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Cataclysms: A History of the Twentieth Century from Europe's Edge

Posted By: IrGens
Cataclysms: A History of the Twentieth Century from Europe's Edge

Cataclysms: A History of the Twentieth Century from Europe's Edge (George L. Mosse Series in the History of European Culture, Sexuality, and Ideas) by Dan Diner
English | November 20, 2007 | ISBN: 0299223507 | True PDF | 322 pages | 2 MB

Cataclysms is a profoundly original look at the last century.

Approaching twentieth-century history from the periphery rather than the centers of decision-making, the virtual narrator sits perched on the legendary stairs of Odessa and watches as events between the Baltic and the Aegean pass in review, unfolding in space and time between 1917 and 1989, while evoking the nineteenth century as an interpretative backdrop.

Influenced by continental historical, legal, and social thought, Dan Diner views the totality of world history evolving from an Eastern and Southeastern European angle.

A work of great synthesis, ""Cataclysms"" chronicles twentieth century history as ""universal civil war"" between a succession of conflicting dualisms such as freedom and equality, race and class, capitalism and communism, liberalism and fascism, East and West.

Diner's interpretation rotates around cataclysmic events in the transformation from multinational empires into nation states, accompanied by social revolution and ""ethnic cleansing,"" situating the Holocaust at the core of the century's predicament.

Unlike other Eurocentric interpretations of the last century, Diner also highlights the emerging pivotal importance of the United States and the impact of decolonization on the process of European integration.