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File Size: 6647 KB

Print Length: 370 pages

Publisher: Simon & Schuster (May 31, 2007)

Publication Date: May 31, 2007

Language: English

ASIN: B000R1BAH4

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#79,866 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

Must read to understand how the world works now. A little too long-winded. The original article by the other in "Foreign Affairs" is also available on Amazon, is a more concise read and covers all the main points equally memorably to this book.

In 2018, some of the ideas in this book will without a doubt be more controversial than ever, given that frank acknowledgements of problems caused by cultural differences has become taboo in some forums. The book is a greatly expanded and elaborated version of the author’s 1993 “Foreign Affairs” article of the same title (which can be accessed at the Foreign Affairs website via paywall.)The central themes of the book are that culture and cultural identities (what he calls “civilization identities”) shape the patterns of cohesion, disintegration, and conflict in the post-Cold War world; that clashes between these are the greatest threat to world peace; and that an international order based on civilizations is the surest safeguard against world war. In the author’s own words: “In the emerging world of ethnic conflict and civilizational clash, Western belief in the universality of Western culture is false, immoral, and dangerous…The common Western assumption that cultural diversity is a historical curiosity being rapidly eroded by the growth of a common, Western oriented, Anglophone world culture, shaping our basic values...is simply not true.”Professor Huntington’s model divides the world into nine “civilizations,” a model he acknowledges is not perfect, but better explains the world’s international difficulties than the most prevalent alternative models: 1) “One World—Euphoria and Harmony;” 2) “Two Worlds-Us and Them;” 3) “184 States, More or Less;” and 4) Sheer Chaos.” He suggests that the “civilizational” aspects of the world’s divisions were briefly thrown into the shade by the bipolar nature of the Cold War and the sometimes forced choosing of sides it required. This was written around 25 years ago, not too long after the end of the Cold War; it is interesting to see how accurately his world model explains the state of the world and the way in which certain choices (especially in the West) seem to be trending toward his predicted end states.While I believe that Huntington largely avoids unfounded value judgements, some of his observations will certainly be considered controversial by many who seem to be in the ascendant these days (2018) in the Western political climate. One of these is his observation, supported by data, that “fault line” conflicts (those occurring across civilizational boundaries) are vastly more prevalent across the Muslim/non-Muslim divide than they are across any other world cultural boundary (remembering he considers that there are NINE cultures in the world). He offers some suggestive data supporting this observation, and offers some possible explanations for it. Despite some hostile reviews I read, it is important to note that Huntington himself does not push any particular conclusions—these are offered as POSSIBLE explanations.A second observation is the undesirability and absurdity of the “multicultural state,” an assertion that seems to go directly against current Western trends being propelled by Western liberal elites. From p305:- “Historically American national identity has been defined culturally by the heritage of Western civilization, and politically by the principles of the American Creed on which Americans overwhelmingly agree: liberty, democracy, individualism, equality before the law, constitutionalism, private property. In the late 20th century, both components…have come under concentrated and sustained onslaught from a small but influential number of intellectuals and publicists. In the name of multiculturalism they have attacked the identification of the US with Western civilization, denied the existence of a common American culture, and promoted racial, ethnic, and other sub-national cultural identities and groupings. They have denounced…the systematic bias toward European culture and its derivatives in education and the dominance of the European-American monocultural perspective. [These people are] very often ethnocentric separatists who see little in the Western heritage other than Western crimes. Their mood is one of divesting Americans of the sinful European inheritance and seeking redemptive infusions from non-Western cultures."He quotes Theodore Roosevelt (p306): "The one absolutely certain way of bringing this nation to ruin, of preventing all possibility of its continuing as a nation at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities." He then observes that in the 1990s, the leaders of the US have not only permitted this but assiduously promoted the diversity rather than the unity of the people they govern. Further (p307): "The clash between the multiculturalists and the defenders of Western civilization and the American Creed is the real clash within the American segment of Western civilization...the futures of the US and of the West depend upon Americans reaffirming their commitment to Western civilization. Domestically this means rejecting the divisive siren calls of multiculturalism. Internationally it means rejecting the elusive and illusory calls to identify the US with Asia."Important to note is that Huntington does not reject the other world cultures he describes. His two simple assertions are that 1) Western values are not universal; and 2) There can be no such thing as a successful “multicultural civilization.” Any state that attempts this becomes what he describes as a “cleft state,” riven with internal conflict. Huntington does readily acknowledge the utility of immigration (p304): “Immigration is a potential source of invigoration for the West, provided that: 1) Priority is given to able, qualified, energetic people with the talents and expertise needed by the host country; 2) The new migrants and their children are assimilated into the host culture.” Unfortunately, neither of these is happening in the West, especially in Europe.Huntington concludes with a recipe for peace in a multicivilizational world, containing three rules (p316):1) Abstention rule: "In the coming era...the avoidance of major intercivilizational wars requires core states to refrain from intervening in conflicts in other civilizations."2) Joint mediation rule: "Core states negotiate with each other to contain or to halt fault line wars between states or groups from their civilizations."3) Commonalities rule: "Peoples in all civilizations should search for and attempt to expand the values, institutions, and practices they have in common with peoples of other civilizations." (This is NOT multiculturalism as “practiced” today!)Some interesting observations and speculations:1) (p53-54): The great political ideologies of the 20th century are all products of Western civilization. No non-Western civilization has generated a significant political ideology. The West, however, has never generated a major religion; these are all products of non-Western civilizations, and in most cases predate it…As the world moves out of its Western phase, religious and cultural means of identification and commitment are replacing ideologies. Separation of religion and politics will be increasingly replaced by intrusion of religion into international affairs.”2) (p78) Modernization without Westernization is quite possible and has been done. (Japan was one of the best early examples.) The challenges of modernizing pale beside those of replacing an indigenous culture with a Western one. The world is becoming more modern and less Western.3) (p90) The text states that military spending has drastically declined in the West and in Russia since the end of the Cold War. This is clearly no longer true in the US.4) (p94): Adoption of Western style democracy by non-Western societies is a paradox, as it gives power to nativist and anti-Western political movements. Democratization is inherently a parochializing and not a cosmopolitanizing influence. "Politicians in non-Western societies do not win elections by demonstrating how Western they are."5) (p112) The core elements in most revolutionary movements are students and intellectuals. He further demonstrates how peaks in certain civil disturbances worldwide correlate with peaks in the 15-24 year old age groups in those places.6) Torn countries are those belonging to one civilization, but trying to join another. This process always seems to fail. Turkey is an excellent example, ultimately rejected by Europe. It is interesting that EU reluctance to embrace Turkey at the time was due to fears of opening its borders to unrestricted immigration from a Muslim nation of 60 million. EU (at least the governing elites’) policy on embracing immigration seems to have changed. The immigration aspect is discussed further starting on p200.7) An interesting factoid (p203): “In 1994, the Clinton Administration, reversing its earlier stance, moved to toughen immigration controls, tighten rules governing political asylum, expand the INS, strengthen the Border Patrol, and construct physical barriers along the Mexican boundary.”8) (p166) There is interesting discussion about the cleft nature of Ukraine, and its ethnic distribution, predictive of a split (25 years ago!).As a final note, I have to wonder why, with so much text devoted to discussion of the Islamic / non-Islamic civilizational problem, the author is almost completely silent on Israel, and never even mentions which civilization he would assign it to. His “post-1990” map shading shows it as Islamic, despite his meticulous shading of other very small areas such as Hong Kong, the Philippines, and the Falkland Islands.

There may be some confusion regarding this book and another with a similar title published at the same time, so let me first clarify things. In 1993 Professor Samuel P. Huntington wrote an article entitled "The Clash of Civilizations?" in Foreign Affairs Magazine. This article generated a considerable amount of interest and criticism and two follow-up books. Professor Huntington expanded his original thesis into a book "The Clash of Civilizations" which was published in 1996. At the same time, his original article, along with 7 critical responses and a rebuttal of this criticism by Professor Huntington was also published. The book being reviewed here is the book containing these critical articles, hence the term debate in the title.Huntington's thesis is that future international conflicts will be based mostly on cultural lines, resulting in a clash of civilizations, with a very important one being the clash between the civilization of Islam and the West. Seven distinguished professors and journalists, namely; Fouad Ajami, Kishore Mahbubani, Robert L. Bartley, Liu Binyan, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, Albert L. Weeks, and Gerard Piel, wrote the critical articles contained in this book. As noted, the book also contains the original article and a rebuttal to these seven articles. It is important to read other viewpoints and these articles make an important counterpoint to Huntington's book and should be read along with it.Be forewarned however, this book is only 67 pages long, of which 25 pages are taken up with Professor Huntington's original article, with an additional 12 pages allotted to his rebuttal of the criticism leveled against it. Most of the critical articles are very sketchy and very short. One of the articles is only a single page long, one is only two pages long, two are four pages long and two are five pages long. This leaves only that by Fouad Ajami, which at ten pages is long enough to develop its criticism. If you already have the book that expands upon the original article, you will be getting relatively little new material for your money. If you have neither book, this (the debate book) is a nice place to start since it provides the original article and opposing views. Then, if you are sufficiently interested in more, you can get the book containing the expanded version of Professor Huntington's ideas. It would have been nice if both books could have been combined, but this was not possible as there are different publishers for each.

The Clash of Civilizations became a key book in the discussion of future American Foreign Policy for all the right reasons. Huntington's argument is well-constructed and his predictions proved very prescient. Huntington could have coordinated with a psychologist or socialogist to right a second book discussing identity theory to bolster his argument but his work stands on its own as work of political science. I found his discussion of the Bosnian War interesting, as the war happened while I was still a child. He predicted the current crisis in Ukraine and described Russia's strategy with remarkable clarity. In his work, Huntington hypothesizes that the relative distribution of power and source of identity after the Cold War will spread to the 9 centers of civilization he describes in his book. The resulting shift will make the next century one of "fault line wars" between the civilization.

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Sabtu, 08 September 2018

Free PDF , by Thomas Asbridge

Free PDF , by Thomas Asbridge

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, by Thomas Asbridge

, by Thomas Asbridge


, by Thomas Asbridge


Free PDF , by Thomas Asbridge

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, by Thomas Asbridge

Product details

File Size: 21136 KB

Print Length: 804 pages

Publisher: HarperCollins e-books; Reprint edition (March 13, 2010)

Publication Date: March 30, 2010

Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

Language: English

ASIN: B003C2SP6E

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#124,976 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

Entertaining popular history but has some shortcomings that deprived it of a star. The first 500 pages or so cover the first three Crusades. This is where the book really excels. It goes into great detail about these Crusades, not just the military movements but the political, social and religious factors and personalities that influenced the events. And it pays attention to both sides of the conflicts in a fair and even-handed way. If it had continued on in this fashion, it would have rated 4 to 4.5 stars but unfortunately the later Crusades and collateral conflicts aren't dealt with in the same way. The Fourth Crusade gets a few pages, the anti-heretic "Crusades" in Europe are brushed off in a paragraph or two, interesting side tales like the Children's Crusade get a sentence. The short treatment of some of these topics also derails some of the author's sweeping pronouncements. For example, he mentions several times that Pope Gregory (I forget which one) had an outsize impact on crusading and changed the way it was viewed, but after one or two pages of hearing about how this Pope would change the historic nature of the Crusades, we are told that he died before his envisioned crusade was even launched. Similar sweeping pronouncements are made about other people and events without the details to back these claims up. It reads as if the author wanted to write a comprehensive one-volume history but realized that the book would run too long so he cut the second half to make it fit.

This book is, as it's subtitle says, is THE authoritative history. It is thoroughly researched and documented. As ridge does an excellent job of taking an immense field of knowledge and relating it in a way that is very readable, extremely thorough, and keenly analytical. He goes well beyond merely relating the raw facts. He weaves a narrative that includes background information about what was going on behind the battlefields and between the crusades themselves. He eschews the simplistic views of villains and victors and shows the major characters as human beings with strengths and weaknesses, with virtues and vices.Asbridge also avoids a binary "Crusaders vs Muslims" caricature. He shows that both sides struggled with multinational intrigue and interior machinations. He includes forces that are outside the "two" major players in the arena.As I read, I was constantly thinking of parallels in current events. Leaders who do well in some arenas but fail in others. Popular generals who meet natural forces that overwhelm their skills. The challenge of juggling logistics, tactics, strategy, morale, health, weather, popular opinion, regal and papal pressure, and more are clearly set before the reader.This work appealed to both me (a PhD) and my brother-in-law who is a high school graduate. This speaks to the readable scholarship that Asbridge offers. Her illuminates history in a way that makes clear the shadows that it casts on today. He offers, to all who are willing to read this, an antidote to the poisons that are concocted by those who would manipulate distorted views of the past to empower warping of current events. If you want one work that will answer the question, "What were the Crusades about?," then this is it.

A good, readable history of The Crusades has escaped me to this point, for whatever reason. I was very excited when Tynerman's God's War was released a few years ago, and quickly became disenchanted when I tried slogging through it and realized what a boringly-written brick it was. Couldn't finish it. Runciman's classic volumes, which have been the definitive essential reading for half a century now, are still valid, entertaining reads but have been long since over-taken by newer evidence and much fresher, more-encompassing interpretations. As a read, they're still great fun. As good history, they're quite biased and lacking today.So, when I saw a shiny new tome promising a complete revisiting of long-held assumptions, I couldn't resist. Asbridge's chronology is straightforward; starting with a quick survey of Islam's rise and subsequent takeover of the Christian Holy Land, he moves to Europe to set the scene of the medieval papacy and nascent western kingships that would bring about the concept of Crusading. In a nice touch, he continues to revisit the contemporary meanings, definitions and assumptions behind crusading as it developed from an event without even a name ("crusading" was a later appellation) to the currently-understood form. From these basics, he moves us through each of the main five Crusades, deftly describing the expected peoples, places, and battles. He strikes a good balance between talking about the most important figures and key battles versus the less-glamorous but as-important topics such as trade and societal makeup that, while harder to make exciting, are very important when trying to gain a full understanding of the events.Very crucially, he spends as much time covering the Arab viewpoint as he does the Christian. He also properly gives notice to the fact that, while western sources are fairly voluminous by the standards of the era, the Crusades just didn't have a major impact on the Muslim world at the time, and therefore sources from the Muslim POV are much less available. That said, he does an admirable job of situating the reader as best he can in the Muslim frame of mind during each crusade, giving admirable detail on outside pressures that might've existed, any internal dynastic or civil events that had bearing on their interactions with the Crusaders... other histories I've read of this era often fall flat in this particular regard.He closes with an excellent overview of how the Crusades have themselves been viewed throughout history, both in the West and in the Muslim World; this may have been my favorite part of the book as it's not a topic I've ever seen covered before, much less so well.The writing style is nice and lively as well. It reads almost like a strong historical fiction narrative, a testament not only to the author's skill but to the inherent drama of the period.BOTTOM LINE: This will be my only answer for anyone asking for a recommendation on the period for probably years to come.

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