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Marc Ferro (1924–2021)

Author of Nicholas II: Last of the Tsars

78+ Works 1,088 Members 18 Reviews

About the Author

Marc Ferro is Director of Studies in Social Sciences at the cole des Hautes tudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris

Series

Works by Marc Ferro

Nicholas II: Last of the Tsars (1990) 200 copies, 2 reviews
The Great War 1914-1918 (1969) 196 copies, 2 reviews
Le livre noir du colonialisme (2003) 72 copies, 1 review
The Russian Revolution of February 1917 (1967) — Author — 60 copies, 1 review
Histoire des colonisations (1994) 49 copies
Les tabous de l'Histoire (2000) 36 copies
Histoire de France (2001) 23 copies
Pétain (1987) — Author — 23 copies
Ils étaient sept hommes en guerre (2007) 19 copies, 1 review
Resentment in History (2007) 17 copies, 2 reviews
Le Choc de l'Islam (2002) — Author — 14 copies
Suez - 1956 (1982) 6 copies
La vérité sur la tragédie des Romanov (2012) — Author — 4 copies
Des grandes invasions à l'an mille (2007) — Author — 2 copies
VERSOS QUE NO MUERDEN(O SI)Cazacosas (2014) — Author — 2 copies
O SÉCULO XX 2 copies
Revivre l'histoire. Autour d'Histoire parallèle (1995) — Author — 2 copies
Kinder und Werte (2001) 2 copies
ross lovegrove/catalogue de l'exposition (2017) — Editor — 1 copy
Șapte lideri în război — Author — 1 copy
LE STYLE LOUIS XV. LA GRAMMAIRE DES STYLES (2012) — Editor — 1 copy
Une histoire du Rhin (1981) 1 copy
Culture et révolution (1989) 1 copy
L'Ancien Régime (2008) 1 copy

Associated Works

I Paid Hitler (1940) — Preface, some editions — 34 copies, 1 review
Faire de l'histoire. Tome 1 : Nouveaux problèmes (1974) — Contributor — 22 copies, 1 review
Revolutionary Russia: A Symposium (1968) — Contributor — 15 copies
Hitler et Staline. Vies parallèles, tome 1 (1991) — Preface, some editions — 7 copies
Hitler et Staline. Vies parallèles. tome 2 (1991) — Preface, some editions — 6 copies
Normandie 44 (Histoire) (French Edition) (1987) — Contributor — 4 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

Tells of the events leading up to the Russian Revolution of 1917.
½
 
Flagged
FoxTribeMama | 1 other review | Sep 20, 2016 |
This is a good, weird one: the project is looking at children's history textbooks to see how national history is presented to kids in various countries. It has that kind of Sorbonne-lecturey French social sciences style where you can imagine Ferro not preparing notes or anythng but just going into class, yawning mightily, and paging through the book in front of the students: "Let's see what we have here ... Armenia, well, this is a nice cover ... according to this Armenia is the oldest Christian nation in the world. In the world!" There's something Socratic about that, I think.

In addition to Armenia, we visit South Africa (whitewashed history), "Black Africa" (not savages!) India (seduces her conquerors), Trinidad (the world's first multicultural utopia), the Arab world (would have been top kings of earth, because Islam is wins, if not for that Euroimperialism [because Islam is loses???]), Iran (has kept its nobility through good times and tough), Turkey (Attila made the trains run on time), Spain (the first large-writ "civilizing mission"), Nazi Germany (Zivilisation v. Kultur, the Aryan nation v. the "Eternal Jew," all the usual filthy binaries), France (rationalism and revolution, united by the gloire thing), the UK (the reluctant hero, making the world safe for commerce, forever defeating the Eternal Continental) the Soviet Union (permanent revolution in the teaching of history to match the ideological exigencies of the day, within a framework of dialectical laws of progress and pan-Slavism), Poland (outperforming against the odds, shooting themselves in the foot, and--during the communist era--getting by anyway with a little help from the Warsaw Pact), China (despots and brave peasants, in the seat of civilization--or in the Kuomintang perspective, despots and brave generals, peasants being the field upon which they mark out their ambition), Japan (exceptional always, sometimes because of its ability to adapt to anything, other times because of its Wa-purity, always because of the emperor, who connects we simple Nihonjin to the sun), the US (a shifting normal--never any talk about internal conflicts or competing interests, but moving from an implicit "American = brave pioneers" to "= WASP elite" to "and let's not forget the Irish! They are also white!" to "=regular kids like you in a house on the prairie where history is nothing but locusts and steam trains and there's no such thing as social issues), the Latino world (here's your history of communities and social conflicts. I'm so glad these guys are taking over America again) to the Australian aborigines (everything that happens disappears, but if you know how to look you can see the traces, across the land, in the stars) and Europe during World War II (the Germans try to equivocate Hiroshima or Dresden with the Holocaust, the Russians remind us that they won the thing and intimate that they were basically fighting the Western Allies, those snakes, as well, the English go "'tweren't nothing. Fair play. All in the line of," etc. etc. etc. etc. etc., and the French shuffle uneasily and fixate on the Resistance, and everyone ignores the other resistances, in the Nordic countries, in Italy (apparently the largest and most effective of all!) except, presumably, for the people in those countries themselves. Ferro's a desultory but agreeable host, and this is undisciplined but diverting pop academia, good for a sunny dock.
… (more)
½
2 vote
Flagged
MeditationesMartini | 3 other reviews | May 17, 2013 |
Ferro reviews a range of histories—narratives about heroes, resistance, liberation, greatness and decline, resurgence and progress—that nations tell of and to themselves. These narratives are the foundations of identity and community in today's world, and the juxtapositions are enlightening: the ‘white history’ of Johannesburg or the U.S. v. the ‘decolonized black history’ of Africa and ‘forbidden Chicano history’; Persian, Turkish and Arab versions of Middle East history; pre- and post-ideological history in China and Russia; decentered history in India, coded history in Japan, and victory-in-defeat in Poland and Armenia. Omissions are as telling as the emphases, notes Ferro, and there can be no such thing as a universal History.… (more)
 
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HectorSwell | 3 other reviews | Feb 20, 2011 |
it was very detailed and made you wonder if one of the girls survived. this gave you a new theory on how one of them could have survived. it really made you wonder.
 
Flagged
lee123 | 1 other review | Oct 16, 2007 |

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Works
78
Also by
7
Members
1,088
Popularity
#23,609
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
18
ISBNs
200
Languages
15

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