Suzanne Labin

Suzanne Labin (6 May 1913 – 22 January 2001)[1] was a French Socialist[2] writer and political scientist, known particularly for her anti-communism, anti-totalitarianism and pro-democracy writings.

Writings and reviews

In reviewing of her book The secret of democracy, Time magazine wrote:[3]

Suzanne Labin writes with a hatpin. This young (thirtyish) French political scientist impales totalitarian myths and neutralist delusions, prods lukewarm intellectuals who rarely rise to the defense of democracy, or if they do, praise it with faint damns. Author Labin has small use for so-called thinkers who don the smoked glasses of a spurious objectivity and report that they can see no difference between Western freedom and Eastern tyranny except "shades of grey." She believes that it is worth restating the great central truth, or "secret," of democracy, i.e., that it is the first, last, best and only hope of 20th century mankind.
Time

Dale Pontius wrote in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science:[4]

Suzanne Labin's The Secret of Democracy, translated from the French, is one of the most thoughtful tracts of our time. Miss Labin has the happy facility of seeing the essential and finding rich and forceful expression. She asks the important questions about both democratic and totalitarian rule. Armed with acute use of the most penetrating literature on politics, and her own searching robes, she demolishes the dictatorships and demonstrates the calm realities of democracy. Political judgment, a use of psychoanalytic insights, and historic perspective join forces in Miss Labin with an ability to write memorable language.
Dale Pontius

Selected bibliography

References

  1. "Suzanne Labin". Who's Who in France. Retrieved 14 September 2010.
  2. It's Labin who defined herself a socialist in The anthill: The human condition in Communist China (1959), in her conclusions
  3. Liberty is a Lady, Time February 27, 1956
  4. Pontius, Dale (July 1956). "The Secret of Democracy (Review)". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 306 (Africa and the Western World): 166–167. JSTOR 1030794

External links

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