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The End of History and the Last Man
The End of History and the Last Man
Oct 10, 2024 11:19 AM

Author:Francis Fukuyama

The End of History and the Last Man

A LANDMARK WORK OF POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY. A GLOBAL BESTSELLER. STILL AS RELEVANT TODAY.

With the fall of Berlin Wall in 1989 the threat of the Cold War which had dominated the second half of the twentieth century vanished. And with it the West looked to the future with optimism but renewed uncertainty.

The End of History and the Last Man was the first book to offer a picture of what the new century would look like. Boldly outlining the challenges and problems to face modern liberal democracies, Francis Fukuyama examined what had just happened and predicted what was coming next.

Now updated with a new afterword, Fukuyama shows how the central issue today remains the same. Have any political and economic models arisen that could challenge liberal democracy as the best way of organizing human societies? He remains unconvinced.

Tackling religious fundamentalism, politics, scientific progress, ethical codes and war, The End of History and the Last Man is as compelling today as it was when it was written - and just as provocative too.

'Awesome . . . a landmark . . . profoundly realistic and important . . . supremely timely and cogent' Washington Post

'Clearly written, immensely ambitious' New York Times

'Clever, important, teeming with original ideas' Mail on Sunday

'We are indebted to Fukuyama for such an ambitious work of political philosophy' Foreign Affairs

Reviews

Awesome . . . a landmark . . . profoundly realistic and important . . . supremely timely and cogent

—— Washington Post

Clearly written, immensely ambitious

—— New York Times

Clever, important, teeming with original ideas

—— Mail on Sunday

We are indebted to Fukuyama for such an ambitious work of political philosophy

—— Foreign Affairs

Charles King, author of this illuminating biographical history [has] a great gift for nicely balanced epigrammatic prose … as King writes with a typically fine flourish, Boas can be seen to have been “on the front line of the greatest moral battle of our time” and he, along with the talented women who learnt from him, won out in the end

—— Lucy Hughes-Hallett , New Statesman

Written with verve and authority, this exciting – even entrancing – story follows the first cultural anthropologists to far-flung field sites that suggested antidotes to the racism and xenophobia of society

—— DAVA SOBEL, author of Longitude

Stunning. Wickedly perceptive, a scholarly masterpiece

—— DAVID OSHINSKY, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Polio

Elegant and kaleidoscopic … this looks to be the perfect moment for King’s resolutely humane book

—— NEW YORK TIMES

Deeply intelligent and immensely readable

—— Alison Gopnik , Atlantic

The notion of cultural relativism was as unique in its way as was Einstein’s theory of relativity in the discipline of physics, a shattering of the European mind. This remarkable book explains why. Franz Boas’s intuitions and insights, distilled in theory and practice by generations of scholars, a lineage that includes Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, and Zora Neale Hurston, all brilliantly portrayed in the book, continue to inform contemporary anthropology, allowing the discipline to stand today as the antidote to nativism and the poisonous rhetoric of political demagogues. The entire purpose of anthropology, wrote Ruth Benedict, is to make the world safe for human differences. Never has the voice of anthropology been more important, and the arrival of this astonishing book can only be described as a gift to us all

—— Wade Davis, author of Into the Silence

Masterful. A vital book for our times

—— IBRAM X. KENDI, National Book Award-winning author of How To Be An Antiracist

Engaging, deeply thought-provoking and brilliantly written. Charles King takes you on an unforgettable journey as daring anthropologists unravel the profound mysteries of culture and mankind

—— DAVID HOFFMAN, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Dead Hand

Vitally relevant

—— GILLIAN TETT , Financial Times

A motley crew of rebellious young female scientists, inspired by a scar-faced mad-genius professor, boldly set out on intrepid journeys to study strange far-flung worlds, and discover that their own home-world is stranger than they thought. Along the way, they have tempestuous love-affairs, scary adventures, swashbuckling battles against armies of racists, sexists and eugenicists. In the end, they change our moral universe. Sounds like a sci-fi fantasy movie? It happened, here on Earth, nearly a century ago. A fascinating and important story, beautifully told

—— KATE FOX, author of Watching the English

As told very engagingly by Charles King, their research turned upside down the then unshakeable assumption that certain people were innatley superior to others, because of their skin colour, culture and gender

—— Julia Lllewellyn Smith , *****Mail on Sunday

Nothing short of magnificent … in many ways a deeply touching book. Charles King’s prose is immensely readable and perceptive and lends itself perfectly to telling one of the most fascinating tales of twentieth-century science

—— All About History

No one until now has told this story of anthropology’s rise to [its] ‘master key’ status … Charles King’s book … does this with both subtlety and panache … A compelling account of mutliculturalism’s intellectual precursors

—— Peter Mandler , History Today

King's book tells this many-layered, mostly forgotten story cogently and compellingly ... a gift to the field of anthropology and to us all

—— TLS

King's book tells...[a] many-layered history, mostly forgotten story cogently and compellingly, and his collective method is a wise and welcome departure from the standard genre of a book focused on one towering individual... it also enriches our understanding of his [Boas's] female students, especially Hurston, enabling us to appreciate that she worked to develop innovative, story-driven ways of communicating anthropological insights... In breathing new life Boas's story he [Charles King] has given a gift to the field of anthropology and to us all

—— Times Literary Supplement

Franz Boas, whose achievements are set out in Charles King's The Reinvention of Humanity, recast the foundations of American anthropology. Against the prevailing political and intellectual orthodoxy, Boas and his students insisted that the basic unity of humankind was beyond dispute, and that within this unity there was no natural hierarchy of races, languages or cultures... That their ideas were found radical and strange is an indictment of their culture; that King's book seems timely is an indictment of our own

—— Francis Gooding , London Review of Books

Fairweather tells this tragic tale in gripping fashion, bringing a new angle to the literature of the Holocaust

—— Publishers Weekly

Brilliantly researched, Jack Fairweather's book is both gripping and powerfully written - a riveting and deeply moving tale of courage in the face of unimaginable horror

—— Henry Hemming, bestselling author of M
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