Narrator Sean Barrett
Why, if life was improving so rapidly for so many people at the dawn of the 20th century,
were the next hundred years full of brutal conflict? Ferguson (Colossus) has a relatively
simple answer: ethnic unrest is prone to break out during periods of economic volatility.booms
as well as busts. When they take place in or near areas of imperial decline or transition,
the unrest is more likely to escalate into full-scale conflict. This compelling theory is
applicable to the Armenian genocide in Turkey, the slaughter of the Tutsis in Rwanda or the
"ethnic cleansing" perpetrated against Bosnians, but the overwhelming majority of Ferguson's
analysis is devoted to the two world wars and the fate of the Jews in Germany and eastern
Europe. His richly informed analysis overturns many basic assumptions. For example, he argues
that England's appeasement of Hitler in 1938 didn't lead to WWII, but was a misinformed
response to a war that had started as early as 1935. But with Ferguson's claims about "the
descent of the West" and the smaller wars in the latter half of the century tucked away into
a comparatively brief epilogue, his thoughtful study falls short of its epic promise.
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