On Freedom book discussion with NYT best selling author Tim Snyder

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When:
October 23, 2024
Noon to 1 p.m.
Where:
Event category: Lecture
In-person

The History Department and the University Libraries will bring author Timothy Snyder to campus for a discussion of his book On Freedom at 12 p.m. on Oct. 23 in the Bernath Auditorium. Fiunded by the Gerald J. Myrna and Stuart L. Bernath Lecture Series for the Support of the Discussion of American History, Diplomacy and Foreign Affairs, this lecture is free and open to all.

Yale University historian of Nazism and communism Timothy Snyder was described by the New York Times as a "public intellectual unafraid to make bold connections between the past and present." His book On Tyranny was #1 on the New York Times Bestseller List more than two years after its publication, thanks to Snyder’s unique ability to distill practical guidance for action from the darkest chapters of history. It has been used around the world in defense of democracy.  

His newest book Our Malady is a short, urgent examination of healthcare as a human right which begins from Snyder's recent and nearly fatal illness. From his hospital bed, he rethinks the connections between the health we lack and the freedom we need. In a time of authoritarianism and pandemic, the timeliness of this book cannot be overstated. Both a cri de coeur and a data-driven argument, it shows the way towards an America that is both healthy and free.   

Snyder is also well known internationally for the prize-winning Bloodlands, which explains the most murderous events of the time of Hitler and Stalin in Europe. In his book Black Earth, Snyder explains the Jewish Holocaust in ways that help us to better understand the basic predicaments of our own time. In The Road to Unfreedom, Snyder charts the path from democracy to tyranny (and back). All five of these books were or are New York Times bestsellers.

A masterful presenter, Snyder is sought out by groups around the world to understand the direct line between big ideas of the past and our lives today.

October 2024
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