Richard Gott
Articles by Richard Gott
Results 1 to 10 of 52
Books
War Without Fronts: the USA in Vietnam
- 13 August 2009
The rape, torture and murder of Vietnamese civilians went on before and after the My Lai massacre. The “real” war criminals are those who allowed it to continue
Books
Radical chic
- 23 April 2009
The Frock-Coated Communist: the Revolutionary Life of Friedrich Engels Tristram Hunt Allen Lane, 459pp, £25
Books
The greatest battle of all
- 19 June 2006
Moscow 1941: a city and its people at war Rodric Braithwaite Profile Books, 446pp, £20 ISBN 186197759X
Books
The great divide. Richard Gott on an unashamedly biased account of the US-Soviet stand-off
- 23 January 2006
The Cold War John Lewis Gaddis Allen Lane, the Penguin Press, 352pp, £20 ISBN 0713999128
Politics
G8 protest: how far should you go?
- 13 June 2005
From the Sixties going back to the suffragettes and the Levellers, Britain has a long history of rebellion, both peaceful and illegal. Richard Gott on what today's demonstrators have to learn from the past
Books
Slaves to industry. Victorian artists tended to depict workers in highly idealised terms - if they bothered with them at all. Richard Gott on the forgotten few who painted life as it was
- 21 March 2005
Men at Work: art and labour in Victorian Britain Tim Barringer Yale University Press, 379pp, £40 ISBN 0300103808
Books
The living dead. In the age of empire, leprosy haunted the popular imagination. Sufferers faced not just an unpleasant disease, but a battle against ignorance and prejudice. By Richard Gott
- 07 February 2005
- 1 comment
Don't Fence Me In: leprosy in modern times Tony Gould Bloomsbury, 420pp, £20









