Editorial Penguin UK
Fecha de edición octubre 2012 · Edición nº 1
Idioma inglés
EAN 9781846146626
Libro
encuadernado en tapa blanda
From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of "Gulag" comes a major new work of historical and moral reckoning: the story of life behind the Iron Curtain. Once the Nazis were defeated in 1945, the people of Central and Eastern Europe expected to recover the lives they had led before 1939. Instead, they found themselves subjected to a tyranny that was in many ways as inhuman as the one which they had just escaped.
This book explains how Communism was imposed on these previously free societies in the decade after the end of the Second World War. Applebaum describes, in calm but devastating detail, how political parties, the church, the media, young people's organisations - the institutions of civil society on every level - were all quickly eviscerated. Ranging widely across new archival material and many sources unknown in English, she follows the communists' tactics as they bullied, threatened and murdered their way to power.
She also chronicles individual lives to show the rapid choices people had to make - to fight, to flee, or to collaborate. Within a remarkably short period after the end of the war, Eastern Europe had been ruthlessly Stalinised. "Iron Curtain" is a brilliant history of a brutal period in European history, but also a reminder of how fragile free societies are, and how vulnerable they can be to the predations of determined and unscrupulous enemies.
x{0026}lt;P Anne Applebaum es columnista en x{0026}lt;I The Atlanticx{0026}lt;/I y x{0026}lt;I senior fellowx{0026}lt;/I en el Agora Institute de la Johns Hopkins University. En Debate ha publicado x{0026}lt;I Gulag, El Telón de Acerox{0026}lt;/I (obra galardonada con el Premio Pulitzer en la categoría general de no ficción), x{0026}lt;I Hambruna roja x{0026}lt;/I (con el que ganó el Premio Cundill y fue finalista al National Book Award), x{0026}lt;I El ocaso de la democraciax{0026}lt;/I y x{0026}lt;I Entre Este y Oestex{0026}lt;/I . Vive en Polonia con su marido, el político polaco Radosaw Sikorski, y sus dos hijos.x{0026}lt;/P
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