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Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World
 
 

Paris 1919: Six Months That Changed the World (Paperback)

de Margaret MacMillan (Author), Richard Holbrooke (Author) "ON DECEMBER 4, 1918, the George Washington sailed out of New York with the American delegation to the Peace Conference on board ..." En savoir plus
4.4étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (67 évaluations de client)
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Amazon.ca Canadian Essential

University of Toronto historian Margaret MacMillan failed at first to find a Canadian publisher for her account of the pivotal peace conference that followed the First World War and, some have said, laid the groundwork for the second, but when Paris 1919 won the Samuel Johnson Prize in the U.K., it returned home a bestseller and remained so for years. MacMillan, great-granddaughter of one of the conference's principals, David Lloyd George, has written a definitive history--authoritative, colourful, and engrossing--of the peace that failed.


Amazon.ca

Margaret MacMillan's Paris 1919 is a colourful, epic history of the momentous days after World War I that saw U.S. President Woodrow Wilson and the other Allied leaders reshape the world. Wilson arrived in France to referee the Paris Peace Conference only a month after the war's end, sailing into a French port past an avenue of British, U.S., and French battleships. The world, horrified by the millions of war deaths, was desperate for peace and embraced Wilson's call for a League of Nations and self-determination for all peoples. Enthusiastic European crowds greeted the U.S. president and posters bearing his face lined the streets.

It was a conference unlike any other in history: attendees redrew borders, rewrote international relations, and tried--unsuccessfully--to contain German militarism. It unfolded in the midst of massive social upheaval as Europeans awoke to widespread hunger and the inequalities of their age. In the pressure cooker of Paris, this bubbling stew of social and political forces boiled over, and many of Wilson's dreams were dashed. The world lives with the legacy of these few months. Not only did the conference produce a new map of Europe and the Middle East, it led to the infamous Versailles Treaty, often blamed for provoking World War II. MacMillan, a University of Toronto history professor, argues that the Allied leaders did their best, and to blame World War II on them is to absolve Hitler and his appeasers. MacMillan could perhaps be accused of bias: her great-grandfather was British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, one of the main political players in 1919. However, her book has been acclaimed by historians and has won Britain's richest nonfiction award. Complete with backroom intrigue, personal drama, and vivid characters, Paris 1919 is a vital contribution to our understanding of the last century and the current one. --Alex Roslin --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.


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ON DECEMBER 4, 1918, the George Washington sailed out of New York with the American delegation to the Peace Conference on board. Lire la première page
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Required reading, Aoû 18 2009
Par Adam Woelders (Vancouver, BC) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
An engaging, colourful diplomatic history of the key decisions deciding the fate of millions and sowing seeds of conflict from Palestine to Vietnam. No understanding of the last century of global history is complete without an understanding of the decisions made in Paris, principally by Wilson, Clemenceau and Lloyd George. Macmillan's book is undoubtedly the most complete narrative and analysis of these decisions, their rationales and motivations behind them. This book should be required reading for all 20th century history teachers!
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Men who tried to fix the world, but left it broken still, Aoû 5 2004
Par Penmachine "penmachine_com" (Vancouver, Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This book demonstrates why I am in awe of historians. The scope of research and the way MacMillan pulls it together coherently are remarkable.

Political leaders were more honest about the warlike nature of nations a hundred years ago. Before the human and financial enormities of the Great War, leaders and citizens assumed that wars were what countries did. It was how they grew and gained influence. In Paris, MacMillan reveals, some wanted to change that. But they didn't.

Perhaps they couldn't have. My impression from the book is that, while Woodrow Wilson in particular wanted (at least in theory) an end to war, and an end to the old land-grabbing power-mongering that led to it, nearly everyone at the Paris Peace Conference (including Wilson himself) was looking out for their own countries' interests, even if those countries didn't exist yet. It took an even more horrible conflict 20 years later, as well as the Cold War, to bring peace to Europe, and even that dissolved in the Balkans and elsewhere in the 1990s.

MacMillan shows that the Peace Conference delegates tried very, very hard. Often they were working at cross-purposes, and the results were, in the end, almost total failure. But they did not know it at the time. Maybe we never do.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 dragon's teeth, Juil 16 2004
Par Robert D. Harmon "bobnbob3" (Mill Valley, CA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Hindsight is valuable in history and Ms. MacMillan's work, coming now, puts more perspective on the Paris conference and the effects that haunt us to this day. Ms. MacMillan does assert that the Versailles Treaty - one of its products - should not bear sole blame for the catastrophe that came 20 years later (though she notes that Hitler found it a gold mine of propaganda).

However, a reader can find in her story that the Paris conference, and the resulting treaties, sowed dragon's teeth that would erupt year after year: the bloody 1922 war between Turkey and Greece; the mutual suspicions between Poland and the new republics around her that left them divided later; the bad blood between Rumania and her neighbors over her new borders; the creation of fragile nations and economies in Hungary and Austria that would be easy prey for fascism; the Italian populist fervor over Fiume and Trieste that contributed so much to the rise of Mussolini; the Sudetenland issue that would awake in the 1930s; the Allied mandates in Arab lands that would cause so much resentment later; the creation of amorphous nation-states that would implode in the 1990s - Rwanda, Burundi, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Iraq.

Ms. MacMillan does provide an epilogue to each decision, as well as a new look at Woodrow Wilson, the first U.S. president to travel outside the U.S. in his term, and whose 14 Points proved perhaps the greatest unrealized promise of the period.

For a conference founded on such post-war hope and good intentions, it certainly proved a road to hell. All in all, a worthwhile read.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

3.0étoiles sur 5 Furstrating
Perhaps my expectations were too high for this book but I was disappointed. There wasn't the level of serious analysis that I expected, but on the otherhand the format of the... Read more
Publié le Jui 29 2004

5.0étoiles sur 5 Brilliant book
just wish she had carried on and explained why the British Govt. didn't support the Hasemites against the Saud's in the civil war in Arabia in the 20's
Publié le Jui 27 2004 par Mr J. S. Smith

5.0étoiles sur 5 A must read history to understand todays world
This is an excellent summary of the fait of the 4 dynasties that were brought to their knees at the end of WWI (Russia, Germany, Austria, and Turkey) and the phoenix-like... Read more
Publié le Jui 12 2004

5.0étoiles sur 5 A modern Classic !
A recent work which is becoming a modern classic. MacMillan covers the entire Paris Peace conference with special emphasis on the actions of the 'Big Three', Lloyd-George,... Read more
Publié le Mai 26 2004 par Maureen Ogorman

1.0étoiles sur 5 Did not live up to my expectations
I was very disappointed with this book. I would have liked more detail on the actual events instead I felt the author dealt more with the characters that attended the meeting. Read more
Publié le Mai 19 2004

5.0étoiles sur 5 Paris 1919 : Six Months That Changed the World
MacMillan (Univ. of Toronto) uses the deliberations surrounding the Treaty of Versailles (together with its adjuncts: Trianon, St. Read more
Publié le Avril 19 2004 par B. Viberg

4.0étoiles sur 5 The Ultimate Narrative History of Versailles
Review of British/ Canadian Edition (Title is "The Peacemakers")

That such a narrative history could be feted by the world at large and be a best-seller in the... Read more

Publié le Avril 19 2004 par R. J Szasz

5.0étoiles sur 5 Excellent history
Margret Macmillan's book is breathtaking in its coverage and originality, and I am proud to own it in my humble collection. Read more
Publié le Avril 10 2004 par Jozias Thoenes

3.0étoiles sur 5 Reading in Bed
"Paris 1919" took me quickly to unconsciousness. But reading it before bedtime meant I didn't finish it for nearly two months! Read more
Publié le Mars 17 2004 par Randall L. Wilson

5.0étoiles sur 5 An outstanding book
This book is a must-read. Beyond the fascinating forgetten historical characters, the roots of unrest in the rest of century are well documented. Read more
Publié le Mars 6 2004 par S. Raja Laskar

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