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Enzo Traverso

    14 ottobre 1957

    Enzo Traverso è un importante storico e teorico contemporaneo il cui lavoro approfondisce la natura del totalitarismo, della violenza e delle complesse dinamiche intergruppo nei conflitti storici. Attinge a un ampio spettro di discipline, tra cui le scienze politiche e la sociologia, per analizzare le radici e le manifestazioni delle ideologie estremiste e il loro impatto sociale. La sua scrittura è caratterizzata da un approccio analitico penetrante, volto a comprendere gli aspetti più oscuri della storia moderna per illuminarne l'influenza duratura. I contributi di Traverso sono apprezzati per il loro rigore intellettuale e aiutano i lettori ad affrontare sfide fondamentali dei secoli XX e XXI.

    Enzo Traverso
    Singular Pasts
    Revolution
    Fire and Blood
    Insegnare Auschwitz
    Gli ebrei e la Germania
    La violenza nazista
    • Lo sterminio nazista degli ebrei è visto perlopiù come evento senza precedentinella storia europea, fiammata insensata di barbarie nel cuore della nostraciviltà. In questo breve saggio, Enzo Traverso intende mostrare invece inquale misura l'Europa dell'Ottocento, l'Europa del capitalismo industriale,dell'imperialismo, del colonialismo, del darwinismo sociale, dell'eugenismo,sia stata in realtà il laboratorio del nazismo.

      La violenza nazista
    • Questo libro affronta il tema della questione ebraica in Germania secondo una prospettiva particolare, vale a dire da un lato l'integrazione della cultura ebraica in quella tedesca, e dall'altro il posto dell'olocausto nella cultura della Germania contemporanea. Per la prima parte il libro si presenta come l'esame dei principali intellettuali ebrei tedeschi, raggruppati secondo le note categorie di "paria" e "parvenu" elaborate da Hannah Arendt, la seconda è una lucida disamina dell'atteggiarsi della coscienza collettiva nelle due Germanie.

      Gli ebrei e la Germania
    • Fire and Blood

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      Enzo Traverso's investigation is based on a brilliant-although controversial- idea. It is an important book that deserves to prompt vast and interesting debates. -Saul Friedländer, UCLA, author of Nazi Germany and the Jews and The Years of Extermination Written with empathy and perspicacity, Fire and Blood takes the measure of the explosion of violence-revolutionary vs. counter- revolutionary, fascist vs. anti-fascist, military vs. civilian-that constituted the European 'civil war' of the first half of the twentieth century. Enzo Traverso's admirable erudition and judiciousness make this work an indispensable synthesis. -Anson Rabinbach, Princeton University Despite thousands of books on the two world wars, we are still far from understanding the violence that tore Europe apart between 1914 and 1945. By conceiving of the conflict as a civil war, Enzo Traverso provides us with a new way to think about the disaster that continues to shape the twenty-first century. -Joanna Bourke, Birkbeck College Enzo Traverso's provocative book poses a profoundly important question to modern history. How can we understand the 'age of extremes' (1914 to 1945) from a present-our present day in the west-that is in general terms allergic to 'ideology' and convinced that 'there is no alternative'? What happens when an anodyne and self-satisfied liberalism projects its values back into an earlier era of intense political struggle? -Adam Tooze, Guardian Nuanced and erudite ... Fire and Blood is more than a history of a catastrophe that began a hundred years ago. It is also a warning of a potential future. -Ron Jacobs, CounterPunch Incisive, challenging, and compelling interpretation of the European wars of annihilation, whose consequences still reverberate. -George de Stefano, Pop Matters Remarkable. -Jonathan Sturgeon, Flavorwire This wonderful book ... is not a simple history of [the 1914-45 period]. Rather it examines the ideas which underlay the mass movements of the inter war years, and why the morality of pre-1914 Europe was undermined by a generation scarred by the horror of the First World War. -Chris Bambery, CounterFire One must admire Traverso's ambitious synthesis of theory and recent scholarship. -Shelley Baranowski, University of Akron This is engaged history at its best ... Fire and Blood is a passionate and bracing contribution to the issues that bedeviled Western political intellectuals in the age of extremism. -Russell Jacoby, UCLA, author of Bloodlust and The Last Intellectuals A remarkable study on the politics of violence. -Dan Diner, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, author of America in the Eyes of the Germans Fluently written and employing a synthetic approach that will appeal to the common reader. -Nitzan Lebovic, Haaretz Enzo Traverso has pulled off the rare reconstruction of a past epoch that pulsates with electric immediacy. Fire and Blood fashions events happening seventy-five-to-one-hundred years ago to feel as lively and pertinent as political debates taking place at present. - Alan Wald, Against the Current Cannot be neglected by anyone with the temerity to approach the subject in future. -Al Richardson, Revolutionary History A magisterial interpretation of an epoch that threw Europe into chaos; it is one of those great books on the twentieth century which will be discussed in the coming years. -Alexandra Laignel-Lavastine, Le Monde [A] remarkable reinterpretation of the history of the 'Thirty Years War' of the twentieth century ... recreates the ethos of this time. -Michael Löwy, Le Monde Diplomatique The latest historiographical work of Enzo Traverso is the result of years, probably decades of investigation on the topics of wars, fascist dictatorships, intellectual exile, the Holocaust and the Nazi violence. Until now, he had approached them only separately, and today, at the height of his historiographical

      Fire and Blood
    • Singular Pasts offers a critical account of the emergence of authorial subjectivity in historical writing, scrutinizing both its achievements and its shortcomings. Enzo Traverso considers a group of contemporary historians who reveal their emotional ties to their subjects and give their writing a literary flavor.

      Singular Pasts
    • Exploring the Holocaust's roots, Enzo Traverso presents extermination camps as a culmination of Europe's industrialization of killing and dehumanization. He challenges the view of the Holocaust as an anomaly, instead revealing a complex lineage of technological and cultural precedents, including the guillotine, machine gun, and ideologies of racial supremacy. By situating these elements within the broader context of European modernity, Traverso uncovers how mainstream ideas contributed to the horrors of Auschwitz, reshaping our understanding of this dark chapter in history.

      The Origins of Nazi Violence
    • The Jewish Question

      • 264pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      In this updated and completely revised second edition, Enzo Traverso carefully reconstructs the intellectual debate surrounding the Jewish Question' over a century of Marxist thought.

      The Jewish Question
    • The narrative explores the European crisis from 1914 to 1945 as a continuous conflict, framing it as an era of civil war marked by unprecedented violence and ideological fervor. It highlights how traditional warfare evolved into a brutal struggle for annihilation, with nations experiencing profound devastation. Enzo Traverso employs diverse sources to analyze wars, revolutions, and genocides, challenging simplistic views of totalitarianism and emphasizing the emotional and intellectual currents that influenced Europe's tumultuous history during this period.

      Fire and Blood: The European Civil War, 1914-1945
    • In this collection of essays, Enzo Traverso examines the relationships between anti-Semitism, modernity and the Holocaust. The different parts of the book analyse multiple dimensions of the destruction of the European Jews, debates over historical memory and left-wing debates on the nature of anti-Semitism. Inspired by the critical theory of the Frankfurt School and the heterodox Marxism of a thinker like Walter Benjamin, Traverso argues that after Auschwitz, critical thought needs to reconsider the notion of progress as such. Enzo Traverso is the Susan and Barton Winokur Professor in the Humanities at Cornell University. His publications include: The New Faces of Fascism, Populism and the Far Right, Verso, 2019; Left-Wing Melancholia: Marxism, History, and Memory, Columbia University Press, 2017, The End of Jewish Modernity, Pluto Press, 2016; Fire and Blood: The European Civil War, 1914-1945, Verso, 2016; The Origins of Nazi Violence, New Press, 2003.

      CRITIQUE OF MODERN BARBARISM