Troublemaker: The Life and History of A.J.P. Taylor

Author:   Kathleen Burk
Publisher:   Yale University Press
ISBN:  

9780300087611


Pages:   498
Publication Date:   11 January 2001
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained


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Troublemaker: The Life and History of A.J.P. Taylor


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Overview

"Popular, prolific, and impassioned, British historian A. J. P. Taylor (1906-1990) was also outspoken, controversial, and quarrelsome. Taylor s many books, including The Struggle for Mastery in Europe, The Origins of the Second World War, and English History 1914-1945, changed the way history was written and read. His legendary television lectures, delivered live and unscripted, brought history to a huge popular audience. In this masterful biography, Kathleen Burk provides a perceptive account of the life and achievements of Britain s most famous twentieth-century historian. Burk draws on her personal acquaintance with Taylor in his later years and on an array of previously untapped archival materials to analyze the successes, failures, and controversies of Taylor s life as historian, Oxford don, broadcast journalist, husband, and friend. The author sets Taylor s professional work in the context of the development of history in England during the century, and she traces the relations between his writings and his reactions to domestic and foreign politics. Her account of Taylor s years at Oxford explores the customs and rituals of the academic community, his colleagues, and the successive crises that beset him personally and professionally. The book also assesses Taylor s political activities and his self-described role as an impotent socialist, his development as a journalist and broadcaster, previously unknown financial aspects of his freelance activities, and his private upheavals, in particular his failed marriages. """

Full Product Details

Author:   Kathleen Burk
Publisher:   Yale University Press
Imprint:   Yale University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 4.30cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.940kg
ISBN:  

9780300087611


ISBN 10:   0300087616
Pages:   498
Publication Date:   11 January 2001
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

The life of possibly the greatest, and certainly the most famous, diplomatic historian of the twentieth century, by a former research student now teaching at London University..Taylor may already be receding into the mists of history, the very mists he did so much to dispel, but Burk ably captures not only his importance but also the flavor of his pugnacious and epigrammatic style. In his history of the Habsburg monarchy, Taylor was the first to use the archives of three countries, and he loftily wrote off the Cambridge History of Foreign Policy as now completely out of date. He produced many major works of diplomatic history and hundreds of essays, but he also irritated his less productive colleagues by writing some 1,600 book reviews and becoming the first television don - delivering one or more series of lectures, by himself and without notes or prompters or film footage, every year for ten years. His contention that Hitler should be seen not as an aberration but as part of the pattern of German statesmanship stirred up a profound controversy - which Taylor relished. He dismissed a criticism by the Regius Professor of History at Oxford that his Origins of the Second World War would harm Taylor's reputation as a serious historian by retorting that the methods of quotation used by the Regius Professor in his review would harm his own reputation as a serious historian if he had one. Taylor's great contribution, one that influenced a generation of diplomatic historians, was to emphasize the fundamental and enduring influences in the behavior of states, and to pay less attention to accident and chance. .Taylor himself thought his life unimportant, and Burk can't quite persuade us that it's worth covering in this detail. Still, Taylor's contribution to the intellectual history of this century makes this account fascinating and valuable.. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Kathleen Burk is professor of modern and contemporary history at the University College London.

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