Regular price$24.00With free membership trial$12.0050% off your first book+ Free shipping
In Stock– Ships within one business day
Do you recommend this book?
Yes!
No
"Imaginative, original--wittily written."--The Washington Post Book World To some, England has long represented tolerance, reason, and political moderation. To others, it is a moribund bastion of snobbery and outdated tradition. In this lively and diverting social history, noted author Ian Buruma, himself the son of Dutch immigrants to England, provides an incisive look at anglophilia--and anglophobia--over the last two centuries. From passionate enthusiasts like Voltaire and Goethe, to exiles like Garibaldi and Herzen, to colorful England-bashers like Napoleon, Marx, and Kaiser Wilhelm II, Anglomania gives a sharply satirical account of Europe's sometimes comical, sometimes deadly prejudices, and explains why England's individuality and her relationship with Europe is still vitally important as we enter the twenty-first century.
Book Details
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publish Date: Apr 11st, 2000
Pages: 320
Language: English
Edition: undefined - undefined
Dimensions: 8.00in - 5.19in - 0.67in - 0.72lb
EAN: 9780375705366
Categories: • Europe - Great Britain - General• Social History
About the Author
Ian Buruma is a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Institute for the Humanities in Washington, D.C.
Praise for this book
"Mr. Buruma's fluency--the ease and erudition with which he mixes anecdote, personal reminiscence and reportage--should not disguise the seriousness of his book--. Readable and intelligent."--The Economist "[Buruma's] own and his family's story is artfully woven through the various tales of Anglomania, making this both a memoir and a work of intellectual history."--The New York Times Book Review