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How to Be a Dictator

Autor Frank Dikötter
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 noi 2022
From the Samuel Johnson Prize-winning author of China After Mao, a sweeping and timely study of twentieth-century dictators and the development of the modern cult of personality.

No dictator can rule through fear and violence alone. Naked power can be grabbed and held temporarily, but it never suffices in the long term. In the twentieth century, as new technologies allowed leaders to place their image and voice directly into their citizens' homes, a new phenomenon appeared where dictators exploited the cult of personality to achieve the illusion of popular approval without ever having to resort to elections.

In How to Be a Dictator, Frank Dikötter examines the cults and propaganda surrounding twentieth-century dictators, from Hitler and Stalin to Mao Zedong and Kim Il Sung. These men were the founders of modern dictatorships, and they learned from each other and from history to build their regimes and maintain their public images. Their dictatorships, in turn, have influenced leaders in the twenty-first century, including Vladimir Putin, Viktor Orbán, and Xi Jinping.

Using a breadth of archival research and his characteristic in-depth analysis, Dikötter offers a stunning portrait of dictatorship, a guide to the cult of personality, and a map for exposing the lies dictators tell to build and maintain their regimes.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781639730681
ISBN-10: 1639730680
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 136 x 210 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury USA

Caracteristici

Mao's Great Famine won the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize (now the Baillie Gifford prize) in 2011, while The Cultural Revolution was shortlisted for the Pen Hessell-Tiltman Prize in 2017

Notă biografică

Frank Dikötter is Chair Professor of Humanities at the University of Hong Kong and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. His books have changed the way historians view China, from the classic The Discourse of Race in Modern China to his award-winning People's Trilogy documenting the lives of ordinary people under Mao. He is married and lives in Hong Kong.

Recenzii

Essential reading . The standalone portraits of his eight dictators are riveting
How to be a dictator? Ruthlessness matters a lot more than talent, but luck most of all. That is the upshot of Frank Dikötter's elegant and readable study of the cult of personality in the 20th century . [Dikötter's] penmanship and eye for anecdote brings [the dictators] to life
A brilliant study of twentieth-century dictatorship . The book's psychological insight is devastating, the stories are eye-popping . Essential reading for any student of political manipulation, as a study of man's inhumanity to man, it's almost unbearably moving
A disturbing emblem of our times
A whistlestop tour of some of the most infamous leaders of the 20th century . What Dikötter does so well is to find the pathological and ideological connections among leaders who "teetered between hubris and paranoia"
Frank Dikötter provides a timely reminder of just how destructive toxic insecurity, and its corollary, pathological narcissism, can become . In terms of the dynamics of narcissistic authoritarianism, there is much in How to Be a Dictator that is of critical contemporary relevance . History only makes sense if we understand the psychological pathology that underlies it, and our own propensity for partaking in such pathology. We need a clear-eyed understanding of history as a recurring series of monumental follies, led by cretins who duped or forced millions of us into humiliating childish submission. Only then can we hope to avoid the repetition. Dikötter is in the vanguard of historians opening our eyes to this fundamental truth
Enlightening and a good read
A heroic piece of research . Devastating in every sense of the word
Ground-breaking . Unsparing in its detail, relentless in its research, unforgiving in its judgements . Dikötter's achievement in this book is remarkable
Worryingly close to home . Dikötter has put together sharp portraits of Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Kim Il-sung, Duvalier, Ceausescu and Mengistu
How to Be a Dictator is a timely book and enjoyable to read. It is strangely comforting to be reminded that many of the dictators in Dikötter's book came to an ignominious end. But that is no excuse for underestimating the need to protect democracy today
Definitive and harrowing
Dikötter never allows his intense account to degenerate into melodrama . Fascinating
Magnificent ... The author gives full acknowledgement to memoirs and scholarly works but it is his own archival research, allied to a piercing critique, that lifts the book to a higher level. He has mastered the details so well that with the most sparing use of description he weaves a vivid tapestry of China at the time .Brilliant