A World on Edge

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20th century
A01=Daniel Schoenpflug
A01=Daniel Schonpflug
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Author_Daniel Schoenpflug
Author_Daniel Schonpflug
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Battlefield to society
battlefields
Bauhaus
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Category=HBLW
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Cultural renaissance
Cultural revolution
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European political change
First World War
Great War
historical
Historical analysis
Historical upheaval
history
History buff present
History teacher appreciation
Interwar period reconstruction
Kaiser William
Language_English
Modernist movement 1918
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Post Great War society
post war
Postwar Europe
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Remembrance day reading
Remembrance poppy movement
Revolutionary ideals
Social transformation Europe
Societal rebirth Europe
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Thoughtful memorial gift
trenches
Veterans Day gift idea
Wartime transformation
world history
World War 1
World War I aftermath 1918
WW1

Product details

  • ISBN 9781509818518
  • Weight: 230g
  • Dimensions: 130 x 196mm
  • Publication Date: 16 May 2019
  • Publisher: Pan Macmillan
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Moving and inspired book ... An evocative and deeply affecting requiem for what might have been.' - Douglas Smith, author of Rasputin and Former People

A World on Edge reveals Europe in 1918, left in ruins by World War I. But with the end of hostilities, a radical new start seems not only possible, but essential, even unavoidable. Unorthodox ideas light up the age like the comets that have recently passed overhead: new politics, new societies, new art and culture, new thinking. The struggle to determine the future has begun.

The sculptor Käthe Kollwitz, whose son died in the war, was translating sorrow and loss into art. Ho Chi Minh was working as a dishwasher in Paris and dreaming of liberating Vietnam, his homeland. Captain Harry S. Truman was running a men’s haberdashery in Kansas City, hardly expecting that he was about to go bankrupt – and later become president of the United States. Professor Moina Michael was about to invent the 'remembrance poppy', a symbol of sacrifice that will stand for generations to come. Meanwhile Virginia Woolf had just published her first book and was questioning whether that sacrifice was worth it, while the artist George Grosz was so revolted by the violence on the streets of Berlin that he decides everything is meaningless. For rulers and revolutionaries, a world of power and privilege was dying – while for others, a dream of overthrowing democracy was being born.

With novelistic virtuosity, historian Daniel Schönpflug describes this watershed year as it was experienced on the ground – open ended, unfathomable, its outcome unclear. Told from the vantage points of people, famous and ordinary, good and evil, who lived through the turmoil and combining a multitude of acutely observed details, Schönpflug composes a brilliantly conceived panorama of a world suspended between enthusiasm and disappointment, and of a moment in which the window of opportunity was suddenly open, only to quickly close shut once again.

Dr Daniel Schönpflug was born in 1969, and is a guest lecturer at the Free University, Berlin, and the academic coordinator at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (WIKO). He specializes in European history from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries, focusing on social and cultural history. Alongside his research, teaching and academic management work, he has also been successful in bringing history to a wider public and has co-authored scripts for docu-dramas broadcast on German national television, as well as writing A World on Edge.

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