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Stanley Karnow

    4 de febrero de 1925 – 27 de enero de 2013

    Stanley Karnow fue un respetado periodista e historiador estadounidense cuyo trabajo profundizó en las complejidades de la política exterior estadounidense y su impacto global. Era conocido por su agudo análisis de eventos históricos cruciales, aportando temas intrincados a la luz con un estilo narrativo claro y atractivo. Sus escritos exploraron a menudo temas de poder, influencia y consecuencia histórica, ofreciendo consistentemente una perspectiva crítica pero equilibrada. El legado de Karnow reside en su profunda capacidad para iluminar momentos cruciales de la historia moderna con una claridad y profundidad excepcionales.

    Paris perdu et retrouvé
    Paris In The Fifties
    Vietnam
    In Our Image
    • “A brilliant, coherent social and political overview spanning three turbulent centuries.”—San Francisco Chronicle Stanley Karnow won the Pulitzer Prize for this account of America’s imperial experience in the Philippines. In a swiftly paced, brilliantly vivid narrative, Karnow focuses on the relationship that has existed between the two nations since the United States acquired the country from Spain in 1898, examining how we have sought to remake the Philippines “in our image,” an experiment marked from the outset by blundering, ignorance, and mutual misunderstanding. “Stanley Karnow has written the ultimate book—brilliant, panoramic, engrossing—about American behavior overseas in the twentieth century.”—The Boston Sunday Globe “A page-turning story and authoritative history.”—The New York Times “Perhaps the best journalist writing on Asian affairs.”—Newsweek

      In Our Image
    • Vietnam

      A History

      “A landmark work…The most complete account to date of the Vietnam tragedy.” –The Washington Post Book World This monumental narrative clarifies, analyzes, and demystifies the tragic ordeal of the Vietnam war. Free of ideological bias, profound in its undertsanding, and compassionate in its human portrayals, it is filled with fresh revelations drawn from secret documents and from exclusive interviews with participants-French, American, Vietnamese, Chinese: diplomats, military commanders, high government officials, journalists, nurses, workers, and soldiers. Originally published a companion to the Emmy-winning PBS series, Karnow’s defining book is a precursor to Ken Burns’s ten-part forthcoming documentary series, The Vietnam War. Vietnam: A History puts events and decisions into such sharp focus that we come to understand – and make peace with – a convulsive epoch of our recent history.

      Vietnam