Thoughts Among the Ruins: Collected Essays on Europe and BeyondTransaction Publishers - 492 pages |
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Page xxiv
... practice , failed , but this had the paradoxically beneficial effect of freeing theory from practice , thought from action , and of enabling the independent Marxist to revert to the contemplative disposition which Marx believed he had ...
... practice , failed , but this had the paradoxically beneficial effect of freeing theory from practice , thought from action , and of enabling the independent Marxist to revert to the contemplative disposition which Marx believed he had ...
Page 11
... practicing highway robbery . Some of his more strident perorations of those years have become famous ; they hardly sound like the later Churchill with whom we are familiar , except for their style . Certainly the abuse he poured on the ...
... practicing highway robbery . Some of his more strident perorations of those years have become famous ; they hardly sound like the later Churchill with whom we are familiar , except for their style . Certainly the abuse he poured on the ...
Page 18
... practice of adjourning for the Derby . In those days the glittering parties at Landsdowne House , Devonshire House or Stafford House comprised all the elements which made a gay and splendid social circle in close relation to the ...
... practice of adjourning for the Derby . In those days the glittering parties at Landsdowne House , Devonshire House or Stafford House comprised all the elements which made a gay and splendid social circle in close relation to the ...
Page 39
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Page 56
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Contents
3 | |
V | 29 |
VI | 53 |
VII | 69 |
VIII | 83 |
IX | 90 |
X | 96 |
XI | 104 |
XXX | 234 |
XXXI | 247 |
XXXII | 255 |
XXXIII | 257 |
XXXIV | 275 |
XXXVI | 294 |
XXXVII | 300 |
XXXVIII | 309 |
XII | 111 |
XIII | 115 |
XIV | 117 |
XV | 128 |
XVI | 134 |
XVII | 150 |
XVIII | 156 |
XIX | 163 |
XX | 173 |
XXI | 175 |
XXII | 192 |
XXIII | 200 |
XXIV | 206 |
XXV | 213 |
XXVI | 218 |
XXVII | 221 |
XXVIII | 223 |
XXIX | 229 |
XXXIX | 316 |
XL | 330 |
XLI | 335 |
XLII | 337 |
XLIII | 348 |
XLIV | 355 |
XLV | 368 |
XLVI | 394 |
XLVII | 406 |
XLVIII | 411 |
XLIX | 413 |
L | 458 |
LI | 477 |
LII | 483 |
LIII | 486 |
LIV | 490 |
Other editions - View all
Thoughts Among the Ruins: Collected Essays on Europe and Beyond George Lichtheim No preview available - 1973 |
Common terms and phrases
affairs American anti-Semitism attitude become Bolshevik Bolshevism bourgeois Britain British capitalism Catholic century Christian Churchill civil Communism Communist conservative critical democracy democratic dialectic dialectical materialism dictatorship doctrine economic Empire Engels essay Europe European Fabians fact faith followers France French French Revolution Gaulle Gaullists George German Hegel Hegelian historian Hitler human Ibid ideology imperial important individual industrial intellectual Jacobin Jewish Jewish emancipation Jews kind labor movement later Lenin Leninist less liberal London Marx Marx's Marxian Marxist matter Mensheviks ment modern moral nationalist never Nietzsche October Revolution original Paris party perhaps philosophy political problem Professor proletariat Proudhon radical reader reason regime Revolution revolutionary role Russian Sartre Sartre's seems sense Simone Weil social socialist society Sorel Soviet Stalin Stalinist theme theory thing thinking thought tion topic Tory tradition Trotsky turn Western workers writings
Popular passages
Page 76 - That the established Government has no more right to call itself the State than the smoke of London has to call itself the weather. That we had rather face a Civil War than such another century of suffering as the present one has been.
Page 7 - No truce or parley mitigated the strife of the armies. The wounded died between the lines: the dead mouldered into the soil. Merchant ships and neutral ships and hospital ships were sunk on the seas and all on board left to their fate, or killed as they swam. Every effort was made to starve whole nations into submission without regard to age or sex.
Page 17 - My dear Winston,' replied the old Victorian statesman, 'the experiences of a long life have convinced me that nothing ever happens.
Page 138 - With some over-simplification, one might thus say that 'classes' are stratified according to their relations to the production and acquisition of goods; whereas 'status groups' are stratified according to the principles of their consumption of goods as represented by special 'styles of life.
Page 107 - Having been an Imperialist, I became during those five minutes a pro-Boer and a Pacifist. Having for years cared only for exactness and analysis, I found myself filled with semimystical feelings about beauty, with an intense interest in children, and with a desire almost as profound as that of the Buddha to find some philosophy which should make human life endurable.
Page 18 - The leading figures of Society were in many cases the leading statesmen in Parliament, and also the leading sportsmen on the Turf. Lord Salisbury was accustomed scrupulously to avoid calling a Cabinet when there was racing at Newmarket, and the House of Commons made a practice of adjourning for the Derby.