The sources of social power

English language

Published May 10, 2012

ISBN:
978-1-107-61041-5
Copied ISBN!

View on Inventaire

(4 reviews)

7 editions

"several weaknesses piled on top of each other"

No rating

Continuing on with Mann's history of it all. He seems to have finished vols. 3 and 4 simultaneously but divided up the resulting Monster Fun Book into two, sort of like Brendan Sanderson partitioning the last Wheel of Time, except the patriarchal authoritarians with the messianic ideology don't win in Mann's 1890–1945 story. Ha ha! I am funny!

Mann continues to be lovely to read, though in going through this volume I kept finding myself saying "ruh-roh" as some element of the fascist ascent that had an obvious parallel in our time fell into place. Mann is darkly convincing about fascism as a distinctive, and distinctively effective, modern phenomenon, which came with a compelling ideology of renewal, dealt ruthlessly and successfully with its political opponents (including the old-regime conservatives who thought they could manipulate the fascists), and used militarism effectively both in war and as an economic policy. In Mann's …

The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggle and a bunch of other things too and sometimes not class struggle actually

No rating

Content warning Why there is no socialism in the USA, why World War I happened

avatar for TimMason

rated it