Eric Hobsbawm, who passed away in 2012, was one of the most brilliant
and original historians of our age. Through his work, he observed the
great twentieth-century confrontation between bourgeois fin de siècle
culture and myriad new movements and ideologies, from communism and
extreme nationalism to Dadaism to the emergence of information
technology. In Fractured Times, Hobsbawm, with characteristic verve,
unpacks a century of cultural fragmentation.
Hobsbawm examines the conditions that both created the flowering of the
belle époque and held the seeds of its disintegration: paternalistic
capitalism, globalization, and the arrival of a mass consumer society.
Passionate but never sentimental, he ranges freely across subjects as
diverse as classical music, the fine arts, rock music, and sculpture. He
records the passing of the golden age of the "free intellectual" and
explores the lives of forgotten greats; analyzes the relationship
between art and totalitarianism; and dissects phenomena as diverse as
surrealism, art nouveau, the emancipation of women, and the myth of the
American cowboy.
Written with consummate imagination and skill, Fractured Times is the
last book from one of our greatest modern-day thinkers.