Brad’s Reviews > The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991 > Status Update

Brad
Brad is on page 178 of 627
Worth quoting Hobsbawm's take on the Spanish Civil War in full:

"Both the Spanish government and, more to the point, the communists who were increasingly influential in its affairs, insisted that social revolution was not their object, and, indeed, visibly did what they could to control and reverse it, to the horror of revolutionary enthusiasts. Revolution, both insisted, was not the issue: defense of democracy was.
Aug 02, 2025 08:40PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991

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Brad
Brad is on page 543 of 627
"There is scarcely a scientific axiom that is not nowadays denied by somebody. And at the same time almost any nonsensical theory would be almost sure to find believers and disciples somewhere or other." - Max Planck, 1933

Well damn.
Aug 08, 2025 09:02PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 504 of 627
"The USSR remained culturally fallow, at least in comparison with its pre-1917 glories."

"The light shining out of Communist China in the arts remained dim."

Yikes, some major Eurocentric pompousness. Kristen Ghodsee had some similar critiques of the Soviet system (particularly during the 30s/40s), but it's possible to have those and still recognize artistic merit.
Aug 08, 2025 01:03PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 500 of 627
Aug 08, 2025 12:32PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 481 of 627
"It is an interesting sign of the interpenetration of official reformers and dissident thinking in the Brezhnev years, that glasnost was what the writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn had called for in his open letter to the Congress of the Union of Soviet writers in 1967, before his expulsion from the USSR."

Interesting indeed.
Aug 08, 2025 10:48AM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 480 of 627
"The aims of Communist economic reformers since the 1950s had been to make the centrally planned command economies more rational and flexible by the introduction of market pricing and calculations of profit and loss in enterprises."

This was *one path* put forward. Another group put hopes in the field of cybernetics, and linear programming. See my reviews of "Balkan Cyberia" and Kantorovich.
Aug 07, 2025 06:30PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 460 of 627
Aug 07, 2025 12:36PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 400 of 627
"It remained a police state, an authoritarian society and...an unfree one."

"In all these respects [i.e. freedom of travel and speech] the USSR remained distinctly inferior to Tsarist Russia."

"Unlike the USSR, the USA was a democracy."

Some nuggets of conventional rhetorical wisdom from this brick of a book. Sigh.
Aug 06, 2025 04:32PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 286 of 627
"The shift in labour's mood was far more significant than the great burst of student unrest in and around 1968...Its cultural significance was far greater than its political significance."

"So 1968 was neither an end nor a beginning, but only a signal. Unlike the wage explosion, the collapse [Bretton Woods]...it does not figure much in the explanation of economic historians about the end of the Golden Age."
Aug 05, 2025 12:33PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 281 of 627
"The most convenient world for multinational giants is one populated by dwarf states or no states at all."
Aug 05, 2025 12:02PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


Brad
Brad is on page 257 of 627
Some good, some cringe. Maybe not a go-to read when you're overtired.
Not feeling the hype, but gonna see this one through.
Aug 04, 2025 06:41PM
The Age of Extremes, 1914-1991


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