"In 1968 I was a member of an attentive and admiring student audience whom Eric Hobsbawm was addressing on the theme, as I recall, of the limits of student radicalism. I remember very well his conclusion, since it ran so counter to the mood of the hour. Sometimes, he reminded us, the point is not to change the world but to interpret it. But in order to interpret the world one has also to have a certain empathy with the ways in which it has changed. His latest book is a challenging, often brilliant, and always cool and intelligent account of the world we have now inherited. If it is not up to his very best work it should be recalled just how demanding a standard he has set. But there are one or two crucial changes that have taken place in the worldâthe death of Communism, for instance, or the related loss of faith in history and the therapeutic functions of the state about which the author is not always well pleased. That is a pity, since it shapes and sometimes misshapes his account in ways that may lessen its impact upon those who most need to read and learn from it. And I missed, in his version of the twentieth century, the ruthlessly questioning eye which has made him so indispensable a guide to the nineteenth. In a striking apologia pro vita sua, Eric Hobsbawm reminds us that historians are âthe professional remembrancers of what their fellow-citizens wish to forget.â It is a demanding and unforgiving injunction."
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CommunistsAcademics from the United KingdomNon-fiction authors from the United KingdomMarxistsHistorians from the United Kingdom
Original Language: English
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Tony Judt, "Downhill All the Way", The New York Review of Books (May 25, 1995)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Eric_Hobsbawm
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Eric Hobsbawm
1920 â 1991
Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm, CH, FRSL, FBA (9 June 1917 â 1 October 2012) was a British Marxist historian and author and a leading theorist of the Communist Party of Great Britain (1920â1991), and former president of Birkbeck College, University of London.
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