Tuesday, April 09, 2019

"Became a Pronounced Cultural Conservative"

"Although there was no purge of Communists from universities in England as there was in the United States, to be a known Communist was a disadvantage. He and several others openly formed the Communist Party Historians' Group after the war, and paid a weird visit to Russia over the Christmas of 1954, 'a dispiriting trip for foreign communist intellectuals, for we met hardly anyone there like ourselves,' Hobsbawm obtusely said. He did find a post at Birkbeck College, where he spent 35 years, the last 15 of them as a professor. This admirable institution, part of the University of London, is for mature students who often have day jobs, and teaching them in the evenings left Hobsbawm's own days free for reading. He did little archival research, but his books are founded on a huge breadth and depth of printed sources in numerous languages."

At The New Republic, Geoffrey Wheatcroft reviews Richard J. Evans's Eric Hobsbawm: A Life in History.

No comments: