Facts are Subversive: Political Writing from a Decade without a Name

Facts are Subversive: Political Writing from a Decade without a Name

by Timothy Garton Ash (Author)

Synopsis

For more than thirty years, Timothy Garton Ash has traveled among truth tellers and political charlatans to record, with scalpel-sharp precision, what he has found. Facts are Subversive, which collects his writings since the millennium, addresses some of the crucial questions of our time: what happens to people who have endured long dictatorships when they try to found a democratic state? How can freedom from tyranny be won? How are free expression, equality before the law and equal rights for men and women sustained in a society of different faiths and ethnicities? This is history of the present on a scale by turns panoramic and human: urgent, exhilarating and necessary.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 464
Edition: Main - Print on Demand
Publisher: Atlantic Books
Published: 01 Mar 2010

ISBN 10: 1848870914
ISBN 13: 9781848870918
Book Overview: 'Timothy Garton Ash is the best and most perceptive political writer of our time, and this book is a wonderful distillation of his thoughts on an extraordinary range of subjects. They were excellent as individual essays; put together like this, they shine the clearest of lights on an entire decade.' John Simpson

Media Reviews
What sets Garton Ash apart is that he never loses sight of the bigger European picture... he remains the best Anglophone observer of contemporary Europe. -- Niall Ferguson * Evening Standard *
Timothy Garton Ash holds a mirror that magnifies... He writes masterfully and with compassion. -- Neal Ascherson * Observer *
Author Bio
Timothy Garton Ash is the author of eight books of political writing - 'history of the present' - which have charted the transformation of Europe over the last three decades. He is Professor of European Studies at the University of Oxford, where he is Isaiah Berlin Professorial Fellow at St Antony's College, and a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. His essays appear regularly in the New York Review of Books and his weekly column for the Guardian is widely syndicated across Europe, Asia and the Americas. He has received many awards for his writing, including the Somerset Maugham Award and the Orwell Prize.