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The trouble with history: morality, revolution, and counterrevolution

Michnik, AdamHunter, James Davison(Foreword by)Grudzinska Gross, Irena(Edited by)Czarny, Roman(Translated by)Marczyk, Agnieszka(Translated by)Matynia, Elzbieta(Translated by)
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Renowned Eastern European author Adam Michnik was jailed for more than six years by the communist regime in Poland for his dissident activities. He was an outspoken voice for democracy in the world divided by the Iron Curtain and has remained so to the present day. In this thoughtful and provocative work, the man theFinancial Timesnamed “one of the 20 most influential journalists in the world” strips fundamentalism of its religious component and examines it purely as a secular political phenomenon.
 
Comparing modern-day Poland with postrevolutionary France, Michnik offers a stinging critique of the ideological “virus of fundamentalism” often shared by emerging democracies: the belief that, by using techniques of intimidating public opinion, a state governed by “sinless individuals” armed with a doctrine of the only correct means of organizing human relations can build a world without sin. Michnik employs deep historical analysis and keen political observation in his insightful five-point philosophical meditation on morality in public life, ingeniously expounding on history, religion, moral thought, and the present political climate in his native country and throughout Europe.

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£18.99
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300207026 / 9780300207026
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
172.1
01/07/2014
English
194 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Translated from the Polish Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.