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Author

Barbara W. Tuchman

/barbara-w-tuchman-quotes-and-sayings

104 Quotes
6 Works

Author Summary

About Barbara W. Tuchman on QuoteMust

Barbara W. Tuchman currently has 104 indexed quotes and 6 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century Practicing History: Selected Essays The First Salute The Guns of August The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam The Proud Tower: A Portrait of the World Before the War, 1890-1914

Quotes

All quote cards for Barbara W. Tuchman

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The writer of history, I believe, has a number of duties vis-_-vis the reader, if he wants to keep him reading. The first is to distill. He must do the preliminary work for the reader, assemble the information, make sense of it, select the essential, discard the irrelevant- above all, discard the irrelevant - and put the rest together so that it forms a developing dramatic narrative. Narrative, it has been said , is the lifeblood of history. To offer a mass of undigested facts, of names not identified and places not located, is of no use to the reader and is simple laziness on the part of the author, or pedantry to show how much he has read.

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Barbara W. Tuchman

Practicing History: Selected Essays

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Nineteenth-century liberalism had assumed that man was a rational being who operated naturally according to his own best interests, so that in the end, what was reasonable would prevail. On this principle liberals defended extension of the suffrage toward the goal of one man, one vote. But a rise in literacy and in the right to vote, as the event proved, did nothing to increase common sense in politics. The mob that is moved by waving the bloody shirt, that decides elections in response to slogans__ree Silver, Hang the Kaiser, Two Cars in Every Garage__s not exhibiting any greater political sense than Marie Antoinette, who said, __et them eat cake,_ or Caligula, who made his horse a consul. The common man proved no wiser than the decadent aristocrat. He has not shown in public affairs the innate wisdom which democracy presumed he possessed.

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Barbara W. Tuchman

Practicing History: Selected Essays