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The Making of a Scholarly Best-seller
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14600 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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5 / 1988 |
6,253 Words |
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Amos Perlmutter Amos Perlmutter is professor of political science at
American University and is the author of thirteen books
dealing with the role of the military in politics, strategy
and the Middle East. He is the author of The Life and Times
of Menachem Begin and is the editor of the Journal of
Strategic Studies. |
How is it that a scholarly, hefty tome weighing in at 540 pages, not to mentioned 80 additional pages of footnotes and bibliography, a book that is squarely aimed at an academic audience and written in a predictably flat style, can become a controversial, talked-about, and widely reviewed popular best-seller?
That's exactly what has happened to Paul Kennedy's new book The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, which appears to have struck a raw nerve not only in intellectuals inclined to accept Kennedy's narrow thesis when it concerns the United States, but also in general readers. This is all passing strange when you consider the work and the author. Kennedy is a professional historian who is on the verge of becoming national celebrity, a familiar face on MacNeil-Lehrer and other political and topical talk shows. Now a Sterling professor of history at Yale, Kennedy had enjoyed a long career as a diplomatic and military historian. He has published Pacific Onslaught, 1941-1943 (1972), and The Samoan Tangle: A Study of Anglo-American Relations, 1878-1900 (1974), neither of which brought him a great deal of fame nor caused any great stir.
His first noticeable success was The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery (1976), followed by an even better book, The Origins of Anglo-American Antagonism, 1870-1914, published in 1978. His career has been a steady, academic one, balancing writing and teaching, and has been basically unheralded, but respected. He has been a historian, whose only contact with practical politics was a brief stint as assistant to military intellectual Basil Liddell-Hart, an armchair strategist and military historian. Yet, today, Kennedy, with the publication of his latest effort, is a regular guest on television,
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