Book description
An impassioned, controversial plea for us to recognise the
importance of writing history - from world-famous historian David Cannadine
David Cannadine is one of Britain's most distinguished
historians and this is his masterpiece. The Undivided Past is
an agonised attempt to understand how so much of the writing of
history has been driven by a fatal desire to dramatize differences
- to create an 'us versus them'. Great works of history have so
often had at their heart a wish to sift people in ways that have been
profoundly damaging and provided the intellectual backing and
justification for terrible political decisions. Again and again,
categories have been found--whether religion, nation, class, gender,
race or 'civilization'--that have sought to explain world events by
fabricating some malevolent or helpless 'other'.
This book is above all an appeal to common humanity. We seem doomed
always to fall (most recently in the wake of 9/11) into the 'us versus
them' trap, but there is no reason why the history we read and write
should not be much better than this and describe what we all have in
common rather than what divides us.
About the author:
Sir David Cannadine is Chair of the National Portrait Gallery, Dodge
Professor of History at Princeton University and General Editor of the
Penguin History of Europe and Penguin History of Britain. He is a
Fellow of the British Academy and the Chair of the Blue Plaques
Committee. His major books include The Rise and Fall of the British
Aristocracy, Ornamentalism and Mellon: A Life. He is
currently writing the Penguin History of Victorian Britain. He
has previously taught at Cambridge, Columbia and London universities.