This has to be one of my favourite book covers of all time:
That illustration on the bottom right so crisply summarises how easy it is for erudite intellectuals to be completely wrong.
Paul Kennedy’s 700+ page magnum opus was published in 1987 (when I was in college). This was the year that Japan’s per capita GDP overtook the USA’s for the first time. This was months before the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan, a couple of years before the Berlin Wall fell.
The tectonic plates of history were shifting.
I remember
the buzz this book created when it came out. Being able to quote fluently from Paul Kennedy was the hallmark of
the undergraduate intellectual, the ultimate kunji for fundae-baazi.
I bought a fat paperback copy for over Rs 600, gamely ploughed through about
250 pages, and felt guilty for at least a decade as the remaining 450+ pages
mocked me from my bookshelf.
And now it
seems Professor Kennedy hadn't quite worked it all out.
The future didn’t belong to Japan after all.
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