Författarbild
20 verk 513 medlemmar 7 recensioner

Om författaren

Richard Vinen is a professor of history at King's College, London. He is the author of academic works, most recently National Service: Conscription in Britain 1945-1963, which won the Wolfson History Prize, as well as A History in Fragments: Europe in the Twentieth Century, The Unfree French, and visa mer Thatcher's Britain. visa färre

Inkluderar namnet: Richard Vinen

Verk av Richard Vinen

Taggad

Allmänna fakta

Födelsedag
1963
Kön
male
Nationalitet
UK
Organisationer
King's College, University of London

Medlemmar

Recensioner

My initial reaction upon actually starting this book (it having been on various TBR lists for awhile), was that I might be wasting my time. To me, the promise was in the subtitle, as I was wondering who in particular Vinen might be referring to in terms of "enemies." It turns out that said enemies were mostly just the authorities of the time, as they attempted to cope with the perceived emergency generated by the "street action" of students and labor unionist. Be that as it may, the chapters dealing with the United States, France, Britain and Germany are the real guts of this book, and they're quite good, in terms of providing an overview of what was motivating people to protest, and what they thought they were trying to accomplish. Perhaps the single most telling insight from Vinen is that if often seems that the various protestors had a stronger sense of what they were against, then what they were for, and I think that mentality has lasted to the current day. Less good are some of the thematic chapters, with the one dealing with the transition from protest, to actual violence of the "urban guerilla" variety being the single weakest. Still, I think this wound up being an effective survey, and if you read it in that spirit, I think one will get a lot out of it.… (mer)
½
 
Flaggad
Shrike58 | 1 annan recension | Jan 31, 2023 |
Viele Galionsfiguren der 68er wie Joschka Fischer, Daniel Cohn-Bendit oder Tony Blair bekleideten später zentrale politische Ämter und prägten so die öffentliche Wahrnehmung dieser Zeit. Fünfzig Jahre danach werden sie langsam von einer jüngeren Generation abgelöst und 1968 kann einer objektiven und neutralen Neubewertung unterzogen werden. Hier setzt Richard Vinen an: "Ich sehe keinen Grund, warum den Beteiligten von 1968 das Sonderrecht zukäme, vom kalten Skalpell der historischen Autopsie verschont zu bleiben." In diesem Buch liefert der renommierte Historiker einen unvoreingenommenen Blick auf eine der spannendsten Episoden jüngerer Geschichte, die bis heute enorm polarisiert, und ordnet die Epoche, deren Spätwirkungen unsere Gesellschaft bis heute prägen, geschichtlich ganz neu ein.
Richard Vinen ist seit 1991 Professor für Geschichte am King's College London, sein Forschungsschwerpunkt ist Europa im 20. Jahrhundert. Er hat zahlreiche Bücher über die jüngere französische und britische Geschichte verfasst. 2018 wird er 55 Jahre alt sein - damit ist er zu jung, um 1968 selbst aktiv erlebt zu haben, was ihn zu einem idealen Biografen dieser Epoche macht.
Studentenrevolten von Berkeley bis Berlin, Mai-Unruhen in Paris, Prager Frühling, Arbeiterstreiks in England und Frankreich - 1968 war ein Jahr, das auf der ganzen Welt Gewissheiten in Frage stellte. Die Ideen, für die die Menschen auf die Straße gingen, wirken bis heute nach: aktuelle feministische Debatten, die Lesben- und Schwulenbewegung oder politische Bürgerinitiativen sind fest in den 68ern verwurzelt. Ein halbes Jahrhundert danach unterzieht Richard Vinen diese Epoche einer globalen Analyse, in deren Zentrum die westlichen Demokratien stehen. So entsteht eine vollständige Neubetrachtung dieses spannenden Jahrzehnts, das bis heute enorm polarisiert.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
Aficionado | 1 annan recension | Feb 8, 2018 |
The subtitle here says all: life under the occupation. Vinen details the differences in the wartime experiences of the French in the cities, the countryside and those in Germany, either voluntarily or imprisoned. The relationships between the mostly female French population and the German soldiers and the French POWs with the German women. The different policing authorities and how they managed to work... or didn't. The food rationing, different for men and women, pregnant women, children and teenagers - how many young adults lied about their age to get the food that teenagers were provisioned with. The different 'liberation' experiences taking place gradually at different times over the country.

I've read a lot about WWII but I still found new information here.
… (mer)
½
 
Flaggad
VictoriaPL | 1 annan recension | Jun 8, 2016 |
http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/2077343.html

This is a terrifically well-researched and fluently written account of occupied France during the second world war. It is a subject where of which my previous knowledge could probably have fitted on the back of a postcard - collapse in 1940, Pétain and Laval, resistance, D-Day, don't take 'Allo! 'Allo! seriously. I had never considered the impact on France of the continuing imprisonment of the two million - two million! - soldiers captured in 1940, plus the hundreds of thousands more subsequently conscripted for forced labour in Germany even as the Nazi regime was collapsing. It was also interesting to learn about the internal ideological manœuvres of the Pétain regime, building a cult of personality as a replacement for actually exercising power and delivering services. And he reports humanely and fairly neutrally on the épuration, the retaliation by both state structures and people taking the law into their own hands, against collaborators after the Liberation.

Vinen also illustrates well a point that I often consider in my professional work - that people rarely know the full picture of what is going on, and definitely don't know the future; in the summer of 1940, it seemed entirely probable that the war might be over in a few months with a German victory; in 1944, we tend to remember Operation Overlord as the successful sweep from Normandy to Belgium that it became, forgetting that to those on the ground, the winner did not seem at all clear, and in any case pockets of Germans were left behind as the invasion swept past.

But much the most interesting parts of the book deal with the effect of the occupation on women, looking especially at those on the margins - those who fell in love with Germans, or became prostitutes, or were successful entrepreneurs in the black market, or found some other nonconformist means of survival in miserable circumstances; and they of course were most likely to be targeted in the épuration. He makes the point that we have very few first-person accounts from these sources; the odd iconic photograph which represents only one story of the many. All of it is fascinating, but some of those accounts are heart-breaking.
… (mer)
1 rösta
Flaggad
nwhyte | 1 annan recension | Mar 23, 2013 |

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Statistik

Verk
20
Medlemmar
513
Popularitet
#48,356
Betyg
½ 3.7
Recensioner
7
ISBN
43
Språk
4

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