Writer and Historian Tony Judt Has Died
#1
Posted 07 August 2010 - 09:05 AM
Judt's unsentimental (and heartbreaking) NYRB essay about his disease is here: Night. If you read nothing else today, read this.
The New York Times' notice about his death is here: Tony Judt, Author and Intellectual, Is Dead . The NYT promises a full obit shortly. In the meantime, a NYT profile of Judt and his struggle with ALS can be found here: A Chronicler of the World now Looks Inward.
A longer Chronicle of Higher Education profile of Judt is here: The Trials of Tony Judt . (But be warned: the comments thread turns into an acrimonious debate about Israel in short order. Judt's views on Israel and Palestine were controversial. )
Terri Gross' "Fresh Air" interview with Judt is here: A Historian's Long View on Living with Lou Gherig's.
Rest in Peace.
#2
Posted 07 August 2010 - 10:49 AM
#3
Posted 07 August 2010 - 12:34 PM
#4
Posted 07 August 2010 - 04:36 PM
Judt was eloquent in his belief in the importance of historical thinking and writing. In Postwar, he applied this to Europe since the Hitler War. I think he brought the same values and mind-set to his recounting of his experience of a debilitating and deadly disease.
Here are some extracts from the last couple of pages of Postwar.
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To say this is not to advocate amnesia. A A nation has first to have remembered something before it can begin to forget it. Until the French understood Vichy as it was -- and not has they had chosen to misremember it -- they could not put it aside and move one. The same is true of Poles in their convoluted recollection of the Jews who once lived in the midst. The same will be true of Spain, too, which for twenty years following its transition to democracy drew a tacit veil across the painful memory of the civil war. Public discussion of that war and its outcome is only now getting under way. Only after Germans had appreciated and digested the enormity of their Nazi past -- a sixty-year cycle of denial, education, debate and consensus -- could they begin to live with it: i.e. put it behind them.
The instrument of recall in all such cases was not memory itself. It was history, in both its meanings: as the passage of time and as the professional study of the past -- the latter above all. Evil, above all evil on the scale practiced by Nazi Germany, can never be satisfactorily remembered. The very enormity of the crime renders all memorization incomplete. [Quoting Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi:] "Only the historian, with the austere passion for fact, proof, evidence, which are central to his vocation, can effectively stand guard.' [ ... ]
#5
Posted 07 August 2010 - 05:22 PM
#6
Posted 07 August 2010 - 05:37 PM
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#7
Posted 07 August 2010 - 06:15 PM
#8
Posted 07 August 2010 - 06:36 PM
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#9
Posted 07 August 2010 - 06:56 PM
dirac, on 07 August 2010 - 06:36 PM, said:
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The Remarque Institute has made a video and transcript of the lecture available here: "What is Living and What is Dead in Social Democracy"
#10
Posted 07 August 2010 - 09:37 PM
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In 1987, after teaching at Cambridge, the University of California at Berkeley and Oxford, he began teaching at N.Y.U. There, in 1995, he helped found the Remarque Institute with a bequest from Paulette Goddard, the widow of the writer Erich Maria Remarque. Under his directorship, it became an important international center for the study of Europe, past and present. His skepticism about the future of the European Union found expression in a sharply polemical, pamphlet-length book, “A Grand Illusion?: An Essay on Europe” (1996).
#11
Posted 08 August 2010 - 12:12 PM
I lost the print clipping, but now have been able to register with the online NYRB an print it out myself.
It's sad and frustrating that Judt was struggling with such debilitating disease at the time he prepared his lecture, and that he did not have the opportunity to refine his ideas and organize his material further.
#12
Posted 08 August 2010 - 02:53 PM
Many thanks for adding some context-setting quotes to the thread. I couldn't even begin to formulate a capsule summary of Judt's work, but I think the passages you've selected at least give a flavor of what it was like.
#13
Posted 08 August 2010 - 04:06 PM
#14
Posted 11 August 2010 - 11:41 AM
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