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About the Author

Includes the names: Tom Stacey, Tom Editor Stacey

Series

Works by Tom Stacey

Exile (2015) 22 copies, 1 review
Peoples of the Earth: 03. Europe (1977) 17 copies, 2 reviews
THE WORM IN THE ROSE (1985) 8 copies
Deadline (1988) 5 copies
A Dark and Stormy Night (2018) 2 copies
The Pandemonium (1980) 2 copies
Jordens folk. Anderna (1982) 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1930-01-11
Gender
male
Education
Eton College
Worcester College, Oxford University
Occupations
screenwriter
Foreign Correspondent
Short biography
Tom Stacey is the author of seven novels. Winner of the John Llewelyn Rhys prize, for many years he doubled his life as a novelist and travel writer with that of a roving correspondent, winning the Foreign Correspondent of the Year Award in 1961.
Nationality
United Kingdom
Birthplace
London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
London, England, UK

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
An outdated edition of European cultures ... but this way the book becomes useful for history, and not just cultural studies, capturing customs and attitudes as they were in 1973, which simply fascinates me. I love the pictures, and the intimate descriptions and stories of people as they were and probably no longer are or ever will be. After 35 years of globalization, I know nothing will ever be the same--quaint, cute, and endearing (I say this partly with tongue-in-cheek)--but Peoples of show more the Earth recognizes that, identifying changes that have already taken place even apart from America's influence. At the same time, it inspires faith in the lasting power of identity and tradition, because no matter how many ideas are borrowed from the dominating (world) culture, human creativity and originality imposes its own twists and styles, making it, again, all its own. show less
Begins with a two-page essay by Arnold Toynbee asking "What is a Nation?" Nationalism, the opposite of ecumenicalism in its secular and religious forms, is described as a "western ideological infection" outlasting "the west's material domination". I don't know what that even means. Toynbee does acknowledge that "Today, nationalism is about 90 per cent of the religion of about 90 per cent of the human race". [8a]

But how did the concept of nationhood arise? All is paradoxical. For example, show more the framework of English nationhood was cobbled up by the kings of Wessex after the Romans withdrew from Britain. Normans invaded. Shortly thereafter, "English people" emerged as a nation in a late medieval period.

Few "nations" are linguistically homogenous. German-speaking Alsatians think of themselves as French. Among the Swiss, four languages, including Romansch, enjoy official status.

This book documents the nations of Europe, geographically, and with photographs and essays. The fact of nationalism, potent and disruptive, is ventilated on these pages. Lots of demographic and political information in the attributed essays.

In this series of 20 volumes, from which the "tribe" of Jews is omitted, the volume for Europe, is blighted by ideological bias. The book perpetuates the myth that life was better in Moscow under communism than under the Romanov reforms.[21]
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A pair of brothers exploring, a fatal attack, Echoes in the night that look like men, and a great war, are the underlying themes for this novel. Yet there is so much more going on it will almost take your breath away trying to comprehend it all. The characters are solid and carry the story with power. Their lives interact masterfully allowing the story to flow off the page into your imagination. I would recommend this book to anyone who likes fantasy, war, science fiction, or character show more driven story. show less

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
43
Also by
1
Members
231
Popularity
#97,642
Rating
½ 2.7
Reviews
3
ISBNs
43
Languages
5

Charts & Graphs