- Jun 14, 2010
 
- 34,930
 
- 60
 
- 22,580
 
aphronesis said:Exactly. It seems to be sliding around in this discussion. And others' of Hitchens' place in things. And not even individuals vs. people, but all sort of combinations between and with means.
I never actually thought of it but now that I do, it seems to me that Hitchens did always take the view that individuals made history. He didnt say it but in his biographies he would usually argue that the world would have been different if not for his protagonists. He for example argued that there would be no US of A without Toussaint louverture.
Even in a science, he in debates on religion, he was fascinated by the scientifci theory that hundreds of millions of years ago, had 1 or 2 small mammals from which we are descended, behaved differently there would be no human race.
Sorry for the digression.
I don't really know what Hitchens represented or place in this is, if he has any place.
Sorry if I haven't answered your question.
With regard to Poland I think Hitchens just knew far less on the issue than he normally did on topics he commentated on. It takes a lot of work to be a historian, more than it does to talk about current events, and with Thomas Jefferson, Hitchens was able to become a historian of sorts by spending years reading and analyzing hundreds of books and primary sources of the man. With Poland, he did not, so his knowledge on the issue was more basic.
				
		
			