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Hardcover Titanic: A Night Remembered Book

ISBN: 1852854340

ISBN13: 9781852854348

Titanic: A Night Remembered

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

In a night of unforgettable tragedy, the world's most famous liner struck an iceberg on 14 April 1912 and sank. Over 1500 people died. Whose fault it was, and how the passengers and crew reacted, has... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Gutsy and Thought-provoking

In "Titanic: A Night Remembered" Stephanie Barczewski has the courage to take the Titanic story where very few contemporary authors have dared to take it, outside of the superficial "conventional wisdom" inspired by James Cameron's 1997 film "Titanic." It's a remarkable effort and well worth reading. As the title suggests, the book is about how the Titanic and the Titanic disaster were remembered (and are remembered), particularly in three cities which have a particularly close identification with the Titanic. They are Belfast, Northern Ireland, where the ship was built; Southampton, England, from where the ship set sail on her only voyage--and the city which four-fifths of the Titanic's crew called home; and Queenstown (now Cobh), Ireland, where almost seven hundred Irish immigrants boarded her. Dr. Barczewski takes pains to contrast the memories of those three towns with how the disaster was perceived in the United States, particularly in regard to the relationships that existed between the social classes. She understands as few Americans do that social class was the great defining force of British society in 1912. She comprehends as few Americans do today--and few did in 1912--that the moral pressures of an individual's social class could and did exert powerful, even dominant, influences on people's behavior in 1912, particularly Europeans. This is a key point, not only to her narrative, but also to the "voice" she adopts in her writing. She writes (whether consciously or not) from a fairly consistent British point of view, which leads her to make some rather barbed comments and observations about the Americans of the time. If these remarks are unflattering, they are also valid, at least from the perspective of being ideas held by much of the rest of the world about Americans in the years before the Great War. She is under no obligation to burnish the image of the United States or the American people (or most particularly the American press) as it existed in 1912: her "editorializing," as one reviewer calls it, is nothing more than a recapitulation of attitudes that existed at the time of the disaster, and the echoes of which I can affirm from personal experience still exist today. I know Belfast and Southampton very well, and I can state with complete assurance that the Titanic disaster is still felt in those two cities in ways that no city in the United States can appreciate, comprehend, or empathize with. (An inexact but apt parallel would be to point out that no one who does not live in New York can ever truly understand the impact that 9/11 had on that city's collective psyche, and anyone who would claim to do so is a liar.) Just as important, the social standards of 1912, not current social values, are the yardstick Dr. Barczewski uses for what was and was not acceptable behavior aboard the Titanic as the ship was sinking, as well as afterward. If she uses the word "coward" with what some overly-sensitive souls feel is unn

The memory is what matters

The topic of the book, as the title suggests, is not what happened during the Titanic disaster but how the incident and the people involved were remembered. Specifically, Barczewski contrasts the American reactions to and interpretations of the event, epitomised by Cameron's film, to British responses, beginning with the two inquiries that were held, one by the United States Senate, the other by the British Board of Trade. In doing so, she provides brief biographies of several of the most important figures in on the Titanic--Captain Edward Smith, First Officer Murdoch, wireless operator Jack Phillips, shipbuilder Thomas Andrews, and bandleader Wallace Hartley--and chapters on the three cities most closely associated with the ship: Belfast in Northern Ireland, where it was built; Southampton, whence it sailed; and Queenstown (or Cove) in southern Ireland, its last port of call before striking the open sea. Barczewski demonstrates how American interpretations tended to see the Titanic disaster as an upset of the existing class, gender, and nationalist structures of British society, upheld on a British-run ship as on land, culminating in Cameron's film interpretation of Titanic as not a British ship at all but an Irish one, built by Irish workers. British interpretations, by contrast, used the sinking to reinforce those structures; the press, public monuments, and poetry portrayed manly Anglo-Saxon men sacrificing themselves in purity of heart for their weaker dependants, women and servants and foreigners. The reason for this, she suggests, was that the sinking of Britain's largest, most luxurious vessel was a direct hit to its waning mastery over the seas. No longer could Britain boast that she ruled the waves when American and German shipping lines were building larger, faster, more elaborately appointed ships every day. After Titanic, it would all be downhill, though her sister ship the Olympic served with distinguished reliability into the Second World War. It was a pleasure to read a book on this subject that disposed of the actual events of April 14, 1912 in one chapter without too many speculations and then delved into the wider implications of the disaster. My only complaint is that the book ended without any sort of summary of her argument; it went directly from the chapter on Queenstown into the appendices. Clear and persuasive though her argument was, I felt that the book needed a summary, structurally. Nevertheless, I recommend it to anyone interested in the world's most famous maritime disaster.
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