Preface
Part I: The Rise of the Postwar Consensus
1: Consensus Enforced: Eastern Europe, 1944-1953
2: Consensus of Silence: Western Europe, 1944-1953
Part II: Boom to Bust
3: Golden Years: Western Europe, 1953-1975
4: Catching Up? Eastern Europe, 1953-1975
Part III: Shock Treatment
5: Neo-Liberalism: Western Europe, 1975-1989
6: Gerontocracy: Eastern Europe, 1975-1989
Part IV: The Fall of the Postwar Consensus
7: Consensus Shattered
8: Memory Wars
Conclusion
Notes
Index
Dan Stone is Professor of Modern History at Royal Holloway, University of London. He is a historian of ideas who has written or edited fourteen books on subjects including the Holocaust, genocide, fascism and eugenics, including (as editor) the The Oxford Handbook of Postwar European History (2012).
A valuable contribution to the historiography of the post-war
period.
*H-Net*
... the book's innovative take on the postwar period ... is thus a
worthy companion to Tony Judt's magisterial Postwar (2005). Stone's
emphasis on the centrality of memory politics presents a new way of
thinking about the connections between disparate phenomena, along
with a new set of tools for explaining Europe's troubled
present
*Central European History*
Dan Stone has written the first serious history since Tony Judt of
the continent after 1945
*Robert Gerwarth, Irish Times*
Dan Stone,[is] one of the finest historians of Europe working in
Britain today
*Arne Westad, BBC History Magazine*
...have no fear. Dan Stone is far too fine a historian to see the
past as unlinear and neatly packaged.
*Arne Westad, BBC History Magazine*
... a good historian must, on the basis of detailed knowledge and
sound judgement, define and present the important issues, leaving
"a lot of things" aside. The past six decades of Europe's history,
full of complexities and transformations, imperatively need this
sort of treatment, and they get it in Dan Stone's illuminating and
stimulating book ... One of the book's admirable features is
Stone's ability to devote serious attention, decade by decade, to
both Eastern and Western Europe.
*Times Higher Education*
A well-researched and academic volume.
*Birmingham Jewish Recorder*
Compellingly written.
*Internationale Spectator*
absorbing and provocative
*John Connelly, American Historical Review*
this is a provocative, well-argued, and very readable synthesis
that surely will inspire more debate on how to make sense of the
second half of Europes twentieth century.
*Frank Biess, European History Quarterly*
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