of the foundations of the British colonial economy. The social implications of this were that a poor white man from Lancashire could leave Britain to become a domestic servant in Virginia, train for a profession there and become a slave-owner himself. Additionally, a white British sea captain could make an enslaved African woman pregnant and then be denied the possibility of living with his child and that mother. In Virginian law, it was a woman who transmitted her status, enslaved or free, to her offspring; and it is this enslaved African matrilineal descent which formally defined the Hemings family.

Annette Gordon-Reed’s The Hemingses of Monticello extends her work begun in her previous book, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy, on the sexual relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings – the enslaved, matrilineally black half-sister of his white wife Martha Wayles - and the identities of their children. In exploring the origins of the immediate ancestors of Sally Hemings, she carefully unhooks the veils placed across relations between black and white in the southern United States during and after the slave era.

Sally Hemings’s mother Elizabeth was the daughter of an African woman and a man identified in family tradition only as a 'Captain Hemings'; her father was Elizabeth Hemings’s owner at the time, the aforementioned Lancashire emigrĂ© John Wayles. Annette Gordon-Reed underlines, first of all, how slavery prevented the emergence of what would be regarded now and at the time as a normal family situation. When he married Martha Wayles, Thomas Jefferson became the inheritor of his father-in-law’s slaves, including his wife’s half-siblings. However, in the eyes of the law, this family relationship could not exist and it obscured and denied the kind of relationship which was part of everyday life in the south. For some male slave-owners like Jefferson their position as father and brother-in-law and uncle of an extended slave family, whose kinship with them could not be acknowledged publicly, offered an ideal ‘private’ patriarchal authority over men and women, free and unfree. In practice, it institutionalised denial and brutality.

The author’s background as a legal scholar leads much of the book to examine the Hemings family’s conundrum as a series of studies of the operation of the law in society. Slaves and their owners were human beings and displayed more human interrelationships than the law allowed. Jefferson seems to always have been conscious that the Hemingses were his wife's family; nevertheless, he placed an equal emphasis on their being his social and, in his view, racial inferiors too. His ties to the Hemingses were emotional, but also personally convenient. In maintaining their connection with him and keeping his brothers-in-law, Robert and John Hemings, as companions and confidential servants, Jefferson negotiated with the legal position of African Americans in Virginia, where after 1782 free blacks could be re-enslaved.

However, Gordon-Reed also explores gender relations as much as she does enslavement. Jefferson’s patriarchal understanding of his role in his 'family' has already been mentioned. Gordon-Reed could perhaps have emphasised that this was not just an idea peculiar to a slave society; in describing his slaves as his ‘servants’ in his family, perhaps Jefferson was adopting a translation convention, for an 18th-century Englishman would have considered his waged servants to be his ‘family’ too. There is a powerful irony in how far the term in the American south suggests to modern readers the biological ties which it partly masked in Sally Hemings’s day. Gordon-Reed furthermore notes, in several cases, Jefferson’s embarrassment with the female. In making Sally Hemings both his ‘concubine’ and his femme de chambre he was enabled to feel more like a man, not just because he had a regular – and subservient – sexual partner, but also because he could withdraw from part of the female sphere of the household.

The link between The Hemingses of Monticello and Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings leads to difficulties in referencing. On several occasions the endnotes refer somewhat frustratingly to the earlier book rather than to the evidence Gordon-Reed used when writing it. Her forensic approach to weighing what evidence there is concerning the lives of the Hemings family can sit ill with some of the more circumstantial assumptions about what Gordon-Reed’s historical actors thought in given situations. Yet this is difficult to avoid where there is compelling circumstantial evidence for an event. Gordon-Reed’s emphasis on movements and the newness of particular ideas – the American Revolution an initiator rather than a symptom of prevailing 'liberal’ political thought in North America and Europe - may strike those who view the age of revolutions as resulting from deep-seated ideas and practices in European institutions as only telling part of the story, but history is full of such chicken-and-egg questions. Ultimately, the book succeeds in challenging long-established prejudices against African American narratives in the history of the United States, and exposes the social and legal realities, as well as the culture of the extended families of intermingled free and unfree Americans.

The Hemingses of Monticello, Annette Gordon-Reed (Norton)

Matthew Kilburn is an independent historian. A former research editor of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, he is a regular contributor to its online edition. He has also contributed to The Cambridge Handel Encyclopaedia and Time And Relative Dissertations In Space: Critical Perspectives on Doctor Who.

Monday, 7 December 2009

The first books of December

What Needled Cleopatra… and other little secrets airbrushed from history, Phil Mason (JR Books)
From William Tell and Charlie Chaplin to Abraham Lincoln, Hitler, Einstein and Karl Marx, What Needled Cleopatra provides an insight into the foibles and complex personalities of some of the most famous figures of history.


Constantine: Unconquered Emperor, Christian Victor, Paul Stephenson (Quercus)
A survey of the life and enduring legacy of the emperor, who, in 312, marched on Rome to establish his control over the western half of a divided Roman Empire, converted to Christianity and ended the persecution of its adherents, and founded Constantinople as a new Christian capital set apart from Rome’s pagan past.


Czechoslovakia: The State that Failed, Mary Heimann (Yale University Press)
This political history of Czechoslovakia, from its founding in 1918 to partition in 1992, rejects the simplistic Western view that Czechoslovakia was simply a victim of its nationalistic German and Soviet neighbours, arguing, instead, that it was also a perpetrator of intolerant nationalism.


The Soldier: A History of Courage, Sacrifice and Brotherhood, Darren Moore (Icon Books)
Based on first-hand accounts of warfare from combatants across the world, an analysis of the politics, human emotions and psychology behind soldiering, which focuses on the period from the Napoleonic Wars to the Global War on Terror.

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

New Wednesday Paperbacks

Alexis de Tocqueville, Hugh Brogan (Profile Books)
A biography of Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859), who wrote incisively on the nature of liberty and democracy and is now known as the prophet of democracy.



Science of Islam: A History, Ehsan Masood (Icon Books)
From Musa al-Khwarizmi who developed algebra in 9th-centry Baghdad to al-Jazari, a 13th-century Turkish engineer whose achievements include the crank, an account of the Islamic scientific revolution between 700 and 1400.



Kingmakers, Karl E. Meyer and Shareen Blair Brysac (W.W. Norton & Company)
The story of how the modern Middle East came to be, told through the lives of the Britons and Americans who shaped it, some of whom are famous (Lawrence of Arabia and Gertrude Bell) and others who have been largely forgotten (Sir Mark Sykes and A. T. Wilson).



Charles Dickens and the House of Fallen Women, Jenny Hartley (Methuen)
The story of Urania Cottage, which Charles Dickens founded in Shepherd’s Bush, in 1847, as a hostel for destitute young women in London in an attempt to rehabilitate the residents and prepare them for a normal life as domestic servants in Britain’s expanding colonies.
 
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