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A second set of essays examines the idea of history as it has survived into our present time, including what Davidson describes as the thin coat of higher learning in a commencement address in which he advises young men and women to listen to dissent and make up their own minds. As Davidson says herein, "The war of ideas is far from over, and every coming generation will have to bear its own share of the burden in the endless struggle for the survival of freedom." Last is a group of reminiscent essays. One recounts a friendship with the historian Charles A. Beard, who proposed to the young Davidson that he call him Uncle Charlie. In another Davidson plumbs the personality of a major figure of the Nazi era, Albert Speer. He also discusses the pathetic, perhaps demented Ezra Pound, whose genius as a poet may have been questionable but whose ability to survive was remarkable. The Narrow Path of Freedom and Other Essays is a valuable guide for all who try to keep the idea of freedom alive. The pieces in it are nothing less than a triumph—historical, literary, philosophical. By confronting the idea of history—what the past should mean—Davidson gives us a book that will last well into our already turbulent new century. About the AuthorEugene Davidson is the author of numerous books, including Reflections on a Disruptive Decade, The Death and Life of Germany, The Trial of the Germans, The Nuremburg Fallacy, The Making of Adolf Hitler, and The Unmaking of Adolf Hitler, all now available from the University of Missouri Press. President Emeritus of the Conference on European Problems and former President of the Foundation for Foreign Affairs, Davidson lived in Santa Barbara, California, until his recent death at the age of ninety-nine.
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