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France and Culture

El beso de Lamourette

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One of our most insightful historians explores the boundaries between past and present. From the homicide beat at the New York Times to Poland's Solidarity movement he shows the reader how new impulses enliven history. Photographs.

363 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1990

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186 people want to read

About the author

Robert Darnton

58 books173 followers
Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and Director of the Harvard University Library

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Samuel.
325 reviews67 followers
October 17, 2023
Sometimes a little too specific, in some essays the author fails to give a wide and "general" perspective, but this is expected, since the purpose is to encourage the study of individual context in historical research. Overall I learned a lot in a very easy-to-read way.
Profile Image for Mpc.
48 reviews13 followers
January 22, 2018
Molto interessante. Alcuni capitoli più di altri: i primi due, quello dedicato al circuito della comunicazione, quello al rapporto tra storia e antropologia e i capitoli dedicati a giornalismo editoria.
Profile Image for Trudy.
81 reviews2 followers
June 16, 2016
Being from the 1970s and a few from the 1980s, many of the essays are dated. Nevertheless, they are still a valuable and enjoyable read. Darnton, a renowned cultural historian, has a lot of engaging information to share about European society in the Enlightenment Era and also, of the state of American academia--its prevailing ideology, favorite topics--during the years he wrote his essays. All of it is interesting even today. I also was able to form a good reading list from his footnotes and recommendations. I like that he does not use very abstruse academic language, but keeps it flowing in a pleasant manner. I got the book on sale, so it was great value for the money. I do recommend it.
Profile Image for Tainá.
76 reviews
December 11, 2025
O livro é bom para trazer um primeiro contato com questões sumárias sobre a história do livro, da comunicação, da imprensa... Por conta da falta de edição, alguns capítulos estão desatualizados (como é o caso do segundo, onde ele ainda fala União Soviética) e alguns envelheceram muito mal (como é o caso do capítulo sobre jornalismo que não considera os meios digitais). De toda forma, traz muitas curiosidades sobre a Revolução Francesa, traz um olhar instigante ao Iluminismo e à História Intelectual, História das Ideias… além de despertar o leitor para as metodologias de análise para pesquisa de impressos. Em muitos momentos o autor adota um tom sarcástico e ácido que, na minha opinião, é totalmente dispensável (e até inadequado). É uma leitura fácil e acessível.
Profile Image for Lauren Albert.
1,834 reviews194 followers
May 11, 2018
I found the beginning essays most interesting as the later essays became more academic and more specialized. "Publishing: A Survival Strategy" was the shortest and funniest though someone who'd never been part of academic life from the inside might not feel that way. There are such gems as "History. Say it's anthropology. Anthropology. Say it's history."
Profile Image for Sally.
272 reviews14 followers
May 8, 2023
I read some of the essays but most of them didn't appeal to me.
Profile Image for Samuel.
32 reviews2 followers
December 31, 2012
O livro é um pouco prolixo e com algum academicismo em algumas partes mas vale a pena. Ele é recheado de pequenas curiosidades da história humana que ajudam a manter o leitor interessado enquanto está no meio de alguma discussão mais profunda. É um livro sobre a história de como a história é contada.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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