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Timothy Garton Ash

Timothy Garton Ash CMG FRSA (born 12 July 1955) is a British historian, author and commentator. He is Professor of European Studies at the University of Oxford. Most of his work has been concerned with the contemporary history of Europe, with a special focus on Central and Eastern Europe.

Timothy Garton Ash

(1955-07-12) 12 July 1955
London, England

Historian, author

He has written about the former Communist regimes of that region, their experience with the secret police, the Revolutions of 1989 and the transformation of the former Eastern Bloc states into member states of the European Union. He has also examined the role of Europe in the world and the challenge of combining political freedom and diversity, especially in relation to free speech.

Life and career[edit]

In the 1980s Garton Ash was Foreign Editor of The Spectator and a columnist for The Independent. He became a Fellow at St Antony's College, Oxford, in 1989, a senior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution[5] in 2000, and Professor of European Studies at the University of Oxford[6] in 2004. He has written a (formerly weekly) column in The Guardian since 2004 and is a long-time contributor to the New York Review of Books.[7] His column was also translated in the Turkish daily Radikal[8] and in the Spanish daily El País, as well as other newspapers.


In 2005, Garton Ash was listed in Time magazine as one of the 100 most influential people.[9] The article says that "shelves are where most works of history spend their lives. But the kind of history Garton Ash writes is more likely to lie on the desks of the world's decision makers."

Geopolitics[edit]

Garton Ash describes himself as a liberal internationalist.[10] He is a supporter of what he calls the free world and liberal democracy, represented in his view by the European Union, the United States as a superpower, and Angela Merkel's leadership of Germany. Garton Ash opposed Scottish independence and argued for Britishness, writing in The Guardian: "being British has changed into something worth preserving, especially in a world of migration where peoples are going to become ever more mixed up together. As men and women from different parts of the former British empire have come to live here in ever larger numbers, the post-imperial identity has become, ironically but not accidentally, the most liberal, civic, inclusive one."[11]


Garton Ash first came to prominence during the Cold War as a supporter of free speech and human rights within countries which were part of the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc, paying particular attention to Poland and Germany. In more recent times he has represented a British liberal pro-EU viewpoint, nervous at the rise of Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump and Brexit. He is strongly opposed to conservative and populist leaders of EU nations, such as Viktor Orbán of Hungary, arguing that Merkel should "freeze him out", evoking "appeasement".[12] Garton Ash was particularly upset about Orbán's move against George Soros' Central European University.[12] Anti-Soviet themes and Poland remain topics of interest for Garton Ash; once a promoter of the anti-Eastern Bloc movement in Poland, he notes with regret the move away from liberalism and globalism towards populism and authoritarianism under socially conservative political and religious leaders such as Jarosław Kaczyński, in a similar manner to his criticisms of Hungary's Orbán.[13]

Personal life[edit]

Garton Ash and his Polish-born wife Danuta live primarily in Oxford, England, and also near Stanford University in California as part of his work with the Hoover Institution.[14] They have two sons, Tom Ash, a web developer based in Canada, and Alec Ash, an author and editor focused on China.[14] His elder brother, Christopher, is a Church of England clergyman.[15]

Und willst du nicht mein Bruder sein ... Die DDR heute (, 1981) ISBN 3-499-33015-6

Rowohlt

The Polish Revolution: Solidarity, 1980–82 (, 1984) ISBN 0-684-18114-2

Scribner

The Uses of Adversity: Essays on the Fate of Central Europe (, 1989) ISBN 0-394-57573-3

Random House

The Magic Lantern: The Revolution of 1989 Witnessed in Warsaw, Budapest, Berlin, and Prague (Random House, 1990)  0-394-58884-3

ISBN

In Europe's Name: Germany and the Divided Continent (Random House, 1993)  0-394-55711-5

ISBN

The File: A Personal History (Random House, 1997)  0-679-45574-4

ISBN

History of the Present: Essays, Sketches, and Dispatches from Europe in the 1990s (, 1999) ISBN 0-7139-9323-5

Allen Lane

Free World: America, Europe, and the Surprising Future of the West (Random House, 2004)  1-4000-6219-5

ISBN

Facts are Subversive: Political Writing from a Decade without a Name (Atlantic Books, 2009)  1-84887-089-2

ISBN

(edited, with Adam Roberts) Civil Resistance and Power Politics: The Experience of Non-violent Action from to the Present (Oxford University Press, 2011) ISBN 9780199552016

Gandhi

Free Speech: Ten Principles for a Connected World (, 2016) ISBN 978-0-300-16116-8

Yale University Press

(edited, with Adam Roberts, Michael J. Willis, and Rory McCarthy) Civil Resistance in the Arab Spring: Triumphs and Disasters (Oxford University Press, 2016)  9780198749028

ISBN

Obrona Liberalizmu (Fundacja Kultura Liberalna, 2022) ISBN 9788366619067

Homelands: A Personal History of Europe (Yale University Press, 2023) ISBN 9780300257076

[16]

for The Polish Revolution: Solidarity (1984)

Somerset Maugham Award

(1989)

Prix Européen de l'Essai Charles Veillon

for journalism (1995) [17]

Premio Napoli

Order of Merit from the

Czech Republic

[18]

Order of Merit from Germany

Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland

Honorary doctorate from , Scotland

St Andrews University

for political writing (2002)

Hoffmann von Fallersleben Prize

(CMG)

Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George

for journalism (2006)

Orwell Prize

Kullervo Killinen Prize from Finland (2006)

from KU Leuven, Belgium[19]

Honorary doctorate

(FRSA)

Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts

(2017)[20]

Charlemagne Prize

European Council on Foreign Relations

Appel de Blois

Project Forum

of essay contributions to the New York Review of Books

List

Official Website

Archived 9 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Journalisted

Articles by Timothy Garton Ash

at The Guardian

Column archives

to the New York Review of Books

Contributions

Dahrendorf Programme for the Study of Freedom

Free Speech Debate

on C-SPAN

Appearances

on Charlie Rose

Timothy Garton Ash

Garton Ash on Facts Are Subversive

In dialogue with Aung San Suu Kyi

Stanford public lecture