The Century of the Intellectuals
“The twentieth century,” Tony Judt asserts in this luminous book of
conversations with the Yale historian Timothy Snyder, “is the century of
the intellectuals.” What does it say about intellectuals, then, that
the century in which they exercised so much influence on policymaking
and public opinion was also the bloodiest in history?
. . . the raucously polemical century began with the obviously malign
thinkers on the right such as the antisemitic newspaper editor Edouard
Drumant and the fascist Robert Brasillach. These were followed by the
idealistic thinkers on the left whose endeavour to make a better world
for all of humanity ended in, as Albert Camus wrote, “slave camps under
the flag of freedom,” and “massacres justified by philanthropy.”
After two world wars and the Holocaust came an unprecedented era of
peace and prosperity in the west—the perfect interlude, you might think,
for intellectuals to uphold their oft-asserted ideals of reason and
justice. But the cold war seems to have enhanced the capacity of
writers, academics, politicians and journalists for terrible ideological
choices. Stalinism and the gulag did not lack for apologists in the
west. Nor did the unconscionable nuclear build-up at home, and the
destructive proxy wars abroad for the sake of the “free world.”
--Pankaj Mishra
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