Yesterday’s World, Tomorrow’s World
A lecture by Stephen Kotkin (Stanford University) organised jointly by the Centre for International History, the Centre for Resistance Studies and the Department of Russian and Slavonic Studies.
Please register here.
Did the world order change in 1989-1991? Suppose you fell asleep in 1974 and awoke half a century later – what, if anything, would surprise you? What would not surprise you? What changed? What did not change, or at least not fundamentally? If you could repeat that exercise now, fall asleep for a time and wake up in the future, what might you see? How does history help, or hinder, our understanding of where we are, and where we might be going? Who is we?
Stephen Kotkin is the Kleinheinz Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and the Birkelund Professor of History and International Affairs Emeritus at the Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University. He is working on Stalin: Totalitarian Superpower, 1941-1990s, the third and final volume of a biography.
Please indicate if you have any access requirements, such as ISL/English interpreting, so that we can facilitate you in attending this event. Contact: aporb@tcd.ie