Home > News and media > Video and audio > Channels > Public lectures and events > Public lectures and events: media player

Public lectures and events: media player

Loading the player...

Download : Audio

Speaker(s): Tom Holland, Margaret MacMillan
Chair: Sir Peter Stothard

Recorded on 27 February 2016 at Wolfson Theatre, New Academic Building

This discussion explores the ways in which history has been re-written to serve the purposes of political leaders or regimes, from Ancient Greece to Communist Russia.

Tom Holland (@holland_tom) is the award-winning and bestselling author of Rubicon, Persian Fire, Millennium, In the Shadow of the Sword and most recentlyDynasty: The Rise and Fall of the House of Caesar.

Margaret MacMillan is the Warden of St Antony’s College and a Professor of International History at the University of Oxford. Her books include Nixon in China, The War that Ended Peace and most recently History’s People: Personalities and the Past.

Peter Stothard is Editor of the Times Literary Supplement (@TheTLS) and author of three volumes of diaries, Thirty Days, On the Spartacus Road andAlexandria, which won the 2014 Criticos Prize for literature on a theme from ancient Greece.

This event forms part of the LSE Space for Thought Literary Festival 2016, taking place from Monday 22 - Saturday 27 February 2016, with the theme 'Utopias'.

Event posting

Books

Related links

Share:Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn|