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Date: Thu, Apr 1, 2021 at 5:38 PM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Empire]: Hague on Abbenhuis and Morrell, 'The
First Age of Industrial Globalization: An International History 1815-1918'
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Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Maartje M. Abbenhuis, Gordon W. Morrell.  The First Age of Industrial
Globalization: An International History 1815-1918.  London
Bloomsbury Academic, 2019.  324 pp.  $88.00 (cloth), ISBN
978-1-4742-6710-6; $26.95 (paper), ISBN 978-1-4742-6709-0.

Reviewed by Stephen Hague (Rowan University)
Published on H-Empire (April, 2021)
Commissioned by Charles V. Reed

In the final pages of _The First Age of Industrial Globalization_,
Maartje Abbenhuis and Gordon Morrell note that the most important
consequence of China's 1917 entry into the First World War was the
spread of the influenza pandemic that likely originated there. The
"Spanish flu," as it came to be called, was the height of a crisis
"when global warfare and global revolutions met global pandemic" (p.
201). The Spanish Flu served as an exclamation point to the
destruction that came to a head between 1914 and 1918. As a global
health challenge, it helped end the century-long process of
"industrial globalization" described in this thin, useful volume.
Intended primarily for students, the book provides a thoughtful
analysis of the past while pointing toward valuable lessons for our
own time.

Written before the onset of COVID-19, _The First Age of Industrial
Globalization_ aims to "offer an accessible international history of
the nineteenth century as an 'age of globalization'" (p. xi). Through
ten chapters the book maps the contours of the nineteenth century,
recasting the period as a story of industrialization leading to
globalization. The first three chapters introduce the concept of
industrial globalization and assess how the international diplomatic
system and the growth of global industrial capitalism enabled
European imperialism in the first half of the nineteenth century.
Four middle chapters describe the repercussions of industrial
globalization after 1850. The infrastructure associated with
globalization--such as international law, global banking and
insurance, and universal time-keeping--created the framework that
enabled this process. Industrialization spurred migrations around the
world, and it often came with staggering environmental costs. The
authors juxtapose a "world of Anglo-European peace" after 1815 with a
"world of imperial violence" to highlight the enormous level of state
violence that occurred beyond Europe as industrial globalization and
imperialism took place. Another chapter outlines the intersection of
local and global ideas and politics in the form of nationalism,
liberalism, Marxism, democracy, and universalism that underpinned
these developments. The final two chapters assess the First World
War, arguing that those states that had industrialized early and
quickly emerged as the "winners in the international environment" (p.
166). Still, the resulting total war was a "system-breaking conflict"
that destroyed an international system based on "restraint,
cooperation, and war avoidance" (p. 202).

This story is well known to historians, if not their students,
although the volume proffers a fresh interpretation of the nineteenth
century for both scholars and their classes. The large and growing
number of excellent general works on the nineteenth century point to
the excitement of reconsidering the century from a global vantage
point, beginning with Eric Hobsbawn's trifecta describing the ages of
revolution, capitalism, and empire. More recent books such as
Christopher Bayly's _The Birth of the Modern World_ (2004), Jürgen
Osterhammel's _The Transformation of the World_ (2009), and Richard
Evans's _The Pursuit of Power_ (2016) offer extended surveys of the
nineteenth century, each highlighting the centrality of Europe while
placing greater or lesser attention on its global context.

By contrast, Abbenhuis and Morrell make clear they have crafted a
book for their students, and _The First Age of Industrial
Globalization_ should be read in this light. Neither a standard text
for the nineteenth century nor a detailed study of the period from
the Napoleonic Wars to the end of the First World War, the book
offers a short, thematic analysis of industrialization,
globalization, and imperialism. Their structure leaves narrative
largely aside, but there is enough attention to chronology to
underpin the thematic treatment without confusion. The result is an
interesting and at times provocative perspective geared toward
undergraduates.

The various combinations of terms such as industrialization,
globalization, capitalism, and imperialism, however, will likely
challenge students. The interplay between industrialization and
globalization drives the book's central argument that "because the
world industrialized after 1815, it also globalized" (p. 7).
Abbenhuis and Morrell argue that the post-1815 peace in Europe
enabled industrialization to take root and flourish, which in turn
enabled what Abbenhuis and Morrell call "industrial imperialism" (pp.
12, 48, 53, 140). Formulations such as "industrial globalization" and
"industrial imperialism" appropriately describe these processes, but
students may struggle to understand the cause and effect implicit in
these catchy, compound, but somewhat woolly terms.

The account Abbenhuis and Morrell present is largely a Western or
European one, or what they call "Anglo-European," a term they propose
to emphasize Britain's centrality to industrial globalization, while
also incorporating the efforts of other European states in creating
the process they trace. In this way, the authors seek to distinguish
Anglo-Europeans from a more generalized concept of the West that they
see as including westernized parts of the world (p. 3n5). They cast
their gaze around the globe but most of their account remains fixed
on Europe.

There was also a distinction between the global influence and effects
of industrialization and its global reach. Many parts of the world
provided raw materials and substantial markets for Anglo-Europeans.
Yet despite increased global interconnectivity, the claim that "the
tentacles of the Industrial Revolution ... reached into every
community connected to the ever-growing global network of commerce,
migration and communications" (p. 12), runs the risk of overstating
the case. Industrial globalization was a hugely important process,
but its networks had their limits.

In such a short survey, it is inevitable that some subjects garner
more coverage than others. The book emphasizes geopolitics to explain
how industrialization drove globalization, and how those processes in
turn led to Anglo-European domination of the international
environment. It deploys both top-down international history and
bottom-up socioeconomic and cultural history, but it is grounded more
in the former than the latter. Industrial globalization, as the
authors emphasize in some chapters more strongly than others, was "a
tragic and destructive story" (p. 8). The authors evince less
interest in the global advance of European culture. Religion and
missionaries as a globalizing force are underrepresented, and
culture--language, sport, music, architecture, and art--draws scant
attention.

The theme of neutrality and neutral nations, which is Abbenhuis's
area of specialization, is better developed throughout. The period
was an "age of neutrals," an idea that takes account of nations
operating outside the 1815 Congress system. For them, and for the
period as whole, wars were expensive, while neutrality was not. The
idea of neutrality draws attention as well to the development of
systems intended to transcend the nation-state and reduce conflict. A
noteworthy feature of the book is its attention to international
organizations and legal structures. Priority is given to
"institutions and networks that connected people across the globe and
integrated their everyday lives" (p. 15). The book highlights how
internationalism, humanitarianism, and human rights--all topics of
current special interest to scholars in history and beyond--played
significant roles in propelling globalization.

The authors have intentionally kept references to minimum, and this
is one area where the book could be stronger. Each chapter ends with
a series of useful study questions and recommended readings. Although
offering students a focused guide to sources, many of the recommended
readings suggest book chapters and the occasional article, rather
than scholarly monographs. In some cases, especially evident in
chapter 1, important sources mentioned in the text do not appear in
either the notes or the reading list. Inevitably in a sweeping global
survey there were choices about sources to include and exclude, but
the book might have benefited from additional pointers to the key
literature.

Likewise, in places the authors could do more to tease out
historiographical debates. The opening chapter, for example,
introduces several historians "for those familiar with the large
literature on the broad sweep of the nineteenth century" (p. 3). But
surely the point is that many students will not be conversant with
these figures and their debates. Later in the volume, the diverse
approaches of diplomatic and sociocultural historians of empire are
mentioned but little is done to unpack their contrasting
perspectives. Most intended readers would benefit from laying out
this historiography in more detail, and it is tempting to say that
the historiography presented is either too much or not quite enough.

Despite these minor drawbacks, _The First Age of Industrial
Globalization_ will be useful for a range of courses. In introductory
survey classes I often assign in tandem Robert Marks's _The Origins
of the Modern World _(2002) and Niall Ferguson's _Civilization
_(2012), to offer different perspectives on the West's engagement
with the world, while for an upper-level course on nineteenth-century
Europe, students read Osterhammel's _Transformation of the World_.
Abbenhuis and Morrell's text could sit easily on an assigned reading
list for classes such as these, offering an up-to-date, accessible,
clearly written survey that maps an interesting framework for
thinking about the creation of the modern global world.

For Abbenhuis and Morrell, 1917 tipped the world into a second, more
destructive age of industrial globalization. The book makes a
compelling case that the US entry into the war and the Russian
Revolutions mark a seminal year in how we conceptualize the process
of globalization. The global system that suffered chaos and
dislocation as a result of the First World War, exacerbated by the
Great Depression, did not recover until well after the Second World
War.

Over the last decade, the forces of nationalism, localism, and
populism have again challenged the idea of globalization. The
coronavirus has brought this challenge into sharp relief. While the
concept of globalization has taken quite a beating in the
twenty-first century, the failure of a global approach to the
pandemic has significantly hindered public health policy and economic
recovery worldwide. Insular responses have meant widespread global
suffering. Globalization, therefore, comes with a decidedly mixed
legacy. This is a central theme developed in this handy book, and one
which students today will especially grapple with to their benefit.

Citation: Stephen Hague. Review of Abbenhuis, Maartje M.; Morrell,
Gordon W., _The First Age of Industrial Globalization: An
International History 1815-1918_. H-Empire, H-Net Reviews. April,
2021.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=55142

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart


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