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On Borrowed Time

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A stunning new collection of essays from Australia’s leading public intellectual. In On Borrowed Time, Manne applies his brilliant mind to the topics that have shaped our world over the last five years, including climate change, the media, Australia’s asylum seeker policy, and Wikileaks. This provocative and challenging book features essays on Donald Trump's alleged links to Russia, Malcolm Turnbull’s leadership, the ideas driving Islamic State, and a searing critique of Jonathan Franzen's views on climate change activists.

384 pages, Paperback

Published February 6, 2018

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About the author

Robert Manne

36 books16 followers
Robert Manne is emeritus professor of politics at La Trobe University. His recent books include On Borrowed Time, Making Trouble: Essays Against the New Complacency, and The Words that Made Australia (as co-editor). He has written three Quarterly Essays and is a regular contributor to the Monthly and the Guardian.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Lisa.
3,803 reviews491 followers
April 30, 2018
On Borrowed Time is a great new collection of Robert Manne’s essays, harvested partly from his Quarterly Essays and The Monthly (which are Schwarz Publishing media), but also from The Conversation, The Good Weekend, The Guardian, The Weekend Australian and The Monthly’s Blog. Because I read some of these publications regularly I have already read some of these essays (and reviewed QE #43 Bad News, Murdoch’s Australian and the Shaping of the Nation an excerpt from which is the first in The Murdoch Empire section), so what I’ve done here is to group the essays by their source so that you can see whether the book is good value for you (as it is for me).
The table of contents groups the essays under the headings and I’ve tagged them with their initials:
Climate Change (CC)
The Murdoch Empire (TME)
Australian Politics (AP)
Australia and Asylum Seekers (A&AS)
Australian History (AH)
The United States (TUS)
The Islamic State (TIS) and
The University (TU)

The sources of the essays are:

The Monthly: ‘Dark Victory’ 2012 (CC); ‘Naomi Klein, This Changes Everything’ 2015; ‘Rupert Murdoch’s Politics’ 2013 (TME); ‘Malcolm Turnbull, the Promise’ 2012 (AP); ‘Malcolm Turnbull, a Brief Lament’ 2017 (AP); ‘Tragedy of Errors’ 2013 (A&AS); ‘Burchett and the KGB’ 2013 (AH); ‘While Rivers Run Red’ 2016 (AH); ‘Julian Assange: Alex Gibney’ 2013 (TUS); ‘The Snowden Files’ 2014 (TUS); ‘Julian Assange: Laura Poitras 2017 (TUS); ‘The Mind of the Islamic State 2016 (TIS);

The Guardian: ‘Explaining our Failure’ 2013 (CC); Jonathan Franzen, This Changes Nothing 2015 (CC); ‘On Refugees, Both the Left and Right are Wrong’ 2014 (A&AS); ‘The Sorry History of Australia’s Apology’ 2013 (AH);

The Monthly Blog:
‘Laudato Si, a Political Reading’ 2015 (CC); ‘Andrew Bolt, “Name Ten” ‘ 2011 (TME); ‘The Second Rudd Government?’ 2012 (AP); ‘Labour’s Long Goodbye’ 2012 (AP); ‘There is a Solution to Australia’s Asylum-Seeker Problem’2016 (A&AS);

Quarterly Essay (or its correspondence): ‘Bad News’, 2011 (TME); ‘Noel Pearson and Indigenous Constitutional Recognition’ 2014 (AH)
The Good Weekend:
‘Malcolm Fraser, an Unlikely Radical’ 2014 (AP);

The Conversation:
‘How We Came to Be So Cruel’ 2017 (A&AS); ‘The University Experience – Then and Now’ 2012 (TU)

Weekend Australian:
‘Donald Trump’s Victory’ 2016 (TUS);
‘The Muscovian Candidate?’ 2017 (TUS)

So as you can see, unless you subscribe to this range of publications, the book is good value, and still very relevant even though some of the essays are more than five years old.

What I like about Manne’s essays is that he doesn’t just describe current affairs, he analyses them with piercing clarity. He also looks at issues from surprising points of view. I admit that my heart sank when I saw that the first five essays were about climate change: I have read so much about this and it’s profoundly depressing because we seem to be stuck in a rut that we can’t escape. But the essays turned out not to reproduce the same arguments but to analyse how the nonsense of denialism was achieved, how writers like Franzen are compromised, and – who knew? – that the Pope offers hope because he gets it, he really does:
My own sense, after spending the day reading this remarkable document, was of great relief… This marks the first time that a person of great authority in our global culture has fully recognised the scale and depth of our crisis, and the consequent rethinking of what it means to be fully human’. (Bill McKibben, reviewing the papal encyclical Laudato Si, in the NY Review of Books, quoted by Manne on p. 67)


To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2018/04/30/o...
Profile Image for Kerry.
995 reviews29 followers
January 30, 2019
This is a terrific collection of essays on a number of topical Australian issues from the recently retired Emeritus Professor of Politics from LaTrobe University. I really enjoyed the logical approach to the issues as well as the historical context that he supplied. His essay on the origin and mindset of Islamic State was one of the best things I have read on this topic. I was saddened to hear that he is battling cancer of the same type that beat Christopher Hitchens. I hope he is around for a long time giving us his insights. Thoroughly interesting!
Profile Image for Benjamin Farr.
569 reviews31 followers
April 30, 2018
A fantastic collection of essays by one of Australia's leading academics.

Well-written, timely, honest - highly recommend!
Profile Image for Kieran Gair.
13 reviews1 follower
October 19, 2018
An excellent collection of essays. Manne’s analysis on climate change is a standout.
Profile Image for Sphinx.
97 reviews10 followers
February 15, 2022
The world is an easier place to understand after reading Professor Manne’s collection of essays. The breadth of his knowledge is astounding. If you want to understand the world more clearly especially in these confusing times, I recommend “On Borrowed Time.”
In his last essay, I liked his assessment of how the role of universities has changed over the time he was an academic. I was at university in the ‘60s when their purpose was beginning to change so I found that essay particularly interesting.
Profile Image for Jeff Wong.
6 reviews
May 23, 2018
Great ideas, but each section gets repetitive and could be half the length.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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