Skip to content

From the archives

The Trust Spiral

Restoring faith in the media

Dear Prudence

A life of exuberance and eccentricity

Who’s Afraid of Alice Munro?

A long-awaited biography gives the facts, but not the mystery, behind this writer’s genius

Preserving What Works

Of civilizations past and present

David Marks Shribman

In Defense of Civilization: How Our Past Can Renew Our Present

Michael R. J. Bonner

Sutherland House

204 pages, hardcover and ebook

Demagoguery. Tyranny. War. Pandemic. Famine. Gun violence. Climate change. Terrorism. Nuclear threats. Racism. Repression. The dreary parade of the world’s woes marches on, even in an era of relative prosperity, galloping technological advancement, astonishing medical breakthroughs, breathtaking cultural richness. No wonder Michael R. J. Bonner opens his new book, In Defense of Civilization, with the saddest sentence of this publishing season: “Human hist­ory is largely a record of failure.”

Fortunately, by the second page comes something of a salve, which suggests that plowing further into this little volume may be heartening: “But our reflections should not be confined to the melancholy contemplation of disaster and destruction.” Whew. What a relief. History is — like medical procedures that heal tissues and organs and restore functions injured due to age or illness — regenerative. Things fall apart, the poet tells us. But Bonner tells us that the centre...

David Marks Shribman won a Pulitzer Prize for beat reporting in 1995. He teaches in the Max Bell School of Public Policy at McGill University.

Advertisement

Advertisement