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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Peter BurkePublisher: Yale University Press Imprint: Yale University Press ISBN: 9780300276503ISBN 10: 0300276508 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 09 April 2024 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews“Ignorance: A Global History explores the myriad ways in which ‘not-knowing’ affects our lives, sometimes for good, sometimes for ill. . . . Burke takes all ignorance—rather than all knowledge—for his province. . . . Throughout . . . , Burke peppers readers with a flurry of striking factoids, quotations and anecdotes.”—Michael Dirda, Washington Post “From this storehouse of historical data Burke offers a fascinating catalogue of the conditions and agency of ignorance.”—Jeffrey Collins, Times Literary Supplement “Explores the ways ‘obstacles, forgetting, secrecy, denial, uncertainty, prejudice, misunderstanding and credulity’ have impacted the course of history, from the redrawing of borders to climate change denial and more.”—New York Times Book Review “Burke writes engagingly about this information overload. . . . His fund of stories and dry sense of humour make this a compelling and even entertaining read.”—Johnathan Self, Country Life “[Burke’s] latest book is a declaration of love for education, which should be read by anyone who is keen to reflect on the relationship between deceptive populism and the absence of knowledge.”—Stefan Bauer, History Today “If Burke’s aim with this book is to provide encouragement to other historians to further explore the effects of ignorance on history, then he has entirely succeeded.”—Eric Hoffman, Fortean Times “Ignorance might seem to be a pressing contemporary problem but, as this dazzling, comprehensive book shows, it has many pasts. Only Peter Burke could have written such a deliciously knowledgeable history of ignorance.”—David Armitage, Civil Wars: A History in Ideas “A rich, fascinating book of astonishing range. Burke impresses the need for awe and humility about how much humanity doesn’t know or refuses to know, and how this problem shifts and resurfaces across eras.”—Linsey McGoey, author of The Unknowers “Delivers a journey through all forms of not knowing, from secrecies to unintended consequences, to different forms of forgetting things formerly known. Burke shows that as more knowledge is generated, the horizon of ignorance can widen—for good or for bad. Burke’s new book will not only be a milestone in ignorance studies, but should become standard reading.”—Matthias Gross, author of Ignorance and Surprise “Ignorance: A Global History explores the myriad ways in which ‘not-knowing’ affects our lives, sometimes for good, sometimes for ill. . . . Burke takes all ignorance—rather than all knowledge—for his province. . . . Throughout . . . , Burke peppers readers with a flurry of striking factoids, quotations and anecdotes.”—Michael Dirda, Washington Post “From this storehouse of historical data Burke offers a fascinating catalogue of the conditions and agency of ignorance.”—Jeffrey Collins, Times Literary Supplement “Explores the ways ‘obstacles, forgetting, secrecy, denial, uncertainty, prejudice, misunderstanding and credulity’ have impacted the course of history, from the redrawing of borders to climate change denial and more.”—New York Times Book Review “Burke writes engagingly about this information overload. . . . His fund of stories and dry sense of humour make this a compelling and even entertaining read.”—Johnathan Self, Country Life “[Burke’s] latest book is a declaration of love for education, which should be read by anyone who is keen to reflect on the relationship between deceptive populism and the absence of knowledge.”—Stefan Bauer, History Today “If Burke’s aim with this book is to provide encouragement to other historians to further explore the effects of ignorance on history, then he has entirely succeeded.”—Eric Hoffman, Fortean Times “Ignorance might seem to be a pressing contemporary problem but, as this dazzling, comprehensive book shows, it has many pasts. Only Peter Burke could have written such a deliciously knowledgeable history of ignorance.”—David Armitage, Civil Wars: A History in Ideas “A rich, fascinating book of astonishing range. Burke impresses the need for awe and humility about how much humanity doesn’t know or refuses to know, and how this problem shifts and resurfaces across eras.”—Linsey McGoey, author of The Unknowers “Delivers a journey through all forms of not knowing, from secrecies to unintended consequences, to different forms of forgetting things formerly known. Burke shows that as more knowledge is generated, the horizon of ignorance can widen—for good or for bad. Burke’s new book will not only be a milestone in ignorance studies, but should become standard reading.”—Matthias Gross, author of Ignorance and Surprise Author InformationPeter Burke is emeritus professor of cultural history at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of many distinguished books that have been translated into more than thirty languages, including The Polymath and What Is the History of Knowledge? Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |