Session 2: Cold War Liberals: The Road to George Orwell's '1984'
Government, Policy, & International Relations
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22m
This short course introduces (or reintroduces) alumni to an important chapter in contemporary intellectual history by looking at several writers and scholars whose work in the early Cold War was decisive for casting the conflict between the Soviet Union and the United States as a struggle between democracy (and pluralism) and totalitarianism. These writers were politically committed to the cause of the West. In Session 2, Mark Gilbert – a professor of history at SAIS Europe – looks at the quintessential antifascist and anti-communist British intellectual, George Orwell, and how his deep-rooted detestation of Stalinism gave birth, eventually, to such classics as ANIMAL FARM, “Politics and the English Language,” and 1984. Visit www.jhu.edu/hopkinsathome for more lectures and mini-courses.
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