Monday 30 November 2009

This week's new books

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.


Samuel Johnson: A Life, David Nokes (Faber and Faber)
This biography looks beyond Samuel Johnson’s public persona and beyond the Johnson that Boswell created to consider Johnson's early life and his relationships with his first wife, Tetty Porter, his family and with Mrs Thrale.


The Fighting Tudors, David Loades (The National Archives)
This history of the Tudors explores the dynasty’s major conflicts, from campaigns in Scotland and France to the crises of the Armada, revealing their public and private impact upon successive monarchs and how military action to defend the throne became a sophisticated propaganda tool.


Troubadour, Mary Hoffman (Bloomsbury)
A tale of persecution and poetry, love and war, set in southern France in 1208, when Bertran, a troubadour, witnesses the murder of the Pope’s legate and risks his life to warn others of the war that he knows will follow this act.

Wednesday 25 November 2009

New Wednesday Paperbacks

A Cultural History of Climate, Wolfgang Behringer (Polity Press)
An introduction to the latest historical research on the development of the earth’s climate, which focuses on cultural reactions to climate change through the ages and reveals how even minor changes in the climate sometimes resulted in major social, political and religious upheavals.


God and the Founders: Madison, Washington and Jefferson, Vincent Philip Muñoz (Cambridge University Press)
Through an analysis of Madison’s, Washington’s and Jefferson’s public documents, private writings and political actions, God and the Founders explains the Founders’ competing church-state political philosophies and provides an insight into how they would have dealt with current church-state issues such as prayer in public schools and government support of religion.


The Arts of Intimacy, Jerrilynn D. Dodds, Maria Jose Menocal and Abigail Krasner Balbale (Yale University Press)
Focusing on its arts, architecture, poetry and prose, this illustrated book explores medieval Castilian culture and the Arabic, Hebrew and Latin strands that are inextricably woven into its fabric.


The Germans on the Somme, David Bilton (Pen & Sword)
Featuring over 250 original black and white photographs, this illustrated book charts the activities of the German Army on the River Somme throughout the long years of The Great War from the German perspective.

Monday 23 November 2009

This week's new books

Five to Rule Them All, David L. Bosco (Oxford University Press)
Drawing on extensive research including interviews with serving and former ambassadors on the council, this story of the creation UN Security Council provides an insight into the political battles and personality clashes amongst its five permanent members and its role in the postwar world.


Battle for the Castle, Andrea Orzoff (Oxford University Press)
An account of how the founding myth of Czechoslovakia as an ideal democracy became enshrined in Czechoslovak and European history. The myth was forged by Masaryk and Benes, the creators of the informal political organisation known as the Hrad or ‘castle’ that fought to set the country’s political agenda and advance this myth.


Ancient Greece: A History in Eleven Cities, Paul Cartledge (Oxford University Press)
This history of Ancient Greece, from the first documented use of the Greek language around 1400BC to the foundation of the Byzantine empire in around AD 330, focuses on eleven major Greek cities to illuminate the most important and enduring themes in Greek history including politics, trade, travel, slavery, gender, religion and philosophy.


Literature and Domestic Travel in Early Modern England, Andrew McRae Cambridge University Press)
A study of the meanings of mobility and the relationship between domestic travel and the emergence of new models of nationhood and identity in the early modern period, when it was commonly viewed that people should know their places both geographically and socially and domestic travel remained highly controversial.

Wednesday 18 November 2009

Send us your review and win one of the latest history books

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 this month's selection.

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).


Battle for the Castle, Andrea Orzoff (Oxford University Press)
An account of how the founding myth of Czechoslovakia as an ideal democracy became enshrined in Czechoslovak and European history. The myth was forged by Masaryk and Benes, the creators of the informal political organisation known as the Hrad or ‘castle’ that fought to set the country’s political agenda and advance this myth.

Five to Rule Them All, David L. Bosco (Oxford University Press)

Drawing on extensive research including interviews with serving and former ambassadors on the council, this story of the creation UN Security Council provides an insight into the political battles and personality clashes amongst its five permanent members and its role in the postwar world.

The Pyramids: Their Archaeology and History, Miroslav Verner (Atlantic Books)
An introduction to the science and history of the pyramids set in the context of ancient Egyptian culture and politics.

Inside the Kingdom, Robert Lacey (Hutchinson)
A portrait of the Saudi state and society, which recounts, for example, how Bin Laden and his Arab fighters in Afghanistan were fostered by both the US and Saudi governments, the background to the seizure of Mecca’s Grand Mosque and the tragedy of the ‘Qateef Girl’, in the voices of the Saudis themselves.

How Terrorism Ends, Audrey Kurth Cronin (Princeton University Press)
Based on a wide range of historical examples, including the anti-tsarist Narodnaya Volya, Peru’s Shining Path and the Provisional IRA, this study of the demise of terrorist groups over the past two centuries, outlines how we might strategically approach today’s terrorist groups and the fight against al-Qaeda.

A Cultural History of Climate, Wolfgang Behringer (Polity Press)

An introduction to the latest historical research on the development of the earth’s climate, which focuses on cultural reactions to climate change through the ages and reveals how even minor changes in the climate sometimes resulted in major social, political and religious upheavals.

God and the Founders: Madison, Washington and Jefferson, Vincent Philip Muñoz (Cambridge University Press)
Through an analysis of Madison’s, Washington’s and Jefferson’s public documents, private writings and political actions, God and the Founders explains the Founders’ competing church-state political philosophies and provides an insight into how they may have dealt with current church-state issues, such as prayer in public schools and government support of religion.

Tuesday 17 November 2009

Reader review: Terrorism: A History

In our series of reader reviews, Lee Ruddin reviews Terrorism: A History by Randall D. Law.

by Lee Ruddin,

It may well be instructive for today’s historian to look to the past for insight. Not least so the author can remind readers that jihadist terrorism is not a modern creation, but rather the latest in a long line of deadly movements. Randall D. Law says as much on the opening page of Terrorism: A History: ‘Terrorism is as old as human civilization […] and as new as this morning’s headlines’ (p.1). This is not to say, however, that Law rewrites the rulebook about ‘historians’ natural predisposition against generalising’ (p.5). Although terrorism evidently flows through the veins of history, Law abstains from providing ‘historical lessons’ (p.9), preferring instead to ‘see above, around, and behind every issue’ (viii).

Conscious of the definitional ‘minefield’ (p.2) that surrounds the term terrorism, Law opts for a three-pronged approach and illuminates the phenomenon tactically, symbolically and culturally. It is this axis, as well as individuals’ and movements’ overall historical significance, that guides the author’s selection of material and narrative, rather than the more traditional body count or their current scale of activity. For this reason, Karl Heinzen (1809-1880), Nikolai Morozov (1854-1946) and Carlos Marighella (1911-1969) feature as prominently as la Grande Terreur, the Tamil Tigers and al-Qaeda.

Taking the theme of culture, the author - unlike Michael Burleigh and his ambivalently titled Blood and Rage: A Cultural History of Terrorism (2008) - presents the cultural ‘environments that gave their acts meaning’ (p.5). This is followed by an investigation into state terror (and much more recent counter-terror measures), something Law - like John Merriman, author of The Dynamite Club: How a Bombing in Fin-de-Siècle Paris Ignited the Age of Modern Terror (2009) - believes to be an essential ingredient in any historical treatment of terrorism.

There is a very good reason why most tracts begin in the late 18th century: political terrorism emerged as a concept only in 1793. However, this did not stop Brett Bowden and Michael T Davis, editors of Terror: From Tyrannicide to Terrorism (2008), from beginning their study with the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. Neither, indeed, has it prevented Law from taking us back to the Sicarii in 1st-century Judea. However, unlike the aforementioned editors, whose account is dictated by dates and ends with the 2005 London bombings, Law follows details and, in particular, the terrorists’ timeless trait: ‘their willingness to see the civilians they claim to represent as ultimately expendable, necessary sacrifices to the greater cause’ (p.28). As we soon learn, this sort of cold-blooded calculation was not limited to the pre-modern world; both Russian revolutionaries in the 19th century and the FLN in Algiers in the 20th century adopted a similar strategy.

Conversely, what is most refreshing is that Law includes in his study the 19th- and 20th-century movement hitherto considered outside the remit of ‘terrorism studies’, namely white supremacist terrorism.

The author is at his passionate best when chronicling the ‘system of thinly veiled state terror’ (p.135) in America in the late 1860s and early 1920s. Notwithstanding it being one of Law’s shortest chapters, tomorrow’s author will feel compelled to include yesterday’s campaign of raping and lynching in any treatise.

Law’s sections on anarchism and Northern Ireland - to name but two - are as concise as either of the Very Short Introductions on those respective areas; the author omitting history a novice historian would more than likely incorporate.

Publisher and author alike are to be congratulated on what is an error-free and well-presented book with a sprinkling of black and white images. The only reservation would be that the author has a tendency to over-quote. That said, Law is not casual with his sources (a criticism levelled at Burleigh), nor are they dated (another criticism directed at Bowden and Davis). Surprisingly, though, some stones do go unturned. However, the exhaustive bibliography directs the reader to further reading on the boomerang policy of prisoner exchange/release and the overlooked state-sponsoring of terrorism.

Although aimed primarily at an academic audience, Terrorism: A History is not beyond the reach of the general reader. Nevertheless, written in a chronological and comprehensive fashion, Law’s study provides the main reading for any political theory or international relations course and remains particularly suited to the university student.


Terrorism: A History, by Randall D. Law (Polity Press)

Lee Ruddin is Roundup Editor at History News Network.

Monday 16 November 2009

This week's new books

Pashas: Traders and Travellers in the Islamic World, James Mather (Yale University Press)
The Levant Company was established in 1581 and, long before the age of European imperialism, Britons known as Pashas travelled to the East to seek their fortunes in the Ottoman Empire. Ranging across two and a half centuries, Pashas charts the origins of the company’s trade in the Middle East and recollects the everyday existence of Britons living there.


Inside the Kingdom, Robert Lacey (Hutchinson)
A portrait of the Saudi state and society, which recounts, for example, how Bin Laden and his Arab fighters in Afghanistan were fostered by both the US and Saudi governments, the background to the seizure of Mecca’s Grand Mosque and the tragedy of the ‘Qateef Girl’, in the voices of the Saudis themselves.


The Roman Conquests: Italy, Ross Cowan (Pen & Sword)
This first volume in The Roman Conquests series charts Rome’s earliest struggles to conquer peninsular Italy, the first stage in their domination of an empire stretching from Scotland to the Sahara desert, but one that has been often obscured by their later conquests of Gaul, for example.


How Terrorism Ends, Audrey Kurth Cronin (Princeton University Press)
Based on a wide range of historical examples, including the anti-tsarist Narodnaya Volya, Peru’s Shining Path and the Provisional IRA, this study of the demise of terrorist groups over the past two centuries, outlines how we might strategically approach today’s terrorist groups and the fight against al-Qaeda.

Thursday 12 November 2009

Reader review: Latrinae et Foricae

In our series of reader reviews, here is the latest review of Barry Hobson’s Latrinae et Foricae: Toilets in the Roman World.

by Désirée Scholten,

Latrinae et Foricae opens with the question ‘why, you may ask, a book on Roman toilets?’, words which were a relief to me (no pun intended), as they reveal that the author is conscious of the oddity of his chosen topic. And yet, who can deny that the lavatory has become one of the most important rooms in our homes? My second question, ‘Why would anyone do this?’, was also answered almost immediately. The author was, until his retirement, a GP. His career combined with his studies in archaeology at the University of Bradford ‘caused an interest in hygiene and disease [in relation to] the distribution of latrines in the community and their situation within individual buildings […] and perception of the development of the provision of facilities over time […].’

However, this trend of answering questions is limited to the preface. The main shortcoming of Hobson’s book lies in its organisation. The first three chapters provide an introduction to toilets in the Roman world, Roman Britain, and Pompeii. They essentially constitute a summary of recent excavation projects during which toilets have been found. However, whilst the appearances of the objects are described and some contextualising facts provided, no interpretative conclusions are drawn. It is not until the last two chapters (chapters 12 and 13) that the reader understands the purpose of the previous descriptive chapters about relatively unfamiliar artefacts. Thus the various features of individual types of lavatories, which are described at length in the first three chapters, are eventually interpreted. To an extent, chapters 12 and 13 should be read first in order to make full sense of the preceding ones.

With the exception of the last two chapters and two others about drains and the location of toilets, the book tends to lack criticism. Hobson has carried out a lot of work in the field and his expertise is obvious from the thoroughness of the examples used. His book is also well-argued; however, in the sections where the author has to lean on secondary literature this attitude disappears. The book fails to move beyond given theories and to explain the pros and cons of a particular theory as given by other authors, or the author’s own opinion on the matter. In pages 81-82, for example, Hobson asks a very legitimate question about gender and the use of toilets and issues of privacy and modesty. He presents the views of various authors, but no real answers are given and the author reassumes his discussion on shared and separate toilets with modern assumptions on gender and embarrassment.

Moreover, Hobson tends to make references to classical literature without considering the specific genre of the works which he quotes. This is particularly true when quoting satiric plays, for example. The author’s interpretations of certain quotes are also, at times, unconvincing. Hobson quotes the Latin poet Martial (p.111), for example: ‘Philaenis wears purple-dyed garments every night and day, but she is not ostentations or haughty, she likes the odour, not the colour.’ He concludes from this quote that Philaenis wears purple because the smell of the purple dye disguises her body odour. But that is not what it says; it says that she likes the scent. In this case, Hobson’s conclusion is in my view a bit premature and needs further explanation to convince me.

Latrinae et Foricae is primarily a survey rather than a well-balanced study on a new topic. Much more could have been made of it, especially since the many pictures of the sites make it easy to follow the author’s descriptions. With its detailed descriptions and illustrations, the book is of great value to those who are already familiar with the topic. However, many chapters lack critical assessment to the extent that the book remains, above all, an inventory of lavatories.


Latrinae et Foricae: Toilets in the Roman World, Barry Hobson (Duckworth)

Desiree Scholten is an MA student in Medieval Studies at the University of Utrecht.

Wednesday 11 November 2009

New Wednesday Paperbacks

The Pyramids: Their Archaeology and History, Miroslav Verner (Atlantic Books)
An introduction to the science and history of the pyramids set in the context of ancient Egyptian culture and politics.



100 Must-read Historical Novels, Nick Rennison (A&C Black)
This latest guide in the Bloomsbury Must-Reads series describes 100 of the finest historical novels with a further 500 recommendations and features an introduction with an overview of the genre from the time of Sir Walter Scott to the present day.



Owl, Desmond Morris (Reaktion Books)
Owl explores the natural and cultural history of owls, describing their evolution into today’s numerous species and wide distribution around the world. The author explains the folk tales, myths and legends of many native peoples in which owls occur, as well as discussing examples of owls in art, film, literature and popular culture.



History Meets Fiction, Beverley Southgate (Longman)
An account of the contentious relationship between history and fiction set in a broad historical and philosophical context. Based on case studies, the author shows how authors, such as Dickens, Proust, Virginia Woolf and Penelope Lively, often anticipated historians in their discussions of issues of truth, objectivity memory and identity.

Monday 9 November 2009

This week's new books

Dilly: The Man Who Broke Enigmas, Mavis Batey (Biteback Publishing)
A biography of Alfred Dillwyn Knox, one of the leading figures in the British codebreaking successes of the two world wars, written by Mavis Batey who worked alongside him at Bletchley Park to help him break the German Enigma ciphers.


Carmarthen Pals, Steven John (Pen & Sword)
The latest publication in the Pals series of books and illustrated with original photographs, maps, diagrams, personal accounts and letters, Carmarthen Pals charts the history of the 15th (service) battalion, one of the early units raised by Kitchener in 1914 to meet the demands of the First World War.


The Dawn of Green: Manchester, Thirlmere and Modern Environmentalism, Harriet Ritvo (University of Chicago Press)
The story of the battle for Thirlmere in the Lake District between conservationists and developers in the 1870s, when the city of Manchester bought the site and converted it into a reservoir. Exploring Victorian ideas about industry, development and technology, the author shows how the lessons learned at the time can inform modern environmental campaigns.


The Fossil Hunter, Shelley Emling (Palgrave Macmillan)
In 1811, when she was twelve years old, Mary Anning discovered the first dinosaur skeleton. At a time when it was widely believed that animals did not become extinct, her discovery was considerably significant to the scientific world and sparked the debates about evolution.

Wednesday 4 November 2009

Reader Review: The German Myth of the East

Here is our latest reader review of Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius’ The German Myth of the East.


By Eric Limbach,

The title of this work is something of a misnomer. Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius is very clear that the past two centuries have seen no single overarching or monolithic 'German Myth of the East.' Rather, he argues, there were many such myths, some barely more than faint perceptions, others thoroughly engrained through generations of contact. Furthermore, the myths that the author considers are, more often than not, deeply contradictory. Readers with even a passing familiarity with European history will undoubtedly expect a book focused on ideas of violent conquest and German domination. On this account, Liulevicius does not disappoint, but he also presents a much broader picture.

For example, stories of the medieval Teutonic Order and its crusades against the native Prussians and other groups provided the justification for many German actions in Eastern Europe during both world wars (and many smaller wars as well). Yet for every Marienburg, Tannenberg or Barbarossa, there were many other approaches, less violent if no less prejudiced. A recurring theme is the perennial German criticism of ‘Polish management’: the perceived contrast between German skills for clearing forests, draining swamps and creating arable land and the Polish inability to make or maintain such improvements by themselves. These ideas have deep roots in German self-perceptions, and were used as a justification for German colonisation and improvement of unoccupied (and, quite often, Pole-occupied) land well into the 20th century, as well as to criticise Polish control over former German territory after the Second World War.

This contrast between an imposed Germanic order displacing Slavic disorder is thus one persistent and recurring image of the German East. However, Liulevicius notes that even such widespread sentiments were occasionally forgotten or overlooked. Many German liberals and academics supported the Polish uprising of November 1830, adopting the Poles' cause as a surrogate for their own nationalism. Others, like the Hanover-born linguist Georg Sauerwein, sought an active role among the non-German inhabitants of Eastern Europe. In Sauerwein's case, his zeal to prevent the Lithuanian language from dying out in East Prussia led him to criticise Germanisation policies enacted by Bismarck's government. In his support for Lithuanian nationalism, Sauerwein spent two decades living in the area and eventually adopted the Lithuanian name Jurgis Sauerveinas.

While the work's primary focus is on Germany and northern Europe, from the Elbe to the Baltic coast and beyond, Liulevicius does not overlook the Austrians, whose own East stretched down the Danube to Romania and south through the Balkans. In particular, it was the Imperial Austrian notion of internal conflicts along a ‘language frontier' that had a significant impact on both German-speaking states at the turn of the 20th century. This helped to shape later Austrian attitudes towards both their larger German-speaking neighbour and their former Slavic imperial subjects.

Cataloguing this wide spectrum of myths, ideas and perceptions is an ambitious task and one that several generations of German scholars have taken on, with varying degrees of success. However, as the author argues, for much of the 19th and 20th centuries, such attempts were themselves bound up with these myths, and often sought to perpetuate one or another set of views. Proponents of this 'East Research' or Ostforschung prospered under both dictatorships and democratic regimes, even as they adapted their research to the political climate of the time. Only in the past two or three decades have German-language scholars begun to come to terms with this part of their academic past.

Although he may not make such an explicit claim, Liulevicius' focus on one of the most problematic aspects of German identity has resulted in nothing less than his own brief history of Germany. While that history may be, as some scholars have argued, a 'long march west', his work shows that the occasional 'glance over the shoulder' has not been missed.


The German Myth of the East, Vejas Gabriel Liulevicius (Oxford University Press)

Eric Limbach is a PhD student at Michigan State University where he is completing a thesis on East German refugees.

Monday 2 November 2009

New November Books

Uranium Wars: The scientific rivalry that created the nuclear age, Amir D. Aczel (Palgrave Macmillan)
A history of uranium and of the competition amongst a generation of scientists to discover its properties and harness its potential, which draws on newly opened archives to reassess the role of the physicist Heisenberg in the German nuclear programme during the Second World War.


Portugal in European and World History, Malyn Newitt (Reaktion Books)
An account of Portuguese history from initial contacts with the Moors, to the development of trade with western Africa, the Salazar regime and the country’s liberal revolution of 1974.


Voices Against War: A Century of Protest, Lyn Smith (Mainstream Publishing)
Based on nearly 200 personal testimonies from the Imperial War Museum Collections, the stories of those who participated in anti-war protests over the course of the 20th century, from the First World War, to the Second World War, the Falkland Islands invasion, the Gulf War and the ongoing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.


Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India, William Dalrymple (Bloomsbury)
Based on the life stories of nine different people who each take a different religious path, this travel book explores how traditional forms of religious life in South Asia have been transformed in the vortex of the region’s rapid change.
 
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