from the NEW STATESMAN at
http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2008/07/chris-harman-world-history

A People's History of the World
Chris Harman
Verso, 386pp, £20

A People's History of the World is the first attempt to provide a
single, accessible, grass-roots account of the development of human
civilisation. The stories of civilisation that have become popular in
the era of the "war on terror" usually come with an arid essentialism.
We are told there is a discrete entity called "the west", whose ascent
is, as the historian Eric Wolf sardonically put it, a "moral success
story" in which the peerless west defeats all-comers by virtue of
certain "values" that often prove to be the credenda of neocon
servatism. The counterpart to such Spenglerian mysticism is the
strident celebration of capitalism and the colonial system through
which it spread. Niall Ferguson is an avatar of this tendency. Chris
Harman's popular history is a vital antidote to these trends.

>From the Neolithic revolution to Y2K, A People's History is a dizzying
tale of change "from below", with political, economic and cultural
narratives interwoven, and occasional pauses to point out intriguing
theoretical vistas. Taking pains to upset received opinion, Harman
asserts that class societies are neither natural nor a long-term
feature of human history. The first such, he argues, emerged after
prolonged struggle, after the agricultural revolution that took place
in the Fertile Crescent 10,000 years ago. Describing the rise of the
ancient world, Harman resists commonplace Eurocentrism, showing how
similar environmental and technological pressures were at work in
creating precocious civilisations in India, China, Greece and Rome. If
the latter were novel, it was partly because of their unusual
dependence on slave labour. He resists the fashionable temptation to
exalt Roman civilisation, which he argues was largely parasitic on
Greek technology and culture, and whose wealth and power derived from
barbaric overland expansion.

Against the view that the feudal period was one of stasis, Harman
emphasises its dynamism. On the Reformation, he properly highlights
the social interests embodied in it rather than reducing it to a
battle of ideas. And the Islamic contribution to Enlightenment thought
is duly registered in a way that frustrates attempts to claim the
Enlightenment for "the west". With the French Revolution, Harman
assails the myths about its bloodthirstiness progenerated by
historians such as Simon Schama and François Furet. And, rebutting
colonial triumphalism, he notes that African societies were, before
the locust years of slavery and colonies, at least on a par with
European societies in literacy and social development. Similarly,
Indian society was far from the stagnant behemoth supposed when it was
colonised by Britain, whose early success owed more to its ability to
win over local rulers than to economic or military superiority.

A People's History has an almost telescopic structure, devoting
greater space to more recent periods as the pace of change increases.
The past 150 years of human life, from Marx to the millennium, take up
approximately half of the book, and it is by far the most provocative
part. From the hopeful experiments of early working-class socialism to
the horrific Götterdämmerung of the Second World War and the chilling
nuclear stasis of the Cold War, there is much to subvert conventional
expectations. Scathing about the effects of capitalism and
colonialism, Harman holds no brief for the Stalinist dictatorship.

He shows that the USSR, far from being concerned with emancipatory
politics, adopted a manipulative stance towards left-wing movements,
encouraging loyal parties to limit their radicalism and to connive in
pro-colonial policies. In fact, his principal diagnosis here is that
the twin pincers of Stalinism and fascism crushed the tradition of
"socialism from below" mid-century, and that this tradition was
partially revived in the "New Left" movements of the 1960s. Thus, if
the postwar strength of the USSR did not confirm the socialist case,
Harman maintains, its collapse did not disprove it.

There are a number of points where engagement with recent scholarship
might have altered Harman's account. On the subject of the First World
War, for example, he in part accepts the idea that the German masses
greeted the war enthusiastically, a view that has lately been
demolished by the historian Jeffrey Verhey. And one could split hairs
over some of the formulations. It is surprising to see Harman defend a
version of Marx's conception of an "Asiatic Mode of Production". It is
also surprising that he does not discuss the controversies over the
origins of capitalism. Given the demands of concision, it is an
understandable omission. Nevertheless, it might have been useful to
give the general reader at least some indication that they exist.

These are minor quibbles, however, about such an ambitious and
marvellously readable history. Harman has, with impressive narrative
sweep, delivered a sophisticated attack on many prevailing
assumptions, not least of which is the complacent faith in
capitalism's durability.

Richard Seymour's book "The Liberal Defence of Murder" has just been
published by Verso. His blog, Lenin's Tomb, can be found at
http://leninology.blogspot.com

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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