糖心Vlog

Sir David Bell, Neil Gregor, R. C. Richardson, Uwe Sch眉tte and Robert A. Segal...

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Published on
April 2, 2015
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Sir David Bell, vice-chancellor of the University of Reading, is reading Henry Marsh鈥檚 Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery (Orion, 2014). 鈥淚f someone is going to saw your head open, just hope it is the eminent neurosurgeon Henry Marsh, who writes powerfully here of his experiences. Probably insufferable and infuriating to work with, he still comes across as a man of deep insight and great compassion. Indeed, some of the most moving passages in the book are when he comes face to face with his 鈥榤istakes鈥. Quite brilliant.鈥


Book review: Dachau and the SS: A Schooling in Violence, by Christopher Dillion

Neil Gregor, professor of modern European history, University of Southampton, has just read Christopher Dillon鈥檚 Dachau and the SS: A Schooling in Violence (Oxford University Press, 2015. 鈥淎n assiduously researched and intelligently argued book that takes our understanding of the camp personnel to a different level. Even in a crowded field such as this, it genuinely stands out 鈥 above all, perhaps, in its account of the dynamics of masculine identity creation and performance in Dachau, opening up new terrain on gender and murder in this context.鈥


Book review: The Englishness of English Art, by Nikolaus Pevsner

R. C. Richardson, emeritus professor of history, University of Winchester, is reading Nikolaus Pevsner鈥檚 The Englishness of English Art (Peregrine, 1956). 鈥淭his classic study is now inevitably somewhat dated, and some of its quirky judgements appear uncomfortably conspicuous. But the author鈥檚 observations on the distinctive features of English architecture as well as art 鈥 all the more penetrating, perhaps, coming from a refugee from Nazi Germany 鈥 stand out as clearly as ever, as do his secure mastery of detail and his skill in connecting art forms with poetry, philosophy and science.鈥


Book review: The Calm Ocean, by Gerhard Roth

Uwe Sch眉tte, reader in German, Aston University, is reading Gerhard Roth鈥檚 The Calm Ocean (Ariadne, 1993). 鈥淥ften, literature slows things down to enable a closer look. With an almost painful immediacy, this novel allows readers to experience life in rural Austria in the late 1970s. The stunning beauty and richness of the natural environment provide a backdrop to various violent occurrences, as Roth lays bare fascism鈥檚 hidden roots lurking beneath the idyll of country life.鈥


Book review: The Moral Arc: How Science and Reason Lead Humanity toward Truth, Justice, and Freedom, by Michael Shermer

Robert A. Segal, sixth century chair in religious studies, University of Aberdeen, is reading Michael Shermer鈥檚 The Moral Arc: How Science and Reason Lead Humanity toward Truth, Justice, and Freedom (Henry Holt, 2015). 鈥淪hermer, the publisher of Skeptic magazine and a firm atheist, argues that science, not religion, has been responsible for what he deems the progressive spread of morality worldwide. By science, he means less scientific discoveries than reasoning and testing. He has disdain for the claim of clerics that secularisation is the cause of moral regress and that terrorists cannot be religious.鈥

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