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  • Book Review: New Fronts In Old Battles

    NEW FRONTS IN OLD BATTLES
    Review by Robert Hanks

    Arts & Book Review, First Edition
    August 3, 2007

    Legendary teacher, Thatcher adviser, hero of fiction, exiled
    maverick: Norman Stone has managed to enter history, as well as
    writing it. ROBERT HANKS meets him

    When Norman Stone was professor of modern history at Oxford, Sir
    Edward Heath is reported to have said of him, "Many parents of Oxford
    students must be both horrified and disgusted that the higher education
    of our children should rest in the hands of such a man."

    The Oxford University Students Union passed a motion condemning him,
    after he wrote a newspaper column opposing the idea of homosexual
    marriage, as a "racist, sexist, homophobe". The horror ran both ways:
    asked, on his departure from Oxford, why he was taking a post at a
    Turkish university, Professor Stone told the press that the students
    there were "less smelly and more attentive".

    >From which you will gather that he is a great maker of enemies,
    and of memorable lines. Both gifts are evident in his latest book,
    World War One: a short history (Allen Lane, £16.99), and in some
    reactions it has already inspired. In 157 pages (plus maps, discursive
    bibliography and index) he sets out a brief, easily digested narrative
    of the First World War that is studded with epigrams, many apparently
    designed with the sole intention of starting arguments.

    "With the Ukraine, Russia is a USA; without, she is a Canada - mostly
    snow." "It is a strange fact of modern European history that Italy,
    weakest of the Powers, brings the problems to a head: no Cavour, no
    Bismarck; no Mussolini, no Hitler." Discuss. There have been plenty
    of histories of the First World War before, but as Stone himself says,
    quoting the historian JH Plumb, "There's always room for a new book on
    a good subject." Over the years, he has kept his eye on the burgeoning
    literature. This new book incorporates recent insights into the way
    warfare changed over the four years of fighting. New knowledge about
    the origins of the war - as Stone puts it, "It's pretty clear now
    that it was a German plot" - rubs shoulders with an account of the
    importance of railway timetables that clearly owes a lot to AJP Taylor.

    He mentions Taylor as one of three writers he used to be able to
    quote whole paragraphs of by heart: the others being Orwell and,
    less predictably, Malcolm Muggeridge. The new revisionism - in which
    Haig is rehabilitated as a tactically astute and caring war leader -
    is tempered by old-fashioned contempt for his donkey-like leadership
    in the early years. The book is disfigured by some very silly errors
    ("Alfred Einstein" is mentioned). But Stone offers what few British
    historians can: the view from elsewhere, a sense of what the war
    looked like outside the Western Front.

    A few years ago, in an admiring review of a book by Noel Malcolm,
    Stone wrote: "Usually, when people can read 20 languages, they lose
    the ability to write their own." I wonder if this was a subtle piece
    of self-deprecating humour, because his own facility with languages
    is famous. He says not; he would never compare himself with Malcolm,
    who "can even do Norwegian!". Nevertheless, he admits to being able to
    read "about 11 or 12 [languages], and speaking a bit less." He started
    off learning French and German at Glasgow Academy, a "remorseless"
    machine. Then he went to Cambridge on a modern languages scholarship,
    switching to history shortly after he arrived because "I couldn't
    handle the literature at all."

    After graduation, he spent a couple of years in Vienna grubbing
    in the archives of the Austro-Hungarian empire. While there he met
    his first wife, the daughter of a minister in "Papa Doc" Duvalier's
    government of Haiti. He proudly notes the fact that their son, Nick
    Stone, is now a successful thriller writer. Back in Cambridge on a
    research fellowship, having failed to complete a doctorate, he was a
    beneficiary of an initiative to get more people in higher education
    speaking Russian: "It was in response to what was alleged to be Soviet
    progress - in 1959, Macmillan wrote in his diary 'There's no doubt
    the Russian standard of living will be far higher than ours in 10
    years time.'" Stone pauses to guffaw at length. He learnt Russian,
    and started teaching Russian history.

    The international perspective that his facility with languages gave
    him was reflected in his first book in 1975, which made his name: The
    Eastern Front, 1914-17. It remains the standard English-language work,
    "To which," he remarks, "I can only say 'Alas'." A few years ago,
    Penguin reissued it and asked him to look through it. "I can remember
    on a hot afternoon in Ankara going through it, and when I read chapter
    one, about the Russian army, really almost suicide country - because
    I thought, 'I'll never write anything as good as this again.' And
    then I reached chapter three, about the October 1914 campaign, and
    I cheered up: it's more or less unreadable."

    One thing that book didn't offer, and the new book does, is an emphasis
    on the Turkish dimension to the war. "It's something people tend to
    forget about... it looked as if it was a sort of side-show, and in
    some ways it was what the war was about." Turkey, Stone argues, was
    the big prize for the European powers: a large but unstable empire,
    which controlled access to the world's greatest oilfields, and between
    the Black Sea and the Mediterranean.

    He has taught in Turkey for 12 years now, having originally gone
    to attend a conference on Bosnia. "I remember arriving in Istanbul
    thinking, I sort of smelt in the air, 'Hmm, good country'. I liked
    the place, I liked the people." At this point, he was on the verge
    of taking early retirement after an unhappy decade at Oxford - the
    unhappiness being, it must be said, mutual.

    Academics tended to dismiss him as a lightweight: since The Eastern
    Front he had produced a well-regarded textbook and a shrewd, lively
    biography of Hitler, but nothing substantially original. He had also
    flaunted his Tory politics in a column, and even acted for a while
    as foreign-policy adviser to Mrs Thatcher. He recalls as one of his
    achievements that "I got her to be pro-German for a week". This
    did not go down well at the university that voted to withhold an
    honorary doctorate from her. Among students, his stock was higher:
    he has always been a vastly entertaining talker, and takes a great
    interest and pride in the achievements of his pupils.

    When offered the chance to run the new Russian-Turkish centre at
    Bilkent University in Ankara, he jumped at it. The decision was,
    he says, "more than eccentric", but right: "There's a lot to be
    said for just picking up your traps and finding a new horizon." He
    speaks admiringly of his students, and thinks that living in Turkey
    has given him a new perspective on Europe, particularly Russia, as
    "when you realise that Tatar-Turkey dimension, you understand the
    thing an awful lot better."

    But even in Turkey his talent for making enemies has not deserted
    him. These days, his main antagonist is what he jovially calls "the
    dear old Armenian diaspora". In 2004, Stone reviewed unfavourably a
    book on the subject of the Armenian massacres - "a terrible rubbishy
    book," he recalls, "the sort of book to be read out in a funny voice"
    - in The Spectator, and derided it further in The Times Literary
    Supplement. Since then, he has been a magnet for Armenian anger over
    what they see as, in effect, Holocaust denial. In fact, Stone has
    never denied that vast numbers of Armenians were slaughtered during
    forced deportations from Turkey in 1915; he does not even dispute the
    possibility that there was genocidal intent. What he does dispute is
    that there is unequivocal evidence of such intent, and in the absence
    of a smoking gun, prefers to stick to "massacres".

    He has been smeared a number of times as a paid apologist for Turkey.

    When I mention these attacks, he makes a disgusted moue: "It's
    just dotty, it's dotty and it's demeaning." An even more convincing
    defence came from a correspondent in The Spectator: "Norman may have
    his faults, but he has always been entirely prepared to bite the hand
    that feeds him. Often quite hard, if he thinks it necessary." In the
    new book, he has been quite careful how he describes the Armenian
    massacres. The tactic hasn't been entirely successful, to judge
    by a negative review already on Amazon.co.uk, accusing Stone of
    "indifference" to genocide. Indifference to genocide, I doubt;
    indifference to what people think he ought to say - there, I think,
    he would plead guilty. And enjoy doing it.

    Biography

    NORMAN STONE

    Norman Stone was born in Glasgow in 1941, and educated at Glasgow
    Academy and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. After research in
    Vienna and Budapest, he returned to Cambridge as lecturer in German
    and Russian history, and was professor of modern history at Oxford,
    1984-1995. Since 1995 he has been director of the Russian-Turkish
    Centre at Bilkent University, Ankara. The Eastern Front, 1914-17
    (1975) won the Wolfson Prize; other books include Hitler (1980),
    Europe Transformed (1984) and the new World War One (Allen Lane); he
    is completing a history of the making of new world orders since 1945.

    In 1999, he made his fictional debut as model for "Fluke" Kelso,
    the academic hero of Robert Harris's Archangel. Married twice
    (divorced once), with three children, he divides his time between
    Oxford and Turkey.

    --Boundary_(ID_u5LZvTzSr4o9KtFQs867bQ)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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