George Pitt-Rivers and the Nazis
Autor Dr. Bradley W. Harten Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 oct 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472569943
ISBN-10: 1472569946
Pagini: 248
Ilustrații: 15 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472569946
Pagini: 248
Ilustrații: 15 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Whilst there is obviously a large historiography on the Second World War, the British far right and eugenics, there is no other title which covers the convergence of these issues in any depth.
Notă biografică
Bradley W. Hart is Assistant Professor at California State University, Fresno, USA and a former by-fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge, UK. His previous works include a co-edited volume entitled The Foundations of the British Conservative Party: Essays on Conservatism from Lord Salisbury to David Cameron (2013).
Cuprins
1. Acknowledgements2. Introduction: Britain at the fin de siecle3. Chapter 1: A World Destroyed4. Chapter 2: From Nietzsche to the Antipodes5. Chapter 3: Anthropology6. Chapter 4: Eugenics7. Chapter 5: The Nazis8. Chapter 6: 'Dear Cousin Clementine': Internment and the Second World War9. Chapter 7: A World Destroyed, Again10. Conclusion: A Life of Ironies11. Bibliography12. Index
Recenzii
What emerges from this thoroughly engaging study is a fascinating discussion of Pitt-Rivers' 'reprehensible' racial and political views.
This book is well worth reading. It is full of entertaining and lively anecdotes, and is fluently written ... The author has written a fundamental book which will stimulate further research.
Not content with having discovered the Pitt-Rivers papers, Bradley Hart skilfully weaves them into the contexts of Pitt-Rivers' numerous interests and networks. The result is a fascinating and insightful study which is an original and compelling contribution to British cultural and intellectual history.
Against a meticulously researched historical background, Bradley Hart tells the fascinating story of Captain George Pitt-Rivers - a wealthy Nietzschean aristocrat who aspired to match the reputation of his eminent Victorian grandfather. Befriended by Bronislaw Malinowski during the 1920s, Pitt-Rivers seemed set to pursue a successful anthropological career. But he failed, despite his keen intelligence and old-Etonian charm. Hart develops the narrative thread of Pitt-Rivers' life as a war-wounded soldier, a budding social scientist and a tireless polemicist. Broken marriages, rapacious mistresses and alienated sons add to the poignancy of the story. Pitt-Rivers' profound conviction that western civilization had to be saved from an international Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy, and his admiration for Hitler, led to his downfall. Informed by the latest research, Hart's deft depiction of the shifting political scene is a model of clarity, while his account of Pitt-Rivers' arrest and imprisonment in 1940 has all the ingredients of an espionage thriller.
George Pitt-Rivers and the Nazis is a beautifully written and all-encompassing look at the iconoclastic anthropologist, aristocrat, and Nazi sympathizer who was detained by the British government during World War II. Pitt-Rivers numbered among his acquaintances such disparate figures as Carl Jung, Adolf Hitler, Havelock Ellis, Bronislaw Malinowski, Oswald Mosley, and Lord Haw Haw, and the local villagers claimed he planted the hedges on his estate in giant arrows to guide Luftwaffe pilots toward London. Bradley Hart's fascinating biography brings Pitt-Rivers to life as assuredly as if he had walked off the screen of a theater showing Remains of the Day.
This book is well worth reading. It is full of entertaining and lively anecdotes, and is fluently written ... The author has written a fundamental book which will stimulate further research.
Not content with having discovered the Pitt-Rivers papers, Bradley Hart skilfully weaves them into the contexts of Pitt-Rivers' numerous interests and networks. The result is a fascinating and insightful study which is an original and compelling contribution to British cultural and intellectual history.
Against a meticulously researched historical background, Bradley Hart tells the fascinating story of Captain George Pitt-Rivers - a wealthy Nietzschean aristocrat who aspired to match the reputation of his eminent Victorian grandfather. Befriended by Bronislaw Malinowski during the 1920s, Pitt-Rivers seemed set to pursue a successful anthropological career. But he failed, despite his keen intelligence and old-Etonian charm. Hart develops the narrative thread of Pitt-Rivers' life as a war-wounded soldier, a budding social scientist and a tireless polemicist. Broken marriages, rapacious mistresses and alienated sons add to the poignancy of the story. Pitt-Rivers' profound conviction that western civilization had to be saved from an international Jewish-Bolshevik conspiracy, and his admiration for Hitler, led to his downfall. Informed by the latest research, Hart's deft depiction of the shifting political scene is a model of clarity, while his account of Pitt-Rivers' arrest and imprisonment in 1940 has all the ingredients of an espionage thriller.
George Pitt-Rivers and the Nazis is a beautifully written and all-encompassing look at the iconoclastic anthropologist, aristocrat, and Nazi sympathizer who was detained by the British government during World War II. Pitt-Rivers numbered among his acquaintances such disparate figures as Carl Jung, Adolf Hitler, Havelock Ellis, Bronislaw Malinowski, Oswald Mosley, and Lord Haw Haw, and the local villagers claimed he planted the hedges on his estate in giant arrows to guide Luftwaffe pilots toward London. Bradley Hart's fascinating biography brings Pitt-Rivers to life as assuredly as if he had walked off the screen of a theater showing Remains of the Day.