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Great speeches of the 20th century

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What has happened to the 'art' of speech-writing and speech making?

Where are the men and women whose words set the heart racing with passion, turn battles, inspire populations to extraordinary endeavour: 'Ask not what your country can do for you.' 'We shall fight on the beaches.' 'I have a dream.' 'The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.' Quote these words today and they still have the power to stop us in our tracks.

This is a book that should be required reading, a book that should be on every bookshelf in the country. Here are fourteen key speeches of the 20th century introduced by prominent figures ranging from F.W. de Klerk and Mikhail Gorbachev to Antony Beevor and Gordon Brown. Winston Churchill: We shall fight on the beaches. Introduced by Simon SchamaJ.F. Kennedy: Ask not what your country can do for you. Introduced by Kennedy's speech writer Ted SorensenNelson Mandela: An ideal for which I am prepared to die.

Introduced by F.W. de KlerkHarold Macmillan: No going back. Introduced by Douglas HurdFranklin D. Roosevelt: The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.

Introduced by Gordon BrownNikita Khrushchev: The cult of the individual.

Introduced by Mikhail GorbachevEmmeline Pankhurst: Freedom or death.

Introduced by Germaine Greer Martin Luther King: I have a dream.

Introduced by Gary YoungeCharles de Gaulle: The flame of French resistance.

Introduced by Antony BeevorMargaret Thatcher: The lady's not for turning.

Introduced by Simon JenkinsJawaharlal Nehru: A tryst with destiny.

Introduced by Ian JackAneurin Bevan: Weapons for squalid and trivial ends.

Introduced by Tam DalyellEarl Spencer: The most hunted person of the modern age.

Introduced by Beryl BainbridgeVirginia Woolf: Shakespeare's sister.

Introduced by Kate Mosse

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Product Details
Preface Publishing
1848090382 / 9781848090385
Hardback
808.85
10/04/2008
United Kingdom
English
320 p.