Stella Ghervas is Professor of Russian History at Newcastle University and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Her book Reinventer la tradition: Alexandre Stourdza et l'Europe de la Sainte-Alliance won the Guizot Prize from the Academie Francaise.
Remarkable...Narrated with great skill and passion...For those who wish to understand the unique European attempt to end warfare forever, this brilliantly powerful book cannot be ignored. -- Anthony Pagden * Literary Review * Focuses on the successive attempts to exorcise war in Europe from the 18th century to the present, a theme it develops with unfailing grace, verve, and lucidity...What is in many ways the most original retrospect of the continent since 1714 that we possess. -- Perry Anderson * London Review of Books * At once an intellectual, political, and philosophical history, her erudite and unusually lucid book should appeal to policymakers, scholars and ordinary citizens alike. She examines five epoch-making episodes from the past 300 years in which different conceptions of peace proliferated, coalesced, crystallized and then were implemented, often imperfectly...Perhaps the first pan-European history of peace, inclusively encompassing territories and peoples from the Atlantic to the Black and Baltic seas. -- Gabriel Paquette * Times Higher Education * Peace is not a natural state of affairs. As Ghervas shows in her elegant and stimulating book, it needs to be 'engineered,' and before that it has to be imagined. The past she brilliantly conjures is another country, to be sure, but the lessons it bears for our own troubled times are compellingly elaborated through an examination of the five major conflicts that have shaped modern Europe. Peace, she rightly concludes, is for the strong, while only the weak resort to war. -- Brendan Simms, author of <i>Europe: The Struggle for Supremacy, from 1453 to the Present</i> Once considered just a utopian idea, lasting peace has been a serious aspiration, as Ghervas documents in this elegant book. Her learned and artful account follows the major European international settlements from the early eighteenth century to the European Union, as well as the contemporary thinkers who articulated their premises. An original defense of the role of diplomacy. -- Charles S. Maier, author of <i>Once Within Borders: Territories of Power, Wealth, and Belonging since 1500</i> How has Europe achieved peace without becoming an empire? With amazing elegance of style and argument, Ghervas answers the question in an impressive work of intellectual, political, and diplomatic history. -- Ivan Krastev, author of <i>After Europe</i> By shedding new light on key historical episodes, political figures, and philosophical ideas, Ghervas tells the fascinating story of the engineering of peace in Europe. A lively, inspiring, and useful read for all those who are committed to a lasting peace in Europe-and beyond. -- Michel Barnier, EU Head of Task Force for Relations with the United Kingdom An ambitious, erudite, and engaging book on the search for an enduring peace in Europe. In this bracing narrative, Ghervas traces presiding 'spirits' which structure the politics of various epochs, a conceit which helps readers get inside the heads of policymakers and their critics in order to consider the possibilities and constraints in international politics from their point of view. -- Christopher Brooke, author of <i>Philosophic Pride: Stoicism and Political Thought from Lipsius to Rousseau</i>