Three famines - Starvation and politics

by Thomas Keneally

Hardcover, 2011

Status

Available

Call number

363.809

Publication

New York, NY : PublicAffairs, 2011, Hardback

Description

Discusses the Gorta Mor in 1840s Ireland, the famine in British-controlled Bengal in 1943, and the string of famines in Ethiopia in the late 20th century, and explores the concept that while famine can be caused by crop failures and weather conditions, famines are worsened by man-made choices such as politics and social and religious ideology.

User reviews

LibraryThing member SMG-TBlakley
I'm not that interested in history books, but this was really well done. Essential for history buffs.
LibraryThing member etsmith
It's hard to read about famines and the truly stupid public policy that precedes them and deepens the suffering that results. Not that Keneally hasn't written an excellent and well documented book. What's compelling here is Keneally's contention that it is not climatological but political problems
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that cause famines. He takes three cases and shows us how government action caused an initially difficult condition to become inexorably and fatally worse. The Irish potato famine is well known but its political causes less so. The other two famines he uses as case studies are not well known at all.

Well-written but tough on the tender-hearted.
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LibraryThing member Sullywriter
A fascinating approach to history comparing and contrasting the natural and human-made causes of three catastrophic famines--Ireland in the 1840s, Bengal in the 1940s, and Ethiopia in the 1980s--and their horrific by-products. I've already read a good bit about the Irish famine but even found sone
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of Keneally said about it enlightening.
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LibraryThing member HadriantheBlind
A brief and sickening overview of three historical examples of famines - the Irish potato famine, the Bengalese famine during WWII, and the Ethiopian famines of the 1970s-80s.

Compares and contrasts the three examples, with the physiological and psychological effects of famine, as well as the heroes
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and villains of each case - those who tried to get the word out, and those callous few who snubbed the starving people or ignored them completely. Amartya Sen's assertion that there has been no famine in a functioning democracy holds true in these cases. The administration has utterly ignored the people's needs.

Considering how North Korea's been in the news a lot recently, this book will always remain prescient reading, sadly enough.

I would have liked even more detail, but that's just my opinion.
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Language

ISBN

9781610390651
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