图书标签: War
发表于2024-11-04
A Shattered Peace pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024
"The peace settlements that followed World War I have recently come back into focus as one of the dominant factors shaping the modern world. The Balkans, the Middle East, Iraq, Turkey and parts of Africa all owe their present-day problems, in part, to these negotiations. David Andelman brings it all back to life – the lofty ideals, the ugly compromises, the larger-than-life personalities who came to Paris in 1919. And he links that far-away diplomatic dance to present day problems that illuminates our troubled times. A tremendous addition to this vitally important subject."
—Ambassador Richard Holbrooke
"The failed peace settlement following the Great War of 1914-1918 had been the subject of many fine books. In many respects, David Andelman’s Shattered Peace is the best of these. It is compact and compellingly written. Moreover, it explains more clearly than any other work how the failure of peacemaking in 1919 shaped later history and, indeed, shapes our own era."
—Prof. Ernest R. May, Charles Warren Professor of American History, Harvard University
"We tend to think of the negotiations at Versailles in 1919 as a bungled business that left the First World War a tangle of loose ends, to be tied up by the victors of World War II. It is the power and fascination of David Andelman’s new book A Shattered Peace that he shows us – with the clarity of a first-rate reporter and the drama and detail at the command of a first-rate novelist – that we are all still enmeshed in those loose ends, the inheritors of a mess left by the hasty, casual dispensation of fragments of nations inhabited by millions of people whose hopes were maimed and whose lives were often forfeit. By focusing not on the giant participants – France, Britain, Italy and the United States – but rather on what seemed to them joke nations and penny-ante fake diplomats, Andelman brings us to Korea, to Vietnam, to the Persian gulf, and to Iraq in our own vexed era. His story is a bitter and bleak one; it is also alive with color, conflict, and interesting (to say the least) people. We could not find a better guide to a time that somehow seems to grow larger and closer even as it reaches beyond living memory."
—Richard Snow, editor in chief, American Heritage
"The peace settlements that followed World War I have recently come back into focus as one of the dominant factors shaping the modern world. The Balkans, the Middle East, Iraq, Turkey and parts of Africa all owe their present-day problems, in part, to these negotiations. David Andelman brings it all back to life - the lofty ideals, the ugly compromises, the larger-than-life personalities who came to Paris in 1919. And he links that far-away diplomatic dance to present day problems that illuminates our troubled times. A tremendous addition to this vitally important subject.
—Ambassador Holbrooke
"The peace conference in Paris at the end of World War I was the first and last moment of pure hope for peace in the history of world affairs. Our President, Woodrow Wilson, was the sorcerer for this hope, and he kindled great expectations in people everywhere. David Andelman, a classic reporter and story teller, tells this fascinating tale of hope falling finally and forever on the shoals of naïveté and hard-headed cynicism."
—Leslie H. Gelb, former columnist for the New York Times, is president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations
David A. Andelman is the Editor of World Policy Journal, the 25-year-old foreign policy magazine published by the World Policy Institute. Previously, he served as Executive Editor of Forbes.com, the world's largest business and financial website after serving as Business Editor of The New York Daily News. This followed five years he spent as news editor of Bloomberg News and Bloomberg.com. For 12 years he was a domestic and foreign correspondent for The New York Times. He served in various posts in New York and Washington, as Southeast Asia bureau chief, based in Bangkok, then East European bureau chief, based in Belgrade. He then moved to CBS News where he served for seven years as Paris Correspondent, traveling through and reporting from more than 60 countries. He served for two years as Washington Correspondent for CNBC before moving to Bloomberg. He is the author of three books - The Peacemakers, published by Harper & Row; The Fourth World War, published by William Morrow, which he co-authored with the Count de Marenches, long-time head of French intelligence; and A Shattered Peace: Versailles, 1919 and the Price We Pay Today, published by John Wiley & Sons in 2007. Andelman has written for such publications as Harpers, The Atlantic, The New Republic, The New York Times Magazine, Foreign Policy and Foreign Affairs. He is a graduate of Harvard University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, and is a member of the Century Association, the Council on Foreign Relations, the Grolier Club, the National Press Club and the Overseas Press Club and its board of governors.
textbook for History of International Relations
评分textbook for History of International Relations
评分让人有些出乎意料的是本书并未怎么提及巴黎和会,而是粗粗介绍了和会的问题和其所涉及的历史问题。这就造成一个问题,有些故事很有趣,但有些却不那么有意思。而且,用一本不厚的书介绍全球政治史难免有所失真或过于蜻蜓点水,比如介绍中国清廷之处既有许多不实之处。此时,作者又偏要引入个人经历和和会对于现代的意义。眼高手低使得这部作品最终相当的鸡肋。
评分让人有些出乎意料的是本书并未怎么提及巴黎和会,而是粗粗介绍了和会的问题和其所涉及的历史问题。这就造成一个问题,有些故事很有趣,但有些却不那么有意思。而且,用一本不厚的书介绍全球政治史难免有所失真或过于蜻蜓点水,比如介绍中国清廷之处既有许多不实之处。此时,作者又偏要引入个人经历和和会对于现代的意义。眼高手低使得这部作品最终相当的鸡肋。
评分textbook for History of International Relations
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A Shattered Peace pdf epub mobi txt 电子书 下载 2024