Nr 98608730

TIME - 1983-1982
Nr 98608730

TIME - 1983-1982
A near-complete consecutive run of Time Magazine – European Edition, spanning 1983 and 1984 (approx. 49 issues in total).
This collection captures two of the most dynamic years of the 1980s — from Cold War confrontations to pop culture revolutions, technological breakthroughs, and historic political milestones.
Highlights include:
-Margaret Thatcher: “Maggie by a Mile” (June 20 1983) – U.K. re-election landslide
-David Bowie: “Dancing to the Music” (July 18 1983) – Pop icon at his creative peak
-George Orwell: “1984 – Big Brother’s Father” (Nov 28 1983) – The prescient look ahead to 1984
-Pope John Paul II: “Why Forgive?” (Jan 9 1984) – Forgiving his would-be assassin
-Geraldine Ferraro: “A Historic Choice” (July 23 1984) – First woman nominated for U.S. Vice President
-Carl Lewis: “A Star Is Born” (Aug 13 1984) – 1984 Los Angeles Olympics triumph
-Dr. William DeVries: “Medical Miracles” (Dec 10 1984) – The artificial heart revolution
1983:
June 20 – “Maggie by a Mile” (Margaret Thatcher’s re-election landslide in Britain); July 11 – “The Colossus That Works” (IBM’s global dominance in computing); July 18 – “Dancing to the Music” (David Bowie and the rise of the global pop superstar); July 25 – “Travel: Americans Everywhere” (U.S. tourism abroad); August 1 – “Japan: A Nation in Search of Itself” (economic identity and innovation in Japan); August 8 – “Central America: The Big Stick Approach” (Reagan’s foreign policy and U.S. interventions); September 12 – “Shooting to Kill” (the Soviet destruction of Korean Air Lines Flight 007); September 19 – “Putting Moscow on the Defensive” (Reagan’s Cold War counterstrategy); September 26 – “Banishing Mao’s Ghost” (Deng Xiaoping and China’s reform movement); October 3 – “Lebanon: Holding the Line” (U.S. Marines amid Beirut conflict); October 10 – “Superdollar” (the dominance of the U.S. dollar); October 24 – “The Tribes of Britain” (punk, mod, and youth subcultures); October 31 – “Luther: 500 Years Young” (Martin Luther’s legacy); November 7 – “Rescue in Grenada” (U.S. invasion of Grenada); November 14 – “J.F.K.: How Good a President Was He?” (Kennedy reassessed); November 28 – “1984: Big Brother’s Father” (George Orwell and renewed relevance of 1984); December 12 – “Western Europe: Racism on the Rise” (xenophobia and immigration); December 19 – “Syria: Clashing with the U.S.” (Hafez al-Assad and Middle East tensions); and December 26 – “Images ’83: Pictures of the Year” (year-end retrospective and “Video Rocks” MTV feature).
1984:
January 9 – “Why Forgive?” (Pope John Paul II pardons his would-be assassin Mehmet Ali Agca); January 16 – “Africa’s Woes” (coups, conflict, and corruption across the continent); January 23 – “Cashing In Big” (venture capitalist Arthur Rock and the new Silicon Valley elite); January 30 – “Olympic Dreams” (Sarajevo Winter Olympics preview); February 6 – “One-Man New Wave” (French actor Gérard Depardieu); February 13 – “Nuclear Power: The U.S. Turns Off, The World Plugs In” (global energy contrast); February 20 – “The Succession” (Soviet power vacuum after Andropov’s death); February 27 – “The Kremlin’s New Master” (Konstantin Chernenko’s rise); March 5 – “That Monster Deficit” (Reagan’s U.S. economic challenges); March 26 – “Cholesterol: And Now the Bad News…” (diet and health awareness); April 2 – “Sex in the ’80s: The Revolution Is Over” (social conservatism and AIDS); April 23 – “Mining Nicaragua’s Harbors” (CIA operations and global criticism); April 30 – “China’s New Face” (Reagan’s visit and modernization efforts); May 7 – “Getting Away with Murder?” (Libyan Embassy crisis in London); May 14 – “Master of the Musical” (Andrew Lloyd Webber’s theatrical success); May 21 – “Olympic Turmoil: Why the Soviets Said Nyet” (the USSR’s Olympic boycott); May 28 – “D-Day: Forty Years After the Great Crusade” (Normandy commemoration); June 4 – “And for Vice President… Why Not a Woman?” (rise of Ferraro and Feinstein); June 11 – “Why Pain Hurts” (neuroscience breakthrough); June 18 – “I Am the Nominee” (Walter Mondale secures the Democratic ticket); June 25 – “Moscow’s Hard Line” (renewed Cold War rhetoric); July 16 – “The High-Tech Gap” (Europe’s struggle to compete with Silicon Valley); July 23 – “A Historic Choice” (Geraldine Ferraro becomes the first female U.S. vice-presidential nominee); July 30 – “The Wonderful World of the Olympics” (Los Angeles 1984 Games preview); August 13 – “Carl Lewis: A Star Is Born” (Olympic heroics and four gold medals); August 27 – “Republican Encore: Coronation in Dallas” (Reagan–Bush re-election convention); September 3 – “Ferraro Fights Back” (defending against media scrutiny); September 10 – “Making Babies” (IVF and reproductive science); November 5 – “Mind Your Manners!” (revival of civility and etiquette); and December 10 – “Medical Miracles: But How to Pay the Bill?” (Dr. DeVries and the artificial heart).
Each issue is a time capsule of 20th-century history, featuring world leaders, cultural icons, scientific advances, and international crises — all in Time’s signature journalistic and visual style.
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