A Political Memoir: Intellectual combat in the Cold War and the culture wars
La Trobe University Press, $59.99 hb, 496 pp
ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.
Left, right, back again
Raimond Gaita is quoted in his close friend Robert Manne’s new memoir as saying that a ‘dispassionate judgement is not one which is uninformed by feeling, but one which is undistorted by feeling’. That distinction points to one of the many attractive qualities of A Political Memoir: Intellectual combat in the Cold War and the culture wars.
Manne is typically dispassionate in telling the story of his life, but there is an abundance of feeling. The Holocaust – in Manne’s words, the German state’s attempt ‘to rid the Earth of the Jewish people’ – has been the central reference point of his political thought and activity, shaping his understanding of the totalitarianisms of the left and right during his time as a conservative anti-communist through to his later engagements with the question of the Stolen Generations and the brutal government treatment of asylum seekers.
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A Political Memoir: Intellectual combat in the Cold War and the culture wars
by Robert Manne
La Trobe University Press, $59.99 hb, 496 pp
ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.
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