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Paul Berman : ウィキペディア英語版
Paul Berman
Paul Lawrence Berman (born 1949) is an American writer on politics and literature whose articles and reviews have appeared in numerous influential publications.
His books include ''Terror and Liberalism'' (a ''New York Times'' best-seller in 2003), ''The Flight of the Intellectuals'', ''A Tale of Two Utopias'', ''Power and the Idealists'', and an illustrated children's book, ''Make-Believe Empire.'' He edited, among other anthologies, ''Carl Sandburg: Selected Poems'', for the American Poets Project of the Library of America.
Born to a Jewish family,〔(Jewish Journal: "What will New Republic exodus mean for American Jewish thought?" by Anthony Weiss ) December 9, 2014〕 Berman attended Columbia University, receiving an M.A. in American history in 1973. He is a contributing editor of ''The New Republic'' and a member of the editorial board of ''Dissent''. He has been awarded fellowships from the MacArthur and Guggenheim foundations and from the Cullman Center for Scholars & Writers at the New York Public Library. He was a Regents' Lecturer at the University of California, Irvine, and a Distinguished Writer in Residence at New York University.〔http://journalism.nyu.edu/faculty/paul-berman/ 〕 He is also an Advisory Editor at ''Fathom: For a deeper understanding of Israel and the region''.
==Totalitarianism and the modern world==
In ''Terror and Liberalism'', Berman offers a theory of totalitarianism. In his interpretation, totalitarian movements of the right and the left arose in Europe in the aftermath of the First World War as a reaction to the successes and failures of liberal civilization. The ideologies promoted mythologies of world events that were paranoid, apocalyptic, utopian, obsessed with purity, and ultimately nihilist. The totalitarian movements were, in Berman's account, mass mobilizations for unattainable aims.
Berman tries to trace the influence of these European movements upon the modern Muslim world. He identifies two principal totalitarian tendencies in the Muslim countries, Baathism and radical Islamism – mutually hostile movements whose doctrines, in his interpretation, overlap and have allowed for alliances. Berman regards suicide terror and the cult of martyrdom as a re-emergence of totalitarianism's nihilist strand.
Berman draws a distinction between the ancient religion of Islam and the political movement of radical Islamism. In July 2010, he wrote in the ''Wall Street Journal'' that "Islamism is a modern, instead of an ancient, political tendency, which arose in a spirit of fraternal harmony with the fascists of Europe in the 1930s and '40s."
In Berman's interpretation, observers relying on modern liberal values have sometimes found it difficult to identify the anti-liberal and anti-rational quality of totalitarian movements. Berman proposed this argument and offered an explanation based on the concept of "rationalist naiveté" in ''Terror and Liberalism''. He developed the argument further in ''The Flight of the Intellectuals.''
Berman's ideas have influenced writers such as Martin Amis and Bernard-Henri Lévy, helping to shape debates about the concept of the "post-left" in Britain. Amis invokes Berman's argument in the opening paragraph of his book on 9/11, ''The Second Plane'' (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2008), p. ix. Regarding Lévy, see p. 269 of his book ''American Vertigo'' (NY: Random House, 2006) and an article in ''The American Interest.'' The British journalist Nick Cohen, in explaining his switch to support for the wider war on terror, cited ''Terror and Liberalism'' as a major influence: "The only time I realised I was charging up a blind alley was when I read Paul Berman's ''Terror and Liberalism''. I didn't see a blinding light or hear a thunder clap or cry 'Eureka!' If I was going to cry anything it would have been 'Oh bloody hell!' ... I was going to have to turn it round and see the world afresh. The labour would involve reconsidering everything I'd written since 11 September, arguing with people I took to be friends and finding myself on the same side as people I took to be enemies. All because of Berman."
Berman's approach has not been without its critics. A writer in ''The Nation'' magazine, Anatol Lieven, labeled Berman a "Philosopher king" of the liberal hawks and criticized him for "() and () the most dangerous aspect of the Bush Administration's approach to the war on terrorism: the lumping together of radically different elements in the Muslim world into one homogeneous enemy camp."〔(Liberal Hawk Down ), Anatol Lieven, ''The Nation'', 7 October 2004〕 Berman has also been criticized in books by the liberal sociologist, Alan Wolfe, and the neo-Marxist political theorist, Robert Meister.

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