Autorenbild.

Robert B. Downs (1903–1991)

Autor von Books that Changed the World

37+ Werke 666 Mitglieder 9 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Bildnachweis: Photo courtesy of University of Illinois Archives, found at World Libraries website.

Reihen

Werke von Robert B. Downs

Books that Changed the World (1956) 415 Exemplare
Books that changed America (1970) 41 Exemplare
Famous books since 1492 (1961) 34 Exemplare
Books That Changed the South (1977) 11 Exemplare
Famous American Books (1971) 11 Exemplare
How to do library research (1975) 8 Exemplare
The bear went over the mountain (1964) — Herausgeber — 6 Exemplare

Zugehörige Werke

Der Dschungel (1906) — Nachwort, einige Ausgaben11,653 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Rechtmäßiger Name
Downs, Robert Bingham
Geburtstag
1903
Todestag
1991-02-24
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Sterbeort
Urbana, Illinois, USA
Ausbildung
Columbia University
Berufe
librarian
Organisationen
American Library Association
University of Illinois

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Well worth the read. It's organized by author, not work, where possible. Books with multiple authors receive a single entry. Authors with multiple significant works, e.g., Aristotle, get longer articles than authors with just one significant work, e.g., the Venerable Bede. Each article typically includes: 1) some historical context, 2) a brief biography 3) a discussion of the work's reception, 4) an assessment of the author's work by some modern historian or literary writer. Pedestrian, perhaps, but useful, too.

I read the articles in reverse order, I recommend this choice. In the period between the late Roman Empire and the Renaissance, notable authors are spread very thinly across the centuries, sometimes there is a gap of 50 years between the death of one author and the birth of the next. In other periods, e.g., the late Roman Republic and Early Empire the authors cluster, often they knew each other in real life.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
themulhern | Sep 29, 2023 |
The authors and works you never heard of are in the list because their work can be said to have influenced Hitler in some way, and because Hitler looms very large in the author's mind because the book was written in the '50s.

"The Invention of Science", which is a very thorough and scholarly work, attempts to refute the assumption of just about everybody, including the author of this book, that Copernicus's "De Revolutionibus" was extraordinarily influential. He points out that Copernicus's was just a rearrangement, and that the stars are still fixed in Copernicus's outer shell, not going off in all directions as we know they do today. He shows that many natural philosophers of the subsequent years seemed to take little interest in Copernicus's work and he argues that it was Tycho Brahe, whose concept of the universe was a whole lot more three-dimensional that had the greater influence. He could be correct, but that's a lot of accepted wisdom to overthrow.

There is an interesting, to me, passage in the chapter on "Mein Kampf" which I've included in the Common Knowledge section. Hitler wrote about techniques of propaganda, and one of his central principles was to keep it simple, to give the people just one enemy to hate, and whenever you want to mobilize them against anything, associate that thing with the one true enemy. In his case, this was "the Jews". But if we look at today's propaganda, I think the one true enemy is the only slightly more abstract "white supremacy/racism" and so everything must be connected to that. We note, of course, that the doctrine that only "white" people can be racist helps to make this abstract evil into a concrete race, in this case "whites" instead of Jews. In the quotation I've attached in the Common Knowledge section, Hitler rants against France but manages to achieve, by words and not by logic a connection to the Jews, who are at the bottom of the French evil. One can imagine some 1930's German, unaffected by the propaganda, laughing at the shear incoherence of this man's invective. But we have the same incoherence now, as everything that is disliked by the propaganda machine is turned into "white supremacy" by words and not by logic. That is how Larry Elder becomes "The Black Face of White Superemacy" and so forth. We deride the incoherence of the propaganda, just as our hypothetical reader of "Mein Kampf" derides its incoherence, but maybe that is to utterly miss the point. It seems to be working reasonably well on the masses now and it was quite effective then.
… (mehr)
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
themulhern | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 2, 2023 |
Original price 35 cents and falling apart, and furthermore written before I was born, this was my introduction to influential books. Good thumbnail sketches. Still holds up.
 
Gekennzeichnet
kencf0618 | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 28, 2021 |

Listen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Mark Twain Contributor
Don Tracy Contributor
Mody C. Boatright Contributor
Dillon Anderson Contributor
Frances Eisenberg Contributor
Wilbur Schramm Contributor
Norris Yates Contributor
James R Aswell Contributor
Dan Storm Contributor
George Cronyn Contributor
W. C. Hendricks Contributor
John B. Sale Contributor
William H. Vann Contributor
Harold Helfer Contributor
Genoveva Barrera Contributor
A.W. Penn Contributor
Roy Scudday Contributor
Jesse Hill Ford Contributor
Davy Crockett Contributor
E. B. White Contributor
Vardis Fisher Contributor
James Thurber Contributor
H. L. Mencken Contributor
William Saroyan Contributor
Robert Benchley Contributor
H. Allen Smith Contributor
Ring Lardner Contributor
John Fischer Contributor
Vance Randolph Contributor
George Byram Contributor
Scott Corbett Contributor
Jesse Stuart Contributor
Richard M. Dorson Contributor
Lloyd Lewis Contributor
Stan Hoig Contributor
James M. Bailey Contributor
Josh Billings Contributor
Edward H. Mott Contributor

Statistikseite

Werke
37
Auch von
1
Mitglieder
666
Beliebtheit
#37,863
Bewertung
3.8
Rezensionen
9
ISBNs
45

Diagramme & Grafiken