Ferdinand Mount: Big Caesars and Little Caesars
Big Caesars and Little Caesars
Buch
- How They Rise and How They Fall - From Julius Caesar to Boris Johnson
Artikel noch nicht erschienen, voraussichtlicher Liefertermin ist der 7.1.2025.
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Sie können den Titel schon jetzt bestellen. Versand an Sie erfolgt gleich nach Verfügbarkeit.
EUR 13,56*
- Bloomsbury UK, 01/2025
- Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert, Paperback
- Sprache: Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781399409728
- Bestellnummer: 11615472
- Umfang: 304 Seiten
- Sonstiges: 8 pages of in-text black and white illustrations
- Gewicht: 454 g
- Maße: 198 x 129 mm
- Stärke: 25 mm
- Erscheinungstermin: 7.1.2025
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Weitere Ausgaben von Big Caesars and Little Caesars
Klappentext
'Wry, informative but deadly - a great book'Will Hutton
'Fast-paced and impassioned'
Sunday Telegraph
Who said that dictatorship was dead? The world today is full of Strong Men and their imitators. A fascinating exploration of how and why Caesars seized power and why they fell.
There is a comforting illusion shared by historians and political commentators, that history progresses in a nice straight line towards liberal democracy or socialism, despite the odd hiccup.
Every democracy, however sophisticated or stable it may look, has been attacked or actually destroyed by a would-be Caesar, from Ancient Greece to the present day. Marx was wrong. Caesarism is not an absurd throwback, it is an ever-present danger.
There are Big Caesars who set out to achieve total social control and Little Caesars who merely want to run an agreeable kleptocracy without opposition: from Julius Caesar and Oliver Cromwell through Napoleon and Bolivar, to Mussolini, Salazar, De Gaulle and Trump. The saga of Boris Johnson and Brexit is a vivid, if Lilliputian instance of the same phenomenon.
The final part of this book describes how and why would-be Caesars come to grief, from the Gunpowder Plot to Trump's march on the Capitol and the ejection of Boris Johnson by his own MPs, and ends with a defence of the grubby glories of parliamentary politics.